Jeff Brawer

Jeff Brawer
Location
Brookline, Massachusetts,
Bio
I have been a television editor in the Boston area for over 25 years, working in broadcast, medical, and industrial TV. I've been dealing with weight issues for over 50 years and ranting about them for an eternity.

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FEBRUARY 8, 2011 4:00PM

Prep School Confidential

Rate: 22 Flag

At the tender age of fourteen, I abandoned hearth, home, tube, and fridge and went off to boarding school for three years.  When I arrived at Williston Academy in the fall of 1964, I was a chubby lad of 160 lbs., but after three months, I was twenty pounds lighter and three inches taller.  The inches were a consequence of puberty; the pounds were victims of circumstance.

Before I wallow in the Dickensian details, it's only fair to note the benefits I received at Williston.  I was given a solid general education with a strong emphasis on writing and literature.  With no TV available, I discovered that there just might be something to this book-reading thing.  I also developed a keen interest of theater since the Drama Club was one of the few places a sports-challenged dweeb could meet girls.

For Williston, like most New England prep schools of that era, was strictly single gender.  Apart from plays, the only contact we had with women came during the occasional Saturday night dance.  These two-hour affairs were more tightly chaperoned than Sicilian mob trials and afforded all the intimacy of a subway platform at rush hour.  Your escorts were chosen by the sole criterion of height, and more often than not, this was bungled.  Many was the night I found myself dancing cheek-to-sternum with some mortified amazon from our sister school.  Prep school may have sharpened my mental skills, but socially, I was one evolutionary step shy of Neanderthal.  As a result, I spent most of my first semester at college gawking at female classmates like a randy village idiot.

The lack of women was only one of many rigors at Williston.  Boarding schools in the 60's came fully equipped with an exhausting and rigidly maintained schedule of studies, athletics, and vicious hazings.  There were daily room inspections, a mandatory dress code, and a dearth of fellow Jews.  Because the school was founded by a dour Congregationalist minister, attending chapel was mandatory six days a week.  To this day, I'm one of the select few of my tribe who knows the words to "Onward Christian Soldiers."

But those hardships were like a week on the Riviera compared to what passed for food at Williston, and I use the word "food" in the broadest possible sense allowed by the English language.

Meals were taken in a large communal dining hall tastefully decorated in Early American Penitentiary.  It could have easily been mistaken for Leavenworth except that the inmates wore blazers and sported more pimples than tattoos.  The room held fifty long rectangular tables, each seating nine students and one faculty member.  Food and drink were served in bulk from indestructible stainless steel platters and pitchers - clearly a time before Martha Stewart had any influence on "institutional" decor.

Like classes, meals at Williston were for instruction, not pleasure.  Apart from providing basic sustenance (dubious at best), the partaking of food was seen as a means to manners, civility, and restraint.  Since the actual food was merely an adjunct to these lessons, it was treated with the same joyless severity as logarithms and gerunds.

However fresh and savory provisions may have been when they arrived at the Williston kitchen, they were soon taken to task by the school's culinary Marine Corps.  Under the stern leadership of head chef Albert Boudreau, the staff didn't so much prepare food as beat it into submission.  Chicken was shaken down and bullied by these gastronomic goons until nothing remained but grease and bones.  Crisp string beans were strong-armed into limp, colorless straw, and potatoes were clubbed into mush right out of the sack.   Serving this stuff wasn't merely an affront to the palette; it was a violation of the Geneva Convention. 

Our biweekly "treat" of roast beef was cooked so far beyond well done that science has yet to find a name for it.  It's as if the recipe came from The Solar Core Cook Book:  "Place meat in preheated oven at 15,000,000° F and roast until nuclei are sufficiently fused."  The remains were then stored in steam chambers until the texture became indistinguishable from an all-weather radial.  Once it was certain no vestige of flavor remained, the meat was cut into thin grayish-white slices and stacked on cold metal trays.  It was served with a brown sludge-like gravy consisting of equal parts beef drippings, butter, flour, flour, flour, flour, and flour.

Another feature of the Williston dining experience was the requirement to wait tables for a three-meal rotation every nine days.  Apparently, it wasn't enough to be nauseated by the culinary horrors tableside, you had to witness first hand how meat and produce could be cruelly transformed into hardened criminal fare.  You also learned the brutal lessons of natural selection as you and forty-nine other crazed students fought with Darwinian fierceness for the clean dishes and silverware needed to reset the tables before you were late for class.

In such a place at such a time, weight loss wasn't a sign of deprivation; it was a blessing.

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I remember all that from my prep school days. Here's a tale: I happened to be captain of the debating society and we did so well in our league that we were asked to participate in the nationals at Yale. But none of us wanted to win. The winners would officially be dubbed "Master Debaters," and having the headmaster announce that at dinner would have ruined me for life.
"Brawer--time for your vicious hazing!"

Believe me, prep school to lose weight is better than Jenny Craig lasagna.

r
Your delightful post reminds me once again how smart I was to turn down a chance at another Army hitch when my first one ran out, and John's comment provides much grist for the next Friday night banter session with O'Really?
Ack. I didn't spend as long as you did at a prep school, but it was long enough. I well remember the dining room strictures, the food-like substances, no television ... hell, we even had mostly crap teachers (although I finally did manage to get out of high school). And don't even get me started on chapel. I was born a Protestant, but it turned me off religion for life.

In fact, it was more like a reform school than anything else. My friend Lloyd and I used to take off in sub-zero weather to run the ice and snow filled streets just to get out for awhile.

What's worse, for years they sent me letters asking me, as an alumnus, to send them money. Fat farking chance.
Wonderful culinary description. Doesn't sound a whole lot different than dinnertime at my college fraternity.
Ah, you bring back memories of my own boarding schools days -- 4 years at a Catholic Seminary High School known as the "Poor boys seminary". On the top of a huge hill in the middle of absolutely nowhere. The spare ribs they served were 50% bone and 49% fat. No girls, not allowed to leave, no town, nobody different than us. Who was the idiot who thought that was a way to teach anybody anything? Sensory deprivation is highly overrated.
Jeff, I went a prep school that was the Baltic and Mediterranean Avenues of prep schools. We use to say the our chef had served as chief steward on the HMS Bounty.
I remember all of that, although I also had the distinction of being the last 9th grade class to start at my joint as an all male school. Next year the ladies arrived. Biggest furor then, happened to be dress code. Guys had to wear sportcoats and ties, and girls did not. Many wore cords, topsiders, and oxford shirts ... just like the guys ... who also had to have a coat and tie to boot.

Oh the injustice of it all. Great education, but, yeah, left some serious scars on the socialization skills starting with an incredible penchant for cutting sarcasm.
Funny stuff, Jeff! Loved the part about a Jew going to Chapel, singing Onward Christian Soldiers. I was in private school, too, but didn't board. My best friend, Butch, was Jewish (which to me always sounded like a word that meant sort of a Jew), I was a Baptist and the school was Episcopalian. We both sang in the choir; mandatorily took "Sacred Studies" ... all very confusing for him. I've lost track of Butch, but believe he became a Mormon and is living in Utah with multiple wives ... and one dog. I hear he and the dog often take the wives hunting, but I too may be confused. Deserves to be rated again {{{R}}}
Jeff....This cracked me up. the closest I got to that kind of food was on a troopship headed for Vietnam!

Believe me, Chef Boudreau would be Escoffier himself in comparison.
It's been a long time since I laughed hard enough to massage all my internal organs.
Sometimes I am grateful to have been born too poor to have had to undergo this kind of institutional abuse .........r
john - Staying below the radar was the best way to survive. Being a drama nerd was a great way to meet girls, but it meant taking a lot of shit from classmates.

Con - Back then, I would have cut off my right hand for that lasagna.

Matt - I often wonder if there's an anti-Cordon Bleu culinary school somewhere in Eastern Europe that trains institutional chefs.

Boanerges Redux - The choice was to be part of the system or become subversive...and unlike real life, subversives had more fun and ate better.

Walter - The first year we had our own apartment at college, Blumenthal and I almost ruined our digestive tracks by only eating food that could be fried in our one pan.

Gary - I swore that my own kids would do the public school route and was lucky with the quality of Brookline schools.

OEsheepdog - I'm sure the good Chef Boudreau (not his real name by the way - I'm terrified of reprisals) picked up his skills at the same venue attended by Cool Hand Luke.

NEMac - The worst problem for me was going from Williston to Tufts in the late '60s and being unable to deal with the freedom and "recreational opportunities," both female and pharmaceutical.

Rod - Having grown up in New England in a WASPY environment full of genteel anti-Semitism, I was clueless about this phenomenon until prep school.

Flylooper - I suspect you had more to worry about than the food.

Bookgirl68 - Glad you enjoyed it.
Rosycheeks - Forgive me if this piece comes off as over-privileged whining. We write what we know.
I wasn't being tongue in cheek here, I really meant what I said and certainly do not see you as an overindulged brat by any means. I think you got a bad deal and would have had more fun in a world less structured and with a mom who cooked for you.......
Humorous recollections. I am not being snide when I say in some ways I am glad I grew up the way I did, we still had the freedom to hang out on the corners and work in pizza shops, drive to the Jersey shore. It's a hell of an education too. Good read.
You and Blu were pre school graduates, eh? Hmm...
Hilarious! I went to a small all-boy Catholic high school in Massachusetts and I'm grinning and grimacing. I also visit the area of your school every month and I'll have a hard time not laughing at inappropriate times. Thanks. R
That should be "digestive tracts" above...idiot!
I love this sentence: "Since the actual food was merely an adjunct to these lessons, it was treated with the same joyless severity as logarithms and gerunds."

The advantage of girls' schools: the kitchens are up against eating disorders so they put in some real effort (I am nostalgic for my high school's cold strawberry soup). And we were all in favor of waiting tables, at least until we got into trouble--yes, "we," as a student body--for sexually harassing the hot dishwasher.
I love your style :) I bet you wouldn't have survived prep school without your awesome sense of humor. Read you soon, I hope! (R)
Good news: The food at Williston has greatly improved! And, as you know, there are GIRLS there too. You should consider a stint teaching creative writing at alma mater to erase bad memories, although your bad memories bring me great joy!
I had to smile at the Early American Penitentiary decor and the school's culinary Marine Corps....love that sarcasm :)
The Solar Core Cook Book:  "Place meat in preheated oven at 15,000,000° F and roast until nuclei are sufficiently fused." 

Hilarious, as was the whole story. I think my grandma used that same cookbook when preparing pork chops. She made great gravy though. R
Boarding schools are very good option for the teenagers that want to study in a limited structure. There are so many online boarding schools are available for such juveniles.
Boarding schools are very good option for the teenagers that want to study in a limited structure. There are so many online boarding schools are available for such juveniles.