Slumgullion

My Father in Minnesota playing cards

When my father retired from the office, my mother retired from the kitchen. That’s how Dad took over the cooking. He was happy to do this, I think, since he liked to cook and my mother (though a wonderful cook) did not.

He preferred simple food: pork chops or mini-hamburgers in our antique electric frying pan, or chili in the oven, or home fries, or great northern (not Navy) bean soup with ham cooked in a huge dented steel pot, enough to feed several families. But his favorite meal was Slumgullion.

Slumgullion was Dad’s word for his most eclectic concoctions. The recipe for Slumgullion was ever-changing, but it started with whatever was left over in the refrigerator. He might take some fried rice, a baked chicken breast, green peas, and gravy of some sort, then stir and heat together with unguessable spices. Maybe it sounds awful, but he enjoyed it, and I have to say so did most who tried it.

He was always happy cooking. He loved being active, having something to do or some place to go. But I think it was the creative aspect of Slumgullion that pleased him so, the ability to take what you are given and make something unique and wonderful out of it.

Eventually, a stroke took away most of his cherished activities, including making Slumgullion. We did what we could, my brothers and I, but still his life narrowed to a small area and limited opportunities. Yet to his last day, he had an astonishing capacity to find joy in almost anything: taking a ride to the golf course or grocery store, watching an old TV show, even our attempts at recreating his Slumgullion recipes.

I always thought my father made up the word Slumgullion. But a friend recently informed me that it is a real word, one that Edward Abbey used in the title of a book. In Slumgullion Stew, Abbey defines the word this way:

Slumgullion stew is the name of a dish popular among hoboes and other knights of the open road. Into a big pot over an open fire each man throws whatever he has to contribute-a stolen chicken, a hambone, a can of beans, a jar of salsa, an old shoe-anything edible.

That sounds like something my Dad would enjoy. But in his last years at least, Slumgullion was not just a dish, but a way of life. He found his joy wherever he could, and shared it with everyone he could.

He was after all his own greatest creation.

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Cover of LIebestraum, a journal
A picture of my granmother as a young girl