the annual journey of friendship
Every “May Bank Holiday,” that quintessentially British name for the last weekend in April/first weekend in May, when all citizens look to the news and to the skies to wish for sunshine on their Monday off work, I get together with six of my best friends to celebrate “The Gathering of Nuts in May.” The GNIMers, as we call ourselves, are the blessed group of food writers from a 2008 Arvon Foundation course in the misty, isolated, magical hills of Devon.
After five days of gruelling work together — under the tutelage of our peerless Orlando — we decided life would not be complete if we did not try to replicate as much as we could the friendship of that week. And so our yearly reunions, which we begin anticipating the moment one is over. This is the moment from last year.
Last Friday dawned cold and dreary in London and so I was glad to make my way, laden with too-heavy bags full of tealights, Maldon salt, fresh herbs, Fox Point Seasoning and other things that made John shake his head (“you can get chicken stock in Derbyshire, you know!”), to Euston Station and hop (well, stagger) on a train to Buxton, there to miss my connection and wait shivering for an hour, thence to Bakewell.
There was Rosie! Our Silver Fox, the precious glue that binds us together. Rooms are warmer, jokes funnier, food more delectable, when Foxette is with us. “There is just so much fat on my palate,” she regaled us for the first of 100 times over the weekend, mocking the judge of “Creme de la Creme,” surely the most irritating cooking programme of all time.
Orlando! I wish my blog could convey his tear-inducing Culinary Frenchman impression. “But no, you are not allowed to use the word ‘delicious’, or ‘crispy”, Mon Dieu!”
Susan smiled her loving, indulgent smile, the best listener in the world.
Pauline arrived with her car journey-proved sourdough bread, popping it into the oven and making the kitchen immediately the most appealing place on earth.
After a long catch-up session of hearing everyone’s news, good and bad, we settled in to wait for Sam and Katie, distracting ourselves with the preparation of the first of the many mammoth meals we would concoct.
“Here is the kilo of duck fat for you, Kristen, and your 16 duck legs,” Rosie said, surely the first time that sentence has ever been uttered. Honestly, she could have been arrested with that lot on the grounds of Type Two diabetes alone. It IS an awesome duck dish, though, fragrant with bay leaves, garlic, white wine, rosemary and thyme.
Finally Katie turned up, armed with a Bundt cake as one normally is. My roomie! How we love our early-morning pajamaed chats.
We settled down to those luscious duck legs, Rosie pointing out again how thoroughly she felt that “the fat is on my palate.” With them we tucked into my unfelicitously named “creamy rice,” which really is the perfect side dish for anything with a lovely juice to soak up. Just steam basmati rice in chicken stock, and add double cream and Fox Point Seasoning. There was plenty of new-season asparagus, and to finish off, Susan’s traditional Marks & Spencer bespoke cake, just for us.
We lingered long at the table and talked long into the evening about such pithy topics as best way to clear drains (whole mackerel and Coca-Cola were bandied about as candidates for the job), whether or not my perfume is too strong (“I feel you shouldn’t be able to smell it until you hug me,” I averred, so there was some experimentation and the subject was aired many more times over the following few days and subjected to the benign opinions of all). Finally to bed, all of us feeling that perfect GNIM sense of the first divine meal behind us, with anticipation of what the morrow would bring.
It brought bright sunshine, a blue blinking sky, and a drive in Orlando’s convertible to Chatsworth House, ancestral home to the Devonshires, one of England’s most illustrious ancient families.
What a place! This is the outrageous center hall, featured in the telly film “Death Comes to Pemberley.”
We wandered for simply hours, enjoying most particularly the current exhibition of Cecil Beaton and the Devonshire Circle, with their admirable motto, “Perhaps the world’s second-worst crime is boredom; the first is being a bore.”
Best room? The library. Yes please.
Best view? Side lawn, although we did not tour it because the weather was by now rather appalling.
Best sculpture? This impossibly accomplished marble piece by Rafaelli Monti (1818–1881). Yes, it is all marble, even the veil.
This bust is not, in fact, Matthew Macfadyen, nor is it Mr Darcy, sadly.
But that iconic tour of the white marble gallery was filmed here, in “Pride and Prejudice”, 2005.
I was inordinately and irritatingly proud to identify a wall of paintings as being by Lucian Freud.
It was felt that my PhD was not quite moribund after all.
Most memorably in the whole of the day, Orlando was invited to play the great Steinway grand piano in the music room.
Seriously. Wild beasts everywhere were tamed. It was thrilling; there was applause. Rosie was lured by the sound from a faraway room. “Right away, as soon as I heard it, I knew it was our Orlando.”
Finally we raided the gift shop.
“What is that thing sticking out of your bag, Orlando?”
“A feather duster for getting behind radiators.”
“What — you came to Chatsworth and bought a feather duster for radiators? Why Chatsworth? It has to be the world’s most expensive feather duster.”
“Well, they have a lot of radiators, don’t they?”
Perhaps they use it for this dome.
Katie bought, as one does in a stately home gift shop, a book extolling 25 or 100 (I forget) ways to fold napkins.
“I know what would be really, really funny to do,” Orlando proposed. “Every time you try to go through a door, PUSH if it says PULL…”
“And PULL if it says PUSH.”
This game followed us through the rest of the weekend, getting a laugh every time. You can see — we are easy to entertain.
Starving to death, we repaired to the cafe for something purporting to be “lamb hash” but certainly wasn’t, and the obligatory Bakewell Tart.
It was discovered that some of our number had missed what was apparently the whole point of the entirety of Chatsworth, a trompe l’oeil violin. Further, those who had seen it felt it was a sight without which their lives would not be complete.
Clearly, those of us who had not been so perspicacious would have to go back. Sigh.
We found a sweet guide who took us up in the lift, and then detached velvet rope after velvet rope to give us a shortcut.
“Did you see those tourists? If looks could kill!” we gloated.
The violin, by Jan van der Vaart (1653–1727) was well worth seeing. Unbelievable, really. It’s just paint. (Sam was underwhelmed, leading us to realise that perhaps we hadn’t adequately explained trompe l’oeil.)
Finally, after a ruinous visit to the Farm Shop, we felt we had wrested from Chatsworth every single opportunity for fun, and headed home. Singing “California Girls” at the top of our lungs, sporting the sunglasses that are almost never needed in England, smoking a forbidden cigarette hand-rolled by Sam, it was a perfect, perfect moment.
Once home, we tended to our contributions to the evening’s feast. Orlando scooped up the herbed and wine‑y duck fat I’d saved from last night’s dinner and applied it to the gorgeous leg of lamb we’d acquired at the Chatsworth Farm Shop. I devoted myself to a positive overdose of beetroots, peeled, quartered, sprinkled with olive oil and fresh thyme, ready to roast.
There were roasted potatoes.
Of course, everything about being with these friends is jolly and perfect, but quite possibly the MOST fun bit is being in the company of people who are obsessed with food and cooking as I am. Even my family, dear and supportive as they are, get a bit eye-glazy at some points with my intense interest in every detail of a dish, with a meal. But with these six we can easily sit around the dining table for a few hours, discussing each ingredient, each way of treating each ingredient, other choices that could have been made, other combinations to try next time. It is pure heaven.
We finished with Katie’s Bundt cake and macerated strawberries and retired to bed, completely happy with our lot.
In the morning I rose early to get my head on straight because of course, being me, I wasn’t content with a relaxing, easy Sunday. Oh no. I had to go and get myself fixed up to RING BELLS. After a sustaining breakfast of Pauline’s fabulous rye, spelt and caraway bread and bacon, that is.
Ringers take a keen pride in ringing every chance they get. It’s a matter of conviviality, partly, and a competitive desire to rack up as many towers (or “churches” as I persist in thinking of them) on one’s resume as possible. For me, it’s also a perverse ambition to frighten myself as often as possible. Perhaps someday, I won’t find ringing bells frightening, but for now, I console myself that if daily doses of fear can stave off dementia, I’m in great shape.
So knowing I would be in Bakewell for the weekend, it was but the work of a moment to enter the postcode into Dove, the bellringing location finder, and see that All Saints Bakewell was my destination, with eight very heavy bells of a Victorian nature. I emailed the Tower Captain and was told that yes, I would be very welcome indeed.
We all trooped up the steep hill to the church. Rosie snapped me at the gate, possibly wanting to get a last image of me before I was defeated by the task to come.
I found that my arrival had been woven into the day’s expectations.
We climbed the steps to the very large ringing chamber and my friends settled in for their very first exposure to my weird and wonderful hobby. The Tower Captain was as happy as all Tower Captains are to put everyone in the picture, with a succinct and stirring explanation.
Every tower has a little model of a bell and its frame, the pride of English change-ringing.
So we took hold of our ropes.
“Can you ring rounds and call changes, Kristen?” I was asked. I assured them I could. And we did.
It went so well that I was asked to treble to Plain Bob Minor, which I had never done before. Just to tell you more than you want to know, if a method is called “doubles” it means that one bell is always ringing in last place. This makes it very easy to ring first when it’s your turn, obviously, because to ring first means you ring after who’s just rung last, and all you have to do is look around the circle to see who that was. In a method called “minor,” as was proposed on Sunday, there is no one bell always ringing last, so ringing first can be quite tricky. You have to do it by rhythm.
More than you wanted to know, no doubt.
At dinner, the night before, I had been peppered with questions about what everyone could expect in the ringing chamber, and I had explained about the treble saying, “Look to,” which means everyone meets everyone else’s eyes to ascertain we’re ready, and the treble says, “Treble’s going, she’s gone.” Because in the immortal words of Dorothy L. Sayers, “bells, like ships and kittens, have a way of being female.” So being asked to “treble” was perfect, because everyone got to see what I had described, in living color. So exciting!
The salient point is that it went very well. I have, over the last few months, apparently been learning quite a lot, at my darling Foster Lane tower. Finally we rang “down,” so that the bells could be safely stored hanging downward. And that went very well, too! We rang down in peal, one of the most beautiful sounds in the world. And then it was finished, and out into the misty morning we went.
There is no feeling of relief quite so intense as having finished ringing! We were all quite giddy and joyous in the cool Sunday air.
We had worked up quite an appetite, one way and another, so it was back home to concoct yet another feast.
It’s funny how at our reunions, we just fall into place in the kitchen. I had brought some stupendous smoked salmon, so a little appetiser was in order.
Sam’s contribution was quick-roasted chickens with lemon and Fox Point.
“You know what?” Katie asked. “We didn’t buy a vegetable.”
“Why do we always have to have a vegetable?” I asked plaintively.
“I’ll make macaroni and cheese,” Rosie offered immediately. “That can be our vegetable. I’ll put in some chives.”
This dish, with a bit of crunchy bacon and a hint of spice in the topping, proved to be a very popular vegetable indeed.
We concluded with Rosie’s evaporated milk ice cream and rhubarb, and sat on at the table, sharing stories of the food world and its glorious mistakes: for example, a dinner party ending with a dessert made by a cook who read the word “marsala” and interpreted it as “garam masala,” thereby substituting for a lovely sweet wine (liquid) an Indian spice blend (powder). Can you imagine what might have been as much as a half cup of curry powder, in a dessert? And winning the award for Best Typo in a Cookbook — “one-inch knob of grated finger,” instead of “ginger.” At least, presumably, one wouldn’t carry through with that mistaken instruction!
Laughing, now, remembering the humor of Orlando, or Orlandeau, or Orlandough… oh my ribs hurt.
We talked fast and furious to distract us from the fact that my train departure was imminent. It was time for the celebratory group photo. First, “look to…”
Then, “be silly…”
Then, “aren’t we lucky to have each other…”
To Buxton we drove, to explore that rather odd spa town, lost in the mists of Victoriana.
I bought a ginger grater, as one does in Buxton. One has to have souvenirs. And then everyone accompanied me to the train station, and with a flurry of French-accented hugs and pushes to the pull door, I was off. The train lurched away, and the Derbyshire landscape floated by, a perfect backdrop to my musings about food, fun, friendship and gratitude. Until next year…
Forensically accurate in my opinion.
Coming from the Cooks’ Illustrated precision-testing devotee of all time, I find this the ultimate compliment.
Joyous memories are the glue of life, relived in the retelling and strengthened by love. A weekend of filled with ‘firsts’. Another triumph perfectly penned. xxx
It was the best… xxx
And now I almost feel as if I’d been there .… good friends, great memories.
John’s Mom
You’d have been most welcome!
Sounds lovely. What a rare and special thing to have a group of people who came together like that. I kind of suspect something like that couldn’t happen in America, culturally. Am I being unfair to us?
Now tell me why you think this about America? That wouldn’t have occurred to me. Tell me more!