half-term

I’m busy in the kitchen this sun­ny Lon­don morn­ing, prepar­ing for a lit­tle din­ner par­ty tonight — my father’s first cousin is vis­it­ing! — at which I’ll serve the nation’s favorite dish.  Cur­ry!  Next week will see Hin­dus cel­e­brat­ing Diwali, the fes­ti­val of lights, and for that rea­son all the tel­ly chefs seem to be com­ing for­ward with their var­i­ous ver­sions of the clas­sic Indi­an treat.  What Amer­i­cans may find fun­ny is that British “cur­ry” often does not fea­ture… cur­ry pow­der!  Cur­ry pow­der itself is, of course, an amal­gam of many spices includ­ing turmer­ic, corian­der, cumin and cin­na­mon.  British cur­ries, includ­ing the one I’m mak­ing tonight, fea­ture a paste of lemon grass, chilli, gin­ger, gar­lic and oil.  I’ll start with that and then add spices as I go along.

If you can imag­ine, Avery is on school hol­i­day this week and next!  How on earth, we might well be tempt­ed to ask, can a school sys­tem be ready for a hol­i­day just six weeks after the begin­ning of term?  Until I became the moth­er of essen­tial­ly a British teenag­er you could nev­er have con­vinced me that any­one could need a break in Octo­ber.  But we all do!  This par­tic­u­lar year, when Avery and her mates are buck­ling down to what are called GCSEs (the first real­ly impor­tant exams that will occur next year, after which chil­dren can legal­ly leave school).  Home­work lev­els have spiked and there is real pres­sure to pro­duce seri­ous work in sev­er­al lan­guages, three sci­ences and (tough­est of all, to my mind) math­e­mat­ics that I can no longer even pre­tend to understand.

Added to this onslaught of work are the rehearsals for “Sweet Char­i­ty,” the musi­cal Avery will be in next month.  As the days grow short­er and cold­er, Avery seems to come home lat­er and lat­er, laden with books and files, starv­ing to death, and with a huge work­load before we can hope to sit down to din­ner.  It was a nice break last week to head over to Kingston to hear the Down­ton Abbey cre­ator Julian Fel­lowes talk about his career, the stratos­pher­ic suc­cess of DA, his future plans — a series about the Titan­ic next year!

He was sim­ply adorable!  For all the accu­sa­tions that he is a snob, that “Down­ton Abbey” is a snob­bish pro­gramme, I have to admit that I love it all.  I do think it’s a fun­ny con­tra­dic­tion, Amer­i­cans’ atti­tude toward any­thing resem­bling the British aris­toc­ra­cy.  We may well have fled Eng­land our­selves all those years ago seek­ing greater equal­i­ty and free­dom, but we love noth­ing more than Hel­lo! mag­a­zine, the Roy­al Wed­ding, and any­one addressed as Count­ess or Lady.  So I enjoyed great­ly sit­ting on the dusty floor of the Rose The­atre in the round, and lis­ten­ing to the plum­my tones of Mr Fel­lowes describ­ing his life as a dra­ma stu­dent, some 40 years ago.  “We found our­selves between the bril­liance of John Cleese and Mon­ty Python before us, and Hugh Lau­rie and Stephen Fry who came after us.  In short, we were the bread between the jam, as it were.”

Act­ing is like play­ing ten­nis,” he pon­tif­i­cat­ed.  “You should always pur­sue each activ­i­ty with peo­ple who are bet­ter at it than YOU.”

Oh, speak­ing of ten­nis, we have had to admit that very short­ly, the courts will be too damp, leafy and dan­ger­ous for us to play.  And so we have tak­en up a new and total­ly crazy sport: SQUASH.  One les­son at the Barnes Squash Club has con­vinced at least John that we should pur­sue this, so I’m going along with it.

I can under­stand that if I am going to con­tin­ue to cook for us, we have to find ever more clever ways of burn­ing off all the calo­ries.  But I have to admit I think I’ll always feel more com­fort­able with the sort of squash that takes but­ter and sage and gets pureed with a hand blender.

Roast­ed But­ter­nut Squash Soup

(serves 4)

1 large but­ter­nut squash

2 tbsps butter

6 leaves fresh sage

500 ml/2 cups chick­en stock

driz­zle sin­gle cream

Cut the squash in half length­wise and dot with but­ter and sage leaves.  Roast at 220C/425F for about half an hour or until ful­ly cooked and soft.  Scoop squash into a saucepan and cov­er with chick­en stock.  Sim­mer for five min­utes, then puree with hand blender.  Pour into warm bowls and driz­zle with cream.

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One of the biggest treats of this autumn has been our trip to Bor­ough Mar­ket.  It’s the way John gets me to accom­pa­ny him on his real-estate for­ays into the East-ish End of Lon­don: the lure of every deli­cious food­stuff you can dream up, under one cor­ru­gat­ed met­al roof, high above our heads.  Stalls of pump­kins (speak­ing of squash!)…

And figs, a dis­play of which would bring my moth­er in law to tears.

But per­haps my favorite stall of all is Gas­tro­nom­i­ca, that famed Ital­ian sell­er of all things char­cu­terie (what’s Ital­ian for “char­cu­terie,” any­way?), dairy, cheese… and the best but­ter on the face of the earth.

I brought home a head of cau­li­flower to roast whole, and WHAT a good idea that was.  Sim­ply driz­zled with lots of olive oil and sprin­kled with a good sea salt, roast­ed in a hot oven for 30 minutes.

For­ti­fied by my cau­li­flower, I’ve been a good girl and done my “pool duty” at Avery’s school, a termly oblig­a­tion which entails pick­ing up the keys to the fab­u­lous old struc­ture at a house near­by, cycling through the autumn leaves over to school, open­ing up the box with its mon­ey to pay the life­guard, ask­ing mem­bers to sign in, then breath­ing in the steamy air for an hour and a half while swim­mers trun­dle up and down.  One man came in from the chilly out­side to greet me and the life­guard, who pum­meled him with ques­tions about the foot­ball match going on: Wales — vs- France.  “I can’t believe you’re root­ing for Wales, sir,” said the life­guard.  “Well, nor­mal­ly of course I would­n’t.  But they’re play­ing FRANCE.”  The less­er of two evils, to the Eng­lish mindset.

On Sun­day we all awoke to a fog­gy day which I spent mak­ing every mis­take in bell­ring­ing that it is pos­si­ble to make.  I led with the tre­ble very bad­ly, final­ly learn­ing to fol­low the tenor.  It’s a nice les­son in life: to be the leader, some­times it’s nec­es­sary only to fol­low who seems to be last.  Then it was onto Chiswick where when asked to “ring down” the tre­ble bell, I acci­den­tal­ly pulled it down in two strokes.  Was there ever a scari­er moment?  “You got away with that because it was the tre­ble, a tiny bell,” Matt said.  “If you’d had a heavy bell you’d be miss­ing a hand right now.”

And this is my new hob­by.  How do I get myself into these situations?

The only way to recov­er was with a love­ly plate of lemon sole, sauteed in olive oil and topped with a dust­ing of crispy Fox Point bread­crumbs.  Ter­ri­bly suc­cess­ful to taste, but not pret­ty enough to pho­to­graph.  On the oth­er hand, the side dish of juli­enned beet­root, shaped into a cake and fried in duck fat, was beau­ti­ful, with its dol­lop of sour cream.

It turns out that while juli­enned pota­toes will form a cake, beet­root will not.  And beet­root with duck fat is sim­ply gild­ing the lily, as it were.  Cook­ing is not always suc­cess­ful if you make experiments.

Avery’s been exper­i­ment­ing this break, but not with beet­root.  First she spent a day in Tot­ten­ham with her fash­ion design­er men­tor Stephane St Jaymes, the bril­liant man who offered her a “Take Your Daugh­ter To Work” day last spring.  I love the out­fit she chose for her day with him this week.

I dropped her off at a pho­tog­ra­pher’s house yes­ter­day so she could be part of a shoot called “hair before and after,” and look what came home!

 So tomor­row, with her new hair­cut and ready for an adven­ture, we are off on the Eurostar to Paris for an ear­ly cel­e­bra­tion of Avery’s birth­day.  More from there!

5 Responses

  1. A Work in Progress says:

    Oh — we play squash (very very occa­sion­al­ly, and very bad­ly…)!! Enjoy — I per­son­al­ly find it to be the best work­out of any sport I have ever played. If you take Julian Fel­lowes’ advice and play with some­one who is bet­ter than you, you may (as I did once) lit­er­al­ly col­lapse on the ground after­wards, unable to move. And that’s when I was in good shape. Try to go watch a pro­fes­sion­al match if you haven’t ever — these guys (and girls) are super­hu­man. Oh, and love the hair — so stylish!!

  2. Work, the whole squash thing is more John than me, but we have anoth­er les­son com­ing up on Mon­day and we’ll see how I do. There is JUST no way we can con­tin­ue to cook and eat and not do some­thing stren­u­ous if we want to remain in any kind of shape at all! Will def­i­nite­ly look for a pro­fes­sion­al match!

  3. min says:

    I like the sound of a half-term break. My old­est son attends a rig­or­ous high school and plays on a sports team. At about this point in the semes­ter, I feel we could all use a few days off. He is the one doing all the work but I take on the stress of it. Of course, I imag­ine half-term wreaks hav­oc for work­ing par­ents of younger children.
    Avery looks beau­ti­ful with her haircut–positively Twiggyesque!

  4. kristen says:

    Now we’re end­ing the break, Min, I’m ready for her to go back to school!

  5. Howdy! I’m at work surf­ing around your blog from my new apple iphone! Just want­ed to say I love read­ing your blog and look for­ward to all your posts! Car­ry on the excel­lent work!

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