And so yes, life is tricky and strange. The thing to do, is dot it with spoonfuls of sugar every now and then. Metaphorically and literally. My own tooth is not particularly sweet, I'd even go so far as saying that at times, I opted for savoury seconds in place of dessert. Again, metaphorically and literally. But denying yourself the pleasure of decadence when the chips (triple cooked or not) are down, seems unnecessary deprivation. One of the most important lessons, I believe, to be learned from a life looking up to a self-flagellator such as dad was, is that you must occasionally kick back and treat yo'self.
To me, there is no greater embodiment of the ultimate treat than a slice of rocky road, aka tiffin, aka fridge cake. When inspired to reach for the sweets, I invariably lean towards chocolate. However, not the sickly, corner shop confectionary minimal cocoa solids content business, but the richer and gooier sort. And even with this particular ingenious yet simple creation, combining chocolaty soothing comfort with a sugary buzz, whilst it's easy to get hold of some god-awful supermarket varieties, they are never EVER as good and satisfying as when home made.
Growing up, of course, my tastes were less discerning on issues on purity, whenever my mum would make fridge cakes. Chocolate was not a staple, we rarely had it at home, let alone available for consumption. But when the mood took her, my mum would whip out the tea biscuits, bash them with a rolling pin, then add them to an irresistible mixture of cocoa powder, fat (marge, horror of horrors) and sugar. This glistening crunchy batter would be shaped into thick salamis, wrapped in baking parchment, and deposited in the freezer. We would then be apportioned 1 or 2 slices to savour, but not every day, the diminishing size of the enticing roll monitored closely by the parental units. I remember the excitement noticing clues of preparation, the anticipation of the finished cake, being allowed access to chocolate-sullied bowl dispensation and its perks (if I'd been good), and the wonder of the cake's sliceability, despite being frozen, made possible by the high fat content.
And later on, as an adult, coming across the more sophisticated variations - made with *gasp* butter and real chocolate, and with added beloved glacé cherries (yes yes, the marmite conundrum... well i love them so there), raisins, nuts, marshmallows, and even such eccentricities as M&Ms or Smarties! Well i never. Tiffin is even covered in ganache! - all interpreted by my still presiding younger self as rare and special moments to be savoured, enjoyed and never taken for granted. Which is probably why the store-bought kind is readily dismissed and ignored by that same young me. They're just not made with the right intent - dotting our lives with specks of delight.
Recently, attending a special and fabulous offal Supperclub marvelled at here, I came across as near an approximation to my mum's recipe as I ever have, and it came as such an unexpected surprise, given the theme of this long and complex meal, that in spite of unbearable fullness, I couldn't help but reach for a second slice, filled with evoked memories, bringing back moments of childhood joy.
ADVENTURE AND TRAVEL LUST, OVERCOMING LOSS AND GRIEF, AND OF COURSE - FOOD MUSINGS
Monday, 29 February 2016
Wednesday, 24 February 2016
A Quest for Life
The whole expanse of the world is stretching out before me - magnificent mountain ranges, deep lakes, interminable deserts, lush valleys, bustling cities and many long roads. But I am sitting alone on the concrete stairs outside my flat, on my street, in my city, feeling
morose. The evening is quiet and I am craving adventure, yet seem to be wishing for it on my doorstep, where the likelihood of realisation is somewhat diminished. Since my father’s exasperated and drawn out death by breast cancer a month ago, much too torturous and stalled for his taste, my entire outlook on life has drastically altered. That is, whilst remaining
the same in essence, my perception of its brutal truths has shifted. Seeing myself
more lucidly, I've been forced to confront my naked and raw identity, which had until now
been obscured by someone else’s ideals. With him gone, I was supposedly free
to discover who I really was, and guiltlessly indulge my reckless side, my wildness and irresponsibility. My
father gave moral structure and organised stability to our lives, upholding conformity and
boundaries. These were harnessed by shackles, however, forged of loyalty and
the need to please him. Mustn’t disappoint my ethical benchmark.
Moralistic he did not remain, however. At 71, my dad stunned
his little tribe of three by confessing, first to his wife, then his two
daughters, to an on-going affair with a mentally unstable colleague. My mother’s
world was turned upside down, as was ours – was right still right, or was it now wrong? What, of all that
we’d believed in, was still worth believing in?
Death, however, is the get out of jail free card for
forgiveness, and callous cancer reifies the need to blame and punish, revealing
petty hues. This new exonerating circumstance gave our anger permit to
soften. We were able to experience a moment of grace with this man, seeing him
for the first time as fallible, vulnerable, human. His dogmatic values of an inherited source no longer applied, allowing our timid hesitancy to be taken over
by a confident sense of our own discretionary consideration. Taking care of him
in the final months required non-wavering compassion, mixed with ruthless
conviction of daily life-or-death decisions. Having my father’s life in my
hands has been the single most powerful experience of my life, in the sense
that any doubts I’ve ever had about my capacity to be a caring, loving person,
responsible for another, have been thwarted. Now, at least, I had proof of the
seed of good in me. Perhaps I am to be trusted, along with my instincts.
With the turmoil and chaos of my repeatedly deconstructed
reality - firstly by the betrayal of trust, then by unconditional giving, and
finally loss - I expected the finality of death, when it finally came, to serve
as relief; a definitive remover of inhibitions, a tremendous motivator. I felt this
was sure to be the moment of clear perspective, when I finally stand up renewed from
the ashes, and pursue my true purpose. But here something was still undeniably blocked,
like a corked barrel. My loss, my grief, only managed to shake the barrel and
effervesce the contents. However the cork would not dislodge. I couldn’t
understand what more was required to provide a final straw. I had realised that
any significant change would not occur during the initial shock phase, and
fully expected to have to wait it out. But the process of grieving had taken a
disheartening turn, as the pain of losing my closest male friend, my ally in
eye-rolling at family gatherings, my confederate in introspective nihilism, my
enabler of the darkest of humour, intensified, rather than subsiding. The solid
stability and core structure my dad’s presence bestowed upon my existence acted
as a mould, without which the contents, jellylike and formless, spilled out, proving
impossible to re-gather and reshape.
I felt paralysed, powerless and lost. Utterly unable to
even begin relocating my path. All that I’ve managed to achieve since his
death, in terms of real change, had been increased propensity towards
self-destructiveness, a sense of listless aimlessness, and a desperate need to
set my course for terra firma of my aspirational dreams. My jelly, it would
seem, would inevitably have to form into an entirely new mould. Although what shape
that mould would take, I had absolutely no idea.
This has not been my first encounter with cancer and its
life-altering path of destruction. But unlike this current craving to surrender
to spontaneous flights of fancy, eight years previously my adventure and travel
lust pre-existed the illness. A round-the-world trip I was about to embark on had been recontextualised by these new circumstances in a
way I could not have foreseen. What was meant to be a carefree expression of my
newfound freedom, and transcendence into full blossom, became an
introspective journey of darker hues. Or perhaps it was always going to shape up that way. You
can plan and make provisions for the way forward, but after all, it’s the impulsive
decisions, wrong turns and detours that eventually shape our lives, and rarely
as predicted.
This time round, sitting on the
stairs, I could not see over the edge of the bottomless hole I fell into. Alone and in the
dark I summoned a route out.
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