The BBC produced a handy booklet in 1966, encouraging listeners to cook, eat and make others happy. They asked 12 Woman's Hour contributors to design a menu each. It's all a bit Come Dine With Me, except they called it Come For A Meal. You get the idea. Each menu was for a different occasion, and surprise surprise there was even a Vegetarian Dinner. If you fancied Tomato Soup followed by Stuffed Marrow and Lemon Sorbet you were sorted! A Vegetarian Dream. Fanny of course had much grander ideas...
Fanny's menu was for those times, that we can all relate to, when you have four guests staying the whole weekend, and you need to plan an entire menu for six from Friday evening until Sunday afternoon. Fanny provides her ideal menu to 'sustain them', "someone has to" she says with a knowingly resentful glance to the radio listeners. You really get the impression these guests are not welcome at all. Best of all Fanny says, you should be able to make all this 'without help' which must've been such a boon for the ordinary housewife listener. Perhaps the domestic is away for the weekend, or worse still your very favourite assistants have the weekend off? Eeeew! Surely not...
Each dish of course is presented with it's very fancy French name, and features a mix of cold dishes ready to 'dish up' as well as others ready to pop into the oven or steamer to 'take care of themselves'. You don't want to neglect your guests while nourishing them. Easy peasy. Your weekend guests will be simply thrilled with Scallops with Cheese Sauce, Jacket Potatoes with a 'difference', Pork and Cider parcels, Ice Cream with Citrus Fruits, Pate Pie, Chicken with Cheese Fondue Sauce, and an untranslatable French Flan, a recurring favourite, which Fanny calls Tarte Fleurette.
So, flash forward to 2015, Nigella is busy cooking Poached Salmon, Avocado, Watercress and Pumpkin Seed Salad, from her new Simply Nigella book. Different ingredients, but perhaps the same sentiment? Nigella urges us to eat good, wholesome, real food. "Cooking is an act of love, whether that's expressed to yourself or others". So whether its 1946, 1966 or 2015, the Woman's Hour message is the same, relish cooking and revel in entertaining. Fanny's additional and unique message was still to fancy it all up in French, naturellement.
I was fortunate enough to meet Nigella at her "An Evening With..." with my friend Karen in Edinburgh not long after her Woman's Hour appearance, squeeeeel. It was a joy to hear her being interviewed and talk about her love of all things food. I can't imagine Fanny releasing a simply stripped back book like this, but both 'home cooks' are linked through their passion for cooking, eating and sharing with readers, listeners and viewers alike. Fanny was all frills, Nigella, well, was Simply Nigella. Next time Nigella, come for a meal, I'll pop the radio on and we can flick through Fanny's books...
Sooo jealous you met Nigella. I love her and her style of cooking.
ReplyDeleteFanny and Nigella are similar is so many ways, but differ greatly in their style - for Fanny it was all about fancying it up, making the presentation specular and ensuring cooks learnt 'French Style' techniques. For Nigella it's all about simplicity. Both wonderful!
DeleteI love Nigella, I just 'met' or saw her in Reading for her book signing tour. Can't wait to read Simply Nigella, haven't had a free moment yet!! ;0)
ReplyDeleteWe had the pleasure of an hour and a half interview session with her before the signing! It's a lovely book to read, I can't wait to cook from it - that's what I've not had tome for yet!
DeleteMy video style is slightly inspired by Nigella. She makes even the most mundane food stylish and sexy. Love her and so jealous you met her.
ReplyDeleteShe was fabulous - we had a long interview session beforehand, I could've listened to her all night. She talks real sense about food too! She was so sweet to me, really thrilled we were wearing matching outfits!
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DeleteHer new show starts on Monday, so let's see if she's influenced by Chestnuts & Truffles TV...
DeleteHaha! I just read the line about the attitude towards vegetarians being 'much more tolerant'--it makes it sound as if there were 'NO VEGETARIANS' signs on pub and corner shop doors in the 1950s.
ReplyDeleteI think the signs were invisible, but still there! Still are in some places really. I don't really get why some chefs wouldn't want to get creative and make some fantastic vegetable dishes!
DeleteI'm a meat eater, but only two to three times per week. People say that Italian cuisine is not good for vegetarians but there are some lovely, traditional dishes using no meat at all. Let's face it, your average Italian farm worker in the 18th and 19th centuries couldn't afford it. What I hate though is when meat dishes are recreated for vegetarians, like vege burgers and the like. Why not make something new?
DeleteExactly, I hate fake meats...
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