sticky summer London adventures
As I sit at my desk, musing over what to concoct for the Foster Lane ringing dinner on Saturday, the air outside sizzles. It’s been a month-long heat-wave and another month is expected. Normally this situation would have me in a tailspin of despair, as I truly hate being hot, but truth be told, our household is in such a glow of pride in Avery that we really don’t mind anything else that is going on.
She got a first!
Now, for those of you unfamiliar with the British system of university exam results, this will be meaningless, so I’ll explain. After the (usually) three years of university work are over, the student’s exam results and essay results are tabulated and a designation given. Lots of students get what is called a 2:1, which is a high second, or a 2:2, a lower second. But a smaller proportion get a “first,” which means a first-class degree. That’s our Avery! She worked so hard.
We gave her a first-edition of “Gaudy Night,” our mutual favourite among all the mystery novels by Dorothy L Sayers, as a congratulations present. She was pleased!
We couldn’t be prouder of her. It has been a long, challenging, exhausting three years, even just to watch from a distance and to try to support as best we can. I think I speak for all of us when I say the main emotion is relief. My friend Tom said it best. “It’s like when you win the World Cup. Journalists always ask if you’re elated, but all you can think of is how relieved you are it’s over.”
So this hot English summer has already had its highlight, for all of us.
Meanwhile, as she worked and worked toward, and then waited for, her results, lots has been happening in our London lives. Art! The famed Summer Exhibition at the Royal Academy was its usual highlight, and while we did buy something small, my two actual favourites from show had already sold, one a very clever latch-hooked rug by Emily Laserwitz, featuring redacted counter-terrorism texts!
The other, a series of burned marks relating somehow to King’s Hospital, by Jackie Brown.
These were two shining examples of obsessive-compulsive, monochromatic works by women that had Kristen Frederickson Contemporary Art written all over them! Globally, however, since the show was curated by Grayson Perry, the watchword was COLOUR and lots of it. Colour, and figures, neither of which floats my boat. But it’s always good fun. We ran into our English architect Andrew Waugh, whose design for a cemetery in Germany won a spot in the coveted Architecture Room! He is such a rock star.
John being John, we’ve been taking all our myriad visitors over to Potters Fields to check on the progress of our building (none, but in our imaginations). First came our darling college friend Jeff, whose presence always pleases. He is one of the friendliest souls there is.
Then our Tribeca friends Ken and Priscilla, fresh from their flight from New York, graciously agreeing to meet us there!
I always love how they say, “You’ll know us by our glasses and wearing all black.” Hello, New York in London.
Then came John’s childhood friends Dennis and Camille, all the way from Waterloo, Iowa!
They came to dinner after their visit to the plot of dirt, and pored over the plans with lively interest (and creamy crab tart as well).
A luscious summer’s day took us as well to Lambeth Palace, home of the Archbishop of Canterbury and to one of the most beautiful gardens in Central London. I thought I was obsessive-compulsive!
There is, as well, a simply gorgeous library. I feasted my eyes on all the books that dated from my “Outlander” Jacobite period, and much earlier than that, too.
What riches there are at our feet in this glorious city.
Seeing such a well-organised library inspired me to come home and effect a much-needed purge of my own shelves. Nearly three years into living in this flat, too many books had come in and none had gone out. “Please,” John begged, “can you do something about these flat surfaces that are all bookshelves now?” I had to admit he had a point. Everything but the dining table had become a repository for something to read. So I began in the living room, getting rid of over 100 books!
My bedroom shelf, normally filled with whatever overflow might seep in from other rooms, became a perfect vision of only children’s books, my real treasures.
What a massive accomplishment! And Martha was happy to accept a delivery of the rejected books at her place of employment, a simply heavenly little used bookshop in Greenwich.
There has been a heartwarming, truly precious visit to Freddie and Angus, and of course their beautiful mother Claire. How lucky was I in years gone by, to live a three-minute bike-ride away? I remember so clearly their tiny arms and legs that made me so nervous to insert them into clothing. Now they are strapping, hysterically funny little boys approaching five years old. WHAT?
There is something about Freddie’s expression that speaks of a future filled with naughty laughter. I treasure these friends so much.
When Angus mentioned that the strawberries I brought to our picnic weren’t very nice (totally true), Freddie admonished him, “Angus, please don’t insult Kristen’s strawberries. They were a present for us.” I can’t decide which makes me laugh more, Angus’s honesty or Freddie’s diplomacy! It will be such fun to watch these two conquer the world.
Of course I have been bell-ringing, although a recurrence of a sprained knuckle forced me on a short hiatus. It was wonderful to get back in the tower, especially to witness with admiration the accomplishments of my cohorts, as I sat quietly for a moment.
I’ve finally mastered what is called “Treble-bobbing,” which means ringing the treble bell (the smallest and therefore the highest in tone) in a series of slowing down and speeding up, all to provide the reliable backbone for letting all the other bells do their complicated work. It is so much fun to be a necessary and supportive member of the band. Naturally I bring snacks.
It is a never-ending and varied pleasure to cross the Bridge after practice, revelling in the fun of ringing, and the convivial evening in the pub after. What a magical view.
Ringing isn’t always for fun, of course. There are funerals. My lovely, adored friend Colin finally left us, aged 92.
I will never forget that I met him on the path to St Mary’s, Barnes, ready to ring for Sunday services, at which he was a beloved parishioner. The next day I came to the Tower, absolutely terrified at the prospect of my imminent first Quarter Peal. There, on the bell-chamber floor, was a card with the British flag on the cover. “Good luck, dear Kristen – you will triumph! Love, Colin.” He will be sorely missed by many, many people.
I was able to ring only a short bit because of my injured knuckle, and probably shouldn’t have rung at all, but… it was for Colin.
In cooking news, I have become a member of that select (and yes, obsessive) group of people who make… sourdough bread. It is tantamount to a religion, much like bee-keeping, fermenting, knitting, bell-ringing (there is an unsurprising and delightful Ven-diagram overlap of all these wonderful skills). As with many things, Orlando has been my oracle.
Heavitree Sourdough Starter
With these three full single-spaced pages of precise and beautifully worded instructions, I’ve learnt to produce if not a perfect or professionally consistent loaf, at least a delicious and rather beautiful one.
You’d never get £3.50 for it at Gail’s Bakery, but it is delicious, if not quite as high and perfectly round as perhaps it should be. But no one at home is complaining.
It’s truly sour! And with a delicate texture, a very crunchy crust and a satisfying feeling of homely satisfaction to go with it, I make a loaf every few days. The starter was a gift from Orlando, all the way from Exeter. When I get back from our American holiday, I will put my hand to concocting a NEO Bankside starter and see how that gets on.
That’s right, we are headed to America. I actually hesitate to deem our upcoming weeks as a “holiday,” because believe it or not, last month our beloved property was hit by a tornado.
It is heartbreaking to see broken windows, a hole in the roof, the giant tree that once held Avery’s childhood swing felled, and most tragically of all, no more Red Gate. It is just “Farm” now, until our wonderful friend Jacque can get down to the business of replacing his own hard work from several summers ago. Parts of the fence remain, but no gate. We go on Monday, for a five-week trip, leaving Avery to her own devices and to hold down the fort and look after our kitties.
Speaking of kitties, Tacy has acquired a new addition to her wardrobe.
Inspired by Orlando – he inspires so many things in this life! – and his cat Nola, we purchased for Tacy what some might call a harness and lead, but what Orlando (and so we) describe as a tunic.
We put it on Tacy up in the flat, carry her literally kicking and screaming down the corridor and down in the lift, and then let her run around. Once down in the garden she is very happy, and proud of all the attention she gets. We all wonder how long it will take her to “realise” how much fun she will have once she is on the ground, and not go through the heart-rending screaming stage of the endeavour.
Being me, I have naturally had lots and lots of people around my table of late. Tis the season of overseas visitors, and everyone comes round for dinner and a catch-up. My childhood best friend Amy came, with her darling husband Kirk, and we sat round the table eating slow-braised chicken thighs (link) and reminiscing.
“I honestly don’t know, Kristen, how we stayed friends all through high school. You never wanted to do anything but stay home and read!” This was perfectly true, but she loved me anyway.
“Remember sitting in your bathtub together, Amy, and planning how we would solve the Middle East drought problem by filling up airplanes with water and then having a lever to push that would turn the bottom of the plane into a sieve? You had a bath toy that did that, and we thought we were geniuses.”
Such fun, and to introduce them to Elizabeth and Maddie as well!
Kathleen and her beautiful family came by for a roasted side of salmon and a chance to gossip about our New York connections. Sadly Avery was in the middle of exams and could not join us – such a shame for her not to be able to reunite with her babyhood and childhood boon companion, the divine Cici.
Isn’t it a terrific joy to meet up with children whom you loved as little, developing people, and to celebrate the brave, talented, independent adults they’ve become? It is one of the consolations of no longer being young, really.
Finally the day came when we could drive one more time down the motorway to Oxford, to arrive in the controlled chaos of Avery’s rooms – books, clothes, coffee maker, kitchenware, bed linens, posters, dirty laundry, rubbish, recycling – and make it all ready for an orderly exit. It’s a quite miserable process that, having moved her in and out nine times in three years, not one of us will miss.
The sheer hard work and stress, repeated so many times in such a short period, almost, but not quite, spoiled the beauty and grandeur that is Oxford. We are all three sadder but wiser people these three years later, having swapped the wide-eyed, open-mouthed disbelief at Avery’s being associated with such an august institution, for a more realistic admission of its pitfalls. So much pressure, competition, and sheer hard work has, I’m sure, tinged Avery’s fresher’s thrill, but at the same time, all those things underscore the enormous achievement of her degree.
Goodbye, Univ.
Part of me will miss Oxford, but I am beyond happy to have her home, safe and sound, complete with the latest Sassoon look.
Last week saw me on one of the geekiest and most enjoyable afternoons of all time – a walk round Bloomsbury to chart the path of not only our darling Dorothy L Sayers in real life, but to capture the steps of her storied heroine, Harriet Vane. As a member of the DLS Society, I received an invitation to join in the walk, and it couldn’t have been more fun.
The lines between fiction and reality became well and truly blurred as we celebrated the taxi rank where Philip Boyes hailed his last fateful ride, and Mecklenburg Square where both DLS and Harriet Vane lived, the latter listening to the sounds of a “rather erratic” tennis match.
And what about the butcher shop where Miss Murchison bemoaned the lack of cuts of meat for single people? It doesn’t exist anymore, but that didn’t stop us standing about on the pavement, thinking about it and quoting from the book. I wonder how much other knowledge has been prevented from entering my brain, simply because the available space is taken up with lines from DLS novels? After all, as Lord Peter Wimsey said, “I love the habit of quotation. It saves the effort of original thought.”
Was it this bar at which the unfortunate victim ingested what might have been arsenic, but turned out to be bicarbonate of soda? We thought so.
What fun.
There will be just two more of my social work outings before we head off, one last visit to my darling Home-Start family. We have decided not to say goodbye, but to stay in touch. As I explained to the little five-year-old girl, “Now when I come to visit you, it’s because it’s my job. When I see you in September, it will be because we are friends. That makes up for my not coming every week.” It will be wonderful to be able to show you their beautiful faces, and not have to be content with taking pictures of the various stray cats I meet on my journeys to see the family.
I will be able to share the gorgeous recipes that the mum has taught to me. On Friday, there will be the final visit to my Friday afternoon Cooking Club! We have hit upon a signature dish.
Sinamin Rowils
(makes 24)
This recipe makes me laugh a great deal, and “rowil” has entered our family vocabulary with a vengeance, led by Martha who listen to any story told about Avery, from childhood to the present day. What an addition she has become to our lives. The two of them, dressed to the nines for a night out, are a complete delight.
The “Sinamin Rowils” are just one of the over 100 recipes that I’ve gathered for Volume Two of “Tonight at 7.30,” whose future is looking very bright indeed. More and more often, the dishes I want to cook – Korean barbecue, Chicken Tonkatsu, “Velvet” Chicken, toffee shortbread – aren’t in my current book, and I am driven to looking up the recipes on my own blog! There are lots of hoops to jump through between now and the book’s appearance, first and foremost how to pay for it, secondly, how to achieve the 40-some photographs of finished dishes that I’d like to include. But it will happen. Watch this space!
Last on my agenda, before we depart, will be a lavish dinner party for my Foster Lane ringing friends. Yet again, the table will be set and the flat ready to make friends welcome.
And that will be the swan-song for our London summer. Next post – America!