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Sunday, June 26, 2011

I am back in France. I have just spent a week in Norfolk punching a hole in the wall above my fishmongers shop. Well I didn't actually do it myself...Builders. But it has extended my showroom, by two more rooms.
Strange and coincidental, that The Fishmonger and I can't exactly live together, what with him being in Norfolk, and me in France, but our two businesses snuggle up quite cosily together. Now he has an extractor fan it is a good deal better.


THE FISHMONGER
I did try to live with the Fishmonger in Norfolk. I tried for two years. He lives in a small cottage on a main coast road. The ceilings are hobbit height and he is very tall. He bought the house thirty five years ago with an inheritance from his great aunt.
His mother helped him choose the curtains....they are a pretty floral with squirrels and nut trees in a tight repeat. and still hang proudly in his bedroom. The kitchen has a beautiful green formica surface surrounded by tiles depicting badgers and field mice. He eats off plastic picnic plates and his vast selection of drinking glasses have been gathered, one feels, from forsaken cider orchards, or neglected beer gardens on sunday afternoon jaunts!
I spent one cosy winter snuggled up with the Fishmonger in this cottage. He has a very efficient fire. It burns everything he gathers and he is a very efficient gatherer. It is rare for the Fishmonger to buy fuel. He successfully acquires anything combustible from the beaches, the fields and the neighbour- hood skips. He chops these finds into tiny pieces (his fireplace being quite minute) and keeps them in a cupboard under his stairs where they dry next to the night storage heater.
This method ensured our warmth in the winter of 95 and apart from dodging the odd molten missile that launched itself resentfully at our contentment, we were as cosy as the multitude of little bugs in their rugs that lived under the wood pile, the sofas, and the hospitably moist Wilton wool carpet that was recycled from his fathers office in 1953, and now adorned the cottage floor.
I was truly in love.
That winter we discussed how I would be an asset to my Fishmonger. Long into the night we thought of a thousand ways a stylist could wave her magic wand and enhance the fish trade. We eventually came up with the idea of opening a small fish cafe above his shop in the nearby village of Burnham Market. 

The fishmonger thought crab salads and sandwiches would be good fillers for the coach parties of old dears that descended on the village from spring to autumn each year. But I was ahead of him here.. Coming from Sydney where the ingredi- ents were fresh ( I think rural Britain still has a fifties concept of the word fresh...despite all the F words and School dinners!) and food was about camaraderie and sensuality.. I took the risk and stood my ground over endless foodie discussions huddled around the fire for the duration of a cruel East Anglian winter.
I wanted salads and, olive oils and sardines, soups, scallops and crepes. I wanted fish, pan fried, with lashings of garlic and lemon.

I have never understood the British obsession with fish in gooey batter, smothered in vinegar and soggy chips. Yuk! I wanted a plate to speak with colour and flavours, simple and tasty. An experience rather than a stop over and fill up!

One trip to the fish shop on Campbell Parade Bondi Beach could put a Pom in the picture about his national dish. Here you choose your fish and they grill it in front of you. You get half a lemon and a newspaper cone full of crispy chips.You sit at sunset in the empty band stand looking over the Pacific ocean watching the last of a few surfie stragglers swimming their boards to the shore,and the beefy lifeguards scratching their rumps and breaking a tinnie or two in mateship. Life's a beach. “Aint that the truth. “No wucking furries mate!”

I decorated the cafe in sea tones and covered it in shells inspired by a Greek ruin we had come across on a holiday to Lindos. Here we had hired a tiny green Corsa and the Fishmongers legs , being too long for the pedals, had ensured that we kangarooed around the island every day until, exhausted, we came to a stop back at our borrowed villa whereupon the Fishmonger lost himself among neighbouring vineyards and returned at dusk bloated and juice stained from gorging himself on the ripening grapes! and pomegranates!

I had a kitchen the size of an airing cupboard, and if someone was washing up and another was cooking at the same time, we had to stand bum to bum and some bums took up more space than others! I had no notion that I would be the one actually cooking in this space but after the dream came the reality and I quickly realised that every- thing was up to me and why not? The fishmonger was much better on the shop floor. He liked the repetitions of life. He needed to know he was safe.
“Would you like your head on or awf Madam”? he would enquire of his customers several hundred times a day and “Would you like a bag for that or not ?” Not one to be overgenerous with the plastic, and quite rightly.
We opened the cafe in the summer of 1996. We were packed from day one, Saturdays being our biggest day, the atmosphere at the tables was electric and as the space was so small people quickly became friends and brought friends and the mood was always alive and magnetic. There were exceptions however and a good cafe mood could be ru- ined by an unhappy marriage. I say this because you can kind of spot when a couple have run their marriage to the point of “sans issue.” These couples sit next to each other. Staring blankly ahead at the space that is sadly empty of their soul mates, they rarely converse except to comment on the food or complain about the service. Often they ask for the music to be changed or turned down and I am here to tell you they can kill a happy vibe as quick as you can say “Head on or awf.”

If all the remaining diners (All twenty four of them ) unanimously decided to rebel and keep the mood buoyant, then approximately three days later I would receive a letter of complaint in the post usually confirming my suspicions that I had ruined their entire weekend!

At this time in the village was a neighbour who had taken a vehement dislike to the Fishmonger. This was partly due to the fact that he ran a twee little gift shop with his over fragrant and orange stained girlfriend. The shop was called “La Belle Vie” or some such elaborate nom de francais. The back door opened directly onto where the Fishmonger stored his delectable waste bins. This meant there was a
profound conflict of aromas. Personally I am of the opinion that though “Odour de Poisson “ is not entirely marketable in even itʼs freshest form, it is an honest smell and preferable to “Odour de Fraises synthetique” that bombarded our senses on a daily basis.
Now, if you are of Essex origin and by some ugly twist of fate have found yourself trading in a quintessentially British village the like of Burnham where the “Windsor Factor” holds itʼs discreet little flag close to itʼs puffy chest, it is beneficial for you not to make too much of your- self. It is not wise to clad yourself in Nike lycra nor to sport gold ingots and an immensity of chest hair burgeoning from your opened track jacket. One chap is never expected to threaten another chap with his briefs in the post over boundary issues. And one needs to be very certain of ones case before one takes any such action towards said Fishmonger because he will raise himself, when threatened, up to his full Old Etonian stature and plot revenge,and he will park you and your nasty flashy jaguar in for days with his secondary fish vehicle sodden with the leakage from his last load, and when asked impolitely to move it, he will stare down at you from a very great height and reply. “Not for a piece of insignificant excrement such as yourself. No.” And while you are dancing Rumplestiltskinesque around the Fishmonger, punching the air in an hirsute rage, the Stylist will notice that you have inadvertently left the door open to your flat and she will quickly lo- cate that special delicacy the chinese duck egg (A gift from a returning traveller purportedly said to be one hundred years old.) and with the stealth and precision attributed to her trade she will secrete it under your stair carpet , stamp on it and quickly beat a retreat. Some weeks later you will find that not even the industrial cleaners are able to locate or remove the offending smell. One weekend we will find you gone. Your shop empty and your briefs un-posted.
It is true that The Fishmonger lamented the loss of his valuable,ancient duck egg for many weeks. What was he keeping it for? Would it one day accidentally end up in an omelette as a cafe delicacy? Best not to take that chance. So it was with smug satisfaction I revelled in its un- timely and infantile demise.
One saturday morning while setting out my wares on the miniscule cafe counter, a local and much celebrated hotelier rushed up the stairs to announce the arrival of an important food critic. It seemed that Jonathan Meades was a guest at The Hoste Arms and our good neighbour had recommended he eat lunch at our establishment.
Panic ensued. I was not prepared. I had written the Plat du Jour and placed it outside the fish shop. All the usuals were there, Cafe Salads, Scallops with parmesan, Seafood pancakes< Thai fishcakes.....and an interesting but unpractised dish I had concocted that very morning with salted cod.
I had bought the salted cod the day before in Portobello. I have long been addicted to foraging the friday junk markets under the flyover. I had already bought a floral bedspread and a couple of 1930s silk nighties when the thought occured....”Oh some salt cod would be excellent!!”
I had never cooked it before, nor had I any notion how to cook it...but I picked up the gauntlet.. I soaked the cod overnight (not long enough as it transpired.) and the next morning, very early I cooked it with chilli and chick peas, lashings of fish sauce and perhaps some coriander, cumin and pickled lemons.
After receiving news of the impending visit, I was naturally anxious to erase the above dish from the specials board . I wiped the excess fish guts, from a bass I had been filleting, off my hands and flew the length of the stairs to obliterate the risky item. Too late...Mr Meades was already first footing the bottom of the stairs. In order not to knock him off his axis and paralyse as well as potentially poison him, I braked excessively and pretended to be intent on polish- ing the banister with my eraser rag. He looked alarmed but fairly un- fazed as he continued on and up into the cafe.
He settled himself into a cosy corner and proceeded to study the menu. I tried not to focus on the salt cod. I repeated a mantra of “Choose the Thai fish cakes” over and over in my head. “I”ll have the salt cod”. he said “Sounds interesting”. That's it! There it was. I was done for, gutted, like the surrendering bass that was already judging me a fraud. Resigned to my inevitable fate, I served him up a healthy portion and waited for the choking........ It didnʼt come. Instead I heard the spoon scrape the bowl a number of times, then a polite request for seconds! The following weekend the Sunday Times ran an article by Mr Meades on the culinary delights of Burnham Market. It featured a rather fetching cartoon depicting the fishmonger and the hotelier and described my dish as an interesting “piri piri” oddity! I think I got off lightly and The Fishmonger having polished off the re- mains of the dish, dined out on the story for months. I was however rapidly realising that fish was not my forte. Love had driven me to embrace things beyond my nature.
Why is it that we women always look to developing the potential in our men? I had clearly decided that my Fishmonger needed to develop, he needed more colour, he needed me and my limitless imagination to put the sparkle into his life. To create the star of Fishmongers. What I clearly neglected to understand was that here was a man who still walked the worn path of his fathers Wilton. . This man was content with his life. Every Sunday he set off with his shrimp net and waders and on Monday he stocked his shop with the mussels and shrimp he gathered on at the weekend. This he had done for over thirty years and over that time hundreds of women had swooned at the very mention of his potted shrimp! He was a national treasure . A beautiful, eccentric, simple man with no expecta- tions to be anything other than he already was. I t was me who had to work a way to change. I had to discover how to be content with him the way he was and also have a life . Clearly the answer meant I needed to be on a long piece of elastic from Norfolk.

Thursday, June 16, 2011

There are better things to do than.......

So, you see it has all mounted up on the desk...Things that need to be done...and now I have given myself the extra pressure of a blog, a Facebook page, and so far I have managed to avoid Twitter because of the stress of it all. I have a recording from childhood of my mothers voice in my head on repeat. Right now she is  at 78rpm, her voice getting shriller by the minute, and the more pressure I put myself under to complete something, the more she will shriek about my tardiness...

I remember a therapist telling me once that I had to kill my mother (well obviously not really, otherwise I would have been banged up for over twenty years now.) But symbolically. He gave me a pillow and suggested I punch it and scream at my mother. But I couldn't do it...I just couldn't. He said I would never get rid of the voice if I couldn't kill her there and then as a pillow. But I could hear the therapist's wife upstairs in the kitchen, offering her children lunch. Well I figured if I could hear her, then she could most certainly hear me. I put this to the therapist and he reassured me that  his wife could hear nothing.
I didn't believe him and so I was unable to deliver more than a feeble and feathery whisper into my billowy parent, before she was quick to remind that I was a failure at therapy too.

So I have repaired to the local bar and met up with two inspiring friends. Peter Poplaski http://blog.seniorennet.be/peterpoplaski and Marcus Reichert http://www.marcusreichert.com/ and under the influence of a citron presse and some very tall and inspiring tales, I have put off paperwork for another day.
This could be a reason  why I live in the Cevennes. There are plenty of fellow desk dodgers and a wealth of subjects of a more pressing nature to be discussed dissected  and dispatched. Anyway, I must buy some more staples before I can think of undertaking any form of paperwork. Shut up Mother!





Friday, June 10, 2011

I seem to Have lost my title

This is fairly indicative of all areas of my life. Sometimes I am Mrs homemaker, sometimes Ms Action woman, sometimes Granny (I like those times) and sometimes La dame avec le deux chiens. It is hard being so may things to myself!! Actually in this instance I have tried being Ms Techno Whiz, but failed miserably in understanding how to change the colour on this text, and in doing so have deleted the title of the blog. Any advice on how to rectify this would be most welcome.

Today was market day. In our village we have two market days a week. Tuesday is small and just the bare essentials, but friday is a proper market, and as summer progresses it overflows the village square and becomes a fair metropolis of soap, and jewelry sellers, african textiles, fossils and semi precious stones: A Peruvian bag seller and a maker of quaint mobiles fashioned out of maize kernels1

On tuesday this week I bought some fairly expensive beauty products all neatly wrapped and placed in a vibrant pink carrier. I then went to the food market carrying my basket and my pink carrier. I bought all
my veggies, bread and oils etc. At home, some four hours later I realised I had left the pretty pink carrier on the last veggie stand I visited. Tuesday was my Mrs Airhead day!

Surrender was the word that came to mind on this discovery....Surrender. Otherwise my neck would start to cease up and I could become mean and spiteful. So surrender then.

Today I gathered my Mrs Housekeeper chattels and set off early to the friday market. I wandered about a bit, looking at some Kantha quilts for 135 euro, that I sell in the shop for 85 quid, and then I made my way to the veggie stand. My eye caressed the vine tomatoes, pootled over the rock melons and came to rest on a vibrant pink carrier bag containing fairly expensive beauty products. "Alors! Monsieur Legume vous et tres sympathique". I swear I nearly kissed him, both cheeks, and a third if you are a protestant..... No..no..no. Not a third cheek! A third kiss! ....Silly.

Monsieur Legume looked rather surprised, even at my restraint, and wished me a fine afternoon and a very good weekend. Miss Because Your Worth It has had a good day and  is now wallowing in the silky finish that only a fairly expensive french face cream can provide.

I seem to Have lost my title

This is fairly indicative of all areas of my life. Sometimes I am Mrs homemaker, sometimes Ms Action woman, sometimes Granny (I like those times) and sometimes La dame avec le deux chiens. It is hard being so may things to myself!! Actually in this instance I have tried being Ms Techno Whiz, but failed miserably in understanding how to change the colour on this text, and in doing so have deleted the title of the blog. Any advice on how to rectify this would be most welcome.

Today was market day. In our village we have two market days a week. Tuesday is small and just the bare essentials, but friday is a proper market, and a summer progresses it overflows the village square and becomes a fair metropolis of soap, and jewelry sellers, african textiles, fossils and semi precious stones.

On tuesday this week I bought some rather expensive beauty products all neatly wrapped and placed in a vibrant pink carrier. I then went to the food market carrying my basket and my pink carrier. I bought all
my veggies, bread and oils etc. At home, some four hours later I realised I had left the pretty pink carrier on the last veggie stand I visited. Tuesday was my Mrs Airhead day!

Surrender was the word that came to mind on this discovery....Surrender. Otherwise my neck would start to cease up and I could become mean and spiteful. So surrender then.

Today I gathered my Mrs Housekeeper chattels and set off early to the friday market. I wandered about a bit, looking at some Kantha quilts for 135 euro, that I sell in the shop for 85 quid, and then I made my way to the veggie stand. My eye caressed the vine tomatoes, pootled over the rock melons and came to rest on a vibrant pink carrier bag containing fairly expensive beauty products. "Alors! Monsieur Legume vous et tres sympathique". I swear I nearly kissed him, both cheeks, and a third if you are a protestant..... No..no..no. Not a third cheek! A third kiss! ....Silly.

Monsieur Legume looked rather surprised, even at my restraint, and wished me a fine afternoon and a very good weekend. Miss Because Your Worth It is now appreciating the fine tuning that only a fairly expensive french face cream can provide.

Thursday, June 9, 2011

Everybody gets to go to the moon in June.

OK. So I spoke too soon about summer and sun, heat and dust. After a week or so (part of which I was back in Blighty) the weather has changed to sort of how it should have been in April. All the roses are over however and the garden looks green and lush but devoid of any colour.
I took a week back in the UK to re-arrange the showroom and add a few new goodies. www.wattswishedfor.com and was surprised to see how, quite unconsciously, I seem to be creating little pockets of varying nationalities in my displays. I now have a very british corner, which looks sweet and makes me want to be living in an english country garden again. However I have to pinch myself and  remember that the sun only shines approx two weeks a year and the concept of heat on the body is unknown to the pallid Brits.
So I was outta there quick as you can say "Cook me up a kipper". Problem was the ever accommodating Ryanair only have one flight to Nimes at 6.25 am. That means leaving Norfolk at 3 am. Thats not funny.
Anyway I made it and arrived home at 10am and went straight to bed.
I have been in a relationship now for seventeen years with the Old Etonian fishmonger Mike Gurney.
I can't live with him because he smells of fish; and fish and fabric do not mix due to absorbency issues.
It is fair to say I love him, but his habits don't please me. I think one needs to be meticulous about one's dress code if one is involved with fish. The Fishmonger though will clean himself up for a coming event, and then moments before we get in the car to leave he will remember he neglected to remove kippers from his smoking kiln.  He will return to the car some twenty minutes later with a tray of kippers to drop at his shop (on the way to the wedding!) The shop however is not on the way to the wedding and the car
and his suit are now impregnated with the smell of prime smoked herring, I am angry, and the poor unsuspecting wedding guests  blissfully studying their hymn sheets will shortly be on the move to a distant pew once said Fishmonger sidles in to a back row position. What an embarrassment he was to his poor children at school gatherings. There are more stories about the Fishmonger that will out over these pages if I am diligent and committed to writing. For now though I am back where the sun is shining and the whippets are happy to see me.

The Fishmonger

The Fishmonger
The Fishmonger beside a tinkling stream.

The whippet walk

The whippet walk
Mazet