Jerry and I contributed wine while everyone else created the always delicious and always ample traditional and unusual Thanksgiving meal, including Jello.
This was the best year yet with everything tasting outstanding (exceptions taken by some who don’t like sweet potatoes or Brussel sprouts). The great thing is there is so much the meal lasts more than two days. Between eating, watching the parade and football, and playing games, the day exceeded expectations.
All this work took a toll.
On Friday everyone went to the movie theater but saw different films. Coco, Wonder, Justice League and Thor all received good to top reviews. Can you match the viewer to the movie?
(Jerry, Anna Lee, Jeff, Dave, Cheryl, Bennett, Ed 49, Leora 40ish, Edan 16, and Liat 14).
Saturday is Troy Farmer’s Market day, a must for our purchasing maple syrup. The market moves indoors during the winter months but is still a local event.
Sunday the DC trio went home. We went to lunch at A Better Bite, a Mediterranean restaurant with a sandwich named Hadassah. We then went to the Albany Institute of History & Art. The exhibit Well-Dressed in Victorian Albany showed the finely detailed clothing worn by middle and upper-class women.
Note the stitches, beadwork and lacework.
The exhibit on Anti-Suffragettes is a bit charming.
In Albany, many women of means opposed women getting the vote because they thought it would lessen their commitment to home responsibilities. It seemed if you were rich you could afford to cede your opinion to your husband but what about poor women who labored under harsh conditions?
At the New York State History Museum was a 9-11 exhibit that has a fire truck, the first one on the scene, all but destroyed on that horrible day. Nearby is an exhibit of vintage fire trucks.
We had breakfast with Jeff before he drove us to ALB airport. Our time in DC and Troy was wonderful as usual, full of loving family doing so many things together. We look forward to a repeat next year.