of Easter bunnies and roasted rabbits, bells and boats
Isn’t this a mysterious image? Every afternoon, slightly earlier every day now as the days get longer, this design floats across the wall in our front hallway, reflected from the stained glass window in the front door. A little bit of accidental magic, every day.
No one appreciates the spring sun more than Tacy.
Except perhaps for Keechie.
I have a confession to make, one which would make my daughter sever all ties with me if she knew: I really like exam season, hers, that is. And since this is our last one, I’ll explain why: she’s home all the time, which as flying-the-nest fast approaches, is a very luxurious thing. Although I’m really not meant to distract her, it’s frightfully easy when she’s sitting with her piles of books just to mention something I wanted to ask her, her opinion about something, what she’d like for dinner. And she’s right there. Very pleasant.
Mind you, not so much for her.
What she doesn’t know about you-know-what surely cannot be worth knowing. There are over 150 events that she’s determined to remember, spanning the years on the Emerald Isle between 1798 and 1921. And now her father and I are pretty close to knowing them too, absorbing them almost accidentally as she works through ideas out loud. Where she gets the capacity for compiling all this information, the attention span for memorizing it all, not to mention the energy for thinking deeply about it all, I can’t imagine. That part of my brain was taken over long, long ago by the contents of hundreds of picture books, and is now occupied with the fourteen different types of rice in my pantry and what they could be used for.
Easter has come and gone, our last with a kid at home to get an Easter basket, I suppose. All these milestones! She was perfectly happy this year to join in.
The ritual was comforting in its familiarity — I never think we have enough eggs, John thinks we have too many, we always wish we had some white eggs, but we never do. How to keep the shells from cracking? This year, John instituted a novel “steam, don’t boil” policy, and it was effective. “What is this weird ‘gloss,’ do you think?” John asks, waving a small plastic packet we’ve found in the Easter supplies John’s mother always brings us in the summer. “Any why would anyone want to tie-dye an egg?” Food coloring is good, too.
Some of the creations had a distinctly intellectual flair. Green for Ireland!
I’ve spent an inordinate amount of time with Home-Start lately, having volunteered to cater their 20th Anniversary/Easter party last week. When I was asked to volunteer at the party, to coax the 30 children and 40 parents attending to introduce themselves, play nicely, share, it was but the work of a moment to offer to cook the lunch. Why on earth should Home-Start spend a penny of their tiny budget (decreasing dramatically, no doubt, with an unfavorable — to my interests — General Election result next month) on rubbishy brought-in tuna sandwiches and crisps, when I could donate the food myself? I actually had fun, cooking for 70. I’ve never cooked so many chicken wings or devilled eggs (from our Easter eggs!) in my life, not to mention sandwiches. Don’t these look as good as a sandwich shop could offer?
The party itself was a delight (once I got over the stress of the satnav not getting the destination right and John rightfully annoyed with me for wasting his time at the wheel of the car). I saw lots of children from a playgroup I’d volunteered at years ago, and my, they’ve grown, and thrived, as have their parents. Whole families kept whole because one volunteer spent three hours a week with them, for a year. What an irreplaceable institution Home-Start is.
We got a huge boost last month when the quite-pregnant Duchess of Cambridge stopped by a children’s centre to hear what we do. How cool, to see her sitting under one of our logos! I think she needs a volunteer, don’t you? It’s stressful having two children under two, no matter who you are.
Finally, in the last few weeks, I’ve had the emotional wherewithal to start to think of cooking something new! I think the cookbook’s reality overwhelmed any creative instincts I might have had, for months and months. But inspired by a visit to a phenomenal restaurant, Rabbit, with my friend Sue, I succumbed to a long temptation.
Rabbit, Three Ways: Rillettes, Loins and Liver Parfait
(serves 3 as appetizers or a light lunch)
1 rabbit, jointed (I learned how at my butchers on the spot)
for the confit legs for rillettes:
1 cup white wine
1/s cup goose or duck fat
4 bay leaves
sea salt and fresh black pepper
for the loins:
2 tbsps butter
sea salt and fresh black pepper
for the liver parfait:
2 tbsps butter
1/2 small shallot, minced
2 tsps brandy
splash Tabasco
2 tbsps double/heavy cream, or to attain proper texture
sea salt and fresh black pepper
For the rillettes: In a frying pan, heat the wine and fat together until fat melts, then add the bay leaves and salt and pepper. Place the rabbit legs in this mixture and cook over a very low heat, the liquid just simmering, for 3 hours. Remove the legs and allow to cool so you can handle them, then shred the meat off the bones and mix with just enough of the hot cooking liquid to attain a nice juicy texture. Set aside and season if necessary.
For the loins: Just before you want to eat, melt the butter in a frying pan and fry the loins until just cooked, perhaps 4–5 minutes, turning frequently. Season and set aside to rest for a minute before serving.
For the parfait: In the frying pan from the loins, melt the additional butter and add the rabbit liver, seasoning generously. Cook until just pink, perhaps 3 minutes, turning twice. Place the liver in a small food processor and pour in the cooking butter. Add the shallot, brandy, Tabasco and cream and process until very smooth. Season to taste and serve either at room temperature or chilled.
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This was a stunning platter of food. Delicate, juicy, savoury, and with such delightfully different textures in each dish. My only concern was that the rabbit available here in London is nearly exclusively farmed rabbit, which eliminates the main reasons to eat rabbit: it’s a pest, and there are far too many of them, and they’re free (or at least very cheap). My rabbit cost £12, about $18, and while that’s not too bad for a meaty meal for three, it’s not a bargain by any means. But delicious? Yes.
And because Avery’s increasingly interested in eating less meat and more vegetables, last week I experimented with an old-fashioned choice, to wonderfully tasty results.
Mushrooms Stroganoff
(serves 4)
2 lbs chestnut, baby Portobello or white mushrooms
3 tbsps butter
1 white onion, minced
6 cloves garlic, minced
sprinkling of paprika
8 stems fresh thyme, leaves only picked
3 tbsps Madeira or Marsala
1 cup/250 ml sour cream
noodles or steamed rice to serve
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Quarter or otherwise cut the mushrooms into bite-size pieces.
Melt the butter and add the mushrooms, onion, garlic, paprika and thyme. Saute until the mushrooms are softened, then add the wine and sizzle for 30 seconds. Add the sour cream and warm through. Serve with noodles or rice as you like.
Such a treat! We grilled chicken breasts and served them in thick-cut slices alongside, but they were certainly not necessary to provide a rich, satisfying, savoury dish.
I’ve needed as much energy as possible because there’s been a lot of bell-ringing. I wish I could convey to you the intense camaraderie, the community spirit, the sheer FUN we all have together. The silly ringing jokes that wouldn’t make sense to a normal person, the acknowledgement of the scaryness of the sport/musical instrument we all love so much.
There is also a beautiful spirituality ‑whether we’re religious or not — in the churchly nature of our surroundings: the baptismal font at Chiswick, and its mausolea in our ringing chamber, the lovely leaded glass windows at Barnes, the putto framed by our ropes.
And on Good Friday, I rang for the first time at St Mary the Virgin, Mortlake, just up the street from our house. What an unexpected gem, nestled just on the High Street.
The doorway of the church — which was moved stone by stone from the banks of the Thames during flooding in Victorian times! — is guarded by this solemn fellow.
This lovely window greeted us in the foyer.
We rang half-muffled, as befits a funeral service. How warmly we visitors from Barnes were welcomed! And we made their five ringers into eight, which is an immensely satisfying feeling. It wouldn’t have been an octave without us.
Our own Sunday service ringing at St Mary’s, Barnes, was greatly enhanced by the Easter bunny’s delivery of some choice chocolate eggs. Bell-ringing joke alert: “That was a very nice Plain Egg Hunt.”
No Easter would be complete without a visit from Henrietta, the ceremonial donkey who travels in each year from her farm in the countryside, to underscore the completely charming and daft approach of the English to religious affairs and animals. Dear Richard the Vicar takes his responsibilities very seriously.
Spring on the Thames, in our part of the world, means The Boat Race, of course, that classic competition between Oxford and Cambridge. It’s often the scene of high drama, as in several years ago when a man protesting the poshness of life in general dived in, to the consternation and danger of everyone involved. This year there was no such drama, just the fun of being at Elizabeth’s house on the banks of the river, eating her special roasted baby courgettes and butternut squash, sipping Prosecco, feeling our special affinity this year for Oxford — who won both their men’s and women’s races.
For the first time ever, the women shared the race day with the men, and the same stretch of river. Feminism prevailed!
At the end of the day, with the crowds dispersed and the sun setting, the kids went out to sit on the river wall and enjoy a few more moment’s respite from their studies. We grownups watched from the window upstairs, feeling a combination of pride and melancholy that we’re all too familiar with, these days. How different life will be in a year’s time for us all. Scattered to the winds, without the comforts of old friends, of home, of traditions. I know that new traditions and circles will be set in place. They always are. But for that Saturday afternoon, we revelled in the familiar, Spring in London, and all was right with the world.