Eat, Pray, Love.

This post started out about pot roast.  And as I was writing about browning and caramelization and braising techniques, all of the words seemed silly and insignificant given the reason I was writing about pot roast in the first place.  So I decided to back up a little.

A few weeks ago my husband, children and I made the familiar drive from our home in Boise, Idaho to my hometown of Seattle, Washington.  We’ve made the drive a hundred times before, but this time was different.  I was going home to be with my Mom.  To say goodbye to my Mom.   

Mom Young-3

She fought a courageous battle with a multitude of physical trials over the past 13 years, among them being a destructively progressive case of MS and a major brain injury.  She continually defied medical odds and bounced back from near-death hospital stints time and time again.  So even though she had been sick for years, it was still a shock to suddenly hear that this time was different.  This time she wasn’t bouncing back.  This time we would bring her home, but it would be so she could finish her mortal life surrounded by her family at home.

Kathy Smith

I’m sure many of you have had similar experiences with people you love.  And like me, you have felt the weight of your world crashing down around you.  I hope you’ve also felt the buoying strength that can come in trying times from the love of both God and other people in your life.  

Sara Wells and Kathy Smith

My Mom passed away three days after I arrived.  I won’t detail everything that happened in those three days because it was a sacred, personal experience, but I was so happy I was there.  I sat at her bedside and told her I loved her.  I held her hand and told her it was okay for her to go; that she fought such a good fight and we were all going to be okay.  I told her I’d miss her every day of my life and I couldn’t wait to see her again one day.  

You might be wondering what on earth this has to do with food and blogging and pot roast.  Well the thing is, you probably know my Mom more than you realize.  

Sara Wells and Mother
Hundreds of thousands of you have read this post.  My experiences with my Mom have shaped my character and played a significant role in influencing my thoughts and feelings about Motherhood.

I grew up at her side in our  kitchen.  She taught me that food is a way to show love and help people connect with one another.  Our kitchen table was evidence of that, and so much of my life is built around that now.  My Mom taught me how to cook.  She never realized it, nor did she ever really get to understand what Kate and I have built here.  When I was at her house after she died, I found this copy of our very first cook book.  I remember my sister sending me a text about it at the time.  I sent a copy home to my parents and my Mom put post-it notes on all of the recipes that looked good.  So like, every page.  I laughed because so many of those very recipes were ones she taught me to make!  She didn’t know, and couldn’t remember.  After my Mom’s passing, Kate pointed out how cool it is to think that my Mom can finally see all that we’ve worked so hard to build here and she would love it.

Our Best Bites Cook Book

On the drive back home to Idaho after she passed away, my mind was flooded.  We were quickly trying to pull together funeral arrangements, and I would only be home in Boise for a few days before we turned around and made the drive back home to Seattle again for her burial.  The previous weeks and days had been emotionally exhausting and my heart ached.  We pulled into Boise with our car full of tired children at 11:30pm on a Saturday but before heading to our home we went to the grocery store. Because I needed a chuck roast.

Boise was cool and drizzly that weekend and the following day was Sunday.  In the final hours of our drive home, all I could think about was how that next day I wanted to curl up on my couch with a blanket and smell a potroast braising in the oven.  Because that’s so often what was happening in my childhood home on Sunday afternoons.  That scent was almost healing.  There is a reason they call it comfort food; my brain went straight to it without even trying.

Sara Wells

In the days and weeks that followed, friends overwhelmed me with love and service.  People showed up with at my door with beautiful flowers.  One  friend made activity bags for each of my kids for the car trip.  Others took my kids off my hands.  And they brought food.  My brother came over and noticed all of the things that had accumulated and noted sarcastically that no one brought him any food.  We laughed and noted that women know how to communicate with one another.  Most friends didn’t even say a word.  They just knocked on my door with a smile, gave me a big hug, and handed over a plate of brownies, or a pan of lasagna, or freezer meal or loaf of bread.  And I heard and felt the message that no one needed to say out loud.  

Food is love.

And that’s why I love what we do here.  My Mom taught me so much of what I know not just about  food, but gardening, home-making, life, faith, family and so much more.  And I have had the unique opportunity to share it with millions of people around the world.  Millions.  I marvel at that.  Part of that is her legacy.  

Sara Wells Instagram

So while you may have never met my Mom, you know her through her famous Mint Brownies and Peanut Butter and Jam Bars.  You’ve adopted her traditions if like me, these Cheesy twice-baked Bleu Cheese Potatoes or Overnight Sausage and Egg Casserole  grace your tables on holidays.  You’ve tasted a bit of her warmth and goodness if you’ve made her signature Candy Cane Cookies found in our second book, and her love shines through in countless other recipes on this site and in our books.  Whether she knew it or not, she’s part of Our Best Bites.  I would say the same about Kate’s Mom, who died when Kate was young.  We’re lucky to be the daughters of great women, whose shining examples continue to uplift and inspire us.  

Children with Flowers

For anyone out there experiencing trials and heartache of your own, know this. There is purpose in everything, even the darker days.  I truly believe that.  One of my favorite thoughts is by James E. Faust, and I’ve felt a renewed significance of it in these past weeks:

Here then is a great truth. In the pain, the agony, and the heroic endeavors of life, we pass through a refiner’s fire, and the insignificant and the unimportant in our lives can melt away like dross and make our faith bright, intact, and strong. In this way the divine image can be mirrored from the soul. It is part of the purging toll exacted of some to become acquainted with God. In the agonies of life, we seem to listen better to the faint, godly whisperings of the Divine Shepherd.

Into every life there come the painful, despairing days of adversity and buffeting. There seems to be a full measure of anguish, sorrow, and often heartbreak for everyone, including those who earnestly seek to do right and be faithful. The thorns that prick, that stick in the flesh, that hurt, often change lives which seem robbed of significance and hope. This change comes about through a refining process which often seems cruel and hard. In this way the soul can become like soft clay in the hands of the Master in building lives of faith, usefulness, beauty, and strength.  (-Faust, The Refiner’s Fire.)

In the weeks to come, you’ll see my pot roast recipe pop up here, and now you’ll know all the heart behind it. I hope it, along with the rest of the food we share here, helps you create traditions, memories, and safe places for your own hearts to return to. 

 

 

woman in denim shirt holding a salad bowl
Meet The Author

Sara Wells

Sara Wells co-founded Our Best Bites in 2008. She is the author of three Bestselling Cook Books, Best Bites: 150 Family Favorite RecipesSavoring the Seasons with Our Best Bites, and 400 Calories or Less from Our Best Bites. Sara’s work has been featured in many local and national news outlets and publications such as Parenting MagazineBetter Homes & GardensFine CookingThe Rachel Ray Show and the New York Times.

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Questions & Reviews

  1. This post is beautiful. My dad passed away a month and a half ago, its difficult. Thanks for sharing.

  2. That was beautiful. Thank you for sharing your sweet memories and your heart with all of us, as well as your moms recipes. I have learned in recent months that the veil is so thin and close. May you and your family find peace, strength,comfort and love from our Savior and Father in Heaven.

  3. Thank you for sharing this post. My deepest sympathies for you and your family. Thank you for your work and your faith. May God bless you!

  4. You are beautiful! I have never commented or even thanked you yet I am one of your biggest fans. I share your recipes with everyone I know, because I too am a woman who communicates with food. Thank you for being bold enough to share food, love and God all at the same time. You are simply beautiful. Thank you!

  5. My sincerest condolences in the loss of your mother. I don’t know that anything can truly prepare you for someone’s passing.

    I have struggled since I unexpectedly lost my Mom on February 19th and then my best friend of 27 years lost her couragous battle with breast cancer on her 49th birthday, just a few months later.

    You were fortunate that you were able to be with your beloved Mother and to say goodbye.

    Thank you for sharing your experience and the beautiful quote Very touching.

  6. Your memories of your mom brought back so many of mine. While I wasn’t as close with mine as you were with yours. I know the deepest of feelings you’ve been through. It was my daddy that taught me to cook. He was home earlier than mother and felt that if she had to earn the living then he had to share all of the house & cooking chores too. You’re right food is love.
    Our joy is that we do get to see our loved ones again. Whether it’s our Mom, Dad, or Mama (my maternal grandmother that taught all of us the importance of showing our love with food), we know that soon there will be many great family reunions in heaven. I love your site and your recipes and wish you a blessed day.
    Margo

  7. I am so sorry for the loss of your momma. My momma died 15 months ago.. only 57 years old. She struggled the last years of her life and though it was very hard to say goodbye, I know she is no longer in pain and rejoicing with her Savior. Selfishly I wish I had her here… I miss her with every beat of my heart… but I know I will see her again. Praying for you and your family these next days, weeks, and months.

  8. This is absolutely beautiful, thank you! My grandmother just recently passed away and this post made me realize how many things are passed down from generation to generation, mother to daughter etc. The comfort in a roast, or in my case homemade chocolate pudding. Thank you for your beautiful words. I’m sorry for your loss.