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Christmas Traditions
Preface / Introduction

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Table of Contents
1. On the subject of candles, why women buy them, why men don't... and why, having read this
article, you'll stock up.
2. On Figs.
3. Of plums, their sweetness, politics, and the eternal desire for more.
Christmas Traditions


On the subject of candles, why women buy them, why men
don't... and why, having read this article, you'll stock up.
By Dr. Jeffrey Lant
Author's program note. It has long been my contention and pet belief that we denizens of Spaceship
Earth, for all the formal education we've had, know next to nothing not just about our particular
planet and our very own solar system... we know little or nothing (but think quite differently) about
the hundreds of things that we see constantly, use frequently and have known about since
conception. We may know the names of these things, all these things, but what we know beyond that
is superficial, cursory... and more often than not, wrong.
Being the Good Samaritan I am, I often write about common things that we think we know, but
don't. Today this burgeoning tradition takes on another item known to all, known to none. It's the
candle.
For the incidental music for today's article, my friend Graham Lee said I couldn't do better than
Elton John's "Candle in the Wind" (1973) Many others would concur with Graham's
recommendation... but I do so without great enthusiasm. Elton's lyrics are too often glib and banal.
As for his characterization of Marilyn Monroe, it is insipid, factually wrong and willfully
misleading.. Otherwise, I like it as much as Graham.
Still, he managed to garner a knighthood (the all important "k") for his additional too sweet lyrics
about Diana, Princess of Wales, and if he's good enough for Her Majesty, he's good enough (just
barely) for me. Find it in any search engine and play it as you read this article. I promise to
illuminate this subject.
Candles I have known (at least superficially).
Like most middle class Americans I have had more than a nodding acquaintance with candles since
birth. My birthday cakes were adorned with the requisite number. These were promptly blown out in
the prescribed manner, after suffering through the annual rendering of "Happy Birthday," a
sophomoric and irritating little ditty that accompanies you through life, your whole life, without
surcease. If you have any sense at all, you come to detest it and all the well-meaning morons (let's be
honest with each other) who sing it at the drop of a hat, at the top of their voice, no matter where you
happen to be.
Still, I have now in my possession a photograph from my third birthday in 1950. I was adorable. The
candles look good, too.
I next recall another jolly holiday, Christmas. In those days and in ours, candles were always a part
of the exuberant decoration which always marked this season. As every decorator knows (and
writers, too, of once-called "women's" magazines), candles are cheap (let's not mince words), and
they do (so sayeth Martha Stewart and her ilk) spruce up and up market any home quickly, easily,
and with instant effect. This is why fully 35% of candle sales are made for Christmas and the season.
We want our homes to be festive... for pennies. It's an admirable objective, and candles certainly
help us achieve it.
More candle recollections.
If candles add their distinctive (and stylish) look to the holidays, they can in the right object turn a
sow's ear into a silk purse. At least this was the case with Liberace. The man owed everything
(except the love his doting mother lavished on her Lee) to a few candles, a pair of second-hand
candelabra he found in a thrift store, and (again complete honesty is required by my professional

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Christmas Traditions

canons) a quite mediocre rendering of any classical tune the audience knew, starting with "Bolero"
and ending with -- "Bolero".
More, and still more, memorable encounters with candles.
Candles, you surely see now, play a significant role in my life specifically and my huge extended
family, generally. Since this is undeniable, I hasten to tell you a confirmatory anecdote. It concerned
my cousin Carolyn's eighth grade graduation from parochial school. My grand mother (a low church
Episcopalian at her highest) was perforce invited to the event... and reluctantly attended. It was the
days of mummery and Pius XII in the See of Rome and Grammie expected -- and got -- the worst. It
happened as cousin Carolyn, always at her most deceptive in white (ask her poor hubbie),marched
dutifully down the aisle holding a white (what else?) votive candle. Each of her now sanctified
classmates did the same... When Grammie saw white clothed cousin so attired, never mind the
candle, she blurted out, in church no less, "I need a drink."
The Protestant side of the family retired to a Howard Johnson's restaurant (and bar) where Grammie
ordered a grass hopper. It was the only time I ever saw her lose her cool, order a grass hopper (and
perhaps a second) and utter sotto voce maledictions against The Eternal City. What percentage the
offending candles had in creating this havoc, I cannot say, although I did enjoy the mayhem
immensely.
Utilitarian candles, a rare beauty.
On one memorable day in the late 50's after a storm had pulverized the power grid, we were, the
entire town, literally left in the dark. Candles rightly stand tall in such inconveniencing moments as
this. And so it was with us. We had, good Midwesteners that we were, a cache of candles, some new,
some used (including a disgraced overly green candle my mother had banished from the dining
table). With its slender elegance it looked forlorn and out of place with the more work-a-day
candles. The entire family set about the business of rendering "Fiat lux" in candlepower. The final
result was both practical and eye-catching. We were proud of our handiwork and condescending
about the fact our neighbors were nowhere near as well prepared as we were.
Such an attitude, of course, is only possible because of the continuing usefulness of candles which is,
after all, why I wrote this article in the first place. This usefulness has been used to lift the darkness
for over 5,000 years now. Like so many things, it started in Rome (though ancient Egypt has its
partisans, too.) Still, Rome makes sense doesn't it?
When you rule the largest empire in the world, there just aren't enough hours in the day. Rulers
always need extra time. The candle, therefore, was needed yesterday and was popular at once,
among Roman men who ruled the empire and their wives who ruled them.
These wives, stern and practical, had the running of large establishments, and they relied on candles
to keep them running day and night. Men relied on candles; women either made them... or, in due
course, purchased them. And so began the romance of women and candles which continues to this
very day.
Most men, clueless, know nothing of this perennial alliance and mutual admiration society, and
almost immediately err... and never ever get their equilibrium back. You may guess at the secret joy
of women from such a situation. Which is why I offer all men this crucial admonition: whatever gift
you give make sure it contains the necessary candles, tall, elegant, chic. Inform her ladyship that
you, her obedient servant, will unpack, position, and light them, making sure the wick burns clean.
... And remember, as the old Chinese proverb says, "It is better to light just one little candle than to
curse the darkness." If you do not follow my fraternal advice, you will most surely come to find its
veracity, for without candles, you will surely come to know the lady's ability to cast you unto utter

http://www.LizsWorldprofit.com                      Copyright Elizabeth English - 2012             5 of 13
Christmas Traditions

darkness, where you will need a candle... but will not have one. The Sisterhood will see to that.




http://www.LizsWorldprofit.com                    Copyright Elizabeth English - 2012            6 of 13
Christmas Traditions


On Figs.
by Dr. Jeffrey Lant
Author's Program Note. Tommy at the Montrose Spa up the street was in a pother when I walked in
the other day. "Where have you been?", he blurted out. Clearly, I had done something or, more
accurately, failed to do something, but what? Tommy's index finger pointed at my dereliction. It was
a box of Mission Figs. "I got three boxes of them a couple days ago," he said. "And I thought sure
you would have come in and snatched them up."
He positively pouted, his point irrefutable... I was, after all, his absolute best fig customer. I got the
last box (for the day) and made my point, too. "You could have called me..." Oh, yes, he should
have... but in the event, the figs in question went precisely where they were destined to go, "Down
the hatch."
Fig Newtons
My first encounter with the fig I devour with avidity and the greatest possible satisfaction was not
felicitous. Quite the reverse. For you see, I have always hated Fig Newtons and nothing you say to
me will change my adamant mind. So don't even try. Still, as this is an article about figs mention
must be made of Nabisco, which buys as many figs as anyone, only to waste them by baking a
trademarked version of the ancient fig roll pastry filled with fig paste.
It might as well be wallpaper paste as otherwise; they taste about the same. Still, since invented by
Philadelphia baker and self-proclaimed fig lover Charles Roser in 1891, its characteristic chewiness
has been a staple of school lunch boxes as has its unusual shape. And yes, in the interests of civic
boosterism I feel bound to tell you that the Cambridgeport, Massachusetts-based Kennedy Biscuit
Company purchased the Roser recipe. As I am writing to you near Cambridgeport, I feel compelled
to tell you. What's more because I can never give too many encomia to my city, state, and
neighborhood you are now being told these unappetizing "Newtons" were named after Newton,
Mass, just down the road a piece. Thus, I have done my duty. But never, ever ask me to eat a Fig
Newton or change my lifelong opinion that the cookie is an abomination and a colossal waste of
otherwise delectable figs.
"I don't care a fig about that."
Have your heard this age-old expression? It means that your level of interest is so low in the the
matter under discussion it hardly signifies at all. But I am sure that doesn't apply to the fig itself. I
am certain you do care a fig about the fig and desire to know absolutely everything about it, and so I
am about to dramatically increase your knowledge of Ficus, a genus of about 850 species of woody
trees. The common fig (and the adjective nettles this most popular of Ficus tree) is called Ficus
carica. Make a note of it. These things count in life.
Ficus carica is native to the Middle East. People developing an instant affinity for figs took them on
their travels. Soon they were everywhere from Portugal to Afghanistan. People of acutely different
cultural and political views found themselves united in their love of figs. Amity must start
somewhere. From the 15th century onwards it was grown in areas including Northern Europe and the
New World. This had two important results.
First, Europeans, especially the English, turned mere figs into culinary perfection. Each Christmas
their figgy puddings became sinfully delicious architectural monuments, the grander you ordered,
the higher your social standing (and likelihood for gout and other conditions of the well-to-do.) Figs
were Introduced into England by Cardinal Reginald Pole. Burnt at the stake in 1558, he may have
been the first notable to grill figs, a delicacy. Yes, figs were moving in the highest society including

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Christmas Traditions

a featured position in a particularly rambunctious Christmas carol, "We wish you a Merry
Christmas". The important and lyric line as far as figs are concerned is this: "Now bring us some
figgy pudding/And bring it right here", and people did as they were bade. Delicious.
The second result occurred when figs landed in California. It was a match made in heaven, facilitated
by Fra Junipero Serra (d. 1784), the man who more than anyone was responsible for the quaint little
missions. Thus we may call him the officiating agent in the marriage between the sweet taste of
luscious figs and the unmatched agricultural land and climate of the Golden State. The padres
savored the figs and no doubt ate more than was good for them; (figs are like that.) And so Mission
Figs were born... thereby provoking the great debate between the figs that grew in Cyprus ("the
original") and those caressed by the goddess Cali. Which was truly superior? Now lest you say you
don't care a fig about this, I tell you this: figs no less than the rest of us bicker about their position in
life... and there isn't a fig grown who will tell you ca sera sera. The competition is real and each side
aims to win.
Me, judge.
I am one of the few people you will ever meet who has indulged himself, copiously, ravenously, not
wisely but too well, with both claimants. Because I lived in California from1962; (in Nuestra Senora
la Reina de Los Angeles, one of Serra's most dubious achievements) I disdained the local figs (for
all their glorious aspects). People are like that, overlooking perfection merely because it is readily
available. And thus I began my love affaire with figs in Cyprus, the place my long-ago Crusader
ancestors found refuge at the de Lusignan Court after being summarily ejected from the Holy Land
they conquered and misunderstood.
It did not take much of a leap to imagine that my devout but unlucky kinsmen made themselves as
comfortable as possible in the harbor at Limassol and buying a heaping basket of figs for a pittance
proceeded to spend a glorious afternoon devouring its contents, spitting stems into the cerulean
beauty of the Mediterranean. It was not a bad way to spend centuries of exile. Perhaps the figs,
exclusively local produce, helped make it all bearable, la dolce far niente being some small
consolation for the now lost Via Dolorosa tread by Our Saviour and promising believers eternal life
and redemption. Figs offer their own sweet balm... and we must take it as we can.
Celebrity fig eaters.
The argument for preferment of Cyprus figs over their succulent California rivals goes like this. Not
only are we the original deal, but we have been chosen and then eaten by an almost unbelievable
cadre of VERY Important People. Here learned figs wax encyclopedic as they recall their celebrated
eaters through the ages and the daunting array of figgy references, viz. The Holy Bible, in the
Garden of Eden (where figs are rightly put out by the fact that their goodness is overshadowed for
eternity by the egregious apple).This opinion is shared by every fig, outraged by injustice. Modest
by nature, figs consider it only fitting and proper that their foliage, in the form of a leaf, should be
used to perplex and shield youngsters of tender age, whose first baffling question to parents is: what
did you do with your leaf, Mama? It is an almost unanswerable query.
The figs of Cyprus are renowned throughout the mythological, classical and historic records. How
they were used in the Jewish Passover celebration... how the legendary founders of the Eternal City
and its empire, Romulus and Remus, were suckled by a she-wolf under a fig tree. (She-wolf milk
being difficult to gather, the wolves seeing no reason to share, this notable figgy cocktail did not
catch on.) How Siddhartha Gautama, the Buddha, sat under a fig tree (apparently a popular past time
for historic figures) and changed the world. It is not recorded whether he ate of this fruit. We can
only hope he did, for millions depend on his own well-being and a mental clarity enhanced by figs .
Cleopatra, some figs, and an asp.

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Christmas Traditions

Learned figs, the most numerous kind, all know that Egypt's iconic Queen Cleopatra deprived
young Octavian Caesar of her body and renown by the simple expedient of placing an asp in a
basket of ripened figs, pinching the serpent which retaliated by biting her majesty and ruining the
figs. (Shakespeare is graphic on this revolting fact.) Perhaps for this reason concoctions involving
asps and figs have been rare.
"The fig is a secretive fruit."
Figs are not a prudish fruit. They pride themselves on their liberality of outlook, truly fruit of the
world. But even advanced figs still dance gingerly around the matter of D.H. Lawrence's 1920
success de scandale, "Figs".
"The fig is a secretive fruit. As you see it standing growing, you feel at once it is symbolic; And it
seems male. But when you come to know it better, you agree with the Romans, it is feminine."
You need a fig leaf for the remainder and a place no one can find you whilst reading.
Beside this wealth of imagery, literary references and the known dietary preferences of gods and
princes, Cali offers only one argument for its Mission Figs: unrivalled taste. And this, as Tommy
knew, will always be paramount... which was the reason he should have called me forthwith, figs
not yet on the counter. I would have bargained for the lot and thanked Lawrence for telling me how
to eat them.
"Just to put your mouth to the crack, and take out the flesh in one bite.
Envoi.
Before going to Tommy's today to see if there are Mission Figs available, if so pouncing to get all
that he has, I recommend as the music for this article "Liaisons" from Stephen Sondheim's splendid
1973 show "A Little Night Music." Find it in any search engine. Hermione Ginggold is perfectly
ancient, world-weary and sardonic as Madame Armfeldt. Her disgust at the descending standards of
contemporary life is palpable. "What once was a sumptuous feast is figs. No -- not even figs --
raisins!" And that simply won't do.




http://www.LizsWorldprofit.com                      Copyright Elizabeth English - 2012             9 of 13
Christmas Traditions


Of plums, their sweetness, politics, and the eternal desire for
more.
by Dr. Jeffrey Lant
Author's program note. I decided to walk to the Farmer's Market yesterday; usually I ask Mister
Joseph to drive me, the better to bring home the excessive armloads of produce I need to feel I have
enough. But the weather, on the cusp between a summer exiting and a fall arriving, was perfect for
something ambulatory and good for you.
Yes, it was a perfect day to be out and about.... and the way to the market hard by the Charles Hotel
was packed with everyone and his brother, folks who had the same idea as I did: to prepare
squirrel-like for the rigorous winter ahead... never mind that every morsel I purchased this day
would be long gone before the first flake of snow hits the pavement. It's the thought that counts, that
there would be enough, that I would have enough, and that this winter there should be, for me and
mine at least, an ample sufficiency.
It is most curious to me how this process works. One minute it is a hot, stiffling New England
summer day... then, as if by magic, there is a whiff of the New England autumn ahead with its
preview of gusts and dismay about the return of the winter that tests us all so sorely, the more so if
Social Security is your metier. This touch of autumn is Nature's wake-up call... and, unless you are
clueless on such matters, you get the point and do the necessary. Thus I was walking to the Market
with a friend who said, "I knew I should have worn my sweater." He really didn't need it... but
Nature's clues resonate more with some than others. Moreover since he is not of hardy stock, he
needs a call more clarion than I do. And he got it.
"Done for the season, sir."
Last week there were white peaches, blueberries and a few blackberries, too. I asked how long the
fabulous whites, an exquisite liquor in a soft skin, would last. The young woman behind the counter,
overly plump and too young to catch her breath as often as she does, was cavalier. "We'll have them
for another month at least." But today, just a few days after her confident pronouncement, there were
no whites to be had, no more to come, and so I was disgruntled. The only white peaches now were in
my head with many a long day to pine for them and wish them sooner here....
But when God, they say, closes a door, He opens a window. And that was nothing but the truth this
day... for there before me was a deep purpled fruit I had, in my lamentation for the whites, forgotten.
But the fruit had not forgotten me. "Try the plums, sir. They're oozing and ready to pop in your
mouth. No waiting!" Thus the young woman, who any 18th century English novelist would have
correctly described as a "saucy wench", thereby in some measure regained the good opinion of
Yours Truly... and so, by the merest touch, I confirmed her evaluation... eyes engaged for color...
fingers to test for perfect readiness... only mouth yet to call into action... and that, once
accomplished, lead to a dozen ready to take home and devour without ceremony.
And so with the plum I had regained my equanimity and good cheer. I knew exactly how Little Jack
Horner must have felt when he, plumless one minute and chagrined, had by deft digital movement
extracted a beauty from his Christmas pie. Plums have been coming to the rescue just like this for
centuries and so boys like Jack "Sitting in the Chimney-corner" know that a single plum at just the
right moment can make a world of difference and that old grannies should be reminded of this
whenever the world is too much with us, late and soon.
Facts about plums.


http://www.LizsWorldprofit.com                    Copyright Elizabeth English - 2012            10 of 13
Christmas Traditions

A plum or gage is a stone fruit tree in the genus Prunus. It is a diverse group of species including
peaches, cherries and bird cherries, amongst others. Prunus is distinguished from its relations
because its shoots have a terminal bud and solitary side buds (not clustered), with flowers in groups
of one to five together on short stems, and the fruit having a groove running down one side and a
smooth stone (or pit.)
Mature plum fruit may have a dusty-white coating that gives them a glaucous appearance; this is
easily rubbed off. This is an epicuticular wax coating and is known as "wax bloom". Dried plum
fruits are called dried plums or prunes, although prunes are a distinct type of plum and may have
antedated the fruits now commonly known as plums... but universally regarded as the best.
Plum: the best part of anything.
You have only to eat a plum to understand why they are regarded as "good". But you need to know
something of its long history and association with mankind to understand why the very word itself
has passed into our language meaning "the best part of anything," for to call a thing "plum" is to call
it the very best it can be. The question is, how to put this "bestness" to work for our greatest
pleasures.
Uses for plums.
Plum fruit tastes sweet and/or tart. The skin, for instance, may be particularly tart. It is juicy and can
be eaten fresh or used in jam-making. Plum juice can be fermented into plum wine; when distilled
this produces a brandy known in Eastern Europe as Rakia. In the English Midlands, a cider-like
alcoholic beverage known as plum jerkum is prized.
In considering how plums are used you must remember that refrigeration is a very recent
development in human history. One feature very much in the plums favor is that it dries well and
keeps its flavor. Dried plums (called prunes) are sweet, juicy, and contain several antioxidants.
They're widely known for their laxative effect, particularly with elderly people suffering from
constipation. How to handle this aspect of what the prune can do has produced sharp disagreement
among plums, all of whom have an opinion on the matter.
On the one hand, plums are glad to be helpful, especially to old folks who have eaten plums and
been loyal to them for a lifetime. On the other hand, plums wish to develop their reputation for being
a celebrity fruit, edgy, cool, the favorite of trend-setters and calorie conscious fashionistas. This
split, so distressing to plum lovers everywhere, after many acrimonious years now seems on the road
to reconciliation thanks to recent developments in a thing which initially wasn't a plum at all... sugar
plums.
"Visions of sugar plums danced in their heads".
A sugar plum is a piece of drage'e candy that is made of dried fruits and shaped in a small round or
oval shape. But "plums" here mean any dried fruit, such as dried figs, dried apricots, dried dates,
dried cherries, etc. The dried fruit is chopped fine and combined with chopped almonds, honey and
aromatic spices, such as anise seed, fennel seed, cardamom etc.; then rolled into balls, to be coated
in sugar or shredded coconut, thence to go into expectant mouths and such gems of our culture as "
'Twas the Night Before Christmas" (1822) ; Eugene Field's poem "The Sugar Plum Tree" (from
"Poems of Childhood", 1904) and, of course, Tchaikovsky's masterpiece "The Nutcracker" (1892)
where the Sugar Plum fairies and their brilliant theme still enchant despite being egregiously
overplayed every Christmas. (Even some plums concur). As for the plums, every time they hear it,
they get angry... for their name and flavorful renown have been usurped to sell... apricots! And
cherries! And that will never do.
Check your sugar plums... make sure there are plums there. Accept no substitutions.

http://www.LizsWorldprofit.com                     Copyright Elizabeth English - 2012             11 of 13
Christmas Traditions

Since launching this campaign, plum sales have soared... and plums, gathering to extol themselves
upon this success, have forwarded any number of additional ideas to keep the ball rolling. The best is
to rework Jack Horner's presentation. Abercrombie and Fitch has been approached for one of their
comely lads to hold a strategically placed plum... and nothing more. Kinky.
The Plum Book.
No story on the plums and their great reputation would be complete without a reference to what
automatically becomes the most popular book in Washington, D.C. the minute the television
networks project the next President. Its actual name is "United States Government Policy and
Supporting Positions"; it is, however, universally called "The Plum Book." It contains over 9,000
civil service leadership and support positions (filled and vacant) in the Legislative and Executive
branches of the Federal Government that may be subject to noncompetitive appointments, in other
words political appointments.
Are you of an upwardly mobile and competitive disposition? Then imagine this: whilst scanning The
Plum Book for something geared to your genius, you nibble an authentic sugar plum whilst listening
to the great melodies of the sugar plum fairies. If you're a plum lover it gets no better than this... go
to any search engine now and, with Tchaikovsky's help and an appointment from the president turn
today into Christmas, the plum itself in all its manifestations the best present of all.




http://www.LizsWorldprofit.com                    Copyright Elizabeth English - 2012             12 of 13
Christmas Traditions


Resource
About the Author Harvard-educated Dr. Jeffrey Lant is CEO of Worldprofit, Inc., providing a wide
range of online services for small and-home based businesses. Dr. Lant is also the author of 18
best-selling business books.
Republished with author's permission by Elizabeth English http://LizsWorldprofit.com.




http://www.LizsWorldprofit.com                 Copyright Elizabeth English - 2012         13 of 13

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Christmas Traditions

  • 2. Preface / Introduction @~~~>The LAST Time I Made This OFFER I was BURIED in calls so I am limiting this to the NEXT 5 PEOPLE ONLY CALL ME NOW - don't miss out! CALL ME NOW for your FREE Internet marketing consultation. $100 value. Let an expert show you RIGHT NOW how to profit online every single day without leaving home. CALL ME -- Liz English -- NOW, (315) 668-1591. LIVE 24/7/365.
  • 3. Table of Contents 1. On the subject of candles, why women buy them, why men don't... and why, having read this article, you'll stock up. 2. On Figs. 3. Of plums, their sweetness, politics, and the eternal desire for more.
  • 4. Christmas Traditions On the subject of candles, why women buy them, why men don't... and why, having read this article, you'll stock up. By Dr. Jeffrey Lant Author's program note. It has long been my contention and pet belief that we denizens of Spaceship Earth, for all the formal education we've had, know next to nothing not just about our particular planet and our very own solar system... we know little or nothing (but think quite differently) about the hundreds of things that we see constantly, use frequently and have known about since conception. We may know the names of these things, all these things, but what we know beyond that is superficial, cursory... and more often than not, wrong. Being the Good Samaritan I am, I often write about common things that we think we know, but don't. Today this burgeoning tradition takes on another item known to all, known to none. It's the candle. For the incidental music for today's article, my friend Graham Lee said I couldn't do better than Elton John's "Candle in the Wind" (1973) Many others would concur with Graham's recommendation... but I do so without great enthusiasm. Elton's lyrics are too often glib and banal. As for his characterization of Marilyn Monroe, it is insipid, factually wrong and willfully misleading.. Otherwise, I like it as much as Graham. Still, he managed to garner a knighthood (the all important "k") for his additional too sweet lyrics about Diana, Princess of Wales, and if he's good enough for Her Majesty, he's good enough (just barely) for me. Find it in any search engine and play it as you read this article. I promise to illuminate this subject. Candles I have known (at least superficially). Like most middle class Americans I have had more than a nodding acquaintance with candles since birth. My birthday cakes were adorned with the requisite number. These were promptly blown out in the prescribed manner, after suffering through the annual rendering of "Happy Birthday," a sophomoric and irritating little ditty that accompanies you through life, your whole life, without surcease. If you have any sense at all, you come to detest it and all the well-meaning morons (let's be honest with each other) who sing it at the drop of a hat, at the top of their voice, no matter where you happen to be. Still, I have now in my possession a photograph from my third birthday in 1950. I was adorable. The candles look good, too. I next recall another jolly holiday, Christmas. In those days and in ours, candles were always a part of the exuberant decoration which always marked this season. As every decorator knows (and writers, too, of once-called "women's" magazines), candles are cheap (let's not mince words), and they do (so sayeth Martha Stewart and her ilk) spruce up and up market any home quickly, easily, and with instant effect. This is why fully 35% of candle sales are made for Christmas and the season. We want our homes to be festive... for pennies. It's an admirable objective, and candles certainly help us achieve it. More candle recollections. If candles add their distinctive (and stylish) look to the holidays, they can in the right object turn a sow's ear into a silk purse. At least this was the case with Liberace. The man owed everything (except the love his doting mother lavished on her Lee) to a few candles, a pair of second-hand candelabra he found in a thrift store, and (again complete honesty is required by my professional http://www.LizsWorldprofit.com Copyright Elizabeth English - 2012 4 of 13
  • 5. Christmas Traditions canons) a quite mediocre rendering of any classical tune the audience knew, starting with "Bolero" and ending with -- "Bolero". More, and still more, memorable encounters with candles. Candles, you surely see now, play a significant role in my life specifically and my huge extended family, generally. Since this is undeniable, I hasten to tell you a confirmatory anecdote. It concerned my cousin Carolyn's eighth grade graduation from parochial school. My grand mother (a low church Episcopalian at her highest) was perforce invited to the event... and reluctantly attended. It was the days of mummery and Pius XII in the See of Rome and Grammie expected -- and got -- the worst. It happened as cousin Carolyn, always at her most deceptive in white (ask her poor hubbie),marched dutifully down the aisle holding a white (what else?) votive candle. Each of her now sanctified classmates did the same... When Grammie saw white clothed cousin so attired, never mind the candle, she blurted out, in church no less, "I need a drink." The Protestant side of the family retired to a Howard Johnson's restaurant (and bar) where Grammie ordered a grass hopper. It was the only time I ever saw her lose her cool, order a grass hopper (and perhaps a second) and utter sotto voce maledictions against The Eternal City. What percentage the offending candles had in creating this havoc, I cannot say, although I did enjoy the mayhem immensely. Utilitarian candles, a rare beauty. On one memorable day in the late 50's after a storm had pulverized the power grid, we were, the entire town, literally left in the dark. Candles rightly stand tall in such inconveniencing moments as this. And so it was with us. We had, good Midwesteners that we were, a cache of candles, some new, some used (including a disgraced overly green candle my mother had banished from the dining table). With its slender elegance it looked forlorn and out of place with the more work-a-day candles. The entire family set about the business of rendering "Fiat lux" in candlepower. The final result was both practical and eye-catching. We were proud of our handiwork and condescending about the fact our neighbors were nowhere near as well prepared as we were. Such an attitude, of course, is only possible because of the continuing usefulness of candles which is, after all, why I wrote this article in the first place. This usefulness has been used to lift the darkness for over 5,000 years now. Like so many things, it started in Rome (though ancient Egypt has its partisans, too.) Still, Rome makes sense doesn't it? When you rule the largest empire in the world, there just aren't enough hours in the day. Rulers always need extra time. The candle, therefore, was needed yesterday and was popular at once, among Roman men who ruled the empire and their wives who ruled them. These wives, stern and practical, had the running of large establishments, and they relied on candles to keep them running day and night. Men relied on candles; women either made them... or, in due course, purchased them. And so began the romance of women and candles which continues to this very day. Most men, clueless, know nothing of this perennial alliance and mutual admiration society, and almost immediately err... and never ever get their equilibrium back. You may guess at the secret joy of women from such a situation. Which is why I offer all men this crucial admonition: whatever gift you give make sure it contains the necessary candles, tall, elegant, chic. Inform her ladyship that you, her obedient servant, will unpack, position, and light them, making sure the wick burns clean. ... And remember, as the old Chinese proverb says, "It is better to light just one little candle than to curse the darkness." If you do not follow my fraternal advice, you will most surely come to find its veracity, for without candles, you will surely come to know the lady's ability to cast you unto utter http://www.LizsWorldprofit.com Copyright Elizabeth English - 2012 5 of 13
  • 6. Christmas Traditions darkness, where you will need a candle... but will not have one. The Sisterhood will see to that. http://www.LizsWorldprofit.com Copyright Elizabeth English - 2012 6 of 13
  • 7. Christmas Traditions On Figs. by Dr. Jeffrey Lant Author's Program Note. Tommy at the Montrose Spa up the street was in a pother when I walked in the other day. "Where have you been?", he blurted out. Clearly, I had done something or, more accurately, failed to do something, but what? Tommy's index finger pointed at my dereliction. It was a box of Mission Figs. "I got three boxes of them a couple days ago," he said. "And I thought sure you would have come in and snatched them up." He positively pouted, his point irrefutable... I was, after all, his absolute best fig customer. I got the last box (for the day) and made my point, too. "You could have called me..." Oh, yes, he should have... but in the event, the figs in question went precisely where they were destined to go, "Down the hatch." Fig Newtons My first encounter with the fig I devour with avidity and the greatest possible satisfaction was not felicitous. Quite the reverse. For you see, I have always hated Fig Newtons and nothing you say to me will change my adamant mind. So don't even try. Still, as this is an article about figs mention must be made of Nabisco, which buys as many figs as anyone, only to waste them by baking a trademarked version of the ancient fig roll pastry filled with fig paste. It might as well be wallpaper paste as otherwise; they taste about the same. Still, since invented by Philadelphia baker and self-proclaimed fig lover Charles Roser in 1891, its characteristic chewiness has been a staple of school lunch boxes as has its unusual shape. And yes, in the interests of civic boosterism I feel bound to tell you that the Cambridgeport, Massachusetts-based Kennedy Biscuit Company purchased the Roser recipe. As I am writing to you near Cambridgeport, I feel compelled to tell you. What's more because I can never give too many encomia to my city, state, and neighborhood you are now being told these unappetizing "Newtons" were named after Newton, Mass, just down the road a piece. Thus, I have done my duty. But never, ever ask me to eat a Fig Newton or change my lifelong opinion that the cookie is an abomination and a colossal waste of otherwise delectable figs. "I don't care a fig about that." Have your heard this age-old expression? It means that your level of interest is so low in the the matter under discussion it hardly signifies at all. But I am sure that doesn't apply to the fig itself. I am certain you do care a fig about the fig and desire to know absolutely everything about it, and so I am about to dramatically increase your knowledge of Ficus, a genus of about 850 species of woody trees. The common fig (and the adjective nettles this most popular of Ficus tree) is called Ficus carica. Make a note of it. These things count in life. Ficus carica is native to the Middle East. People developing an instant affinity for figs took them on their travels. Soon they were everywhere from Portugal to Afghanistan. People of acutely different cultural and political views found themselves united in their love of figs. Amity must start somewhere. From the 15th century onwards it was grown in areas including Northern Europe and the New World. This had two important results. First, Europeans, especially the English, turned mere figs into culinary perfection. Each Christmas their figgy puddings became sinfully delicious architectural monuments, the grander you ordered, the higher your social standing (and likelihood for gout and other conditions of the well-to-do.) Figs were Introduced into England by Cardinal Reginald Pole. Burnt at the stake in 1558, he may have been the first notable to grill figs, a delicacy. Yes, figs were moving in the highest society including http://www.LizsWorldprofit.com Copyright Elizabeth English - 2012 7 of 13
  • 8. Christmas Traditions a featured position in a particularly rambunctious Christmas carol, "We wish you a Merry Christmas". The important and lyric line as far as figs are concerned is this: "Now bring us some figgy pudding/And bring it right here", and people did as they were bade. Delicious. The second result occurred when figs landed in California. It was a match made in heaven, facilitated by Fra Junipero Serra (d. 1784), the man who more than anyone was responsible for the quaint little missions. Thus we may call him the officiating agent in the marriage between the sweet taste of luscious figs and the unmatched agricultural land and climate of the Golden State. The padres savored the figs and no doubt ate more than was good for them; (figs are like that.) And so Mission Figs were born... thereby provoking the great debate between the figs that grew in Cyprus ("the original") and those caressed by the goddess Cali. Which was truly superior? Now lest you say you don't care a fig about this, I tell you this: figs no less than the rest of us bicker about their position in life... and there isn't a fig grown who will tell you ca sera sera. The competition is real and each side aims to win. Me, judge. I am one of the few people you will ever meet who has indulged himself, copiously, ravenously, not wisely but too well, with both claimants. Because I lived in California from1962; (in Nuestra Senora la Reina de Los Angeles, one of Serra's most dubious achievements) I disdained the local figs (for all their glorious aspects). People are like that, overlooking perfection merely because it is readily available. And thus I began my love affaire with figs in Cyprus, the place my long-ago Crusader ancestors found refuge at the de Lusignan Court after being summarily ejected from the Holy Land they conquered and misunderstood. It did not take much of a leap to imagine that my devout but unlucky kinsmen made themselves as comfortable as possible in the harbor at Limassol and buying a heaping basket of figs for a pittance proceeded to spend a glorious afternoon devouring its contents, spitting stems into the cerulean beauty of the Mediterranean. It was not a bad way to spend centuries of exile. Perhaps the figs, exclusively local produce, helped make it all bearable, la dolce far niente being some small consolation for the now lost Via Dolorosa tread by Our Saviour and promising believers eternal life and redemption. Figs offer their own sweet balm... and we must take it as we can. Celebrity fig eaters. The argument for preferment of Cyprus figs over their succulent California rivals goes like this. Not only are we the original deal, but we have been chosen and then eaten by an almost unbelievable cadre of VERY Important People. Here learned figs wax encyclopedic as they recall their celebrated eaters through the ages and the daunting array of figgy references, viz. The Holy Bible, in the Garden of Eden (where figs are rightly put out by the fact that their goodness is overshadowed for eternity by the egregious apple).This opinion is shared by every fig, outraged by injustice. Modest by nature, figs consider it only fitting and proper that their foliage, in the form of a leaf, should be used to perplex and shield youngsters of tender age, whose first baffling question to parents is: what did you do with your leaf, Mama? It is an almost unanswerable query. The figs of Cyprus are renowned throughout the mythological, classical and historic records. How they were used in the Jewish Passover celebration... how the legendary founders of the Eternal City and its empire, Romulus and Remus, were suckled by a she-wolf under a fig tree. (She-wolf milk being difficult to gather, the wolves seeing no reason to share, this notable figgy cocktail did not catch on.) How Siddhartha Gautama, the Buddha, sat under a fig tree (apparently a popular past time for historic figures) and changed the world. It is not recorded whether he ate of this fruit. We can only hope he did, for millions depend on his own well-being and a mental clarity enhanced by figs . Cleopatra, some figs, and an asp. http://www.LizsWorldprofit.com Copyright Elizabeth English - 2012 8 of 13
  • 9. Christmas Traditions Learned figs, the most numerous kind, all know that Egypt's iconic Queen Cleopatra deprived young Octavian Caesar of her body and renown by the simple expedient of placing an asp in a basket of ripened figs, pinching the serpent which retaliated by biting her majesty and ruining the figs. (Shakespeare is graphic on this revolting fact.) Perhaps for this reason concoctions involving asps and figs have been rare. "The fig is a secretive fruit." Figs are not a prudish fruit. They pride themselves on their liberality of outlook, truly fruit of the world. But even advanced figs still dance gingerly around the matter of D.H. Lawrence's 1920 success de scandale, "Figs". "The fig is a secretive fruit. As you see it standing growing, you feel at once it is symbolic; And it seems male. But when you come to know it better, you agree with the Romans, it is feminine." You need a fig leaf for the remainder and a place no one can find you whilst reading. Beside this wealth of imagery, literary references and the known dietary preferences of gods and princes, Cali offers only one argument for its Mission Figs: unrivalled taste. And this, as Tommy knew, will always be paramount... which was the reason he should have called me forthwith, figs not yet on the counter. I would have bargained for the lot and thanked Lawrence for telling me how to eat them. "Just to put your mouth to the crack, and take out the flesh in one bite. Envoi. Before going to Tommy's today to see if there are Mission Figs available, if so pouncing to get all that he has, I recommend as the music for this article "Liaisons" from Stephen Sondheim's splendid 1973 show "A Little Night Music." Find it in any search engine. Hermione Ginggold is perfectly ancient, world-weary and sardonic as Madame Armfeldt. Her disgust at the descending standards of contemporary life is palpable. "What once was a sumptuous feast is figs. No -- not even figs -- raisins!" And that simply won't do. http://www.LizsWorldprofit.com Copyright Elizabeth English - 2012 9 of 13
  • 10. Christmas Traditions Of plums, their sweetness, politics, and the eternal desire for more. by Dr. Jeffrey Lant Author's program note. I decided to walk to the Farmer's Market yesterday; usually I ask Mister Joseph to drive me, the better to bring home the excessive armloads of produce I need to feel I have enough. But the weather, on the cusp between a summer exiting and a fall arriving, was perfect for something ambulatory and good for you. Yes, it was a perfect day to be out and about.... and the way to the market hard by the Charles Hotel was packed with everyone and his brother, folks who had the same idea as I did: to prepare squirrel-like for the rigorous winter ahead... never mind that every morsel I purchased this day would be long gone before the first flake of snow hits the pavement. It's the thought that counts, that there would be enough, that I would have enough, and that this winter there should be, for me and mine at least, an ample sufficiency. It is most curious to me how this process works. One minute it is a hot, stiffling New England summer day... then, as if by magic, there is a whiff of the New England autumn ahead with its preview of gusts and dismay about the return of the winter that tests us all so sorely, the more so if Social Security is your metier. This touch of autumn is Nature's wake-up call... and, unless you are clueless on such matters, you get the point and do the necessary. Thus I was walking to the Market with a friend who said, "I knew I should have worn my sweater." He really didn't need it... but Nature's clues resonate more with some than others. Moreover since he is not of hardy stock, he needs a call more clarion than I do. And he got it. "Done for the season, sir." Last week there were white peaches, blueberries and a few blackberries, too. I asked how long the fabulous whites, an exquisite liquor in a soft skin, would last. The young woman behind the counter, overly plump and too young to catch her breath as often as she does, was cavalier. "We'll have them for another month at least." But today, just a few days after her confident pronouncement, there were no whites to be had, no more to come, and so I was disgruntled. The only white peaches now were in my head with many a long day to pine for them and wish them sooner here.... But when God, they say, closes a door, He opens a window. And that was nothing but the truth this day... for there before me was a deep purpled fruit I had, in my lamentation for the whites, forgotten. But the fruit had not forgotten me. "Try the plums, sir. They're oozing and ready to pop in your mouth. No waiting!" Thus the young woman, who any 18th century English novelist would have correctly described as a "saucy wench", thereby in some measure regained the good opinion of Yours Truly... and so, by the merest touch, I confirmed her evaluation... eyes engaged for color... fingers to test for perfect readiness... only mouth yet to call into action... and that, once accomplished, lead to a dozen ready to take home and devour without ceremony. And so with the plum I had regained my equanimity and good cheer. I knew exactly how Little Jack Horner must have felt when he, plumless one minute and chagrined, had by deft digital movement extracted a beauty from his Christmas pie. Plums have been coming to the rescue just like this for centuries and so boys like Jack "Sitting in the Chimney-corner" know that a single plum at just the right moment can make a world of difference and that old grannies should be reminded of this whenever the world is too much with us, late and soon. Facts about plums. http://www.LizsWorldprofit.com Copyright Elizabeth English - 2012 10 of 13
  • 11. Christmas Traditions A plum or gage is a stone fruit tree in the genus Prunus. It is a diverse group of species including peaches, cherries and bird cherries, amongst others. Prunus is distinguished from its relations because its shoots have a terminal bud and solitary side buds (not clustered), with flowers in groups of one to five together on short stems, and the fruit having a groove running down one side and a smooth stone (or pit.) Mature plum fruit may have a dusty-white coating that gives them a glaucous appearance; this is easily rubbed off. This is an epicuticular wax coating and is known as "wax bloom". Dried plum fruits are called dried plums or prunes, although prunes are a distinct type of plum and may have antedated the fruits now commonly known as plums... but universally regarded as the best. Plum: the best part of anything. You have only to eat a plum to understand why they are regarded as "good". But you need to know something of its long history and association with mankind to understand why the very word itself has passed into our language meaning "the best part of anything," for to call a thing "plum" is to call it the very best it can be. The question is, how to put this "bestness" to work for our greatest pleasures. Uses for plums. Plum fruit tastes sweet and/or tart. The skin, for instance, may be particularly tart. It is juicy and can be eaten fresh or used in jam-making. Plum juice can be fermented into plum wine; when distilled this produces a brandy known in Eastern Europe as Rakia. In the English Midlands, a cider-like alcoholic beverage known as plum jerkum is prized. In considering how plums are used you must remember that refrigeration is a very recent development in human history. One feature very much in the plums favor is that it dries well and keeps its flavor. Dried plums (called prunes) are sweet, juicy, and contain several antioxidants. They're widely known for their laxative effect, particularly with elderly people suffering from constipation. How to handle this aspect of what the prune can do has produced sharp disagreement among plums, all of whom have an opinion on the matter. On the one hand, plums are glad to be helpful, especially to old folks who have eaten plums and been loyal to them for a lifetime. On the other hand, plums wish to develop their reputation for being a celebrity fruit, edgy, cool, the favorite of trend-setters and calorie conscious fashionistas. This split, so distressing to plum lovers everywhere, after many acrimonious years now seems on the road to reconciliation thanks to recent developments in a thing which initially wasn't a plum at all... sugar plums. "Visions of sugar plums danced in their heads". A sugar plum is a piece of drage'e candy that is made of dried fruits and shaped in a small round or oval shape. But "plums" here mean any dried fruit, such as dried figs, dried apricots, dried dates, dried cherries, etc. The dried fruit is chopped fine and combined with chopped almonds, honey and aromatic spices, such as anise seed, fennel seed, cardamom etc.; then rolled into balls, to be coated in sugar or shredded coconut, thence to go into expectant mouths and such gems of our culture as " 'Twas the Night Before Christmas" (1822) ; Eugene Field's poem "The Sugar Plum Tree" (from "Poems of Childhood", 1904) and, of course, Tchaikovsky's masterpiece "The Nutcracker" (1892) where the Sugar Plum fairies and their brilliant theme still enchant despite being egregiously overplayed every Christmas. (Even some plums concur). As for the plums, every time they hear it, they get angry... for their name and flavorful renown have been usurped to sell... apricots! And cherries! And that will never do. Check your sugar plums... make sure there are plums there. Accept no substitutions. http://www.LizsWorldprofit.com Copyright Elizabeth English - 2012 11 of 13
  • 12. Christmas Traditions Since launching this campaign, plum sales have soared... and plums, gathering to extol themselves upon this success, have forwarded any number of additional ideas to keep the ball rolling. The best is to rework Jack Horner's presentation. Abercrombie and Fitch has been approached for one of their comely lads to hold a strategically placed plum... and nothing more. Kinky. The Plum Book. No story on the plums and their great reputation would be complete without a reference to what automatically becomes the most popular book in Washington, D.C. the minute the television networks project the next President. Its actual name is "United States Government Policy and Supporting Positions"; it is, however, universally called "The Plum Book." It contains over 9,000 civil service leadership and support positions (filled and vacant) in the Legislative and Executive branches of the Federal Government that may be subject to noncompetitive appointments, in other words political appointments. Are you of an upwardly mobile and competitive disposition? Then imagine this: whilst scanning The Plum Book for something geared to your genius, you nibble an authentic sugar plum whilst listening to the great melodies of the sugar plum fairies. If you're a plum lover it gets no better than this... go to any search engine now and, with Tchaikovsky's help and an appointment from the president turn today into Christmas, the plum itself in all its manifestations the best present of all. http://www.LizsWorldprofit.com Copyright Elizabeth English - 2012 12 of 13
  • 13. Christmas Traditions Resource About the Author Harvard-educated Dr. Jeffrey Lant is CEO of Worldprofit, Inc., providing a wide range of online services for small and-home based businesses. Dr. Lant is also the author of 18 best-selling business books. Republished with author's permission by Elizabeth English http://LizsWorldprofit.com. http://www.LizsWorldprofit.com Copyright Elizabeth English - 2012 13 of 13