November: Theivamanoharan Handshake
Week 1
My thinking with
baking is to increase the challenge as the week goes on. First then I start
with cookies. The recipe has been given to me by my mother-in-law. It’s a
Nigella episode. Before I talk about the cookies, let’s reflect on the name Nigella.
Her father was Conservative Chancellor of the Exchequer, Nigel Lawson. That’s
right Nigel just added ‘la’ to his name to get his daughter’s name. So intent
was he on passing it on, he wasn’t going to let the small matter of having a
girl get in the way. Teachers can look forward to ‘Ryanla’ gracing the school
registers in the future with my daughter explaining, “My name? Legacy to blame.”
Away from the
name, I was worried about doing a Nigella recipe because it’s a well-known fact
that whatever ingredients you put down you need to add a healthy amount of
innuendo. Nigella is the Queen of innuendo. What happens if I didn’t have the
requisite amount of double entendre: Will it affect my bake? Would my cookies
crumble? Would my biscuit not rise to attention? This was the recipe below, but I wrote an extra ingredient to ensure
success:
- 50
grams soft light brown sugar
- 50
grams caster sugar
- 50
grams unsalted butter (soft)
- 1
medium egg
- 1
teaspoon honey
- 1
teaspoon vanilla
- 200
grams peanut butter crunchy
- 100
grams plain flour
- 1
teaspoon bicarbonate of soda
- 1
teaspoon salt
- Mixing bowl worth of sexual innuendo
I decided to measure out the ingredients the night before as the maths
is the least fun part of baking. I didn’t have quite enough caster sugar, but I
had near enough. I said to my wife, “Near enough is fine.” Harriet was not
happy with this attitude. She said, “Ryan, baking is a science. If you don’t
get the quantities right, it won’t go right.” It was like Chris Whitty advising
Bo Jo. I replied, “You’re too hamstrung by details. I’ll just feel the baking.”
She said, “If you want to just feel the baking without weighing things
properly, you can be sure that I won’t be eating the baking.” Reluctantly, I
listened to her.
In following the science, the bake turned out very well. I’m a recent
convert to peanut butter. I didn’t have it growing up, not because of any
anti-American sentiment, but perhaps because of pro-British sentiment. I was a
fan of Adrian Mole, Only Fools and Horses and The Beano. I was a
cracker under the sofa, cup and saucer kind of child. To eat peanut butter
would defile the Alan Bennett character I was trying to cultivate. But Kit
loves a peanut butter sandwich and wouldn’t you know peanut butter is very
tasty. The cookies tasted great. I must have beat my mixture with the right
amount of wrist action. There we go: it’s that level of innuendo that ensured
the Nigella bake went without hitch.
Week 2
I’m in work and a few people have been asking about my bakes. I’m
surprised because just as Mark Twain said, ‘dance like nobody’s watching;” I
write like nobody is reading. I’m at the computer in the staff room preparing a
lesson when Caroline asks me, “What are you baking this week?” I tell her that
I saw a Nadiya recipe in the Radio Times for a gluten-free apple cake. Caroline
says she does a good Delia one. See: I’m becoming a real baker now, getting
first name recommendations from others. She says to me, “An apple cake is
pretty easy, you won’t have any bother with that.
I reply, “Easy for you might be difficult for me. I’m not a very good
baker.”
Caroline reassures me, but then in conversation later tells me she’s been to catering college and any reassurance vanishes.
I decide to heed my wife’s advice and do the maths and follow the
science. I weigh out everything carefully and take a breath before undertaking
this technical challenge. I’m making a cake without standard flour and without
eggs – I’m not sure about this at all. No one I know is a vegan, but I’m not
yet at a level where I can follow instinct and make my own substitutions. If
the recipe says it, I’ll follow it.
Everything seems to be going well. Going into the oven, everything looks
as it should. It’s coming out of the oven where the problem arises. I put the
bake on the cooling rack and nervously await my wife’s inspection.
“I’m not sure about this, Harriet.”
We cut into it and the apples don’t seem like they’ve cooked properly. She
gives me a couple of kind eyes and says, “It’s raw, Ryan.”
I feel really disappointed. We were going to meet friends in the park
today, one of which was celebrating her birthday. I had visions of us all on
picnic blankets laughing as we ate cake. I hoped my cake would add a slice of
bonhomie to the afternoon, instead we would be going empty handed. I also
didn’t like the idea of throwing a whole cake away, not when some people
struggle for food in the world. It was edible; it’s just the apple sauce I
bought was pretty runny and not chunky enough; the excess liquid meant I needed
a longer cooking time. I agree that it’s not fit for human
consumption, but I’m not a human when it comes to food. People don’t know this
about me but I am a machine when it comes to eating. Over the next week, I
therefore decide to eat all the cake myself. In worrying about the consequences
of a privileged westerner throwing away food, I greedily eat the whole thing. The
irony of that sentence isn’t lost on me.
Week 3
I’ve lost confidence so I choose to bake something from Kit’s picture
book. A fridge bake that doesn’t require you use the oven at all. This is an
easy win: like Manchester City drawing Dunstable Town in the FA Cup. But to
continue the analogy, Pep has a confidence stricken striker in need
of a goal. The Highway Rat’s Fridge Cake has a cheesecake digestive base and a
chocolate sauce on top – it sets in the fridge very nicely. My confidence is
restored; I can go again.
Week 4
I deliberate what my final bake will be. I decide to go for something
quite traditional to show what I’ve learnt over the month. I feel a carrot cake
will be a good way to go because it involves mixing, sifting and whisking.
Three fundamentals of baking. I put Kit in his high chair and bring the bowl
over to him to give it a good stir. As things stand, I’m not sure what Crystal
Maze game he would be selected for. He likes a book: mental. He enjoys Hide and
Seek: mystery. He can pick up peas: skill. But judging by his face when he’s
stirring a mix, he likes a physical challenge too.
We put the carrot cake in the oven and don’t open the oven door. I
learnt this when watching The Bake Off. You lose heat if you open the
door too much. Baking favours the patient. Curiosity killed the cat; it also
killed the cake. So we wait and we wait. Kit sits by the oven door like a contestant. I feel a little nervous: if I get this one right, it
provides a satisfying conclusion to the blog – I would have gone from
confidence to setback to eventual triumph. A true heroes journey. A
whole sense of narrative is resting on this carrot cake. I’m just glad carrot
cakes aren’t sentient, as surely it would otherwise topple under such pressure.
The bake comes out looking good. Whilst it cools, I put together the
icing. With the remaining crushed nuts
and some shop bought decorations, I set about beautifying the cake. I’ve never
been artistic; I’ve never been the most presentable type; when I mark books I
empathise with the kids who don’t underline titles or highlight words in gold.
Presentation is such a faff. If our children are to grow up in a society where
appearance is secondary to the content of character, shouldn’t we start with
cakes? I’ve half a mind to just chuck the icing on to strike a blow against
‘filtered Instagram glamour,’ but I want this to look good so I submit to toxic
beauty. I therefore create swirls with my knife, distribute the mini carrots precisely
and disseminate the nuts evenly.
Harriet comes home and is impressed by what she sees. We cut in and the joy is shared. The cake is just right: existing in that happy place between dryness and moisture. We freeze the other half, saving a slice for mum. I’m confident a Theivamanoharan handshake awaits. I don’t think I’m going to be the new Chigs or anything. I won’t be appearing on Bake Off next year making a Mad Hatter’s Tea Party. But if I have the confidence to bake with my little boy and have him enjoy the maths, the science, the art, the design of it, then I’ll take that.
If music be the food of love, play on.
Looks delicious. Would be honoured to eat a slice.
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