Saturday, 23 February 2013

St Valentine, Pavlova and the Iron Lady



 Last week we celebrated St Valentine’s Day, a day even more reviled than Christmas for its commercial quality, in fact it’s often denounced as a fake feast day since opinions are divided as to who Valentine actually was and why this day is dedicated to lovers. Most would agree that he was a 3rd century Roman priest – some even have him as the Bishop of Terni in Umbria - who appears to have been martyred on February 14th, the day we associate with him.  One hagiography claims Valentinus was put under house arrest by a judge who put Valentinus’ beliefs to the test by asking him to restore the sight of his blind daughter.
But what is the association with romance?
The Nuremberg Chronicle of 1493 has Valentine being arrested and imprisoned for aiding Christians and even marrying Christian couples who were being persecuted by Claudius II of Rome.   
Yet another account claims to be the ‘real story’:  here there is agreement in that Valentinus was imprisoned and tortured for performing Christian marriage ceremonies. One of his judges, here named Asterius, on being so astonished when Valentine prayed with and healed his blind daughter, that he himself became a Christian. In 269 AD, Valentinus was sentenced to being beaten, stoned and finally decapitated for supporting Christian marriage. And herein lies the romance: before his death, he wrote a note to Asterius’ daughter, signing it, ‘from your Valentine’.
Now some say that it wasn’t until the time of Chaucer in 14th century England that Valentine’s feast day was associated with romantic love. But that last ‘real story’ is the one that has my vote. Not because of its hagiographic credentials, nor for its ring of authenticity. It is an account by Father Frank O’Gara of Whitefriar’s Street Church in Dublin.  To put it purely and simply, the Irish tell a cracking tale; as well as having the gift of the gab, they have the gift of the craic.

On that same day last week I got to the supermarket display of beautiful orchids just in time to see a young woman scoop up every last one. That got me thinking: I guess we girls, less than confident that our gallants will do the romantic thing, just get on with it and treat ourselves!  So off I went home and made up a batch of Pavlova.  
 I use a failsafe recipe of Alastair Hendy’s – no eggy smells, no seepage or separation.  Here it is as it appeared in his Masterclass column in the Sunday Times on 8.4.2001
Ingredients  :  
 4 egg whites, 120 g castor sugar, 110 g sieved icing sugar, 1tsp cornflour, 1 tsp white-wine vinegar,  half tsp vanilla extract; approx 300 ml double cream and  fruit for decoration.
Method :
Set oven at 150oC / 300F/ Gas Mark 2; cover a large baking tray with lightly greased baking parchment.
 Beat the egg whites and caster sugar for about 3 minutes until very firm. Then add the icing sugar, cornflour, vinegar and vanilla for a further 4 minutes until ultra-firm, white and glossy.  The trick is in beating and beating and then beating some more; the consistency is moving from ultra-firm to cement-like!  With circular sweeping movements spread it out onto the parchment so that there is a slight hollow in the centre and nice fluid lines around the sides.  Just before placing in the oven reduce the temperature to 140oC/290F/Gas Mark 1.5 and bake for around 1 hour 10 mins or I hour if you have an electric convection oven. For smaller or individual meringues you need to reduce the cooking time accordingly. Your cooked meringue should be firm on the outside and wonderfully gooey on the inside; leaving it to cool in the oven stops the pavlova cracking so much.
 I have once had the pleasure of entertaining a lady Muscovite and it just so happened this was the dessert on my menu. Being an Applied Linguist, I couldn’t pass up the opportunity for phonological practice. Thanks to Olga’s coaching, what we serve up is now pronounced PAV-lo-va, with resounding Russian first-syllable stress.
Instead of making one large meringue base, this time I made three heart-shaped (well, nearly!) couple-sized ones : one for H’n’me, and one each for our sweet-toothed, sweet neighbours, Anna and Olympia….to share with their respective Valentines!
One friend is such a devout fan that he has been served one such large pavlova in its entirety for his sole enjoyment. Stephanos, in response to your recent ‘lemon curdy greetings’,  here’s a sweet  salutation!


                                                      
Living out in the sticks, it’s only now I’ve seen the award-winning film, ‘The Iron Lady’. Unquestionably Meryl Streep deserved every accolade and award for her role as the older Baroness Thatcher, magnificent in her control, diction and facial expression. The film did focus on her father’s influence, her ascent in the political world, her friends and foes, the fighting spirit that ensured her place in world politics, but that also led to her downfall. We saw what her career cost her in terms of family life.
It saddened me, however, to see how much time was spent on seeing things through her dementia.  Certainly many of her policies were greatly unpopular- the Poll Tax being one of them- but whatever our political position, we cannot deny that she was a great political force. Paradoxically in gender terms, she could be described as one of our last real statesmen, leading her country as she did to war, as well as through political and economic crises. How sad today to see political action based on currying popularity, maintaining power, rather than consistent with an overall perspective and cohesive policy as was the case with her. She showed herself to be a person of moral fibre, the longest-serving UK Prime Minister of the twentieth century, and the only woman to have held such a post.
  Rather than focus so much on the image of an ailing old woman, we needed to have more of a balance and see the strength that personified her and earned her global respect.   
And here I reach for another image, a metal metaphor: Antony Gormley’s  towering steel structure, the Angel of the North. Its picture is reproduced courtesy of Google images. This 20 metre-high structure in Tyneside expresses the mettle, if you like, of the northerner. Like the Angel, our image of Margaret Thatcher should have been allowed, though visibly tarnished by the passage of time, to stand as a symbol of strength, dignified and true. 


                                                        
Finally, our alkyon or kingfisher seems to have heard my plea and protected us from adverse weather conditions.  I recently managed to do some tidying up in the garden. Here you can see its prior sorry state and Leon doing an inspection of it in the ‘after’ shot. 



          



                               
Yes, we have been having more dreary, grey days with much atmospheric humidity than we want but it’s not so cold and the snow that has fallen has been  mainly on the high ground.      
                                    
                                    Our lilies and primroses are currently in bloom.
                                      

 

 


                                                                                


               So to paraphrase Percy Bysshe Shelley in his Ode to the West Wind:
                        If Winter is on the wane, can Spring be far behind?

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