Break
down to pieces, make cocaine quiches
Money
piled high as my nieces
Crusading
forth through Keda Black's cookbook, I had a bash at this traditional
French dish. Mine, unlike Pusha's, did not have a Colombian slant to
it.
It
first involved making pastry, which I didn't knead for long enough.
When I took it out of the fridge an hour after making, it was still
sticky. I left it overnight and rolled it out the next morning on a
kitchen work surface. It STILL stuck to the breadboard. I added some
more flour before rolling it out.
I
mixed up the quiche ingredients, but had to guess-measure the cream
as the mixture itself was in my only mixing jug. After cooking,
cooling and fridge-ing the dish, I gave it a shot.
It
was good. It was better than I'd expected. I wasn't sure that the
pastry had formed properly, being a bit soft, but it tasted fine.
Better than fine. The only problem was, the recipe was for four
people. It was a feast. I only got about a third of the way through
before I had to bin it. The thought of freezing it in portions didn't
cross my mind for some reason, the parents were away (again) so I
couldn't give it to them, and I don't think many friends are ready to
trust my cooking yet. I don't even know if I do. Especially with a
dish like this, which people tell me is one of the more complicated
ones. Come on, Keda, you could have stuck that in later in the book!
But
that's why I'm doing this. When I got this cookbook for my birthday,
I thought, I'd really like
to be able to use this. But I'm going to do it all wrong.
I
have short-term memory difficulties stemming from a complication at
birth. After recent conversations with family and a few memory
specialists, we've nailed down a hard home truth. I expect things to
go wrong. I expect to fail, and because I expect I will, I do. I
expect I will, however, because I have experienced 29 years of making
the same mistakes and NOT remembering what went wrong. This has
resulted in repeatedly NOT being able to foresee problems and avert
them.
But
this doesn't mean things will always be this way. I learned to drive
and passed first time in 2002. I've got a 2:1 BSc Hons in
Professional Broadcast Techniques. I've developed methods of
organisation, using a phone, diaries and notebooks, to make sure
things happen when they should. I devised a lever-arch file system
for any info pertaining to the flat. I've had a number of pieces of
writing published and have held down a public sector job for three
years. I've also got a forty-thousand hit blog. I've learned to
improve my writing. I've learned how to tailor my writing to attract
blog hits using Search Engine Optimisation. If the human race can
thrive by cooking and eating decent food, there's no reason why I
can't join them on that, is there?
And
so, I cook on, under the guidance of the very knowledgeable Keda
Black. Stay tuned for more meal-making malarky.