Food-wise, I’m waiting for peaches. That’s when I know I’m in Los Angeles. More than lemons and oranges, which have an all-year-round prolific, whoreish quality – if they’re not blossoming they’re bearing fruit, it’s a constant publicity machine – peaches can only mean early summer here. And they get riper and more aromatic and squishier as the weeks go by, the skin seemingly more paper-thin, the round globe of flesh beneath more sunset-orange, more dripping, before it goes over, starts to rot.
We have a nectarine tree which is coming into blossom and that counts as my stone fruit barometer of how things will be. The blossoms are pink and furtive still, with only a few little dazzlers. There is no point waiting for the fruit, which will be eaten by squirrels. Every year I have been thwarted by them and so I don’t bother now – they know the perfect moment at which the fruit needs to be eaten better than I do and besides they’re more likely to be up and ready. They demolished my sunflowers, full of nascent seeds. They eat all the bird food.
And we have B&B to do. We’re ‘doing’ B&B though sometimes it feels as if we are being done to, depending on the caliber of guest. Some make it easy. Our first guests since our return were from Amsterdam and behaved as if these were their last days on earth. They breakfasted early and then played tennis, swam in the pool and generally ran themselves ragged in a pleasant and contained way. They loved the place and we loved them for loving it all.
Then came a mother and daughter team – New Yorkers originally from Egypt – who alternated between days spent dragging around theme parks and long hours holed up in their room lobbing shrill and indecipherable insults at each other. They also filled our fridge with foodstuffs of no particular seasonal bias: Ranch dressing, a bumper box of strawberries, little dwarf tomatoes, chocolate milk, an enormous chocolate Bundt cake, boxed up. “Fresh,” the mother announced, “I need fresh.” As if this explained it. It may have explained their blocked toilet, which I had to investigate with a forced smile and a plunger.
It was the Bundt cake that bothered me. They were passing up my homemade lemon shortbread, which languished to staleness. Five ingredients (lemon zest, butter, sugar, flour, almonds) versus – actually I lost count. They had me at sorbitan monostearate. I’m not against junk food in its place (a burger at midnight, fries, sweet fries for dipping into an omelette, a tranche of milk chocolate and a hot mug of tea), but if I’m being offered something home-made, I devour it. And I say thank you a lot. And where’s the fricking Ranch anyway? What is Ranch dressing? I need to know this before I leave.
Some strangers become stranger still, the longer you make their acquaintance; in this case, we were all mutually baffled by one another but tried for the sake of sanity to get along. They were nice people and kind in this instance: Joe did his back in and they gave us Tiger Balm and it helped. But it always happens in the first moment of meeting, the mould is set and there’s no turning back; the apartment becomes a set of enclosures, returning to rooms only when the keys are returned.
Back to blossoms. I will let you know when the peaches are in. In the meantime, there are rosemary blossoms (however, on the turn) to add to peach and nectarine and they are all edible. You could festoon salads with them, or adorn this cake with them if you are in favour of icing/frosting (they would need something to stick to, I should think). I immediately wanted to make chocolate cake; I wanted to make the opposite of the towering brown behemoth chilling in our fridge for seven days. So this is an austere, silken and rather un-American square of dark chocolate brownie spiked with rosemary. The herb gives it a silvery, savoury edge and the chocolate is dense and rather grown up. I also added a handful of almonds and two small clouds of cocoa.
Rosemary and chocolate – how very intriguing! I’m going to give this a try! 🙂
Let me know how you get on 🙂
Oh dear. You are a brave woman. Stranger and stranger still. Lovely brownies. I adore savory with sweet, but haven’t tried rosemary with chocolate (yet).
Hello Michelle, I think they’re worth a try – simply to explore the oddity and they are also very delicious. Sophie
You must have saintly patience to deal so well with some of those people but hopefully the good outweighs the challenging! What wonderful brownies. If LA weren’t so far from London I’d love a weekend in your B&B for brownies such as those 🙂
Thank you, you’re very kind. I’m sure you’d be an ideal B&B guest. ‘Saintly patience’ rings a bell…:)
Ah, those whoreish peaches–you say that like it’s a bad thing.
You do B&B??!! If Jody and I get to LA I’ll definitely be looking you up! A room with access to delicious baked treats–how exquisite is that? Your “brownies” sound great, although they sound suspiciously too good to be real brownies.
In Mary Gordon’s wonderful novel FINAL PAYMENTS the death of the main character’s demanding invalid father finally liberates her from over a decade of round-the-clock care, confronting her with the greater dilemma of what to do with her life. She takes a job visiting the elderly in rest homes, finds a lover, begins exploring the greater world. When an old man expresses a wish to see a woman’s breasts one last time before he dies she naively complies, and Gordon compares Isabel’s fumbling revealing of her breasts as the equivalent of “peaches tumbling out of a grocery bag.” Brilliant–funny, clumsy and innocent.
Ken
Okay, you win. And just so you know, I’m Isabel for the purposes of this post. Lovely quote – must read the book. Sophie
You conjure up the image of “blossoms … pink and furtive …” and “nascent seeds” and then you hit me with the guests from hell. I’ve got to make this brownie recipe to banish the image of that bundt cake!
Yes, banish away. Weirdly, Joe said the Bundt cake was ‘actually quite good’. Terrifying. xx
Whoa, that’ll be the Sorbitan Monostearate I expect.
I always read your posts from LA with a hint of disappointment, because I know living in the English Midlands means I’m rarely going to experience the mouthwateringly perfumey beauty and deliciousness that is fruit trees in full bloom amidst glorious sunshine. Today I am delighted though because I have a garden full of herbs and my Rosemary is full of these tiny lilacy blue flowers 🙂 Although the idea of leaving them on the plant to keep looking at them is quite nice, I think I am definitely going to have to bring them into the kitchen this year, your brownies look sublime!
Thank you Kate and how lucky you are to have a garden full of herbs and rosemary still in bloom. This really made me smile and if you do make the rosemary brownies would love to know what you think. Sophie
Loved this post – wonder if your guests are reading and if they are rethinking their food choices? I keep trying to explain fresh to my kids when they want me to buy something in a box with a cartoon character, I hope one day they will be able to appreciate the difference.
Yes, it takes a while doesn’t it – I don’t think I really grasped it as a child. Glad you visited the blog and enjoyed x
I have often been intrigued by the idea of doing a B&B. But as you said, you never know what or rather who will walk in the door. Maybe that is part of the intrigue. You might make life-long acquaintances that make up for the others. I guess I would never pass up your homemade treats and I think I would quite enjoy your company as well. 🙂
Thanks Laila. Yes, who walks through the door is never up to you. It can make for quite a charged atmosphere at times! Sophie x