Read The Art of Baking Blind Online
Authors: Sarah Vaughan
The thought prompts her to take a deep breath and then to concentrate on breathing out slowly. In for two; out for five. In for two; out for five, she repeats, conscientious and self-conscious. She must do everything she can to stay relaxed. She smooths down her eiderdown again, holds up her wrist with its sparkling bracelet to the lamp and watches tiny rainbows dance on the wall beside her â then drops her arm. The problem with relaxing is that it is so tedious.
Voices float up from the street: New Year's revellers, no doubt first-footing. Their laughter and the clicking of the woman's heels drift away. Her life is quiet, now, but perhaps she should live somewhere more tranquil? Untouched and remote with the sea at the bottom of the garden and a golden beach stretching out of sight? They had spent their honeymoon in unsophisticated north Cornwall and the memory of being the first to step on to the sand, in the early morning, and mark it with fresh footprints, the exhilaration of plunging into water so icy it almost hurt before her skin tingled, remains vivid. Perhaps their baby could take its first steps there â¦
âAnd all that remains is for me to wish you a very Happy New Year.' She must have dozed off. The BBC Home Service announcer is signing off for the evening, his avuncular tone replaced by the clipped forecast for the coastal regions. âViking; North Utsire; South Utsire; south-westerly eight; moderate to good.' She switches off the wireless and tries to settle back down. A very Happy New Year. Yes, please. Her fingers cross automatically. Oh stop being superstitious. But anxiety gnaws away at her optimism.
What will 1966 bring? The war in Vietnam continues but Kathleen is untouched by world events. The news filters through her wireless or floats up from the pages of her
Times
and
Telegraph,
and yet all that matters occurs in this room. Inside her body. Inside her womb.
George had once wooed her by reading John Donne. She had been stunned when he'd stumbled through âThe Good-Morrow'. Who would have thought this grocer's son would have such a sensitive streak? On their wedding night, he'd blushingly recited âThe Sun Rising': âShine here to us, and thou art everywhere,' he'd told her after they'd made love for the first time and though the act itself was unspectacular â she had saved herself; and it had improved â the fact he had thought to quote metaphysical love poetry almost made up for it. Lying in his arms, being told she was âall States', she had felt so loved. For the first time since her father died, she had felt totally secure.
Now, she picks up her copy of the
Collected Poems
and turns to that poem with its celebration of sexual love. The book opens easily on this page, as though it has been read more than any other.
âThis bed, thy centre is,' she reads.
And it really is. It is the centre of her world.
Â
Â
Who can resist a proper pudding? The sort of gooey, comforting pud that is as British as a rainy afternoon in February and is its perfect antidote.
We have a tradition, in this country, of steamed puddings: steamed apricot pudding, steamed gingerbread pudding, syrup pudding, Baroness pudding, or nègre en chemise, the French take on a chocolate and almond steamed pudding. We slather them with cream, for a treat, or a custard or raspberry sauce, and delight in their soft, warm stickiness.
Then there are the baked puddings. The milk- and egg-based desserts of our childhood: junkets, Old English rice pudding, egg custard, which soothe like a hug from a plump and pear-drop-scented granny. Next, the bread or suet-enhanced ones with which the economical cook can fill her family with her canny use of leftovers: bread and butter pudding, plump with egg custard and dried fruit, enhanced by a little orange zest; baked sultana roll with suet; apple Charlotte; rhubarb Charlotte; brown Betty; queen of puddings.
When the strawberry season is in full swing, or the apple trees are drooping with fruit, the careful cook can turn to fruit cobblers, apple hedgehogs or summer puddings. Gooseberry or rhubarb fools are a creamy treat. But, when summer dies, the family cook turns again to the comfort of a blackberry and apple crumble, nutty with butter, drenched in double cream.
Delicious though these puddings are, there will be occasions when more sophistication is called for. And then the clever baker can bring out the dinner party delights: lemon meringue pie or apple amber, decorated with angelica and glacé cherries; the French classic vacherin, a divine confection of meringue, cream and chestnut purée; a bavarois of raspberry, coffee or chocolate; crème caramel, crème brûlée or our own Cambridge cream.
It has become fashionable for women, worrying about our waistlines, to spurn such puddings, preferring a sliver of fruit or a Ski yoghurt, now available at any Eaden's store. But our husbands and children still hanker after a proper pudding â and feel cheated if we deny them. Make sure you serve one truly decadent pudding a week and watch them enjoy every last, creamy mouthful.
Kathleen Eaden:
The Art of Baking
(1966)
Very small children love to devour milky, creamy puddings. Reminiscent of their mother's milk, these are the easiest of nursery foods to guzzle and to bake. But do as the French do and try to develop their palates early. A three-year-old will demolish a white chocolate mousse or a chocolate soufflé.
âAlfie, I said no. Not now.' Vicki is feeling frazzled as she assesses her chocolate fondants, probing the sponge to see if the right amount of chocolate oozes out.
âMummy, choc choc. Choc choc for Alfie.' Her three-year-old is tugging at her leg with surprising ferocity as she ignores his entreaties.
âNo, Alfie. I said no. Mummy's concentrating.'
âMummy, choc choc. Please, Mummy.' Alfie is insistent. His bottom lip begins to wobble and his eyes fill in preparation for tears.
âCan't you just go and play for a bit?' Vicki's voice feels close to a snarl as she turns to address her boy. She softens as she takes in the crestfallen toddler and feels immediate guilt at her harshness. She would never have spoken to a pupil that way.
âI'm sorry, lovely, but I'm busy. You can lick the bowl in a moment â or we can make something together â but just now I'm trying to work something out.'
The bottom lip juts and rage and frustration coalesce in his small face. âAlfie wants choc choc. Alfie help you.'
âAlfie, I've already told you. This is tricky. Mummy needs to do it on her own.'
He remains unconvinced, tugging at her jeans pocket then slipping a small hand under her top and trying to touch her puckered stomach. How would she deal with him if he were a difficult pupil?
As a last resort, she would suggest he see the only male teacher in the school, the year six teacher: older, taller, more experienced. More authoritative in every way. With a sigh, she removes his small hand and flounces to the bottom of the stairs.
âGreg?' She barks her husband's name, a single syllable packed with resentment.
âWhat?' His voice drifts from the bathroom.
âAre you finished yet? I need some help here.' Bloody hell, she thinks, kicking aside some Lego then wincing as she stands on a small piece. Where is he when I need him? Still having a shower after his Saturday morning lie-in.
Five minutes later, her husband emerges, as bouncy and refreshed as a Labrador puppy. His towel-dried hair is tousled, his eyes bright after sex followed by a decent night's sleep.
She, in contrast, feels weary. She has been up since six, trying to practise spinning caramel into baskets before Alfie woke up, and she has made chocolate fondants since giving him breakfast. Her hair, scrunched up in a hair band, is greasy and her body, clad in pyjamas that now need a wash, clammy with their juices and the scent of this morning's baking. She longs for a revitalising, cleansing shower to wash away her stickiness; and a triple espresso made by somebody else â ideally a barista in a city centre coffee shop devoid of toddlers â to kick her into shape.
She glances at the photo of Mrs Eaden, with her mixing bowl, and feels an unfamiliar twinge of resentment. Did you ever feel like this, Kathleen? She very much doubts it. How did you find the time to cook so expertly when you had a small child? I know you stopped writing before you had her but you still carried on baking â and playing on the beach, and surfing and flying kites. That interview, with your daughter Laura, was full of it: this idyllic childhood in which you managed to be both parent and ever enthusiastic playmate, painting with her, cooking, sewing. Creating homes in her tree house and doll's house. How did you manage it? She sighs. You were evidently much better at multi-tasking than me.
âYou all right?'
Greg looks unnaturally, frustratingly healthy. A scrubbed face, pink from a hot shower and a good shave; a close-fitting jumper he can just get away with; a springiness to the way he moves around the kitchen, creating more clutter as he fills a glass with orange juice and fails to put the carton back in the fridge; pops a bagel into the Dualit toaster, leaving the packet out of the bread bin; switches on the coffee machine.
âJust a bit knackered. I'm finding it hard to get everything done with little Alf here.'
âWhere is he?' Greg remembers he has a child.
âI put him in front of CBeebies.'
âVicksâ¦' The syllable is suffused with disapproval.
âWhat? He hasn't watched any yet this morning and I needed to concentrate.' She folds her arms across her chest, aware she is being defensive and hating herself for it.
âIt's only nine thirty. Of course he shouldn't have watched anything yet.'
âWell, lots of children are dumped in front of it as soon as they wake up to give both parents a lie-in.'
âWho?' He is incredulous. âWell, that's immaterial. My son's not “lots of children”. We don't need to bring him up by others' standards.'
âIt's very educational.' She hears herself trotting out her excuses as he sweeps from the room to rescue his son from the imagined depravities of children's television. He doesn't hear and she swears out of earshot, out of frustration at feeling in the wrong.
She goes back to clearing up the detritus of cooking: putting packets of flour and pots of cocoa back in the cupboard, screwing up the 70 per cent cocoa chocolate wrappers, tossing eggshells in the compost bucket, putting butter back in the fridge. She wipes her index finger round the inside of the mixing bowl, sucks the sticky chocolate concoction from it then fills it with hot water. A sprinkling of flour is wiped from the surface; sugar and egg from the handle of the electric whisk.
Alfie runs into the kitchen beaming, his hand snug in Greg's. Her husband looks self-satisfied.
âWe're going on an adventure!'
âAre you now? Where are you off to?' She bends down to address her boy properly. âThe moon? To play with the pirates? I know, the jungle?'
âNope.' Alfie cannot keep his secret any longer. âLegoland!'
âReally?' Vicki straightens up, looks Greg in the eye.
âI'm doing some hands-on parenting for a change. You're always complaining I don't do enough of it. It'll give you plenty of time to do your baking.' He speaks without rancour but she feels he has scored a point over her. Mummy puts Alfie in front of the telly; Daddy whisks him off to small boy heaven with the promise of Lego goodies.
âI'm not sure he's old enough. I think we need to discuss it. I mean, it's a massive treat and maybe I'd like to join inâ¦' Her voice peters away and she realises she is sounding churlish.
âWell, you've just said you haven't enough time to get everything done so you definitely haven't got time to go to Legoland. Besides, it would be good for us to have a bit of boy time, wouldn't it, Alfie?'
âYeah, boy time,' repeats his son, though he looks to his mother for confirmation. âBut Mummy come too?'
âOh my lovely, I'd love to.' She is conflicted. On the one hand, she cannot bear to think of her beautiful boy experiencing a treat like this independently and she is incensed that Greg will receive much hero-worship for it; on the other, she craves some time alone â time to bake without someone vying for her attention; or to shave her legs without someone bursting into the bathroom and demanding that he float his Playmobil in the bath.
Greg senses her indecision.
âMummy's going to stay here to get her baking sorted. Then she can relax with us and have a family day tomorrow.'
Vicki opens her mouth to protest.
âGood plan? I thought so.'
She bites down her anger at her enforced impotence. âWell, he's going to need his rucksack and a spare set of clothes and his water bottle and some snacks.' She flits around the kitchen, gathering up a packet of raisins and another of oatcakes, grabbing his Thomas water bottle and going to fill it, her frenzied activity disguising the fact she feels redundant.
âNo, he doesn't. I'm sure we can get drinks there. Come on, Alf.' He practically drags his son from the kitchen, bustling him into his anorak, and omitting to do up the zip, thrusting his feet into trainers.
âHe'll need a pee.'
âDo you, Alf?'
Alfie shakes his head.
âWell, don't take his word for it.' Vicki's voice rises in exasperation. âHe's three. Of course, he's going to say that.'
Then: âCome on, Alfie. No pee, no Lego.' She guides him briskly to the downstairs loo, lifts the seat, and stands guard as he manages to direct an impressive arc of urine.
She cannot, of course, resist commenting. âYou see, Alfie. You did need one.'
She is aware that Greg is glowering in the hall, irritated at her taking over and at her pointing out that she was right.