Sunday, June 10, 2018

Blue Rhythmic Night - Crystal Rabbit Moon of Cooperation, Day 11





6 Akbal

Blue Rhythmic Night


 That was the Night

Of Light and Sacred Things

When after endless Drought

It fell – the rain, the dew – Amrita!*


 That was the Night

When I trembled in your Arms

Took you in my Arms

Kissed you in the Dark


 That was the Night

Of  Dreams fulfilled –

We clung as Magnets reunited –

Like a Force of Nature 


That was the Night

When Heaven rose from the moist Earth

When a goddess took her god

Into the Sacred Garden of Delight *


*Amrita: Sanskrit word for "immortality", often referred to in sacred texts as "nectar."  The word's earliest occurrence appears in the Rigveda as one of several synonyms for soma, the drink which confers immortality upon the gods. It also refers to the feminine sexual fluid.

©Kleomichele Leeds 

                              







Annie "Knowles" Fisher (December 3, 1867 – June 11, 1938) was a cook, caterer and entrepreneur. She lived in Columbia, Missouri, and worked for prominent families as a cook until she started her own catering business. Annie became famous in Missouri for her widely sold beaten biscuits. Through her cooking, Annie amassed a sizable fortune and purchased rental properties and farms in and around Boone County.


Early life

Annie "Knowles" Fisher was born on December 3, 1867, in Boone County. She was one of eleven children born to former slaves Robert and Charlotte Knowles . From an early age, Annie was put in charge of cooking for the family. Although Annie attended school for a short time, she eventually quit school to help support her family. Annie found her love of cooking while working in kitchens of wealthy white families in the Columbia area. She was paid little and received second hand clothing as one of the "perks" of the job. Annie noted later in life in a newspaper article that although she was grateful for the second hand clothing, she wanted to make a good living so that she could afford new clothes. Annie went to work for the Lenoir-Nifong family of Maplewood, Missouri. In 1890, Annie began to work for George Bingham Rollins and the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity at the University of Missouri.

Cooking, catering and entrepreneurship

Annie saved most of the money she made cooking to start her catering business which she operated out of her restaurant, the Wayside Inn, which was located at the sight of her childhood home behind Grindstone schoolhouse. She reportedly had over 1,000 place settings of china and handled many large catered events for the University of Missouri. One of her largest banquets at an Alumni dinner for the University of Missouri. She was paid $1,200 at a price of two dollars per plate. Annie's beaten biscuits became so popular that Missourians who had moved out of state would mail order her biscuits to be delivered to states as far away as New York and California. Annie cooked in what she referred to as, "old Missouri style," which meant she used local ingredients to give her food a distinct flavor. Her cooking became so popular that she began endorsing local businesses such as the Boone County Mill's H-P flour which she used in her famous biscuits. In 1911, a Sedalia hostess who handled catering for the Missouri State fair made sure Fisher's biscuits were on the presidential table for William Howard Taft's visit. Fisher's ingenuity didn't end in the kitchen, she invented a specific cutter for her biscuits that would keep them from sticking to the surface of the cutter and after Fisher's mail order business had taken off, she incorporated a biscuit brake to meet the demand for her biscuits. In a news article, Fisher reported she usually makes around one million biscuits a year and around 50 dozen biscuits every hour with help from her daughter. By 1919, Fisher was making $500 a month selling her biscuits alone, she sold them for 15 cents a dozen. Using the profits from her cooking and catering businesses, Fisher bought her first house in 1901 and paid it off in two years. After her first property purchase, Fisher went on to buy 18 rental properties in the downtown Columbia area, most of which were along what is now Ash and Fifth streets. Later after Fisher's catering business had become quite successful, she purchased a 58 acre farm outside of Columbia where she raised livestock and crops to use in her cooking.

"Old Missouri Style" Beaten Biscuit recipe

Fisher's recipe included 1 quart of sifted flour, 1/3 cup of pure lard, 1/3 cup of butter, 1 cup of sweetened water, and salt to taste. Ingredients are mixed thoroughly and beaten for 15 minutes to make biscuits light and fluffy. Fisher said beating the biscuits was meant to, "put life into them."


Published in the University Missourian on March 17, 1919:

Personal life

Fisher was considered by those who met her to be a strong, witty businesswoman who was not afraid to speak her mind. In 1919, Fisher gave a speech at a meeting of the National Negro Business League. In her speech, Fisher told those assembled how to make a profit from catering and about her life growing up. She said she was a 57 year old woman who was not afraid to tell her age. In 1907, Fisher divorced her husband William and offered him a little over 100 dollars to not contest the divorce in court. William refused and was awarded nothing by the court system. Fisher said that her marriage wasn't a success and that for her to be successful she had to believe in herself and no one else. Fisher put her daughter Lucille through college and a music conservatory with the profits from her catering business. Fisher's first home was a 16 room house on Park Avenue which stood until 1960. In the 1920's she had a house built along Old Highway 63. During construction, she bought the materials, hired her own workers, and stayed on the property in a tent to oversee construction. Fisher was a celebrated personality in Columbia, with multiple articles written about her in the University Missourian. One particularly interesting article concerned her suggestions for Thanksgiving dinner. Fisher rented her properties out to black families who couldn't find housing easily in 1913. Annie gave out her recipes freely, but noted that she couldn't teach the common sense needed to cook her food. In a 1927 article in the Springfield Leader, Fisher's estimated net worth was approximately $100,000. Fisher was buried in a modest grave in 1938 at the Memorial Park Cemetery in Columbia.

Legacy

Annie Fisher's legacy lives on during black history month when a Columbia woman dresses as Fisher and visits schools to share the story of how local African Americans have helped to shape the history of Boone County. The Annie Fisher Food Pantry is operated by the Columbia Housing Authority; the goal of this local food pantry is to provide nutritional options for growing families. It is supplied by the Food bank of Central and Northeastern Missouri.*




AKBAL



Kin 123: Blue Rhythmic Night


I organize in order to dream
Balancing intuition
I seal the input of abundance
With the rhythmic tone of equality
I am guided by my own power doubled.


Every humanly created object in the world that we see is a result of a process of visualization, projection and manifestation.*



*Star Traveler's 13 Moon Almanac of Synchronicity, Galactic Research Institute, Law of Time Press, Ashland, Oregon, 2017-2018.








 The Sacred Tzolk'in





Svadhistana Chakra (Kali Plasma)




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