memories of March
Every time we think spring has come — a tantalisingly warm and blowy day, with perhaps a blink or two of blue sky — the grey descends again, this month, and plops us right back into London winter, which is like a long, long Thanksgiving Day. No real weather, to speak of, but resolutely chilly and dank, with no hint so far on the trees at St Paul’s Cathedral of the glories of a new season to come.
That’s why it’s important to create your own bit of magic. Our household has been lightened and made cheerful by the arrival of Avery, home for her long Easter break. Of course, John and I have got used to our lives without seeing her lovely face or hearing her mid-Atlantic voice describing some new adventure or idea. We have a nice time when it’s just the two of us. But there must be some sort of protective parental pressure valve that doesn’t let us remember how much nicer life is with her around, until she arrives and we can appreciate her. We’ve been cooking together!
She’s about to head off on holiday to stay in an airbnb flat, with a kitchen and no university dining hall! So it occurred to her to get some experience in the kitchen with me to give a bit of guidance. Actually, she started out last week with her father teaching her to make scrambled eggs, a life skill up there with tying one’s shoes or sewing on a button — you can live without these skills, but it’s a lot easier with them. If you can scramble an egg, you will never go hungry.
Then she and I tackled spaghetti carbonara (from “Tonight at 7.30″, naturally!). Then we moved onto one of her absolute favorite dishes: mushroom risotto.
Mushroom Risotto
(serves 4 as a main dish, 6 as a side dish)
1 tbsp butter
2 tbsps olive oil
12 closed cap mushrooms or 3 portobello mushrooms, sliced or chopped as you like
1 further tbsp butter
4 cloves garlic, finely chopped
1 small white or red onion, finely chopped
1 3/4 cups/350 grams Arborio (risotto) rice
about 4 cups/2 pints hot chicken or vegetable stock
3 tbsps cream
handful chives, chopped
1/2 cup grated Pecorino or Parmesan
In a heavy, large saucepan, melt the butter with the olive oil and when hot, toss in the mushrooms. Stirring frequently, cook until soft. Lift out of the saucepan and set aside in a small bowl.
Add the further butter to the saucepan and cook the garlic and onion until softened, then add the rice. Stir thoroughly until all the rice is coated with buttery oil. Then over a medium heat, begin adding stock with a ladle, stirring nearly constantly as the rice absorbs the additions of liquid. After about 20 minutes, the rice will have absorbed all the stock it can and will be cooked, but still a bit firm to the teeth. At this point, you can decide if you would like the risotto softer, and if so, add another ladle of stock. Add cream and mushrooms and stir.
Garnish with chives and cheese.
It was the first time Avery had cooked her own dish in order to photograph the finished product! It was completely delicious. And to be honest, I had only half the required quantity of risotto rice, and supplemented it with so-called “paella” rice. It was perfect.
You may have noticed, in these photographs, that Avery’s hair is absolutely amazing! She has had her second Vidal Sassoon haircut as a model. What fun to have this film to watch. I loved this haircut, around Christmastime, but I like her new one even more. When she came home in time for dinner after the shoot this time, she said, “Excuse me a minute; my lipstick may look normal, but it’s actually coated in hair.”
Meanwhile, amidst the cooking and conversation, I made my way back to a Saturday morning ringing practice in Barnes, for the first time since October. It was absolute heaven to be back, and let me tell you, spring has sprung in Barnes, as it does early every year.
I think my Barnes colleagues were a bit disappointed that after all my experiences ringing at the famous Foster Lane, I have not been miraculously turned into a good ringer! I explained that my improvements are very interior, and not particularly noticeable to the outside world. It isn’t that I’ve learned a new method, or even improved my understanding of an old method. It’s my precision that’s improved, after weeks and months of dear Tom’s voice in my ear, like an instructional, beloved mosquito. But simply ringing together, in that beloved ground-floor chamber, was worth the walk to Waterloo, the train ride, the walk across Barnes Common. SO lovely to be back together with my cherished colleagues.
We had a champagne party to say thank you and goodbye to our dear Colin, one of my dearest friends in Barnes who was a ringer before my time, and has always been treated as our older Statesman, our Emeritus.
Barnes will never be the same, with Colin in a lovely retirement home close to his daughters, on the border of Somerset and Devon. He was so pleased with Trisha’s toast, as you can see. “Thank you for my hugs, Kristen,” he said, giving me one, and a kiss on the cheek. I told how, the afternoon of my first Quarter Peal, I arrived at the ringing chamber to find a card decorated with the British flag lying in the middle of the carpet. “Good luck, Kristen! You will be great. Love, Colin.”
Happy memories, in Barnes.
And my twins came to hear the ringing! They were thrilled, as it was such a good Saturday tradition for us. Their wonderful mum taped this adorable tiny movie, with little Freddie saying over and over, “Kristen’s bells, Kristen’s bells!”
We had a lovely lunch together at their home, scene of so many shared hours of talk, games, birthday parties, cups of tea.
I miss so much living just around the corner from them. How many afternoons did Claire bring them to our house to run up and down the stairs and kick a ball in the garden, and how many times did I pop onto my bike to bring them a bag of fresh doughnuts, or a bit of ham salad as a teatime treat? The hours we spent watching the swans on the pond, kicking leaves on the Common, throwing sticks into the stream, saying “woof, woof” to all the Barnes dogs that stroll past. Not enough hours, now we have to make a real effort to see each other.
All too soon I came home, leaving behind the life in Barnes that I loved so much. Such a different river view we had there outside our door than the one that offers us St Paul’s Cathedral and the Globe now.
Of course it takes only my arrival back in SE1, to our lovely flat so unexpectedly cosy, considering its location, to make me happy to be home, and happy that we made our epic move in October. How the project of the Tate Extension next door is coming along swiftly. But to be ready for the Queen to open it in June? I will believe it when I see it.
The next week brought Avery’s citizenship ceremony! It felt very strange to see her, a Compleat Adult, raising her right hand and promising loyalty “to the Sovereign Lady, her heirs and successors.” We really belong here, now.
To celebrate, our great friends John and Suzanne braved the journey from their new home outside London to have lunch with us! Crab tart to be sure — it really is the ultimate luncheon dish, or dinner if you have some substantial side dishes. A spicy rocket salad, a bit of marinated red cabbage, a warm banana cake. And then we walked off the calories by taking the elevator up to the 22nd Floor, to show them the unsurpassed view.
Suzanne didn’t tell us until she got into the elevator that she suffers from fear of heights! She was very brave.
We got into the elevator — the very much glass elevator — to come back downstairs and the doors shut. John hit the button to come down. Nothing happened. “Oh, my God,” I said, feeling for poor Suzanne, “we’re stuck.” John prised open the doors like Superman and we emerged, panting slightly. What were the odds?
Tomorrow will bring a stormy Easter Sunday and my first Quarter Peal with my Foster Lane band. Forty-five or so minutes of Plain Bob Doubles, with me on the treble. Watch this space…