Much More Than Food

I stood studying the labels on jars of tomato sauce. One promised Traditional Classic. Another claimed Authentic Italian. But it was the jar labeled Bone Marrow Sauce that caught my eye. I took it home with quiet hope and gave it a try, but to no avail. Nothing came close to the sauce I remembered from my childhood.

The Morano family’s morning always began in the second-floor kitchen, where pots clanged softly and the aroma of fresh basil mingled with simmering tomato sauce. The old wood-burning stove groaned under iron pans, and the clatter of spoons on plates was a hymn of endurance. Grandma Catherine stood sentinel over steaming cauldrons while the older children helped wash and slice vegetables fresh picked from the backyard garden.

Though I have not yet been born into the world, the clink of utensils, the muttered invocations, the incense of garlic and onions are imprinting me through scent and sinew of my future mother.  My unborn being absorbs the unspoken rhythms of this home.

My mother’s hands have learned the wisdom of spices and olive oil. They stir the sauce slowly, as if remembering something sacred—bone-marrow-rich shank of beef, vine-ripe tomatoes stewed overnight, and aromatic herbs clipped fresh from the Victory Garden out back: parsley, basil, garlic, and oregano.

Their meals consisted of pasta e fagioli—macaroni and beans—with homemade whole-grain bread baked in a heavy cast-iron oven. Sometimes chicken, fish, or lamb. Beef was rare and expensive, but the bones—ah yes, the bone marrow—gave the sauce a hallowed significance. The commercial sauces that supermarkets sell in glass jars could never equal that deep, rich fullness of body.

My family did not serve mere food here—they took homemade bread and vintage wine in prayerful gratitude to God. And I, not yet born, inhaled its essence and meaning.

My future father, lonely and famished for a good home-cooked meal of lasagna in the warmth of her family kitchen, had already fallen in love—not only with her—but with her Sicilian cuisine. “The way to a man’s heart is through his stomach.” He was a goner after his first meal with her … hook, line, and sinker.

If her sauces had been bland, maybe I would never have been born.

Those quiet rituals nourished far more than hungry bodies. They celebrated the Italian spirit expressed through the sacrificial labor of preparing a family meal. Those who have never tasted genuine Sicilian cuisine have no way of knowing what they have missed.

As I write this, my mind leaps to something Jesus said. “Unless you eat my flesh and drink my blood, you have no life in you (John 6:53).” His loving sacrifice for humanity became eternal nourishment for our daily lives. Those who fail to do so will never have tasted, never have experienced, never have known Him.

And I suddenly realize why those meals have remained with me for eighty-four years. Food was never the point. Long before I learned the essence of Christian faith, I often received it through the ordinary but ancient rituals of an Italian family dinner.

Every loaf of bread, every savory meatball, every ladle of blood-red sauce, every prayer of remembrance before the meal was teaching a child—even one not yet born—that love always gives itself away.


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