In the days leading up to the winter solstice (which is tomorrow, by the way), I enjoyed reading a newly-released essay by Nina MacLaughlin. I had been browsing in a local bookstore, and the title immediately caught my eye: Winter Solstice: An Essay. This slim volume (88 pages) was the perfect thing for me to read right now.
Although the book “blurb” on Goodreads mentions that “the luminous prose pushes back the dark,” I didn’t find that to be completely true. Instead, I’d say the “luminous prose” (for that is certainly what this essay offers) doesn’t “push back the dark” so much as it . . . invites us to become more comfortable with the dark, to accept it and revel in it, to understand and celebrate it. And . . . to encourage us to bring our light to that darkness, too.
One of the things I most enjoyed about this little volume is the Addendum on “Plant Matter” at the end. The author explains that there are specific plants and herbs that are most strongly associated with the winter solstice, and that these are often used for decking-the-halls or burning in fires or for making into tinctures and teas. She specifically mentions cedar, clove, rosemary, nutmeg, birch, pine, chamomile, juniper, frankincense, wintergreen, holly, blessed thistle, mistletoe, cinnamon, yew, and oak. She provides further background on a select few of these plants, and I thought I’d share her words on one of my favorite winter spices . . . cinnamon.
Cinnamon
It comes from the innards of the tree, extracted from below the bark and let to dry, and it curls into rolls as it does. Scrolls of rust-colored spice, grated into powder, dusted over the apple crisp, a glass of thick rich eggnogg, buttered toast, sugar cookies. A familial smell, a smell that lives in our minds before we’ve even smelled it, inherited from thousands of years of global trade, of boats and caravans, travelers crossing sea and land to deliver new flavors to the mouth. Cinnamaldehyde brings the smell, an unappealing set of syllables for a smell of warmth, ovens and forests, color of fallen oak leaves, of darkened honey. It’s an antioxidant, an anti-inflammatory, it lowers blood sugar. It’s said to increase circulation, too, widening the vessels, especially in the abdomen and between the legs. More blood flow, more warmth, a special heat, more babies are conceived this time of year than any other. Rattle of cinnamon stick in the jar, dust on your fingertips, a stranger at the door.
— Nina MacLaughlin in Winter Solstice: An Essay
Can’t you just smell the cinnamon from here?
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EDITED TO ADD:
After seeing my advent calendar post this morning, Tom shared this post-it note with me . . . showing the chemical structure of cinnamaldehyde. I thought you might find it interesting. Besides . . . it’s his 65th birthday today, so I’m happy to have him contribute to my post! (What I was most charmed by . . . is that he just knew it off the top of his head. Chemists really do speak an entirely different language.)
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If you’re wondering what this “advent calendar” is all about, you can read my “intro” post here.
I think I’ll sprinkle some on an eggnog this evening. Thanks Kym!
That looks like a lovely little book, Kym! (and yes!! I can smell the cinnamon!) This is one of those bonus posts with a new word… cinnamaldehyde!
P.S. Happy Birthday Tom!! Thanks for that great visual!
Wow! re cinnamon. And you are doing your part bringing light to the darkness with these advent posts. Thank you so much, Kym. (Am now going into the kitchen to make some cinnamon toast.)
I love cinnamon any time of year! It’s one of the spices along with cloves and nutmeg that I use in zucchini bread, and just yesterday I got whole cloves to stick in oranges and then roll in cinnamon. Now I’m going to go have some hot buttered toast with cinnamon!
And a Happy Birthday to Tom who always has chemistry knowledge at the ready!
Happy Birthday, Tom!!!
What a great little factoid! Happy birthday to Tom, and thanks to him for sharing that fun little chemical structure (not that I have any idea what it means)!
Happiest of Birthdays Tom and thanks for your little note (my dad would have known that – and would sometimes doodle those drawings). The essay sounds wonderful Kym…I think I’ll look on Amazon. And, I just discovered she has another one: “Summer Solstice: An Essay” – I may need to get both!
First of all …………..happiest of birthdays to the guy with the best smile in blogland! Hope he has a wonderful day of celebration.
Cinnamon! I have yet to find someone that doesn’t like cinnamon. Partnered with nutmeg it’s about the best fragrance you can have coming from your oven.
I’m going to get this book, and also see if I can get it delivered for my friend Ann (the alpaca farmer) for tomorrow, I think she would love it. And Happy Birthday to Tom!
I love Tom’s addition! Happy Birthday, to Tom! Tomorrow I’m starting The Comfort of Crows to read throughout the seasons!
Happy Birthday Tom and thank you for another fun tidbit about cinnamon! I’ve been pondering Light and Dark this week – one of my Advent devotions is celebrating Light and another one is leaning into Darkness … a welcome reminder we need both.
I had cinnamon on oatmeal with apples for breakfast this morning! Happy Birthday to Tom!
Very interesting! I am glad to read your positive review of this little book. I was going to buy a copy and then read some mixed reviews. One year my word was light and I thought a lot about dark as well.
I blow a handful of cinnamon into my front door on the first of every month for luck and abundance. Cinnamon is one of my favorite spices, too.
Well, obviously I am going to have to find this book because I do love the dark!
Tom is so much like my sister Mary Ellen – she once gave a brief lecture on the chemical makeup of lipstick when one of my nieces gave her one as a Christmas gift (that niece’s sister “Next year, please get her a nightgown or something …”). Happy Birthday to him!