Sunday, 7 May 2017

Artisan Teas, Sparrow's eggs and other trivia....


“Would you like an Artisan tea”, he asked me?  Blimey. You mean to tell me that artisans have their own tea of choice now? I mean, we've all heard of artisan bread, right. So, perhaps this is what you're supposed to drink whilst eating your artisan bread sarnie. Doubt it though, not at that price.   It was one of those rather poncy pyramid shaped tea bags too, to maximise diffusion, so I'm reliably informed. Perhaps it was designed by an ancient Egyptian architect who worked for a pharaoh and, in between building the world’s largest tombs, found a novel way of adding a little delicate flavouring to the otherwise bland waters of the Nile?
 
It seems that teas go by profession or trade these days, what with Builders' tea a traditional favourite with construction workers so they say,  being a strong cuppa brewed in a mug with a tea bag. Its no doubt not dissimilar to Sergeant Major’s brew (one so strong that the spoon should stand up in it unaided, so my old man used to say) and which should be dispensed at twice boiling point from of a large brightly polished tea urn. It should then be gulped down at a throat scalding temperature (pain is for civvies) between blood curdling roars of fury directed at poor souls gasping their last on Satan’s very own parade ground. 
 
Doubtless Doctors and other medical practitioners automatically prefer a more genteel experience, and are inclined towards that expanding universe of medicinal "herbal" teas. I tried one once; it was nettle infusion tea, meant to be good for hay fever. It smelt of old grass cuttings, you know the ones kept in a warm shed for too long. It tasted even worse. Hay fever was preferable.
 
What about teachers, or do they prefer whiskey (queue gales of laughter please at this prime example of distilled wit). Doubtless something of a more soporific nature to help them while away those long school holidays.   What about chemists? Perhaps a memorable mixture of leaves and other naturally brewed psychotropics.  It could be well worth trying in these politically stressful times for all of us.....
 
Restaurant and pub menus are often another unintended source of mirth. Saw one the other day in a pub; it was a Sunday roast, and the pork proudly declared itself to be “hand carved”.  I imagined some machete-wielding AI out back slicing up the roast pigs with atom like precision except on Sundays. For a Sunday treat however, the pork was being carved by a human – perhaps an award winning sculpture? Relief all round especially for the pig no doubt - at least that job hasn't been automated by a Google designed robot….
 
The biggest joke on the menu however was that claim made by those old staples under the "traditional meals" section, namely, of course, The Pies!  All insisted they were home-made, conjuring up quaint images of the publican's wife (sorry, "partner") applying some special recipe passed down by word of mouth for generations and rolling the pastry, hand prepared only minutes before, with one of those old rolling pins that your mum used to keep in the kitchen. All these fanciful illusions are cruelly dispelled the moment said home-made pie arrives, in the generic white baking dish and super-heated to the point it’s almost undergoing nuclear fission. The pastry crumpled and flaking like layers of burnt newspaper, threatens to blow away if you so much as prod it with a fork. Underneath all of this, the pie’s “contents" are a glutinous molten lava soup bereft of recognisable or edible solids save for the odd faded pea and shrivelled survivor of diced carrot. So much for home made.
 
One last anecdote.  I remember stopping for breakfast once in a Little Chef (big mistake), one of those road side Michelin starred temples to motorway haute cuisine. In a mad fit of over-expectation I order scrambled eggs on toast. Let’s overlook the fact the toast was no more at best than barely warm bread, the portion of scramble looked like it had been conjured up from out of a single sparrow's egg. Curious as to its miniaturised avian origin, I asked the immensely tired and monumentally disinterested waiter why the scrambled nano-egg portion was so small. He lethargically went off to check with the so called "chef" returning with the biologically illuminating feedback that that was all you got in the packet!  Well, well, and there I was thinking all my life that scramble was made from an egg that came in a shell laid by a hen.  Never trust what they teach you at school.
 
Thank the stars I didn't ask for any bacon....
 
 

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