As a child I made chocolate chip
cookies with my mother, of course. She
said once that she could get three more cookies out of a dough than I could
because I ate so much raw dough. But my mother only cooked by necessity – and
did it well, feeding her large family meals both nutritious and basically good.
She preferred painting to cooking, and the kitchen was not a scene of much mother-daughter
collaboration.
In college I lived in a dorm, where
meals were provided and kitchens hidden, so I didn't have any incentive to
learn to cook. When I lived in Aix-en-Provence for six months during my
sophomore year, I boarded with a Swedish roommate in a family house where the
kitchen was not ours to use. A Provençal cooking class was offered in Aix while
I was there, but, to my eternal regret, I did not take advantage of that great
opportunity. I wasn't interested in cooking at that time.
That interest didn't blossom until I
became a student in Cambridge, England, and shared a house with four other women
students. I bought a cookbook called "Cooking in a Bedsitter" and
started cooking in the single pot on the single cooking ring in my room. Soon
enough, I ventured beyond the room into the shared kitchen.
Then I was hooked. I bought more
cookbooks and started making more elaborate dishes, but it wasn't my four
housemates I cooked for nor our kitchen that emitted the enticing smells but my
boyfriend, Peter, who benefitted from my new interest and the marvelous kitchen
in his marvelous house that was the site of lavish dinner parties.
Peter's house, which he shared with
several other Cambridge students, all male, was a Victorian semi-detached in a narrow
lane called Portugal Place. Francis Crick's house, identified with an inn sign
of a double helix, was a few doors down. The entrance to Peter's house led into
a large book-filled front room, off-limit to the renters, curious and
intellectually avid students though they were. I remember the upstairs living
room, with its rickety harpsichord, and the attic room, formerly an artist's
studio, that Peter took as his bedroom, but I especially remember the basement
kitchen and its dining room. It had a low roof that Peter regularly banged his
head on, a circumstance more understandable when you know he was blind. I was
too short to worry about banging my head, but I do remember that the kitchen
was low-ceilinged and that the only natural light came from a below-street-level
window. It was a large kitchen with a fabulous stove and included a dark dining
room, only used when Peter and I threw our splendid dinner parties. It had a
grand, heavy, Victorian table with matching ladder-back chairs of heavy dark
wood. We set it with candles and ladened it with steaming platters of beautiful
food.
We didn't do it often, but I loved
those parties, planning, cooking, and serving grand seven-course dinners for six
or eight people, flinging myself into the study of cookbooks, learning to cook
by cooking. Peter would buy a large array of bottles of champagne, from half-pints
to huge magnums and jeroboams. I would make delicate hors d'oeuvres, meat
dishes of elaborate preparation, irresistible desserts. The only specific dish I
remember is some sort of pie, which I remember because it was my first effort
at pie crust and Peter raved not about it but about the perfect pie crusts his
aunt would make, which I thought an unfair comparison, since I had only just
begun as a pie-baker.
But nothing dampened my excitement
at being able to serve such fabulous food to my friends. One course was hardly
downed before I jumped up to prepare and serve the next. We ate and drank to
repletion. We toasted the queen. We talked of literature and music, Bob Dylan
and opera. At the end, we sprawled around the table with its food-stained plates
and half-emptied platters, sipping port, Beethoven still playing on the stereo
upstairs. When the guests finally left, I was exhausted but exhilarated. I had
discovered the magic of cooking and serving good food, the spell that Babette knew,
a new dimension to life as beautiful as the sex, also new, post-party in Peter's garret up four flights of stairs from the basement kitchen,
still littered with the detritus of the day's cooking.
No comments:
Post a Comment