Sunday, March 1, 2026

The Sunday Memory Drawer - Buried Memories

 


Located on a quiet hill in the even quieter hamlet of Hartsdale, New York, Ferncliff Cemetery is the eternal home of lots of famous people. Songwriter Harold Arlen, James Baldwin, ice cream meglomaniac Tom Carvel, Joan Crawford, Basil Rathbone, Toots Shor, Ed Sullivan and his orchestra leader Ray Bloch, director Preston Sturges, Moss Hart and his wife Kitty Carlisle Hart, renowned troublemaker Malcolm X, Oscar Hammerstein, Moms Mabley, and Judy Garland. Beatle John Lennon was cremated there. The list goes on and on and on. The place includes also a whole passel of my relatives. And the relatives of several good friends of mine.

And my parents.

Indeed, my mom would be happy to know that her top floor studio apartment/niche was once a mere three dozen footsteps away from Miss Garland, whom I would have allegedly be named after. If I, of course, was a girl. Not that gender ever made a difference to Judy. Meanwhile, Judy's family has since moved her casket to Los Angeles.  But, I digress...

Believe it or not, cemeteries were a prime destination for Sunday drives, especially with my grandparents.

"Come on, let's go see Uncle Fritz."

The eight-year-old comedian in me could not resist the witty retort.

"Yeah, but he can't see you." 

Ha ha. My grandmother didn't find the funny in funny.

"Don't be fresh."

Almost as punishment, I was loaded into the car along with a whole bunch of gardening tools and off we went to Tombstone Land. I never understood why my grandmother felt the need to garden some graves, except perhaps we had some family members who were too damn cheap to pay for the perpetual care offered by the cemetery. My grandmother would survey the lawn on top of some relative and if she found it a little too weedy, there would be the beckoning call to my grandfather.

”Pop, bring me the shears!”

And then they would spend an hour manicuring the grounds while I played hopscotch on the bronze nameplates all around me. And then get scolded for that.

”Don’t walk on them. That’s where their head is.”

Huh?

Now, in our family, there were two cemeteries of choice. The old and staid Woodlawn Cemetery in the Bronx. Most of the older folks wound up there. Cousins who had died of sinus infections in the pre-antibiotic days of the 30s. One young nephew who had accidentally stabbed himself to death while slicing some pork chops in the butcher shop. And now, there in Woodlawn, “reside” my grandparents. In a plot they selected twenty to thirty years before they died. By the fence so they could watch all the cars drive by on Webster Avenue. That was the reason I was given. I kid you not. And, I digress again…

The younger relatives were all found in the more modern and up-and-coming Ferncliff up in the suburbs. And that place always managed to give me the creeps. Invariably, I would get sent into the mausoleum to get some water for vases. And the eerie, somber music that was piped into that joint made my trips into them as time-condensed as possible. I walked through there wearing imaginary blinders. If you looked at any of the crypts on the left or the right, you would find decorated to look like real living rooms with kids’ toys on the floor. Audible scream!

There was one grave that my father scared the shit out of me with. It seems some real jerk had a bust made of his head. When he was buried, the bust was placed under the nameplate and you could lift it up to look down. One day, my father said, “come on and say hello to Uncle Charlie.” Not knowing the horror to come and being a dumb kid, I did so. Uncle Charlie looking up from his resting place. 

Audible scream all over again! Nightmares for a week. Thanks, Dad.

Ironically, I’d unwittingly get back at him for this injustice. Years later, the day after he passed away, I went through the robotic process of “making arrangements.” There never was a thought in my mind that his eternal resting place would be at Ferncliff. Besides, all the good spots by the fence at Woodlawn had already been taken. 

Anyway, as if I was playing the bonus round on Supermarket Sweep, I blew through Ferncliff and got everything settled in the space of fifteen minutes. Cement vault, hole in the ground, lettering and design for the plaque, timing for a graveside service. Because I don’t believe in the ritual, there would be no funeral parlor viewing. It would be just like the Wild West. 12 Noon at Boot Hill. Be there or be square. And your attendance would be by invitation only. I had it all solved in a flash.

The day before the burial, I got a call from one of my dad’s cronies who had made my A List of invitees.

”So, Len, what time is the cremation tomorrow?”

Huh???? I told the guy there would be a burial.

”But your father always told me he wanted to be cremated.”

I thought about the cement vault. Already invoiced. The grave. Already dug. The in-ground plaque. Perhaps being engraved as we spoke. I called my mother and asked if she had ever heard that request. Knowing my parent’s virtual disregard for any timely communication, I was not surprised that she had not. And naturally this was complete breaking news for me.

So, indeed, in death, there would be one last time where I screwed up something for Dad. And, in a way, I was getting back at it for the fright show that had been Uncle Charlie. But, I also thought that my father might have enjoyed the faux pas that only I could have constructed.

On the day of the burial, we stood in the street near the gravesite and waited for the hearse to show up. We saw it enter the gate and it immediately made a hard right turn. Into the section where all the Black people were buried. Most of us couldn’t help but giggle. Suddenly, the hearse slammed on its brakes and started to back up. We imagined that the drivers had been startled by a rap on the window in the back of the hearse. And perhaps a faint voice from the beyond.

”What are you idiots doing? You can’t put me here with all those coloreds.”

When I make my annual visit to Ferncliff now, I survey all the nameplates around my dad and realize that his pain is continuing. Every name is Chinese.

Sorry again.

Dinner last night:   General Tso's chicken.

Saturday, February 28, 2026

Classic Movie Trailer of the Month - February 2026

 Fifty years old this month.   And, yes, I'm talking to you.


Dinner last night:  Cheese and crackers.

Friday, February 27, 2026

Photos Provide Such Memories

 

Obviously, the photographer had told them this would be nothing but a head shot.
If this is a familyu portrait, I have some questions.
Little Petunia is being blocked by, well, a little petunia.
The way Dad is sitting behind Mom, you would think she would have a bigger smile on her face. 
This time, the dog is giving Mom a bath.
Future pole dancer.
Trying to fit a size 6 baby into a size 4 wagon.
"Mommy, this uncle is drunk now, too."
I need her phone number.
Surprisingly, the most awkward thing in this picture is the sofa.

Dinner last night:  Chili from my freezer.

Thursday, February 26, 2026

Hollywood Then and Now - February 2026

 Back when Hollywood was brand spanking new in the Roaring Twenties and Thirties of the last century, the entire growing city was one big sound stage for the movie making world.   It was very easy to go and shoot whenever they found a great location.

A few years back, I visited one such memorable spot nestled into a quiet neighborhood in Silver Lake.

If you are fans of Laurel and Hardy, you might remember their Academy Award winning short "The Music Box."  Stan and Ollie lugging a piano up a large flight of stairs.

This might be one of the funniest Laurel and Hardy adventures ever.

Well, the internet allowed for me to search where these steps are and Hollywood has already turned the spot into a shrine.

With a street sign.

And a plaque.

But nothing is official until I visited the steps.   Notice I only went up one flight.  My knees, even then.

Yep, Hollywood's back lot just might have been your backyard.

Dinner last night:  Leftover chicken tenders.

Wednesday, February 25, 2026

This Date in History - February 25

 

Happy birthday, Tea Leoni.  Our Secretary of State looks like this...at least on the CBS show a few years back.

138:  THE ROMAN EMPEROR HADRIAN ADOPTS ANTONINUS PIUS, EFFECTIVELY MAKING HIM HIS SUCCESSOR.

This bunch was changing leadership as much as they were changing their togas.

493:  ODOACER SURRENDERS RAVENNA AFTER A THREE-YEAR SIEGE AND AGREES TO A MEDIATED PEACE WITH THEODORIC THE GREAT.

Theodoric was later nicknamed the Beaver.

628: KOSRAU II IS OVERTHROWN BY HIS SON KAVADH II.

Who Cares II?

1336:  4,000 DEFENDERS OF PILENAL COMMIT MASS SUICIDE RATHER THAN BE TAKEN CAPTIVE BY THE TEUTONIC KNIGHTS.

Doesn't say much about the Teutonic Knights.

1570:  POPE PIUS V EXCOMMUNICATES QUEEN ELIZABETH I OF ENGLAND.

This is the Queen Elizabeth without the handbag.

1797:  COLONEL WILLIAM TATE AND HIS FORCE OF 1000-1500 SOLDIERS SURRENDER AFTER THE LAST INVASION OF BRITAIN.

Lots of tails between lots of legs.

1836:  SAMUEL COLT IS GRANTED A US PATENT FOR THE COLT REVOLVER.

Malt liquor to follow.

1843:  PROVISIONAL CESSATION OF THE HAWAIIAN OR SANDWICH ISLANDS ESTABLISHED BY LORD GEORGE PAULET.

A combination would be a Hawaiian sandwich, probably with pineapple slices.

1866:  MINERS IN CALAVERAS COUNTY, CALIFORNIA, DISCOVER WHAT IS NOW CALLED THE CALAVERAS SKULL --- HUMAN REMAINS THAT SUPPOSEDLY INDICATED THAT MAN, MASTODONS, AND ELEPHANTS CO-EXISTED.

Until, of course, the mastodons and the elephants got hungry.

1870:  HIRAM RHODES REVELS, A REPUBLICAN FROM MISSOURI, IS SWORE TO THE US SENATE, BECOMING THE FIRST BLACK EVER TO SIT IN CONGRESS.

Liberals, please note all the irony in that sentence.

1901:  JP MORGAN INCORPORATES THE US STEEL CORPORATION.

Money to be made there.

1901:  ACTOR ZEPPO MARX IS BORN.

Oh, horse feathers!

1913:  ACTOR JIM BACKUS IS BORN.

Watch out for that next step, Magoo!

1913:  ACTOR GERT FROBE IS BORN.

Gold-fing-uh.

1920:  RELIGIOUS LEADER SUN MYUNG MOON IS BORN.

Rising in the east.

1929:  MUSICIAN TOMMY NEWSOM IS BORN.

He once asked to borrow my pen.   Long story.

1932:  ADOLF HITLER OBTAINS GERMAN CITIZENSHIP BY NATURALIZATION, WHICH ALLOWS HIM TO RUN IN THE 1932 ELECTION FOR PRESIDENT.

Jesse Owens also got to run later on, too.

1940:  BASEBALL PLAYER RON SANTO IS BORN.

He used to click his heels when the Cubs won.   That was while he still had heels to click.

1941: IN OCCUPIED AMSTERDAM, A GENERAL STRIKE IS DECLARED IN RESPONE TO INCREASING ANTI-JEWISH MEASURES INSTITUTED BY THE NAZIS.

And you wonder why the Franks went to the attic.

1943:  BEATLE GEORGE HARRISON IS BORN.

My sweet Lord.

1948:  THE COMMUNIST PARTY TAKES CONTROL OF GOVERNMENT IN  CZECHOSLOVAKIA AND THE PERIOD OF THE THIRD REPUBLIC ENDS.

Czech, please.

1954:  GAMAL ABDEL NASSER IS MADE PREMIER OF EGYPT.

Nasser later is the place where all US space shots were made.

1966:  ACTRESS TEA LEONI IS BORN.

If Tea Leoni married James Lipton...

1968:  DURING THE VIETNAM WAR, 135 UNARMED CITIZENS OF HA MA IN SOUTH VIETNAM ARE KILLED AND BURIED EN MASSE BY SOUTH KOREAN 
TROOPS IS WHAT WAS LATER KNOWN AS THE HA MY MASSACRE.

Ha, indeed.

1986:  PRESIDENT OF THE PHILIPPINES FERDINAND MARCOS FLEES THE NATION AFTER 20 YEARS OF RULE.

Wait!  You forgot your wife!

1987:  ACTOR JAMES COCO DIES.

Death by Death.

1996:  ACTOR HAING S. NGOR DIES.

The Killing Fields, indeed.

1997:  YI HAN-YONG, NORTH KOREA DEFECTOR, IS MURDERED.

He didn't defect fast enough.

2006:  ACTOR DARREN MCGAVIN DIES.

I guess he was frag-ile.

2013:  SURGEON C. EVERETT KOOP DIES.

Hazardous to his own health.

2014:  GAME SHOW HOST JIM LANGE DIES.

A Straight-From-The-Coffin Kiss!!!!

2017:  ACTOR BILL PAXTON DIES.

Reliable actor.

Dinner last night:   Leftover pappardelle.

Tuesday, February 24, 2026

Len's Recipe of the Month - February 2026

 

I follow a couple of cooks with YouTube channels.  Around Christmas, three of them posted recipes for a traditional Bolognese sauce.   I was intrigued and gathered the fixings to do this myself.

Two days later, a couple of hernias sent me to the hospital.  So much for Bolognese sauce.

So, five weeks later, I finally tackled it with great success.   When done traditionally, it is a convention of flavors you cannot imagine.   So, follow along.

Buy one of those 8 oz packages of diced pancetta.   Heat up some EVO in a Dutch oven saute the pancetta for about five minutes.  You need the fat you are rendering.

Next, some mirapoix.   What is that, you ask?   It is the holy trinity of cooking up a sauce base.  Carrots, onion, and celery.   Chop two carrots, an onion, and two celery ribs.   Or, thanks to Bristol Farms, you can buy it ready made.

Add a little more EVO and saute the mirapoix with the pancetta.   Now, for the meat.   After all, this is a meat sauce.   The cooks I follow suggest a pound and a half of a mix of beef and pork.  For maximum flavor, I used a pound of ground Italian sweet sausage and 1/2 pound ground beef.   

Into the Dutch oven it all goes and, for about 15 to twenty minutes, you brown the meat and get the veggies translucent.   Keep stirring it.

When the whole mixture is a brownish gray color, mince four or five garlic cloves and add that.   Take this opportunity in the process to salt and pepper it all.

Mix in a tablespoon of tomato paste.   Then deglaze the pan with a cup of red wine.  Make sure to use a wooden spoon to scrape up the stuff stuck to the bottom.  That's flavor, gang.

Now add a cup of beef broth.   Or mix one tablespoon of Better Than Boullion with a cup of water.

There's more.

Now add two 28 ounce cans of crushed tomatoes.   Use a brand like Cento that is made in Italy.

Salt and pepper again.

Most chefs add a piece of Parmesan Reggiano cheese rind.   This is another key for flavor.   You can buy these at most super markets.  Drop it in.  Over the long cooking time, it will melt.

And here's another trick up the sleeve.   Stir in a cup of whole milk.   Apparently, that's the way it's done in Italy.   Who will argue?

Drop in two bay leaves and the prep is done.  

Now, for cooking, there are two schools of thought.   One is to stash it away in the oven for three to four hours.   The longer the better.   But you can also let it simmer on low for four to five hours on the stove with the cover slightly ajar.   

But the real secret is what these chefs will recommend next.   Don't serve it the same day.  When you are done cooking, put it in the fridge and let it mull overnight.   Somehow and some way, it tastes even better this way.  One of those cooking magic acts.

Now traditionalists will tell you to use this sauce with a wide pasta noodle like pappardelle or fettucine.  I did that and it was fine, although a bit clumsy to eat.  Frankly, I think this would work with most pastas, except for spaghetti, linguine, or angel hair.  

Regardless, this is one meal you will never ever regret making.

Dinner last night:  Chicken tenders.

Monday, February 23, 2026

Monday Morning Video Laugh - February 23, 2026

 The snows of February conclude.   After the storm, there is...the snow blowers.


Dinner last night: Pappardelle with homemade Bolognese sauce.