And Give Us Our Daily Bread
by
Sabine Barnhart
by Sabine Barnhart
Bread
is one of the main sources of food in Germany, as it is in most
other cultures. I always look forward to going home and eating our
bread. It’s crunchy and solid, and has a texture that’s hearty.
The
basic bread has a sourdough taste, with a touch of caraway. At times
the caraway seeds are sprinkled on top of the loaf. Bread can have
the form of a loaf or is round. The type of bread baked depends
on the region of the country and can have a variety of flavors.
Either way, taking a bite into a slice of fresh bread with real
butter is hauntingly delicious leaving behind a satisfying feeling
in my stomach and a fulfillment in my soul. Ask any German living
in a foreign country, and they will tell you the same thing about
our bread. They understand the craving for real bread!
I
know all about making bread, since my grandfather was a baker in
our small village in Franconia. I was literarily born into it the
first year of my life, and at the age of six my family lived with
my grandparents for two years on their farm as well. I also spent
many summer months there during my school vacations.
Since
the day I was born the bakery was a central part of my growing-up
years. I played between sacks of flours, wooden bread pans, and
baskets or watched my grandfather make the dough in a machine. He
wore a white apron and white hat, and rolled the dough into shapes
on a big hallow, wooden table that contained the flour. The best
part was watching my grandfather shove the bread into the oven on
big, long wooden ‘paddles.’ He’d sprinkle water on top of the bread
and place it back into the oven. The smell of fresh bread still
captures that part of my memory.
Since
my grandfather was a master baker, he also had several fellows over
the years that would help him out. Both of my uncles became bakers
but did their apprenticeship in other bakeries. They no longer practice
this profession, but still can bake some great bread and cakes.
My
grandfather sold his goods in a tiny shop at the front of the house.
It had a small counter over which he sold the bread. Behind it were
wooden shelves on both sides for the bread and a display with several
glass bowls containing candy which he sold in brown triangle bags.
I sometimes played back there and pretended to be a shop owner.
When I was a teenager and spent my vacations there, I’d decorate
the shelves with doilies and flowers. I even used to decorate the
window and my grandfather just rolled his eyes, and walked off scratching
his head in disbelief at what I did to his humble shop. I knew he
wasn’t mad, because he always smiled when he saw the seriousness
with which I went about my business.
When
a customer entered the little shop the door rang a little bell.
As a little girl I loved running out into the shop to see who it
was. I knew everybody and liked to visit with the people that came
in for their bread. Of course the flour dust all over my face and
clothes gave some people a few laughs and they commented about my
bakery look.
There
was an older girl across the street from us whose family owned the
only grocery store in town. She gave me the nickname of "Little
Crumb" because I was the offshoot from a baker. Every time
when one of the rolls she bought from my grandfather had an air
pocket, she teasingly said that’s where I spent the night. Yes,
I dreamed my nights away inside a bread roll. Still, the name stuck
and to this day she calls me "Little Crumb."
The
fashion of getting bread on the table was a natural cycle of continued
events that involved the entire community of our little village
and starts in the fall.
All
the farmers went out into the field to plough the soil. Some still
used horses and oxen. My grandfather had a small tractor. I always
wondered how hard it must have been to plough without a tractor.
It can take an entire day for a small plot of land.
After
the different grains and rye seeds were planted in rows it was left
alone during the winter months. We always were glad for the snow,
since the cover of the snow protected the sod from the cold. I heard
the farmers talk amongst each other many times, and the main concern
was always the planting, the weather, the harvest and where to get
wood for the winter.
In
the early spring, I could see the first sprouts coming through the
ground. Most of the women were out in the fields with their colorful
aprons and scarves, hoeing the ground of their potato and sugar
beet fields. As a teenager I had to go out into the vineyard with
the entire family and hoe.
I
know the blistering truth about hoeing. Wear gloves! One bends over
constantly with a hoe in hand cracking the soil and pulling weeds.
I’ve seen the hands of the older women; and I have the deepest respect
for their hands. Albrecht Duerer’s famous praying hands are a tribute
to these men and women that labor with their hands. He made these
hands in honor of his brother who worked hard, so Albrecht Duerer
could go to school and study his craft. No lotion in the world could
remove the marks of their labor.
During
the spring and early summer months the grain was green and growing
strong. When the wind blew through the fields, the stems were dancing
to the motion of the wind and I got saddened when a storm blew in
and flattened some of the crops. Yes, life for a farmer was always
under the mercy of nature herself. Their livelihood depended on
it.
And
then the harvest season started in late August. It was such a busy
time of the year, because the time had to be used wisely. My grandfather
also planted potatoes, sugar beets, and sunflowers. The crop had
to be brought home and stored or taken off to be sold. We also needed
hay for the cows, and several meadows had to be mowed, the grass
turned over to be dried, and after another few days brought home.
When
we were children, this was a great time. The smell of fresh hay
is better than the most expensive perfume. It smells sweet and,
when you think about it, contains all the fragrant flowers that
grow during the summer.
Trying
to load it up on a wagon when we were kids was a trial in itself.
It kept falling back down and all over us. Finally my parents and
grandparents had a load filled and we were riding home on top of
the hay wagon. This experience was the closest I’ve gotten to an
amusement park ride. The only difference was that we came off the
ride with grass and hay all over ourselves and smelling like it,
too.
The
most challenging job was the grain crop. Not everyone had a threshing
machine, and the farmers that did sold their services to the others.
Sometimes farmers from other villages would come in, too, to help
out for a price. The plan how to handle the timing of it was most
likely hatched out during Frühschoppen at the local tavern
after Sunday church.
I
used to go out with my grandparents for the grain crop. I watched
the machine cut the stems that have turned golden by now, separating
the grain from the stem and spitting out the remaining straw in
a compact package at the rear. In the olden days it was a lot harder.
My mother said they used steam engines and the straw had to be tied
together by hand. Walking through the stubs left in the ground was
very painful to the ankles. All of the children and adults had the
marks of these stubbles with bloody scratches on our legs.
The
hard labor required food and drink, and we waited for the church
bell in the village to strike the hour of noon. My grandmother would
then find a shady tree and we all gathered around her like hungry
cubs. She pulled her leather satchel out that she kept with her
at all times, and we had rolls, bread and lemonade. It doesn’t sound
like much, but it was delicious and tasted wonderful after being
outside working and running around in the heat. The bread was chewy
and satisfying and filled us up until we went home.
We
never said much when we ate. We just sat there and listened to the
birds, and the breeze blowing through the trees. There was always
something to look at. Sometimes we saw a deer or a rabbit, or another
farmer passed by. I lay there in the tall grass and if an apple
tree was nearby, would grab a few for desert. Cherry trees were
around, too, and I’ve climbed in them several times in secret to
find a spot in a branch just to eat a few of them. The only rule
was; don’t get caught, and if caught, run!
Once
the grain is taken back in brown cloth sacks, it was laid out to
dry for several weeks and then taken to the local miller about 2
km away from the village near a small creek that had a water wheel.
The grain was ground by two big sandstones that were turned through
the power of the water wheel.

My
grandfather had a business arrangement with all local and bordering
farmers that for each five pounds of flour, the farmers would get
six pounds of bread with a 90-Pfennig baker-wage. He would honor
the deal by handing out bread-coins to the farmers bringing him
flour to bake the bread and rolls for the community. When people
came to buy a six-pound loaf of bread, they used their bread coins
and only paid the baker-wage.
It
seemed to work well, and this system worked for my grandfather until
he finally retired in the early 1970’s. A similar system was in
place with his father, grandfather and great-grandfather. He is
the only one that came up with the coin idea to simplify the system.
In the past they had markings in books for each contributor of flour.
The
bread my grandfather baked was again the source of life for the
people of the village. It was served for breakfast, lunch and supper.
It tastes excellent with homemade sausage, pickles and tomatoes,
as well as butter and jam. It was in our school lunches and in everybody’s
leather satchel out in the fields.
Before
slicing the bread my grandmother would bless the bread by carving
a cross on the back of it with a knife. And only then was it allowed
to cut the bread. My mother does it to this day. Bread is sacred
and was acknowledged as a blessing that came about through many
sacrifices and hard labor.
I
would bless my bread, too, if it wasn’t in a plastic sack. However,
I acknowledge its value as food through thankfulness each day during
supper time with my kids.
About
30 years ago in a small village in Franconia there still was a different
way of making bread and is now at the twilight of its existence.
It involved everyone’s effort and work to reap the fruit of labor.
Bread is a perishable but life-giving food. The process it took
to get on the table became of value to everyone. A forgotten value
today, because man has forgotten its wisdom.
"And
give us our daily bread..." will always be a demand in our
world. Learning how to share that value again will be our generation’s
challenge.
December
20, 2003
Sabine
Barnhart [send her mail]
moved to the US in 1980 and lives in Fort Worth, TX with
her three children. For the past 15 years she has been working for
an international service company.
Copyright
© 2003 LewRockwell.com
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