There was a man I recently talked to who said he always steamed his vegetables; this made me feel sad. I have a steamer and it is currently doing time on the top of my fridge, covered in a suspicion of ancient cobwebs. I come from a long line of Midlands folk who would not know what to do with a vegetable steamer, who rarely drank water (‘water is for washing’) and who needed proper animal fat for a day to pass without incident.
My grandpa had red hands, almost purple in hue, small and puffy and strangely delicate with ridged fingernails. He would wash my own small hands in the sink finger by finger as if whittling wood. He began many of his sentences with the word ‘why…’, which was in his lexicon the beginnings of an answer he was formulating. He was a timber merchant and had brylcreamed hair and resented the amount of trifle I ate and was constantly wiping my fingerprints off the glass doors. But of course I loved him and was in awe of the way he polished my shoes.
I remember the pristine plastic bag he would give me at Christmas, long like a sleeve. Inside was a Bunty comic – he was obviously ‘advised’ – and something to do with stationary and pencils. The smell of newness. I have always loved the smell of Christmas, the colours, the citrus, the nuts, the dome of disgraced pudding. However much you feel the bubbling up of resentment somewhere in your being (inevitable) it is hard to quash the feelings of excitement, of occasion, it’s always hard to sleep on Christmas eve. Presents, gold wrapping, a basted bird, the morning walk in frost, the sudden intimacies with strangers.
I have little recollection of what I ate with my grandparents at Christmas, except there was always trifle at some point and I remember the pudding on the day, hot and cascading with complicated fruit and brandy butter which I ate by the spoonful followed later by a spell of biliousness in the back of granny’s car. Breakfast would contain dry Alpen mixed to a rough cement with single cream (top of the milk).
Now the trees are on their lopsided uppers, kicked to the kerb, empty of trinkets. The only red thing left is a poinsettia, the oranges the only thing orange. It is over! It is not even the beginning of the end. It’s a whole new year. There is nothing tenuous about it. We must begin anew. My granny eventually turned her back on butter, switching to Flora margarine – something to do with Terry Wogan’s influence. But I can’t – butter is balm, particularly now in January, when darkness falls at four and the cold works its way pincer-like through all my layers. Fat makes you feel better. Well, me.
Here is a recipe for buttered carrots to which you can add the following: more butter. And a knife point of paprika, thyme, garlic or bay leaves. Adding some sweet potato can also be lovely; it will disintegrate within minutes though. I should say that I always add garlic to this. It is delicious alongside hummus or mixed with a bit of yoghurt or feta. It becomes a soup with ease, simply add water or stock. Meat stock can give it an intensity you should be prepared for.
Buttered carrots
A bag of carrots, preferably organic (my bag says 650g)
Generous knob of good quality butter, min 25g (I use President)
Garlic, 3-4 cloves or more, bashed and chopped
Thyme sprigs (optional)
Melt the butter in the saucepan with the garlic and the (diagonally if you like) sliced carrots and coat well, add thyme or another herb here if using and a pinch of salt, then add sufficient water to cover the lot and bubble away until this has reduced to a stickiness. The moment it is ready is entirely a personal preference – I like my carrots almost burnt as it seems to bring out a corresponding sweetness, but Jane Grigson says the point of readiness is when the liquid is ‘reduced to a shiny, colourless glaze’. If you would like to make this into a soup then I would add more water and/or stock at this stage, bring it up to a boil and then blitz.
ooh nice orangey things..
Yes, orange the order of the day x
You write such beautiful stories to go with your recipes, Sophie. Thank you. And wishing you a very happy 2017!
Thank you – so kind of you to say and happy 2017 to you…all good things wished for.
Lovely story about your grandparents, and I like the tip at the end about making it into a soup, as I wouldn’t have thought of that. I do love roasted carrots, though, so this is a keeper.
Thank you very much for the nice comment and yes this is a keeper, you’re right. I must have made this recipe hundreds of times and never tire of it x
Another great piece of story telling… keep it up, I’ve missed you! x
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I am going to make this tomorrow. Butter is the only way !
The only way is butter, love S xxx
Wow really great writing– Creamy writing, with words and sentences melding together to create an incredible experience for the reader. Like butter 😉
(this is what happens when a recipe causes me to describe writing with food adjectives haha)
Thank you – I’ve never been told my writing was ‘creamy’ before! Very nice of you x
Haha no problemo 🙂
I’ve somehow quit receiving notices of your blog posts. Need to check that out. Glad you’re doing better and I love your writing, as always!
Thanks so much, Mimi. Good to know you’re out there. x
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