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Baking Great Memories Pizza Random Thoughts

Mom, Finally Getting the Props She Deserved

May 9, 2023

I had a dream about my mom this week. She was standing on the front porch of my parents’ former home and I was behind the screen of the front door looking at her. She was dressed up and looked beautiful. I told her I wanted to open the door to hug her but I was afraid she would disappear. She said, “No, I won’t.” So, I opened the screen and walked to her. We had a long, tight, emotional hug, and then I must have awakened. I haven’t been able to hug her since 1992, and feeling that lingering embrace again felt so real and so good.

I think she’s been on my mind because one of my stories about her got picked by Writer’s Read in NYC, which means I’ll be going to New York to read it in front of a crowd on Saturday, May 13th. If you live in NYC or are visiting, I would be honored to have you join us. Here’s a link to buy tickets: https://bit.ly/3Azw5Xg

(Please pardon my blatant self-promotion.) The story is about me being a snotty teenager, embarrassed by my mom and not wanting her to come to Mother-Daughter night sponsored by the Girls Athletic Association. (I’m pasting the story below, in case you’ve never seen it.)

Then I had my “Mom” Epiphany, brought on by guilt over being such a jerk, my mother’s unwavering love, and her absolutely delicious pizza. She and I started a new chapter after that moment.

Maybe it was my frontal lobe finally starting to mature and develop after a thorough thumping from the universe, which I so richly deserved. I’m glad it happened in time for me to appreciate her for who she was for the remainder of our years together. Thanks frontal lobe!

All I can say on Mother’s Day is, if you’re lucky enough to still have your mom around, please put your arms around her, give her a hug, and tell her she what she means to you. Better yet, do that AND write out how you feel in a lovely note to her. It’s all any mom really wants. (I hope my kids are reading this!)

And to all you moms, step-moms, grandmothers, and dads who’ve had to be moms too, I wish you a Happy Mother’s Day filled with appreciation, love, and some fine quality chocolate. Mom’s Powerful Pizza Recipe is after the story.

The Power of Love and Pizza

When I was a teenager in the 1970s, the combination of my mom’s thick Italian accent, lack of education, 1940s hairstyle, booming voice, and obesity made me cringe when friends were around. So, I did not want my mom to attend Mother-Daughter Night, sponsored by the Girls Athletic Association. 

I said something snotty like: “Oh girls and their moms will be in the gym. They’ll be running around in shorts, playing volleyball and basketball. I don’t know what you’d do there, but you can come if you want.”


She couldn’t hide the disappointment in her voice. “You don’t a want a me dare. I’ll a look a like a big a buffalo wit all a dose a skinny mothers.” With resignation and attempted cheer, she added, “Its a OK honey, you go without a me.  Have a good a time a.”

A good daughter would have felt terrible, but I was relieved. I knew she wouldn’t be able to play like the other mothers. And I didn’t want everyone knowing my mom was more like everyone’s grandmother. Plus, she was always telling people how wonderful I was and I was afraid people would laugh at us.

So, my mom stayed home and I went to GAA night with my best friend Carolyn, her young, thin mother, and a little something my mom sent. 

All night, I watched mothers in blue jeans and shorts leaping acrobatically as they played volleyball. While I played, my self-absorbed, teenage brain kept thinking, why can’t my mother be cool like this? Why did she have to wait until she was forty-two to have me? Why does she have to be overweight, and why does she still have that dumb accent? I felt low and alone all night. Then it was time to eat. 

The little something my mom sent was two pizzas the size of large cookie sheets. She’d baked them the day before and they became her ambassadors. 

After we played, we settled in the gym bleachers for snacks. I brought out the pizzas my mother carefully wrapped in aluminum foil. I checked them for weird ingredients because occasionally I’d come home, smell something good and garlicky, open the oven door and recoil at the sight of a split head of a goat sizzling away. Since mom never wasted anything, I had to make sure she hadn’t slipped a goaty surprise into a pizza.

They checked out, I sliced them, passed them around and waited, hoping people liked them. Things were quiet, then I heard whispers.  Mothers, daughters, even the gym teacher started asking about the pizza…who brought it, who made it, and where could they get more? They raved about it, telling me how lucky I was. They said none of them ever got delicious homemade pizza like this.

In minutes, my mother became the most famous mother in GAA history without touching a volleyball. With the oohhh’s and aaahhhs echoing through the gym, you’d have thought these people had never tasted pizza.

I went from feeling like a pathetic orphan, to the luckiest teenager in New Brighton. And the pizza wasn’t even hot. It was cold, day-old pizza. 

Later I sat alone in the bleachers staring at the brightly lit gym floor and felt ashamed. I felt guilty for all the times I’d wished my mom had been someone cooler, normal and American, who didn’t roast goat heads.

Then, I made a vow. I’ll never resent my mother for who she is and what she doesn’t do. She does something just as important as the “normal” moms, she’s simply in a different talent category.

When I got home and told her everyone loved her pizza and how lucky they said I was, she was beaming. We started a new chapter.

Anything that can change a teenage mind deserves props. Never underestimate the power of love…or pizza.

Mom with loaves of bread and her famous pizza.

Mom’s Powerful Pizza

[cooked-recipe id=”21663″]

  • Reply
    Matilda Novak
    May 16, 2023 at 12:24 am

    i’ve just finished reading this — days late (not that i could’ve hopped off to NYC for the read, though i would’ve Loved to)!
    Franzie, this is one of your very best, and i’ve never read anything you wrote that didn’t touch my heart…
    i too sometimes wished for “normal, American parents”….
    How blessed i forever am in my beautiful Hungarian Mama and Papa!
    This was just beautiful.
    Thank you.
    i’m proud as can be of you, too!
    Keep it up, girlfriend….
    We’ll meet one another’s folks one day, and i look forward to that — not to mention eating some of your Mama’s pizza! My Mama rocked the food world as well, and my twin does to this day.
    Love you, and thanks for sharing these beautiful memories….

    • Reply
      Fran Tunno
      May 18, 2023 at 5:46 pm

      Awwww Matilda. Thank you so much for always taking the time to read and to respond. I really appreciate it. I love Hungarian food, there used to be a place in LA that served it and it was delicious. It I am ever in your neck of the woods, I’ll have to get that sister of yours to cook for me! Thanks again! xoxox

  • Reply
    Jane
    May 11, 2023 at 8:08 pm

    Hello Fran, my celebrity cousin ! Your readings in New York about your mom will be the best. Wish we could be there and listen to your memories.
    Hugs and best wishes.

    • Reply
      Fran Tunno
      May 18, 2023 at 5:44 pm

      Hey Jane, I’m hardly a celebrity, there were 15 others there too, but it was really fun. And it will be on YouTube, so I’ll post it. Thanks for the support, you rock. xoxo,

  • Reply
    Julia Shure
    May 11, 2023 at 7:35 pm

    Great story, Fran. I remember you telling me about the goat head in the oven and it cracked me up. And once she made me the best pie! You are lucky to have had such a great mom. She fed you delicious food, saving you from the potato chip casseroles and Rice a Roni a lot of us were raised on. And you’re lucky your frontal lobe kicked in early. I was a jerk for longer!

    • Reply
      Fran Tunno
      May 18, 2023 at 5:43 pm

      Hey Julia, I absolutely remember you reading the story and commenting on the goat head!!! How funny what we remember. I think I would have probably loved a potato chip casserole! What matters is that you are and always have been a wonderful, sweet soul and that’s what your mom probably thought too!
      Thanks for reading and taking the time to write! xoxox

  • Reply
    Frances Rothenberg
    May 11, 2023 at 11:51 am

    Fran, this is such a heartwarming remembrance which made a tear come to my eye.
    Thank you

    • Reply
      Fran Tunno
      May 11, 2023 at 5:42 pm

      Awww, thank you Frances for reading and taking the time to respond. So nice to hear from you. I hope all is well.

  • Reply
    Nicky
    May 10, 2023 at 3:37 pm

    Absolutely a beautiful for Mother’s Day xo

  • Reply
    Chas Madonio
    May 10, 2023 at 3:32 pm

    What a great story – maybe your best ever. I know what it was like to have an Italian parent that was different than the other kids folks. There’s a powerful life lesson in your story. Happy Mother’s Day and good luck in NY.

    • Reply
      Fran Tunno
      May 10, 2023 at 9:43 pm

      Oh Chas, I did not know that about you! We will have to talk about it sometime. Now that the weather is good and I’m finally retired, I promise to make the drive to your neck of the woods. Thanks for the encouraging words!

  • Reply
    Emil Mitchell
    May 10, 2023 at 3:02 pm

    Great Story Ms Fran!

  • Reply
    Charles Burkett
    May 10, 2023 at 1:46 pm

    I’m so sorry I will miss your City Winery performance. But thank you for including it in your blog. I raise a glass to you and your mom here in London. In fact, I’ll even have pizza for dinner. They have a lot of it here but God knows why!!! To you and your mom 🍕🍻

    • Reply
      Fran Tunno
      May 10, 2023 at 9:40 pm

      Thank you Chuck! Bummer we won’t see you, but enjoy that pizza and take lots of pics of Liverpool so I can see them. Have fun and safe travels!

  • Reply
    Bruce Barker
    May 10, 2023 at 12:40 pm

    Love this story, Fran, and congrats on the “live read” this weekend. How cool is that?? Best three-word phrase ever: “Thanks, frontal lobe.” Ha ha!

    • Reply
      Fran Tunno
      May 10, 2023 at 9:39 pm

      Awwww Bruce. Love you to bits. Thank you so much for always reading and taking the time to respond. Thank God that frontal lobe finally kicked in! xo

  • Reply
    Nancy Kirk Long
    May 10, 2023 at 12:21 pm

    I love your stories, Fran. Congratulations on your recognition and have fun in New York. Happy Mother’s Day.

    • Reply
      Fran Tunno
      May 10, 2023 at 9:37 pm

      Hi Nancy, thank you so much. I appreciate you taking the time to read and comment. Happy Mother’s Day to you too.

  • Reply
    JiAnn Jones
    May 10, 2023 at 11:44 am

    So very happy for you, Fran, love the stories of Aunt Mary , your sweet mom, she was a generous , kind , full of life lady who loved you very much. I bet she is s telling everyone in heaven about her daughter, and is so proud that you are going to New York !!!
    Happy Mother’s Day , Fran ❤️

    • Reply
      Fran Tunno
      May 10, 2023 at 9:36 pm

      Hi Joann, I’m sure you’re right, she definitely would be telling everyone, that much is certain. We both had firecracker moms! God bless them both. Thanks for taking the time to write and I wish you a wonderful Mother’s Day!

  • Reply
    cynthiaanngoodman
    May 10, 2023 at 9:48 am

    This is beautiful! So proud (and happy) that you are receiving some well-deserved recognition! Happy Mother’s Day!

    • Reply
      Fran Tunno
      May 10, 2023 at 9:34 pm

      Aww Cynthia, Thank you! Happy Mother’s Day to you too! I’m going to enjoy this while it lasts. xoxoxo

  • Reply
    Mary Mason
    May 10, 2023 at 9:43 am

    As always, Fran, your writing tugs at our hearts in all the right places. Enjoy reading to others in the big apple on Saturday and may you gain many more fans! Once in a while, I believe, we are lucky to get a visit from our moms in our dreams. I had one once too…I still feel that tender touch. Savor it. I believe our moms are ever by our sides.

    • Reply
      Fran Tunno
      May 10, 2023 at 9:33 pm

      Thank you Mary. I’m so glad you got to feel that warm hug too, it means so much that you often take the time to comment. I really appreciate it! I hope all is well! xo

  • Reply
    Marianne Gazzilli
    May 10, 2023 at 9:13 am

    Fran, this touched my heart!! Those of us not fortunate enough to have our moms around for an in person hug on Mother’s Day, hope those who are fortunate enough to have Mom here in person know what a precious jewel they have. The gift any mom wants is a loving relationship with her children. I am so thrilled that you had that loving relationship with your mom!! More importantly, your mom knew you loved her!! Your mom is beaming as your present your story of love for her on Mother’s Day. Can you hear her bragging about “ that’s a my Fran”….I can!!

    • Reply
      Fran Tunno
      May 10, 2023 at 9:26 pm

      Oh Marianne, I hope you’re right. Thank you for taking the time to comment and for the sweet comments. I wish you a very Happy Mother’s Day with lots of love!

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