A parsnip. A leek. Three sweet
potatoes the size of a child’s fist. A sweetheart cabbage that was far too
small to serve at Saturday's Easter family dinner for eight. Leftover chicken.
I’m thinking soup. Grab the chicken stock, garlic, salt and pepper.
The trifling plate of cooked chicken
was the only thing left over from lunch. Roast potatoes, roast parsnips, honeyed carrots, peas and leeks sauteed in butter, sausage-meat stuffing and gravy all disappeared within a crumb and a splash. I reckon that a video of the table, played back at
high speed, might easily draw similarities to a shoal of pirhanas stripping the
flesh from a cow pushed into a Brazilian river.
My 1912 doorstep size Ward Lock
edition of Mrs Beeton’s Book of Household Management expounds on soup – broth, clear and thick – for over 50 pages. It’s
one of a handful of collectable books that I kept after I sold Foxed &
Bound, the second-hand and antiquarian bookshop I ran for 10 years until the
end of 1999. The recipes that catch my eye are Solferino Soup (with choux
pastry), Prince’s Soup (with turnips) and Turtle Soup (barricade the terrapin
tank).
When the delights of Mrs Beeton –
Sweet potatoes deserve to receive more
intelligent attention in the kitchen – completely distract me from writing
this blog post I come across some other people’s leftovers flattened between
the pages: a dried fern, the disintegrating flakes of azure blue silver paper that
I imagine once sealed a cigarette packet although not a trace of dry tobacco scent remains, a fragment of old newspaper with a quote urging people to return any books they borrow, and one
of Julian Barnes’ ‘Pedant in the Kitchen’ columns cut from The Guardian
in 2003. By me. The paper’s name and date, 5.4.03, are scribbled in my handwriting
on the yellowing newsprint. But I can’t remember doing it.
I don’t even remember reading the
column. But I feel as if I should. I recently bought Barnes’ book, The Pedant in the Kitchen, and this
particular article, ‘Mrs Beeton to the rescue’, in which he talks about his
mother’s hulking 1915 edition of Mrs Beeton, appears in it verbatim, albeit with
the alternative title, ‘The Cactus and the Slipper’. But when I read it again I
had no memory of the original article, or of ever having read the Guardian column,
or of even having seen the phrase, The
Pedant in the Kitchen, before.
How much of my life has been so easily
forgotten? My guess would be: more than I’m comfortable with. Does it matter?
Probably not. Memories associated with heightened emotional experiences tend to
be the ones that persist. Perhaps what
matters more is that I pay attention in the moment. On this day in 2003 I
bothered to cut out the article because I recognised and relished the link to
something in my life. I acted to mark that connection without the slightest
inkling that seven years later I’d be writing about food and writing and life
myself. Perhaps that’s all any of us can
do: make some effort to mark our places in the world.
Hungry Writing Prompts
Write a list of ingredients - practical, imaginary or fantastic - for Leftover Soup.
Write about a river.
Write about an old newspaper
cutting.
Write a list of things you have
forgotten.
Write about what connects you to
the world.
Comments
This quote from Anne Enright seems apt -
‘We pilfer our own memories, we steal them from the world and salt them away.’
But then we forget where we put them!
This quote from Anne Enright seems apt -
‘We pilfer our own memories, we steal them from the world and salt them away.’
But then we forget where we put them!