Probably not, in the case of our flamboyant friend and
artist and Lord High just about Everything Else Jonny’s samizdat ramble. Given a
style which is very much the man as he holds forth, Cook au Vin deserves to be
hailed as the Tristram Shandy of its ilk. And it really should be read from
cover to cover (the illustration above is by his pal David Hockney, perhaps not one of his best...). From his fastness in the foothills of the Alpes maritimes above
Nice, the Broon has compiled recipes of sorts with a little help from friends
with mysterious names such as ‘The Saintly’, J-J and Chinkers (one of the few
to be properly introduced to us). So beguiling are the digressions that I was
almost disappointed when we finally reached ‘Appetizers and Aperitifs’.
I needn’t have worried. The footnotes and the Chinese-box
off-pistes continue. Musing on the order of wine serving, JB floats back to Edinburgh in the 1980s –
which is where I met him – and a Queen’s Hall recital by Roger Woodward; he’d
written the notes in chronological order for a programme of three Chopin
sonatas, only to find that Woodward had decided to play them 3-2-1. But before
we get to discover the reason, there’s a note on why artists’ Green Rooms are so
called, and after it another on Woodward carving a duck ‘like a swashbuckler
from a Chopin Polonaise’. Here's a snap I took of the author at a splendid Edinburgh Gesamtkunstwerk event to launch his roadmovies exhibition and book (J sang Lieder eines fahrenden Gesellen, amongst other musical plums).
The food? Well, you’d probably eat it. We have, on various
excursions to Duranus - that's me looking bleary and unwashed below with my morning coffee after a night on the floor of JB's record room - though I remember the gaggle of weird guests rather than
the flavours (how could I forget Belinda and Belinda, who were writing a book
called Sex and Drugs and Rock and Roll: A Year in Provence? ‘It’s in real time’, they told us,
‘and you’ll be in it’. Given our failure to click, it’s probably a mercy that
said publication does not appear to have reached the light of day).
At least the advice on ingredients is probably sound. Thereafter they are mashed into what JB calls ‘gunk’ spread on bread or else pickled in various kinds of alcohol (James Hamilton Paterson’s semi-dud Cooking with Fernet Branca springs to mind – does Jonny know this book?) OK, so the worst is definitely tongue in cheek, the ‘gunk’ for pan-fried foie gras wittily titled ‘Sauce tirée des boîtes’ – the boxes in question containing fish fingers and cornflakes, preferably mixed with retsina. This priceless volume, complete with plenty of JB's artworks like the one below and reproduced bottom-of-wineglass stains, is printed to order by Brown Paper Editions. Apply to villaparasol@aol.com or (less preferably) buy a copy from Amazon.
A step up the evolutionary ladder is the beautifully
produced three-tone Goodbye Cockroach Pie from London friends Rosanna Kelly and Casilda
Grigg, celebrating the launch of Rosanna's Inky Paws Press. It stems from a 1986 discussion around the same Dundas Street (Edinburgh)
kitchen table I had only recently deserted for London after graduation. Rosanna
and law student Gail Halliburton mooted the idea of a cookbook especially
aimed at students. They gleaned many vintage recipes from friends, but the idea
hung fire until this year when the concoctions were refreshed and punctuated
with jolly illustrations.
Very well, so this Carabosse is in mild dudgeon not to have
been asked for his perfect student recipe. Needless to say I no longer cook it,
but it became a staple in the Dundas
Street kitchen: a fish curry consisting of smoked
mackerel (!), cooking apples, desiccated coconut, onions and the usual powders.
Decidedly an improvement on the meat loaf cooked with a lump of lard in it by
flatmates Mary and Helly, or the Spaghetti Carbonara of Simon without the
carbonara. I blush to think of the pride with which I served up to visiting
mother and stepfather gammon and pineapple. Happy days, as the delightful
co-winner (hurrah, a woman!) of Masterchef: The Professionals would put it.
This has not been the best of years for reading, but the
finest is probably what I’ve now reached: Ludmila Ulitskaya’s Sonechka – A
Novella and Stories. The shorter form seems to suit this author best: she is
so keen to give us her many heroines’ backstories that a longer novel like
Medea and Her Sisters can get overloaded by multiple strands. But what
compelling histories these are, usually tales of fortitude in the face of
adverse Russian circumstances and – unfashionably – of happiness descending in
time from banal or manipulative situations.
Within a couple of pages bookwormish Sonechka, her big
breasts her only physical asset, is courted by an equally unlikely artist and
soon can’t believe the joy to be found in the mundane. Zurich magics up a love story between a
Russian girl looking for a westerner and a westerner looking for a one-night
stand. The outcome of The Queen of Spades, its nonagenarian matriarch
tyrannizing her daughter and granddaughter much as the Countess tyrannises Lisa
in Pushkin’s short story, is less happy, but emancipation is so close at hand.
I so want to read more by Ulitskaya, but currently only The Funeral Party is
translated into English, and my Russian probably wouldn’t be up to Imago, which
Vladimir Jurowski selected as one of his 2011 summer reading books for The ArtsDesk.
Before Ulitskaya, I’d had something of a Patrick Gale binge,
with a slight sense of diminishing returns as I worked my way back from the
most recent to the earlier novels. Gale excels in his polyphony of family
voices and sense of place, especially Cornwall
in the two I enjoyed the most, A Perfectly Good Man and Notes from an Exhibition. No
doubt if he’d tackled the subject matter of The Facts of Life today, he’d have cut and
shuffled voices and times more flexibly than he did back in 1995. The jackets
and the Richard and Judy commendation do tend to put these books at lower than their real value. For once, here’s
a novelist who incorporates music and – as far as I can tell – art with real
understanding, who usually has a sympathetic gay character or two but doesn’t
necessarily make us see the world entirely from their point of view. I know I’d
like him as a person, and there are plenty more novels for cosy company when I
wish.
Otherwise, I don’t know why I was so compelled by the
sometimes dodgy preaching of Bunyan in The Pilgrim’s Progress, Part Two of
which I’ve also read since the Vaughan Williams stint, and I’m not sure whether
I was in the right mood when I read Hilary Mantel’s Bring Up the Bodies, but
the Boleyn saga didn’t seem to me quite as singular as Wolf Hall. Music book of
the year – not that I’ve read many – is Anthony Phillips’s superb translation
and footnoting of the Prokofiev Diaries, Volume Three. But further comment on
that had better wait until after the BBC Music Magazine review appears. Other reading highlights of the year here and here.
13 comments:
All those books sound interesting. I finished reading another book you wrote about, Fifteen Journeys by Jasia Reichardt. The neighbourhood and streets she speaks of I know well. They are the street where I worked while in Warsaw. Her journeys through the city I could follow easily. Will look for those books now.
I cannot claim to be up to the intellectual level of these blogs, but I note the comment "Hurrah, a woman" in the context of the winners of a cookery competition. Louis XV did not believe that women could cook. However one evening at Versailles the maitresse en titre Madame du Barry gave the King a dinner which he pronounced as magnificent.
"Aha France ! I have you !!" said the du Barry, "That meal was cooked by a woman. And,as you have given an award to a male chef, today you will award a Cordon Bleu to this chef!" And I have always assumed that the reason the cooking school founded originally for women under the name of the Cordon Bleu was named for this reason though I have never seen confirmation of this.
Well, I can only say it's a good thing one of my holiday presents is a Barnes & Noble gift certificate (Amazon seems unable to deliver reliably to our POB). More to peruse here, but I had to rush over and say THANK YOU for noting the Grisey/Mahler concert. I had your review bookmarked, but may well have missed hearing the BBC3 replay had you not made your comment when you did. I am listening to it for a second time, before the listening period runs out on me. It is remarkable and Bell a revelation.
So, now, I've brought my book wish list as up to date as the available books will allow. Have to say that I would consider Cooking with Fernet Branca more than a semi-dud (yup, I have read that one). Seems I may have liked Bring Up the Bodies a bit more than you did, but no question at all about the wonder that was Wolf Hall. (One of those that will merit a second read, don't you think?) I'm thinking that, of hers, I should try A Place of Greater Safety. Patrick Gale's A Perfectly Good Man has been recommended to me more than once--looks like I should pay attention and try it out. May I have eight more lives, please?
Laurent - Jasia's book is right at the top of the list with Ulitskaya. Glad you found it so evocative.
David - 'it's good to be/the cher ami/of Dubarry'. But it's funny how the heat of the kitchen still seems to be a male preserve. On Masterchef we do also get the expressive Monica Galetti, but there were, what, two women out of the dozens of competitors. Anyway, I suppose it's analogous to what Fay Weldon said, 'literature is not an equal opportunities employer'.
Sue - of course, agreed about Wolf Hall. HM's versatility is extraordinary. APoGS is the one to read next if historical novels are your bag. I think my favourite is the one about the couple who settle in Norfolk after a trauma in Africa, A Change of Climate. But then the early ones about a creepy woman, starting with Every Day is Mother's Day, are astonishing too. Go on a(n) HM binge. Re Patrick Gale, you might especially enjoy The Cat Sanctuary.
Delighted you caught the Grisey - perhaps the most remarkable new(ish) piece I've heard this year.
From what I read in the comments, I gather that the door may be more open for female chefs here than there (I do not refer to the glut of television chefs, fun though some of them may be).
Now, there's something about you spending the night on the floor of someone's record room that may or may not ultimately be as interesting as it sounds, but that certainly is intriguing.
Oh, believe me, it's not interesting. The (future) diplo-mate and I slept among the LPs, while our friend Ruth shared a waterbed with Jonny, which also sounds as if it might have been intriguing but wasn't. My days on floors are over, and I never coped with them very well, if truth be told - was ratty most of that holiday.
Thanks so much for the additional book recommendations. A Change of Climate from Norfolk, which I know well, to Africa, sounds like an awfully good set-up for an HM novel. I'll look forward to following up. HM binge not a bad idea either. As for waterbeds, gawd, I actually had one long ago and far away. What an idiotic idea for any and all purposes. Wonder if they still exist?
And hooray, re your news Over There. Please do say if any problem next time, as there are addt'l steps I can take.
Oh, re Fernet Blanca, wonder if this was clear: when I wrote "more than a semi-dud," what I meant was a total dud . . . too bad, it seemed such a fun premise.
Oh, apologies for filling up your inbox. Re HM, I think I put it backward, but meant to say Africa to Norfolk! A Change of Climate, indeed.
Not at all. Shame, wasn't it,about Fernet Branca, because Hamilton Paterson is usually such a great stylist. Gerontius, which I'm sure I've mentioned, about Elgar's mysterious 1926 trip up the Amazon, is certainly one of those books like Mantel's which repays re-reading.
Oh, am I glad I stopped by once again! I didn't know about Gerontius. That I must have. I do need to get off the internet a few days, don't I, just to catch up on some reading. Thank you once again.
One of the powerful levers to removing the barriers to women is to recognise that women are different from men. It is politically incorrect to say so, but evolution has done its work. There is no reason to be surprised if men are better cooks than women, or better at many other things ( bridge for example) but with skills of a different kind the impact of inserting women into to previously male enclaves can be very beneficial. This is a cultural blog and I am anxious to avoid leaping too far into financial areas, but some senior women in investment banking might ( I would say WOULD) change the culture and reduce the risk of the nonsenses we have experienced in the past
Women might even make better priests than men( "priestesses" is too evocative of Norma ).....
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