Bayram Cigerli Blog

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Scandinivian Wedding: Enchanted Castle

The Stockholm wedding photos are here!  We all got our hair done for the wedding off the main square in Landskrona.  They typically don't have large wedding parties at Swedish weddings, so I think it was quite a departure to have so many bridesmaids getting their hair done.  Here is the beautiful bride-to-be getting ready--she totally fits in as a Swede (although it was her groom that is from the area):


The wedding took place at the beautiful Orenas Castle (Orenas Slott).  We all got ready with the bride in her suite and prayed for no rain as the cloudy skies loomed out the window.





Part of the bridesmaids crew
The ceremony took place outdoors and lo and behold the skies cleared.  It took place on a grassy area with stunning backdrops on all sides, overlooking the sea on one end and the castle on the other:






The reception took place upstairs in the ballroom:
It is customary to play wedding games during the reception.

The beautiful couple

And the celebration raged on in to the early morning.


We were up bright and early for the post wedding brunch at Landskrona harbor, overlooking this beautiful view, before heading up to Stockholm and saying farewell to an unforgettable wedding weekend.







NOVEMBER 5 = Election DAAAZE!!!

Well I feel that I would be terribly remiss in my duty as an historian if I  were to completely ignore the fact that this is that election time of year!  I will just give a brief little run-down of three races that happened on today's date, November 5 in the past, to remember as you leave the voting booth for another year or two....

1872 = Ulysses S. Grant -VS- Horace Greeley

In 1872, the Republicans re-nominated President Ulysses S. Grant for President.  Grant's administration had been plagued by charges of corruption, and many of these charges were true although Grant himself was an honest man.  The decisiveness that served him so well as the commanding general of the Army of the Potomac during the Civil War deserted him in his Presidency, as he appointed many men who were incompetent, or crooked, and then stood by them for too long.  But still he was very popular as the man who defeated the Confederacy.  His opponent was the celebrated journalist and U.S. Representative from New York, Horace Greeley.  Greeley (below) is described thus by
writer Paul J. Boller Jr.: "Greeley, for all his intelligence, sincerity, idealism, and journalistic aplomb, was erratic, crotchety, unpredictable, and thoroughly incompetent in the art of politics."  On election day, today's date in 1872, at which time my great grandmother, Sarona Cooper, whom we called "Mimma" was two years old, the famous suffragette, Susan B. Anthony took the liberty of voting, for which offense she was arrested on November 18.  She would be fined $100.00. "I will never pay a dollar of your unjust penalty." she said.  She never did.  The government dropped the case.  Women were given the right to vote in 1920, an activity in which my great grandmother would take quite an interest.  Grant wound up easily winning the election with nearly 56% of the popular vote. Greeley died on November 29 of that same year, well after the election, but before the Electoral College met.  Therefore, Greeley's rivals on his side took the liberty of dividing his electoral votes among themselves, making Greeley's posthumous defeat even worse.

1912 = Woodrow Wilson -vs- Theodore Roosevelt & President W.H. Taft

This election was a huge win for the Democratic Nominee, New Jersey Governor, and former Princeton University President Woodrow Wilson. This was mainly because of a rancorous split in the Republican party.  William Howard Taft, was elected President in 1908 with the blessing and support of his predecessor, the irrepressible Theodore Roosevelt.  T.R. could easily have been re-elected himself that year, but the two-term tradition of
U.S. Presidents was established, and he rashly promised early in his second term to respect that tradition.  In those days, a promise was a promise, so T.R. gave way to his old friend, the jolly and rotund William Howard Taft.  But T.R. had been a burr under the saddle of the Republican establishment with his reforming, progressive policies, so they were only too happy to be rid of him. And when Taft proved to be too accommodating to the establishment, T.R. publicly broke with his (former) friend and tried to unseat him by running for the
Republican nomination himself. When the party bosses clamped down and denied him the nomination, T.R. bolted the party, and accepted the nomination of the Progressive Party.  Needless to say, this split in the G.O.P. gave the election on today's date in 1912 to Wilson, who tallied 41.8% of the vote to 27.4% for Roosevelt. Poor Taft came in a distant third with 23.2%.  It was a terrible defeat for T.R. who never again regained the Presidency which he had so loved.  The Progressive Party had been nick-named  
the "Bull Moose" Party in honor of T.R.'s hard-driving image.  After the election a cartoon showing a large, exhausted, and cracked egg with the face of Roosevelt was published along with the taunting rhyme: "Humpty Dumpty sat on the wall/ Humpty Dumpty had a bad fall/ All the ex-bosses/ And Bully Moose Men/ Can never put Humpty up again."
"Click" on the image to enlarge.

1940 = Franklin D. Roosevelt -vs- Wendell Willkie

In 1940, the whole world seemed to be catching fire around an America which up to that point had been desperately trying to stay out of the war in Europe.  But by election day of that year, today's date, most of Europe had been overrun by the forces of Adolf Hitler's Nazis. The Battle of Britain was in full swing as Hitler's air forces tried to bomb England into submission.  The democratic nominee, President Franklin D. Roosevelt who had already served two terms was breaking a two-term tradition in a way that his relative, Theodore Roosevelt (who was the Uncle of FDR's wife, Elanor) had been unable to try.  FDR said that with the world closing in on the U.S. like it was in a way that would probably involve America, it was his duty to stay on.   His opponent was a maverick businessman (ala Donald Trump??) named Wendell Willkie (below) who managed to outmaneuver Senator Robert A. Taft (the son of William Howard Taft)
and New York Governor Thomas Dewey and pick up the Republican nomination.  Although Willkie was nearly identical to FDR in his attitude towards the war raging in Europe, Republicans damned Roosevelt for his economic policies. My great grandmother who was now an active Republican stalwart (now you know where I get it!) ran, I am told, one of those homes wherein the very mention of the word "Roosevelt" would get the speaker soap in his mouth.  And this was what Willkie attacked Roosevelt for.  But it didn't work.  FDR carried 54.8% of the popular vote that year, gaining that unprecedented third term. My great grandmother lived until she was 99, passing away in 1969 when I was nine years old.  Franklin Roosevelt would be elected to a fourth term in 1944, before succumbing to a stroke in April of 1945.  Wendell Willkie would die in 1944.  But one small fragment of his spirited 1940 campaign has survived.  It is the "1940 Psalm" which sarcastically sums up how the opposition felt about FDR's economic policies:

"Mr. Roosevelt is my Shepherd, I am in want.
He maketh me lie down on park benches
He leadeth me beside still factories.
He leadeth me in the path of destruction for the New Deal's sake.
Yea, tho I walk through the valley of depression, I anticipate no recovery, for he is with me.
His policies and diplomacies they frighten me.
He prepareth a reduction in my salary.
And in the presence of my enemies, he anointed my small income with taxes.
My expenses runneth over.
Truly unemployment shall follow all the days of my life.
And I shall live in a mortgaged home for ever".

Sources:

"Presidential Campaigns" by Paul F. Boller Jr., Oxford University Press, New York, 1984

"The Life and Times of Teddy Roosevelt" by Stefan Lorant, Doubleday & Co., Garden City, N.Y., 1959

+ 66.

Tasty Tuesday! Holiday Recipes for YOU!

From Cooking Light – November 2002 Ultimate Holiday Feast!


Ultimate Roasted Turkey
½            Cup Apple cider
5             Tbsp dark corn syrup divided
1             (12 pound) fresh or frozen turkey, thawed
1             Tbsp poultry seasoning
1             TBSP dried rubbed sage
1             tsp salt
¼            tsp black pepper
4             garlic cloves, sliced
2             Golden Delicious apples, cored and quartered
               Cooking Spray
1             tsp butter
1             (14.5 oz can) fat tree, less sodium chicken broth
1             Tbsp cornstarch

1.  Preheat oven to 375 degrees.
2.  Combine cider and 4 Tbsp corn syrup in a small saucepan, bring to a boil.  Remove from heat and set aside.
3.  Remove and reserve giblets and neck from turkey.  Rinse turkey with cold water and pat dry with paper towels.  Trim excess fat.  Lift wing tips up and over back; tuck under turkey.  Rub seasoning mixture into skin and body cavity.  Place half each of garlic, onion quarters, and apple quarters into body cavity.  Place turkey breast side up in a shallow roasting pan coated with cooking spray.  Arrange remaining garlic, onions and apples around turkey in pan.  Inset a meat thermometer into the meaty part of the thigh, making sure not to touch bone.
4.  Bake at 375 for 45 minutes.  Baste turkey with cider syrup; cover with foil.  Bake an additional 2 hours and 15 minutes or meat thermometer registers 180 degrees, basting with cider syrup 4 times at regular intervals. 
5.  Let turkey stand 10 minutes.  Remove from pan and reserve drippings for sauce.  Place turkey on platter and keep warm.
6.  Strain drippings through a colander into a bowl.  Place a sip top plastic bag inside a 2-cup measuring cup.  Pour drippings into bag; let stand 10 minutes so fat will rise to the top.  Seal bag and carefully snip off 1 bottom corner of bag.  Drain drippings into a bowl, stopping before the fat layer reaches opening.  Discard fat.
7.  While the turkey is baking, melt butter in a medium saucepan over medium-high heat.  Add reserved giblets and neck, sauté 2 minutes on each side until browned.  Add broth and bring to a boil.  Cover, reduce heat and simmer 45 minutes.  Strain mixture through a colander into a bowl discarding solids.  Reserve ¼ cup of broth mixture.  Combine remaining broth mixture with drippings in roasting pan on stovetop over medium heat, scraping pan to loosen browned bits.  Combine ¼ cup of reserved broth mixture and cornstarch; add to roasting pan.  Add 1 Tbsp corn syrup, stirring with whisk.  Bring to a boil, cook 1 minute.  Serve gravy with turkey.  Gravy will be dark and thin. 

CALORIES  331 (24% from fat); Fat 8g, Protein 50.4g, Carbs 9.4 g, Fiber .1g, Chol 130 mg, Iron 3.2mg, Sodium 396mg, Calcium 52mg

Mama’s Corn Bread Dressing

Can be made a day or two ahead

5             Cups Mama’s Corn Bread, Crumbled (home made or store bought)
3             Cups (1 inch) cubed toasted white bread (about 5-1 inch slices)
1             Cup crushed saltine crackers (about 20 crackers)
3             Cups vegetable broth
2             Cups chopped celery
2             Cups chopped onion
¼            cup butter
1 ½         tspn dried rubbed sage
¼            tspn salt
¼            tspn black pepper
2             large eggs
1             large egg white
Cooking spray

1.  Preheat oven to 375 degrees. 
2.  Combine first 3 ingredients in a large bowl.  Combine broth, celery, onion and butter in a large saucepan; bring to a boil.  Reduce head, simmer 10 minutes.  Add broth mixture to corn bread mixture, stirring well.  Add sage and next 4 ingredients; stirring well to combine.
3.  Pour mixture into a 11x17 baking dish coated with cooking spray.  Bake at 375 for 45 minutes; cover and bake an additional 30 minutes until golden.  Makes 12 servings.


CALORIES -243 (39% from fat), FAT 10.5g, Protein 7.1g, Carb 30.4g, CHOL 65mg, IRON 1.9mg, Sodium 622mg, Calcium 68mg

Manuela Sáenz

Remembered primarily as the lover of Simón Bolívar, celebrated leader of South America's crusade for independence, Manuela Sáenz was a revolutionary in her own right. Born December 27, 1797 (maybe), in Quito, Ecuador, Manuela participated in the liberation movement before meeting Simón. They met in 1822, after she left her husband in Lima, and returned to Quito. Theirs wasn't just a romantic partnership. She joined him on campaigns, delivering food, medicine, and partaking in combat. She fought in conflicts at Pichincha, Junín, and Ayacucho; at the recommendation of Simón’s second in command, she was presented the rank of colonel. Manuela demonstrated her fidelity again when she prevented Simón’s murder by launching herself at assassins, granting him the chance to escape. Consequently, she was bestowed the nickname, “The Liberator of the Liberator.” 

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Can I listen to Christams music now?!?

Especially with the time change and the weather getting colder and all the cloudiness we have been having, I have been longing to listen to Christmas music. It is a little awkward (for me) sometimes, as I hate when people say "Christmas Music Already!!".