Tuesday, October 29, 2013

...for the perfect espresso... (part nine)


I've been lucky of late in that I've tasted some very fine coffee. However I'm not sure whether the global standard of coffee-making is on the rise or my own standards are in steep decline. To be truthful I feel convinced that neither of these are in fact the case, and the net result has proved to be one of great pleasure to me.

For many years now coffee has been my constant companion. Wherever it was served, you'd find me present.

I've realised I won't find life's answers at the bottom of a demitasse, instead I'll discover all the reasons for being alive by looking beyond the rim of the cup and across to my companion.

When the book of my life is written, it will be measured not in the number of cups of coffee I have drunk, but instead through the quality of the company in which I consumed them.

Saturday, September 28, 2013

...for the land of hope and pork pies...


Undeniably, the French know a thing or two about food. And fighting. So it takes no great leap of faith for one to believe Napoleon Bonaparte was well-informed and indeed accurate when he claimed “An army marches on its stomach”*.

We British, knowing less about food but nonetheless agreeing with Boney’s sentiment, went on to conquer two-thirds of the world’s landmass during the 19th century fuelling an army purely on beer, beef, and pork pies (mixed with a cunning refusal to learn the native tongue).

Forced to retreat to these shores during the first half of the 20th century, the reasons for the failure to create an enduring empire became apparent as we returned to this Sceptred Isle clutching such exotic delicacies as the balti, the pita, and the kebab. All admirable and delicious foods in their own right, but not manna for sustaining an occupying army.

Whilst the empire has long disappeared, fortunately those three staples of beer, beef and pork pies remain in great abundance. The first two are both well-known and have their own global iterations, so it is for the pork pie to stand alone as uniquely British.

Today, civilisation is divided in to two distinct spheres: those who adore a good pork pie, and those who have yet to taste one. They have become something of an obsession of mine.

In common with all the world's finest food, their concept is terribly simple. The traditional British pork pie consists of roughly chopped pork cooked in a hot water pastry crust. The pies are unique in that the base is raised by hand around a wooden ‘dolly’. The dolly is removed, the filling placed in, and a pastry lid seals the deal. Yes. The French raise their children by hand. The Austrians, no doubt, raise their veal calves by hand. But we, the Brits, raise our pork pies by hand.

The crowning glory of the humble pork pie is in its jelly. As the meat cooks it reduces, leaving a void within the pastry casing. As any pork pie aficionado knows, this just won’t do. In order to maintain moistness a jelly, made by boiling the pigs bones in water, is injected through a hole in the now deliciously golden crust. Really, what’s not to love?

And there you have it. A simple food borne of the English huntsman’s desire to have a tasty snack while out shooting fox and boar, and one that went on to feed those who felt the world’s riches were there to be plundered in the name of the king (or queen).

Throughout much of its history the pork pie has been associated with one town, Melton Mowbray. It is our Parma, our Kobe, our region de Champagne. And there, amongst the hills of Leicestershire, it lays quietly anticipating the second coming of the British Empire. It may be in for a long wait…



* Yes, for the pedants amongst us, it is far more likely that what Napoleon actually said was, “Une armée marche sur son estomac”. But no one likes a smart-arse, do they?