It’s county fair season.
I’ve loved the county fair since I went to my first one in Alta, Iowa as
the tag-along little sister in the mid 1980’s.
I’m developing a different appreciation for the fair as I
use it as the deadline to teach my kids the skills on my punch list of life
skills I think they need to know before they leave our home. I only have four
more fairs with our oldest. She still
has to do a refinishing and citizenship project. Our son’s fair 4-H career starts next year,
but he’s in his second fair exhibiting bucket calves. I love watching them care
for and learn through their livestock projects.
As a recovering 4-Her I realize the real wins for me were the lifelong friends and fabulous
adventures I was able to have on a 10 acre parcel of ground in a town far enough away that I needed to stay from chores to chores every day. I participated in competitions that weren’t a
part of my rest-of-the-year life and were also the culmination of month’s long
chores and training of animals. I got to exhibit refinishing projects that made
me a discerning buyer of furniture. I dabbled in enough creative art projects (that
my art teacher mom encouraged) to develop an appreciation for hand crafted
items and the process of creating art. I tried my hand at sewing and baking
projects. I got to choose my own market hogs and breeding and market sheep. I
gained knowledge about agriculture, food production and consumerism from my
projects. I also gained the confidence to try about anything once, because I
learned that if I failed it wasn’t the end of the world.
Aside from my love of showing hogs at the fair, I lived for
the educational presentation competitions.
It didn’t matter if it was a working or educational presentation, I
loved participating and working with people to share knowledge about something.
I did presentations on everything from cream cheese mints with a club mate and
how to make homemade root beer with a friend from another club in my county to
one on the beef industry in Iowa and projects like marbleizing paper and other
crafts. I should have figured out from
how much I enjoyed working presentations that vocational education was a
passion of mine, but there weren’t many female ag educators in the late 80’s
and early 90’s to look to and I didn’t see how my love for my hog and sheep
projects and agriculture were tied to what we called home economics at the time.
Of all the presentations that I did, my first one was the
one that lives on in our family. I was a
nervous first year 4-Her, wanting to keep up with my older sibling’s success.
Thankfully mom was willing and able to help get me organized early in the
summer. I thought long and hard about
what I wanted to make in front of a crowd.
I was sure I wanted to do something cooking, because I would catch Julia
Child and Chen Can Cook on our IPTV station and cooking seemed like the perfect
thing to do. I didn’t have a very deep
set of recipes that I could make unassisted with consistent success, but I did
have a good banana bread recipe that our family liked.
I made that recipe two times a week in the month leading up
to fair. I still could eat banana bread
by the time I exhibited that bread as a static exhibit and did my
presentation. I did very well the day of
the presentation, and since I couldn’t exhibit as a first year Junior 4-her at
the State Fair in August, the judge elected to send me to present at the Clay County
Fair.
My fair was the third week in July. The Clay County Fair was the second week in
September. I continued to make banana
bread at least weekly to keep my presentation up to practice. The recipe made two loaves of bread. As we got closer to the fair, I’m pretty sure
the neighbors were getting as sick of banana bread as I was. By the time I presented at Clay County I
could barely stand the smell of banana bread and couldn’t get a bite past my
mouth.
I still remember presenting at the Clay County Fair. It was the one event that I participated in that both of my grandmothers were able to be at. I lost one of those grandmas not long after that presentation and I treasure the picture I have of both of them with me in an auditorium that smelled like autumn. Just behind us was my Godfather holding a loaf of banana bread that was baked in the toaster oven. He held it so you couldn't see it had a burned top from hitting the roof of the oven as it baked.
I still remember presenting at the Clay County Fair. It was the one event that I participated in that both of my grandmothers were able to be at. I lost one of those grandmas not long after that presentation and I treasure the picture I have of both of them with me in an auditorium that smelled like autumn. Just behind us was my Godfather holding a loaf of banana bread that was baked in the toaster oven. He held it so you couldn't see it had a burned top from hitting the roof of the oven as it baked.
I’m in my 40’s now and I usually pass when offered banana
bread, but my husband and kids enjoy it so I make it from time to time. It works well with frozen bananas or fresh
ripe ones.
Note: If you are going to freeze
the bananas I would recommend mashing them before freezing and then freeze the baggie flat so it is easier to defrost in the microwave to use in the recipe.
The groceries...
1 Cup Sugar2 Cup Flour
1/2 teaspoon Salt
1 teaspoon Baking Soda
2 eggs
3 Tablespoon Milk
3 Mashed, very ripe bananas
1/2 Cup Margarine, melty
1/2 Cup chopped nuts, optional
The Process...
Preheat the oven to 350 degrees and grease a large loaf pan.
Combine all the
ingredients in a bowl and barely blend them together.
Bake for 1 hour or until
a knife inserted comes out clean.
Butter the crust when
done and let sit for 10 minutes before running a knife around the edge of the
pan to help loosen it before turning it out.
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