Love Bites: Marital Skirmishes in the Kitchen. Christopher Hirst. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Christopher Hirst
Издательство: HarperCollins
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Жанр произведения: Кулинария
Год издания: 0
isbn: 9780007357154
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      Love Bites

      Marital Skirmishes In The Kitchen

      Christopher Hirst

      FOURTH ESTATE • London

      To Mrs H, whose real name is Alison

      Table of Contents

       Cover Page

       Title Page

       Dedication

       Taste For Travel

       5 Burger king

       The Sound Of Falling Scales

       6 Infernal rind

       The Lure Of The Cookbook

       7 The joy of blancmange

       Tools For The Job

       8 Slower pasta

       Walking Down The Aisles

       9 A bite on the wild side

       Whining And Dining

       10 Pizza excess

       Dinner Party Dust-Up

       11 A selfish feast

       Suet And Steel

       12 A cake is not just for Christmas

       Judicial Matters

       13 Telling porkies

       Cash Into Nosh

       14 Getting the raspberry

       Recipe For Disaster

       15 Death by chocolate

       The Food Of Love

       16 Shucking revelations

       Bibliography

       Acknowledgments

       About the Author

       Praise

       Copyright

       About the publisher

       A CULINARY COURTSHIP

      GIVEN OUR COMMON INTEREST, it was appropriate that Mrs H (as she then wasn’t) and I met in a kitchen. It was at a party in south London, Darling Road to be precise, in 1982. When one thing happily led to another, food emerged as a joint passion. The first meal I ever made for Mrs H was a giant pile of smoked salmon sandwiches. I noticed that they went down well. This was promising. I doubt if a longstanding relationship would have resulted if she had turned out to be one of those females whose main nutritional intake is a breath of air.

      The first meal she ever made for me was a Mongolian hot pot. This takes the form of a great plate of raw titbits – slivers of chicken breast, pork and steak, along with prawns, sliced scallops, broccoli florets, mangetouts – that you cook piecemeal in a large pot of stock over a methylated spirit burner. When you’ve simmered a piece, you eat it. Mongolian hot pot is an ideal dish for a couple in the exploratory stages of courtship. Because you use chopsticks to fish out the various items, there is plenty of scope for intimacy. You might steer your companion towards a succulent piece of steak, while she hands over a juicy prawn. There might be a certain amount of light-hearted competition for a scallop. The culinary foreplay is prolonged but not so heavy on the stomach as to preclude subsequent activity.

      The meal was a revelation. My passion for food began when I became passionate about Mrs H. After living in an all-male flat, where food was fuel rather than feast, I was astonished by the flair and generosity of her cooking and also the remarkable amount she spent on ingredients. Not that I was entirely indifferent to food when we met. I don’t suppose many men would have proposed the Royal Smithfield Show as a destination for a first date. Somewhat to my surprise, Mrs H expressed keenness to attend this agricultural jamboree. The first thing we saw inside Earls Court was several lamb carcasses suspended over an enclosure containing their living siblings. Mrs H did not seem too alarmed by this vivid depiction of before and after. We bought a pair of pork chops at the show, which she grilled for supper. They were excellent.

      Nibble by nibble, our relationship blossomed. We did a certain amount of the restaurant work that courting couples are supposed to go in for. Not that we had many candlelit dinners for two. Economy was a greater priority than romantic surroundings. Restaurants don’t come much cheaper or less romantic than Jimmy’s, the Greek joint staffed by famously cheerless waiters in Frith Street, Soho, while Poon’s on Lisle Street came a close second. Though far from ideal for a tête-à-tête – you ate at shared tables covered