Next day Young Sookie and Judy turned a hand mill and ground up cabbages and turnips, nuts and red peppers. When the girls added some dried garlic, their eyes began to water and the children began to laugh. Mrs. Gray sent them outdoors into the fresh air.
What wonderful smells were coming from all the houses up and down the street! It made their mouths water. Everybody was making kimchi, and everybody was looking forward to the hot taste of the pickles when it would be ready-yes, even Judy!
"I'm going to like it," she told Young Sookie. "After all, I helped make it. I'll enjoy it no matter what it does to my tongue!"
Young Sookie laughed.
"Soon you'll be a real Korean," she said. "Kimchi pickles will help!"
November: The Tenth Moon
KOREAN SLED
Judy came into the house one day in late November. She threw aside her coat.
"I don't like Young Sookie any more," she told her mother angrily. "She's mean."
"Oh ?" Mrs. Gray looked up from her sewing. "What has she done?"
"She won' t play with me. Kim and she went off sledding and wouldn't take me."
"Did you say something to hurt them?" asked Mrs. Gray.
"Oh, well, I . . . I just laughed when I saw their Korean sleds. Then I told them about the toboggan I have at home, and about my skates and skis."
"It's much better for us to use Korean things while we are living in this country, Judy. Remember, there has been a war in Korea, and the people must buy all the necessary things first, before they think of skates and sleds. But you know what fun the boys and girls have with the toys they make. Kim and Young Sookie didn't buy their sleds, did they?"
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