
Someone I love just gave me this “Brew” cup and infuser ball along with loose black tea leaves mingled with cinnamon, ginger, turmeric, milk chocolate curls, and calendula petals… what’s not to love?
I am sipping liquid Autumn.
In my online writing voyage, I’ve just come to a new port of call—Sharing Our Stories: Magic in a Blog.
Those words, stories and magic, are all the passport I need to disembark and discover…

Today’s open invitation is writing about a favorite fall food, or one loved as a child.
My mind goes immediately to the breakfast cereal Count Chocula. I look for it at the beginning of every autumn now, but, if I recall correctly, it used to be available all year round when I was a child. I could be wrong. At any rate, I hadn’t seen it in decades when, maybe three years ago, it reappeared on grocery shelves as if by magic—poof! Voilà! —catapulting me, wide-eyed, open-jawed, straight back into childhood, to age 8? 9? 10?, hunkered over the cereal bowl, immersed in a book (for one cannot eat a bowl of cereal without a book, right? Isn’t it some unwritten law?). I wouldn’t stop at one bowl, see. Usually it was two. Maybe even three… suddenly my father is walking through the kitchen again, scowling: “First ketchup! You use way more than you should. Now this. Nobody needs to eat this much cereal…I’m buying three gallons of milk a week! For only two kids!”
What would he say if he could see how many boxes of Count Chocula I have, at this very moment, squirreled away my cabinet? Yikes!
Once this prompt got me walking around in Long Ago, savoring my Count Chocula, I began tasting other things… my mother’s peanut butter cookies with Hershey’s kisses on top, slightly melted from the fresh-baked warmth. She made them when neighborhood kids gathered at our house to watch the annual airing of The Wizard of Oz on TV, in those pre-cable days. I think this was in fall… there was a chill outside. The grainy-crunch cookies with their soft-bottom chocolate caps, Dorothy, her comrades, her red ruby slippers (which I later went to see numerous times in the Smithsonian), dear Toto, Glinda in her iridescent bubble, the Emerald City, the music… all magic, all warmth… there’s no place like home in the living room with friends and family, taking a trip down the yellow brick road once a year.
I do not know why memory leads from that scene to school carnivals, the caramel apples and Crackerjacks that I did NOT like, the scent of hot buttery popcorn in the air, the delicious excitement of reaching my arm into a giant clown face with a cut-out mouth for a grab-bag full of little treasures…and onto Halloween, the shivery joy of putting on a costume and going out into the cold dark night with friends who looked funny, creepy, and spooky but never really scary, in a time and place where it was safe to go trick-or-treating from house to house to house…oh, and I never did like candy corn, although it’s pretty and fun to use as decorations, like for turkey beaks or tail feathers on tabletop arrangements at Thanksgiving.
—Thanksgiving.
My mother’s carrot cake.
Locally famous, the only carrot cake I’ve ever really liked. Everyone loved it. I have her recipe. I make it every Thanksgiving and again at Christmas. Her secret: carrots finely-grated to pulp and extra cinnamon.
—And there it is.
My favorite flavor of fall.
Cinnamon isn’t exactly a food in itself, but to me, it’s the essence of celebration in my mother’s cake, the aromatic allure of my new autumn spice latte tea, the crowning glory of hot apple cider, the thing behind my longing for pumpkin spice coffee at the first hint of coolness in the air, just as reds and golds begin tinging the leaves… interesting, isn’t it, this tree-connection. Cinnamon is, after all, bark. The dying of the leaves, the dying of the year, going out in a blaze of glory, cinnamon their royal embalming spice, rich, fragrant, preserving like memory, like immortality, like being a child at home, face pressed again the window soon to reflect candlelight, the holiness in holidays, flickering bright with hope and promise when the days grow short and dark…
My best-loved taste of fall.
Well, and Count Chocula.

—Yum.
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I’m joining an open community of writers over at Sharing Our Stories: Magic in a Blog. If you write (or want to write) just for the magic of it, consider this your invitation to join us. #sosmagic
I love the way you describe Count Chocula!
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I’ve never had Count Chocula and your the second post to mention “hiding” fall favorites..I love how this post went beyond one fall food. I’m inspired to find a collection of fall foods.
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I couldn’t believe it when Ruth wrote of hiding the honeycrisps! All an effort to make the magic last, that’s all. Surely not hoarding…
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For me it has to be pumpkin. I know that’s predictable but I can still remember walking out on my parents’ back porch only to find a brown speckled bowl holding pumpkin baked deliciousness. No note but I knew it who had snuck it over.
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Hello, Anna Maria! As for pumpkin – sure it’s big seasonal favorite, as it should be, but it’s those connotations of loved ones and special times that have the most evocative pull… as you allude to here. Makes me want to know the rest of the story. 🙂 Hope you and yours are well.
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Your memories of Count Chocula brought back the jingle from the advertisements and the voice of Count Chocula, what a riot! Haven’t thought of that cereal in years. Also reminds me of Twinkies & swizzle sticks & my favorite, green apple Jolly Ranchers. Enjoy your Count Chocula! 🍂👻🍂
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It IS a riot, isn’t it?! I loved green apple Super Bubble gum. Dyed our tongues blue and my dad said it stunk. Lol. That retro stuff was great – fun to “retaste” it all. Count C has a friendlier appearance on the box than he did back then. Had a bowl this morning – just one. 🙂
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I would have never thought you a Count Chocula eater! 🙂 I have never had that cereal, but now I kind of want to try it. What a flavorful journey! Welcome to this portal of writing!
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What can I say -? Childhood faves die hard! All a part of recapturing the magic of those times, I think. Thanks so much, Elsie – happy to “see” you. 🙂
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Such beautiful writing about food! You brought me back through so many of my own memories around food. My cereal was Lucky Charms!
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Thank you and Lucky Charms was my sister’s favorite! Magically delicious:)
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