Food & Drink

A Favorite Daughter

Dancer, Wire actor, and storyteller Maria Broom always comes home.

With leather bracelets from India adorning each ankle, Maria Broom
sits at her kitchen table as she talks about her 64 years of
gallivanting across the globe. “I’ve been to the continent of Africa at
least eight times,” says the Windsor Mill resident. “I’ve been to India
four times. I’ve been to Czechoslovakia and Poland four times, and I
spent a year in Germany, a year in Hawaii, a year in Tennessee, and a
year in L.A.” Her brief time as a flight attendant actually spurred her
interest in cooking. But all roads have returned her to Baltimore. “I
always come back here,” she says.

Broom’s peripatetic career path has had many incarnations—including roles on The Wire and Homicide: Life on the Street,
a four-year stint as a WJZ consumer reporter (working alongside an
ingénue named Oprah Winfrey), and as an accomplished storyteller who
performs locally. But her primary passion is dance, which she currently
teaches at the Baltimore School for the Arts.

A trip to see Ballet Russes de Monte Carlo at the Lyric at
age six gave her direction. “I remember thinking, ‘Those are my
people,’” she says. “‘That’s where I need to be.’”

Broom studied dance while at Morgan State University and won a
Fulbright scholarship to Germany in the early ’70s. When her studies
ended, she had a change of heart about dancing. World travel beckoned,
especially after she watched a flight attendant give instructions in
different languages while en route back home.

“I thought, ‘I can do that—I can do it in French, I can do it in
German, and if I hear it enough, I can do it in Spanish,’” she says.

When she got home, she headed to New York and interviewed with Pan
Am. They offered her a job based in Miami. But she got more than she
bargained for.

“In those days, there were real meals being served, and you had to
cook,” she says, laughing at the memory. “We actually had to preheat
these ovens and ask the people in first class, ‘How would you like your
steak? Rare or medium rare,’ and thenyou had to remember that the person
in 3F wanted it well-done. It was the perfect job for a year.”

These days, Broom is happy to be back on terra firma in her
own country kitchen, where she loves to put together a meal. “I am an
intuitive cook,” says Broom, who enjoys making stir-fry. “When I became a
vegetarian in 1976, so much of it was trial and error. I went through a
lot of tofu in those early years.”

While her life has led her in many directions, Broom finds it’s a
small world after all. “The older adults know me from my
consumer-reporter days, the middle-aged adults know me from teaching
their children, and now the younger adults know me as Miss Maria who
comes to their classroom and performs,” she says. “I feel like the
village’s favorite daughter!”


Miss Maria’s Veggie Stir-Fry

INGREDIENTS

  • 2 tablespoons ghee (clarified butter)
  • 1 medium organic sweet onion, diced
  • 1 medium organic red pepper, seeded and sliced thinly
  • 2 cups organic broccoli florets
  • 1 cup organic portobella or shiitake mushrooms, cut into large dice
  • 2 garlic cloves, crushed
  • 1 teaspoon cumin
  • 2 teaspoons curry
  • 2 teaspoons maple syrup
  • 3 cups organic brown basmati rice, cooked according to package directions

DIRECTIONS

  • In a large skillet, add 1 tablespoon ghee, and melt on low-medium heat.
  • Add onion, and sauté for 10 minutes or until translucent.
  • Add peppers and broccoli florets, and sauté for two to three minutes.
  • Add mushrooms and garlic and sauté with other vegetables for an additional two minutes.
  • In a small saucepan, melt remaining tablespoon of ghee over low-medium heat.
  • Add cumin, curry, and maple syrup, and stir until sauce forms a paste.
  • Add paste to vegetables.
  • Stir. Serve over rice. Serves 4.