Showing posts with label cooking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cooking. Show all posts

Monday, 10 May 2010

POST 2, PART I: HOW DO YOU LIKE YOUR EGGS IN THE MORNING?

Actually, I’m way too much of a coward to cook eggs for someone I’m attempting to impress. Boiled or fried, I have a knack for cocking up the apparently foolproof tasking of cooking an egg. Scrambled is always over-cooked. Soft-boiled is hardboiled. Fried ditto. Omelettes – see scrambled.

Poached is by far the worst. I’ve tried all the tricks – shallow pan versus deep saucepan of water, a dash of vinegar and/or swirling the liquid around before dropping the egg in. Whatever, I wind up with the white parting company with the yolk, leaving me fishing for a lonely yellow ball amidst the froth of white that I just know I’m gonna burst before I get it on my toast.

What is the secret to successfully poaching an egg?! Answers on a postcard please...

Still, the song seemed kind of apt... But my staple boyfriend breakfast is, in fact, the bacon sandwich. Now, while I believe a bona fide bacon sarnie should be made with perfectly fresh white bread – with that pleasingly crisp crust and preferably still slightly warm from the baker’s oven – if you’re buying the constituent parts the day before (as this is the morning after, remember) you are better off, in my humble opinion, investing in a nice, sliced brown bread. Something malted and seeded. Not just boring wholemeal.

A risky move, you might think – but hear me out...

The unusual choice of brown bread, you see, allows you to conduct a crucial boyfriend test – a little something I like to call The Bacon Sandwich Test. I developed this a few years ago when I was dating someone I can only loosely describe as a ‘man’ a couple of years younger than myself – well, four to be precise. ‘Getting some cash back’ as a mate of mine calls it. Names have been changed to protect the innocent, so I’ll refer to him as ‘Don’. (But as he’s not that innocent, I will tell you that ‘Don’ is only one vowel away from this real name. And since no one is called ‘Den’, ‘Din’ or ‘Dun’, you will doubtless deduce that his name is ‘Dan’. Well done, Sherlock.)

Now, I knew full-well Don, 24, was immature – that was a given. Boys lag a few years behind us girls, so I figured he’d be around the 19- or 20-mark in female years. I had my reservations, but I think I’d recently read a magazine article in the hairdressers – let’s blame Cosmo – about how refreshing and baggage-free younger men are. And I must admit I liked the idea of training someone up to suit my specific requirements. So when he asked me out after what I’d chalked up as yet another ill-advised one-night-stand, I decided to give him a go.

However, I soon started to suspect Don was especially childish. The fact that he didn’t have a bed when we first met was a dead giveaway, in hindsight. Just a broken futon, a duvet with no cover and an old sleeping bag. I really don’t know what I was thinking. Standards, Amy! Standards! There were also the World of Warcraft sessions that lasted late into the night (though not while I was there, I hasten to add). His grotty bathroom that never seemed to be stocked with items such as toilet roll, soap or towels. Oh, and the shower didn’t work either. Not that this bothered him, because personal hygiene is overrated. He was in a band, too. Yawn.

And then there was the food thing. I want to say he ate like a baby, but that’s not quite true. He liked to please me by taking me to fancy-ish restaurants and trying new things, but I suppose, to my mind, he put food together in a totally random and unrefined way. But what bugged me about this was the ballsy way he’d pass off his God-awful creations and combos as delicious and superior, subjecting me during the course of our five-month relationship to some of the worst meals I’ve ever ingested. In short, he believed he was a better cook and foodie than me, the cocky little sod.

This was war.

Cooking is my thing, see. It’s what I quite literally bring to the table. And, in this case, I’d clearly demonstrated to Don, time after time, that I’m a kick-ass cook while he, on the other hand, was not. But rather than roll over and accept defeat, dear obstinate Don kept on cooking for me. I can chart our relationship’s demise through three truly hideous meals he made for me, all of which I’ll share with you some day. But, for now, here’s by far the best/worst...

I turned up to Don’s one week night after work, tired and hungry. I’d been bugging him about what he planned to cook as the last time he’d had the genius idea of making lasagne, from scratch, at 7pm on a Wednesday... Which we didn’t eat until gone 11pm, and even then the pasta was still crunchy. But he was insistent it was a surprise. His treat.

“You can help me get it ready,” he told me on arrival. ‘Geez, thanks’, I thought, wondering why we couldn’t just get a takeaway if that was the case. “I’m making chilli prawns with mango and red onion salsa,” he boasted as I rolled up my sleeves.

Red onion..? For two people with a passing interest in kissing later on..? R-i-g-h-t... Another fine choice, Don. He gathered his ingredients – a packet of pre-cooked prawns and, um, that was about it. “I couldn’t get a mango,” he muttered. “Or a red onion,” he added, passing me an ordinary onion. An ordinary onion? There. Are. No. Words. Any rational person would have abandoned this recipe when they realised the shop was all out of mangos. But not our Don, no. Here was a man happy to chow down on raw – raw!­ – onion rather than admit he was a total halfwit when it came to cooking.

“So you’re planning on serving us pre-cooked prawns with some raw, white onion?” “Yeah.” “Raw onion?” “Yeah. It’s the same. They’re just different colours. They’re the same thing.” “No, they’re really not. You’re seriously telling me you’re going to eat raw onion? Really..? Where’s the chilli?” He presented me with some chilli powder. I scowled. “Maybe we could fry the onion?” he offered.

At which point I stormed to Tesco for a pizza. And that, boys and girls, was the last time Don was allowed to cook for me.

As I have spectacularly failed to get to the bleedin’ point, I will have to tell you how Don fared in the bacon sandwich test in my next post. And I also promise to put up a proper breakfast recipe for my favourite smoothie as my random thoughts on bacon sandwiches really don’t count. Sorry!

Next post: recipe and conclusion...

Monday, 3 May 2010

POST 1, PART I: HOW TO MARRY A MAN IN 11 EASY RECIPES

First up, an apology. No, let’s make that an explanation. (Coz this is no way to make a good first impression, Amy!) The title of this blog... I’m not seriously suggesting the ramblings and recipes I would like to share with you on here are a sure-fire way of eliciting a marriage proposal. That there’s some sort of magic Shepherd’s Pie method out there only I possess the secret to that’ll make a man drop down on one knee and whip out a diamond ring. That would be madness, even for me. So this isn’t one of those God-awful guides written by some uptight New Yorker instructing you ‘How To Marry A Man By Being Anybody But Yourself And Never, Ever – EVER! – Calling Him’ (or similarly depressing title). Promise.

No. The concept for this blog came when I found myself one Saturday, for no particular reason, whiling away the morning baking a massive key lime pie with meringue on top as seen on The Hairy Bikers’ ‘Mums Know Best’ show. Now, I have no business baking a pie of such proportions. Why? Well, because I am single and childless. I am fast-approaching 30 and, according to my doctor, am on the “upper end” of a medically normal weight. I live in a flat in London with a girl the size of my thigh who survives on nothing but Alpen bars and fat-free yoghurt. I consider cooking for three when my brother and I return home to my mum’s a real treat and sufficient grounds for a feast, consequently cooking enough grub to feed an army to feed my addiction.

Yep, I love – love – cooking. Proper cooking. I wish I could get excited about salads, sushi and nourishing Thai stuff, but I can’t. What does it for me is what I would consider good, old-fashioned British dishes – those staples, the childhood favourites and home-comforts, that come with gravy or custard. Roasts. Pies. Mash. Picnics. Scones. Puddings. Cakes. Stuff my mum and my granny taught me. Made with butter – the more the merrier.

And I suppose because these recipes and cooking rites of passage remind me of family, of cooking en masse and happy times, I can’t help but get swept away with fantasies of my future family. There’s no fighting it... The sizzle of steak and there I am, wondering how my hubby will like his (rare, btw – he’s no wuss). As I cream together butter and sugar to bake a cake? Children, of course. Two of ‘em, a boy and a girl – far more appropriate recipients of my cakey-cakes than me, myself and I. As I removed my key lime pie from the oven, there I was with those Hairy Beasts, Dave and Si, showing the world what a first-frikkin-rate wife I was. Sad? Yes. Very.

See, I do find this silly and slightly shameful – I aspire to far more than simply being someone’s wife, the 2.4 children, a mortgage on a semi-detached house somewhere in Kent and a people-carrier in the drive. As will become abundantly clear if you stick around, I’m worse than useless when it comes to men and relationships. And besides, I’m from a broken home – it’s only going to end in divorce anyway. Oh, and I can’t stand kids (though I hope I’ll eventually grow fond of my own)... But, by God, there are times when I’d gladly sell my soul to the devil to be shacked up for the rest of my days with a decent, dependable shag, a Smeg fridge, the full-set of Le Creuset cookware and an excuse to consume raw cake mixture on a regular basis (ie, children). It’s complicated. I’ve been single too long, maybe. Who knows what I want? Not me. So it’s just that ­– a fantasy, as frivolous and far-off as my plans for spending my lottery winnings or making my Oscar acceptance speech.

But you can see why a love of this kind of cooking causes a single girl such as myself a problem, right?! I’ve made a Battenberg cake, for fuck’s sake! Marzipan and all. I hoard recipes I’d never dare make, knowing they’d go to waste or, more probably, straight to my waist. Batches of gingerbread men, for example, or buckets of homemade jam – I drool over them like they’re food porn. Alas, I have no one to cook for! So I thought writing about it would be therapeutic and fun.

Are you sitting comfortably? Then I’ll begin...

Next post: recipe and conclusion...

FYI, the plan here is to post the start of a story on the Monday and the recipe and conclusion on a Thursday. And it's probably worth pointing out that the rest are stories rather than me just explaining myself, as per this first post. I'm a blog virgin, so bear with me!

Oh, and a huge thanks to Bex for the first of many fabulous illustrations – you can follow her blog, Bex Thorts, by clicking here.