I always had two Easter baskets as a kid. One was child-sized, filled with plastic grass, a few colored eggs, a Russell Stover chocolate bunny and some jelly beans. It was mine alone. The other, a more serious large, woven affair, was the family basket, the real Easter basket. My mother handled that one as we made our way to the Catholic church on the day before Easter to have the baskets blessed. It’s a common tradition in the Polish and Croatian communities from which my parents hailed and the specified contents of the basket never varied: ham, kielbasa, home-made bread, colored eggs, spring onions, radishes and povitica, the sweet bread swirled with a nut filling made at holidays and for special events.
Each day of the Easter Week was consumed with the process of procuring and preparing those items, with special trips to the local butcher/sausage maker, and evenings spent with my mom cracking whole walnuts while my dad put them through the old-fashioned, hand-cranked grinder he’d attach to the kitchen table. Thursday was dedicated to povitica baking; Good Friday was always bread baking, egg dyeing and ham baking day. On Saturday morning, the baskets were filled with packets of the meats and breads, along with the prettiest of the colored eggs on which we’d scrawled names of each family member. Then the basket was covered with an embroidered cloth.
The church was always packed to the rafters for the special afternoon service. Baskets lined the aisles and the women toting them would stoop to carefully fold back a corner of their fancy linen covers as the priest made his rounds with incense and holy water. (Although I always suspected a bit of one-upmanship in their carefully orchestrated maneuvers, each striving to make sure everyone saw that she had the best-looking basket.)
Saturday’s rite served as a punctuation mark on the Easter season, a sign that all the devotion and preparation was about to culminate in the next day’s celebration. We weren’t allowed to touch anything from the basket until Easter morning, when it would be unpacked and the foods consumed to break our Lenten fast. Sitting at the table, cracking open an egg, my mother would inevitably say, “Doesn’t the blessed food just taste better?” We kids would roll our eyes at this oh-so-predictable comment. But somehow, it was true.
We’ll be having the Slovenian versin of potica tomorrow! YUM!!
Loading up the basket and going to get the Easter food blessed is my #1, miles-ahead-of-the-pack, best religious holiday memory. My mother would be horrified that this, of all things, is what I took away from years of Mass attendance, but something about the priest passing by in a deep swirl of burning incense and all the women gathered together for a moment’s reflection before the crush of relatives overwhelmed the house was beautiful to me, even then.
#2 in this listing would probably be the annual screenings of The Ten Commandments on cable.
I can attest to the deliciousness of the povitica! Funny but when I settled in last night I turned on the news and just then they were running a story about a Polish church in Brooklyn where everyone would line up to have their Easter baskets blessed. I’ll have to ask my father about this.
My cousin passes along this anecdote from a fellow churchgoer, who was told when first joining that she needed to bring food for a meal to be blessed. So she did — a whole ham, large bowl of potato salad, desserts, everything and in a cooler. She walked into church carrying her cooler and was surprised to see properly dressed people with decorated baskets. She was still wearing her at-home clothes.
Oops,