DEAR MF BUMFACES DIARY,
Since you didn’t ask, I’d like to, you know, be having sex regularly. I sort of feel like Ariel at the bottom of her little treasure hoard, looking up, except instead of combing my hair with a fork, it’s a vibrator. What do hoomans use these mysterious things for? It doesn’t grow shut, does it? Please say no. But if sex happens, I get too distracted to write. For some of us the top of Maslow’s pyramid is very, very VERY far off and minuscule.
Today I printed out all the things I am going to do and make in October. Thirty-nine recipes, ranging from Fricandeau of Beef (whatever that is, right?) to a cherry sauce for pudding. This does not include “normal” workaday meals that have more of a footing in this century, like tacos or Some Stuff I Found. I keep this month’s calendar on the fridge where it acts as an aid to memory and a whip.
Last month and August went well–two calendars all scratched off. I like cooking in this house. I kind of keep to myself, as you do in Seattle, but this street is encroaching on me.
My neighbor called yesterday, not the Recycling Bin Hermit.
“Hey, SJ,” he said. “I would come over and knock but I am still in my pajama pants.” He works from home, too. If he knocked, he would probably get me in my pajama pants too, or possibly in my new latex lederhosen that I just got off layaway. (Don’t ask.)
He invited me to his birthday party, and then later when I was digging up my yard came out in his pajamas anyway. They were blue and fuzzy and covered in moons. While we were talking a little brown dog came over to us and then meandered on.
“That dog sticks its head into my door when I am roasting chickens,” I said.
“Oh, yeah, he belongs across the street. The lady there told me that he’s some kind of breed that’s irretrievable, he can’t be called and he only comes home when he feels like it.”
“Sounds like my first husband,” I said.
His owner crossed the street and came over to me.
“Hello,” she said. “I should have introduced myself to you the other day when you told me my headlamps were on.”
“It’s fine,” I said, and it was.
I’d like to have old Moon Pants and his son over for supper, but they’re vegetarians, and it’s hard for me to find a night when I am not reducing adorable baby animal faces &tc into a nice glaze.
Tonight I make Fowl a la Marengo! The story goes that Napoleon whooped some ass in Italy and then snapped his fingers for a post-battle repast. What could be scrounged up was tomatoes, crawdads, white wine, mushrooms, eggs, and some chicken. Sounds like dinner to me. HOWEVER. Beeton tells us this story in her usual breezy “let’s have a little historical grounding shall we” fashion:
The following is the origin of the well-known dish Poulet la Marengo:—On the evening of the battle the first consul was very hungry after the agitation of the day, and a fowl was ordered with all expedition. The fowl was procured, but there was no butter at hand, and unluckily none could be found in the neighbourhood. There was oil in abundance, however; and the cook having poured a certain quantity into his skillet, put in the fowl, with a clove of garlic and other seasoning, with a little white wine, the best the country afforded; he then garnished it with mushrooms, and served it up hot. This dish proved the second conquest of the day, as the first consul found it most agreeable to his palate, and expressed his satisfaction. Ever since, a fowl la Marengo is a favourite dish with all lovers of good cheer.
Isabella, I am on to you. You explain all this, which sounds like a very nice meal indeed, and then your recipe OMITS the white wine. Really, can you imagine a French dish prepared in Italy without white wine and with only a “very small piece of garlic”? TSK. Even Frances Crawford’s recipe in French Cookery Adapted for English Families [1853] calls for wine in. FRANCES. FUCKING. CRAWFORD. I see. You took this recipe from Alexis Soyer. Well, I will do it your way and omit the tomatoes, eggs, and crawdads, but I will not omit the white wine. I am also suspicious of the need for sugar. It is challenging to rejigger dishes like this one. Presumably Victorians did prepare it this way, because the recipe appears in some of the most popular books of the time. I will find a way to keep it true without being dire.
FOWL A LA MARENGO.
949. INGREDIENTS – 1 large fowl, 4 tablespoonfuls of salad oil, 1 tablespoonful of flour, 1 pint of stock No. 105, or water, about 20 mushroom-buttons, salt and pepper to taste, 1 teaspoonful of powdered sugar, a very small piece of garlic.
Mode.—Cut the fowl into 8 or 10 pieces; put them with the oil into a stewpan, and brown them over a moderate fire; dredge in the above proportion of flour; when that is browned, pour in the stock or water; let it simmer very slowly for rather more than 1/2 hour, and skim off the fat as it rises to the top; add the mushrooms; season with salt, pepper, garlic, and sugar; take out the fowl, which arrange pyramidically on the dish, with the inferior joints at the bottom. Reduce the sauce by boiling it quickly over the fire, keeping it stirred until sufficiently thick to adhere to the back of a spoon; pour over the fowl, and serve.
I should probably crosspost this to The Queen’s Scullery but without the sad sex TMI. DIGNITY. ALWAYS DIGNITY.
Hello! This is a somewhat unrelated question, referring to your earlier post about Limoncello.
I followed your link to the recipe and got my liqueur on with a mountain of zest and some 80 proof vodka. I’m planning to make a few more batches (Christmas gifts!), and I was wondering, how did yours turn out? What, if any, modifications would you have made to the recipe? Will you share your Limoncello wisdom?
Also, that wandering dog sounds like a pug. I have one, and his central feature is obstinacy.
Emily: “…I was wondering, how did yours turn out?”
Psh. Asshole limoncello is supposed to be the nectar of the gods. I am still waiting for her to start distributing. HEM HEM
I would recognize a pug and it turned out fine.
Oh no, I did not mean to imply that I thought you wouldn’t know a pug when you saw one. They are highly recognizable, being one of the most thoroughly mutated breeds. :) Even in the dark I’m pretty sure that I could identify one just by the snuffle-honking and copious snot-blowing they do.
Eh, TMI away. It makes us feel less alone.
OK, I’ve figured out what you need to do:
Graphic novel/cookbook with vignettes like these.
I died a little when you said ‘sounds like my first husband.’ Partly with envy because I feel like the women who say things like that are a special group sort of like Buddhas or Boddhisatvas of life. But you’ve always been one of them even when you were still with this first husband.
Please? Graphic something something biography cookbook with hilarious fucking vignettes? Or are we getting that on the internet already? Why do I demand the pages? My printer kind of sucks but that’s not the reason. I like the silence of the book.
I like books too! I want the finished product to be something unique that you can hold and sniff and spill on.
Wow, you’re insane. And I know that’s going to be a compliment.
But you’re right, you should have asked for a pony.
Sorry, I glazed over after the sex part (yes that was a lame cooking joke); my repertoire is limited to Cheerios and buttered toast. It’s not pretty.
Ok I’m off to self-actualize. But don’t worry it doesn’t grow shut – you wouldn’t believe me if I told you the last time I got laid.
^^<—PS: This is what not getting laid for long enough does to you.
Hmm, someone who follows the twittergraph…LET’S SEE SOME ID MA’AM
What I never really get is, if this is the stuff that was handy in the countryside, surely all the surrounding peasants were already eating it more or less that way? It seems so unfair that it’s always Napoleon’s chefs who invented it!
fucking tasty anyway so whatever!
Yes, history is written POORLY by the victors once again. I’m sure this dish was a couple hundred years old, and probably older sans tomatoes before the age of exploitation.
Your adventures in Victorian cookery always make me want to give it a go, but then I remember my husband is all vegetarian and realize that TOFU A LA MARENGO is completely inadequate.
Still! I bought mace! And I’m going to use it someday!