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February 29, 2008
08:54 AM


I have always been a fan of Richmal Crompton’s "William" series, the books only, the TV versions have never got it right.
I remember one story of hers when the 29th of February occurs for the first time in William's life and he gets the slightly wrong end of the stick.
He thinks that because it won't occur for another four years that all memories of the day will likewise be obliterated.
As a consequence he is even more outrageous than ever and spends the day performing the most appalling deeds of destruction and anarchy, safe, he assumes from retribution for at least four years.

Oh to be a William!
Aren't there people out there that you would like to put in their place, whose bubbles you would like to prick, or on whom to get revenge for some past slight?
Do it today.
According to the "William Gospel" all will be forgotten at midnight tonight and we can start with a clean slate tomorrow.

(And Happy Birthday Noirin, lucky you to have had so few!)


1 Comments
February 28, 2008
10:40 PM

Long before I ever thought of cooking as a career I had heard of George Perry-Smith’s restaurant in Bath; The Hole in the Wall.
This was principally because my cousin Dermot Staveacre, who was a student in Cambridge, used to work there as a waiter in his holidays and tell us stories of the goings on behind the scenes.
It all seemed incredibly glamorous to a 14 year old school-boy in Cork.
When, about eight years later, in my early twenties I went to England looking for experience in restaurants I used the Good Food Guide as my short list of the type of restaurants I wanted to work in.
As I looked into these restaurants, the starred restaurants of the early seventies, there was a thread running through them, all the chefs seemed to have worked in Perry-Smith’s restaurant in Bath and been trained by him.

He was the Gordon Ramsey of his age, without the histrionics.
It was he who took the recipes of Elizabeth David which were revolutionising home cooking in England and translated them into restaurant foods.
When I in fact found work, in the Wife of Bath in Wye, the chef, Michael Waterfield was another Perry-Smith protégé and spoke very highly of him.
Perry-Smith had at this time moved to a “Restaurant with Rooms” in Helston in Cornwall called the Riverside but had an ex Wife of Bath chef there; Simon Mallet, so we were all kept abreast of the happenings there when he visited his alma mater.
It was either Simon or Michael who one day , in passing, said that whenever they served Moussaka in The Hole in the Wall they used to top it with a cheese souffle.

This sounded like a brilliant idea to me and obviously intrigued me because I have kept the idea of this Moussaka in my mind since.

Moussaka and Lasagne vied with other as the dinner party dish of choice in the early seventies, they were both ideal dishes, one pot, hostess friendly and cheap.
I think the differences blurred in the seventies, I’m fairly sure I ate a few hybrids but eventually Lasagne conquered all before it and now we see it as the convenience dinner of choice, pre cooked and pre packed in the local deli.
Moussaka, outside of its home in Greece, has become almost forgotten.

There are as many variations for Moussaka as there are for Irish Stew so I presume that this national dish of Greece doesn’t have a true definitive version.
A lamb stew, usually minced lamb (although beef was also used) and aubergines were essential and come sort of topping, a cheese sauce or, as in Elizabeth David’s Mediterranean Food, where she gives a recipe which has a baked batter top like a Yorkshire Pudding.
Perry-Smith’s take, seemed to me ideal.
Moussaka I felt, needed to be looked at again, and I felt I might give the this version a try. I hasten to add that this is all based on a chance remark, I have no idea which this bears any relationship to the Moussaka cooked in Bath thirty some years ago.

Moussaka
(for 4 )

Olive Oil
2 Medium Aubergines
350g (12 oz.) Minced Lamb (or beef)
2 medium Onions
2 fat cloves Garlic

2 Carrots
1 Cinnamon Stick
280g (10 oz.) Tomato Passata or Chopped Tomatoes
1 teaspoon dried Oregano
Salt and pepper

Souffle Topping:
60g (2 oz.) Butter
60g (2 oz.) Flour
225ml (8 oz.) Milk
110g (4 oz.) strong Cheddar
3 Eggs

Method;

First cook the Aubergines.
Slice them in 2 cm. thick slices, diagonally is the easiest.

Fry these on both sides in hot oil until browned and cooked through.

Brown the mince in a pan in a little olive oil, breaking it up well with a wooden spoon.
Put this to one side.

Chop the onion, garlic and carrot and fry these on a high heat for a few minutes until beginning to colour.
Add the mince to the pan, the Oregano ,the cinnamon stick and the tomato.
Bring this to a simmer and simmer gently for about 45 minutes.


Add some water or stock if it dries.
Take out the cinnamon stick and discard.

Now using a casserole or souffle dish of roughly twoand a half litres capacity put in a layer of the sauce, a layer of Aubergine then repeat this ending with a layer of Aubergine on top.

Now make the souffle.

Melt the butter in a pan, stir in the flour then add the milk to make a stiffish white sauce.
Grate the cheese and melt this into the sauce.
Separate the eggs, stir the yolks into the sauce and beat the whites until stiff.
Fold the whites gently into the cheese sauce then spoon this on top of the layer of Aubergine.

Put the oven to 190C, 375F, Gas 5.
Cook the Moussaka at this temperature for about 40 minutes.

The souffle will rise a little and make a delicious but light crust on top of the Moussaka.

I don’t think this really needs potatoes or rice, maybe some bread and a salad.


Post Script March 5th '08

I found this quote in an article by Rowley Leigh on Joyce Molyneaux (another graduate of Perry-Smith's);
Part of the guiding principles in Joyce's cooking - much of it inherited from the great George Perry Smith at the Hole in the Wall restaurant in Bath - was that nothing was wasted. If a salmon had been poached on the bone, the meat would be scraped off the bones afterwards with a teaspoon, to be used in a croquette or a pojarsky de saumon. Mushroom trimmings would go into a stock, the tops of leeks would clarify a consommé and trimmings from the rack of lamb minced to make a moussaka or at least a shepherd's pie for the staff.

Perhaps the Moussaka was never served in the restaurant but was merely staff food?




2 Comments
10:47 AM


Todays London Independent

Congratulations Hugh!

You did it!


3 Comments
February 27, 2008
03:07 PM

It is utter nonsense that the stone which we have been kissing in Blarney Castle for the last hundred years is the wrong one and not the giver of gab.
The scientific proof which refutes this idea, recently postulated in a book about the castle, lies in the my own fondness for talk.
As a child we lived in Cork, about ten miles from Blarney so any time we had visitors, and my family were always hospitable, we always went to the castle and any time we went there I kissed the stone.
Anyone who knows me will agree that in my case this kissing “took” and as a consequence I have been generously endowed ever since with the gift of speech.
This has its downside, like nature I abhor a vacuum so do tend to fill silences with speech which might not be as apposite as it should be, a tendency to “go on and on “ about stuff, particularly when wine has been taken, might be a criticism my nearest and dearest might justifiably make.
The plus side is that I am the answer to a radio producers dream and living in Waterford, and having done a piece about food on the local radio, WLRFM every week for twenty odd years now, they are starting to haul me out every time that need someone prepared to rabbit on about anything.

As a result I now make frequent verbal appearances on Sunday View, which is a discussion of what has been on the Sunday papers, and every other week, for the last three or four years I have been reviewing works of non fiction on a Saturday morning.

That this had made me read lots of books I never would otherwise have is the great gift of this exercise. I have been educated about the war in Iraq, the state of the Congo in Africa, and even read an immense tome on the life of Che Guevara.
There have also been turkeys, biographies of young whippersnappers like Brian O Driscoll or Colin Farrell are difficult to keep awake through. Sharon Osborne’s effort was so full of contradictions that I think she should have sued herself for misrepresentation.
There was even something called The Secret by one Rhonda Byrne which made me wonder if Fahrenheit 431 wouldn’t have been such a bad idea after all.

This weeks offering which Mark Graham, the presenter of the programme assigned is the stiffest one to date.
That this has been on the best seller lists many times on the last twenty years gave me the feeling that it must be readable and (for some people) it may even be.
If you ever want an insight into what AA Milne intended Pooh Bear to feel when he described himself as “a Bear of Very Small Brain” just try reading Stephen Hawkins Brief History of Time.
Here we are introduced to the world of Big Bangs,Black Holes, Quantum Physics, Imaginary time, Quarks and Antiquarks.
How all these behave, and interact obviously fascinates Hawkins but can be really hard going for someone who gave up maths at Inter Cert.

Let me just give you a small example of the speed at which Haw kin’s brain runs;
He imagines an Armageddon situation in which nothing remains except an excess of quarks rather than antiquarks, between brackets he then adds the following useful piece of information (Had it been an excess of antiquarks , however, we would simply have named antiquarks quarks and quarks antiquarks)
Are you all with me?
And I have to talk about this on the radio for fifteen minutes next Saturday?
Come back Sharon Osborne, all is forgiven.


0 Comments
February 26, 2008
11:21 PM




Acknowledgements and thanks to this weeks New Yorker.


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