Port Talbot is a bit like Danny
Boyle’s Olympic opening ceremony – things keep popping up! But these are pop-ups that
all involve food. Now, wouldn’t that have been something in the Olympic Stadium
– an edible stage set? The Olympic Torch one gigantic flaming sambucca? Not
very British though.
I wasn’t a huge fan of the Olympics’
opening ceremony. I liked some of the content but I felt the concept was more
stage set than big arena spectacle. But I did stop watching before the lighting
of the torch and I’ve been assured that was the cherry on the icing on the
cake. That’s far more British.
I am in Wales again, this time for a trip around a forest, a trip around the docks and a trip around the
mayor’s parlour. Don’t you love the word
‘parlour’? From the French parler –
to speak — and originally used for a room set aside for receiving and speaking
to people. So that’s spot on for the Mayor’s room in the Civic Centre. Although the phrase, 'The Mayor's Parlour' makes me think of plumpness: overstuffed chairs and waistcoats stretched over bellies.
Parlours had their day
in both grand and less grand homes. My parents’ house on Sandfields Estate was
built with two downstairs rooms: the front room that we called the parlour, and
the living room at the back of the house. The parlour was where we had an early
family portrait taken. I remember those faint leaves floating up the skin of the
wallpaper. The green patterned carpet had just been laid: you can make out a
cut-off in the background. It was 1964 and we are a perfect advertisement for
the drip-dry family: courtelle, nylon, crimpelene.
One Christmas Day my sister and I
sneaked downstairs in the early hours of the morning to find there were no
presents in front of the gas fire in the living room. With our hearts knocking in our chests we
started to look around the house and found them in the parlour and, in prize of
place, a dolls’ house my dad had made, the roof papered with brick patterned
wallpaper. Slowly, and with some difficulty, we carried it into the living
room, then went back to shift the rest of the presents too.
‘But we put them in there so
you’d have more room and there'd be less mess in here,’ my mother said when she got up and
found us in a sea of wrapping paper in the living room. But the parlour wasn’t
where we lived, where we ate and watched TV. That room was for unfamiliar
things.
The division has gone now. The
wall between the front room and the hall was demolished making an open plan space with the
staircase in the corner. It has the dining table in it now, an oak and stained
glass bookcase from my paternal grandfather’s house, a computer desk for my
mother’s laptop and CD player. We eat here when there are more than three of us
at home. My great niece and nephew dance in here when they visit. Lulu’s
‘Shout’ is a favourite. We play table-top games here. My mother keeps any
flowers she has in this room because it’s cooler than the living room which
faces south-west. And it’s always the front-room now, never the parlour. But
there’s still a sense of otherness about it, as if it’s been set aside for
possibilities, not the business of everyday, ordinary living.
To return to Port Talbot’s pop-ups.
A crop of new eateries have sprung into being during the last couple of months:
- The Copper Penny: a Marstons family pub and carvery restaurant on Baglan Moors.
- Giovanni’s: an Italian Restaurant at The Grand Hotel opposite the station in town.
- Trellis: a café for traditional afternoon teas in Forge Road in the centre of town that promises the cakes of angels.
I’ve ticked the first two off my
list and I’ve only been here two days: I highly recommend them both. After making myself go for a two mile run this morning, up and back down the Prom, a cafe latte at Gelato Gatti's was my reward. And I was very happy with the Spring Lamb Stew with Broad Beans and Spring Onions at The Copper Penny late this afternoon. Giovanni’s is booked for next Friday.
I’m looking to fit in Trellis one weekday afternoon. Well, a girl has to eat.
Perhaps it’s true that there are two types of businesses you can always rely on to ride the tide of tightened budgets during recessions: the ones that involve food and the ones that involve death. And they both can have parlours.
Of course, if you have a parlour, you're very likely to have a mantlepiece. The Copper Penny has a mantlepiece with my kind of ornament on it.
Hungry Writing Prompts
- Write about something quintessentially British.
- Write about a conversation in a particular room.
- Write about a family portrait.
- Write about the business of everyday living.
- Write about a funeral.
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