When Sharon and I were young, we spent many summers with our maternal grandparents, Granny and Papa, in Panama City, Florida. We loved going to their house for a lot of reasons, not least because they had cable television (we never did) and could watch Nickelodeon and such classics as Rugrats, Doug, and Salute Your Shorts. But we particularly enjoyed our visits because our grandparents were like grown up children. My grandmother has a decorative pillow that says, “Grandmothers are just antique little girls.” How true this was.
They took us to Shipwreck Island water park and Miracle Strip amusement park. We went to Saint Andrew’s State Park for picnics and the beach. We went fishing, boating and swimming in their neighbor’s pool. We got ice cream, tried on mom’s wedding dress (every year) and played with her antique Barbies. One year they even took us on the Big Red Boat, a Disney cruise. Life was pretty sweet when we were with Granny and Papa.
Especially the food. Good Southern “soul food,” my Granny calls it. We were good sports when we were kids, we’d eat just about anything mom put in front of us, but at Granny and Papa’s house – we loved everything they made. Of course Papa was a grill master, particularly with ribs and his famous Lemon Chicken. Granny made chicken and dumplings, pot roast, chicken tortilla casserole, fried fish and hushpuppies, southern-style vegetables, cornbread, coconut cake, chocolate pie and our favorite: Dirt Dessert (ground Oreos made the “dirt”), complete with gummy worms.
At Granny and Papa’s we got to drink soda and sweet tea by the gallon and eat potato chips from the bag. It was a food free-for-all for kids who were fed three healthy squares a day and just two cookies in the lunchbox. My poor mother: she worked so hard to give us a balanced diet, just for her parents to spoil us rotten. But that’s what grandparents are for.
By far the greatest delicacy was Granny’s Banana Pudding. An amazing Southern classic, I could have eaten an entire bowl. A few years ago, I asked Granny if she would write down the recipe for me. She pointed to the side of the Nilla Wafers box. Okay, so it’s not an heirloom family recipe, but it’s a wonderful dessert and it will forever remind me of my Granny and Papa and those blissful summers in Florida.
smartcat says
Wonderful memories…love the pic of the wedding gown. I too have memories of banana pudding and was equally surprised to find it on the side of the box!
Amy says
Cuuuute pictures! They sound like the best kind of grandparents.
Pam says
And I’m grateful for parents who did exactly as they did–spoil you rotten! And watch out. I consider my parents good role models on the grandparent front.
BTW, we did change the banana pudding recipe a little, using whipped cream instead of meringue. It’s a little simpler–you don’t have to bake it–and it’s sooo good.
Debbie Phillips says
There’s no way I can restrain myself on this post. I grew up in PC with your mom, though a few years older, & our families shared many of the above mentioned foods at church events/outings, each others homes, including, lots of raw oysters. 🙂 Yes, you do have wonderful grandparents who in my memories were indeed very sweet, thoughtful, great cooks, FUN, & always up for adventure. Ditto on the banana pudding. I like the whipped cream idea, too.
Amy says
Love them both. I can’t wait to visit with them next week.
Teri Dingler says
I think the bonding process is what also made it special – my husband and I have taken our grandkids for the past 10 years on “Kuzins Kamp” for the weekend – different places and different adventures – no parents allowed! Wonderful adventures, memories, food binges, acting silly, and enjoying them and them enjoying us! What great times we have preserved!!!! Your memories are priceless! Thanks for sharing!
shari says
I’m grateful for grandparents right now too… but not my grandparents, but rather my parents….. the grandparents of my boys. My boys are 2 & 5 years old and love love love their Grandma & Papa who have introduced them to juice, chocolate milk, and bologna, 3 things I will not keep in the house. Culinary giants they are not, but the boys love going there and have their “treats.” Lol. I love when they go to see their grandparents so I can sleep, read, clean and sleep some more!
susan says
Loved the story and the great pics, Maggy. What great memories! Living in the south, Banana Pudding is very popular but the made from scratch kind? I think I can get lost in it!!
zelda says
I was wondering if you’d ever post your chicken and dumpling recipe…..Thanks Zelda