Morning all.
Grey here too, CG. A bit more rain forecast for today. Long way to go, though, before we get enough to make a difference. But anything is better than nothing.
M up the valley and friend duly arrived last night. Bearing gifts - a full set of Cordon Bleu magazines. The first issue in the collection dates from 1968 and cost 4/6d. Quite a sum of money for a weekly magazine in those days . My mum bought a later series and I really wanted to save them from the tip when I cleared out her house last year but couldn't. My mum's were much thicker and I don't remember them being structured in the same way. Anyway, M brought me these, saving his mum's from their local tip. So familiar but at the same time very different to my mum's. And odd to see the menu for the week on the back. Aspirational, obviously, but women must have spent hours and hours just cooking, cleaning and washing-up. I only had a week of it with YH and that was enough! First things I ever cooked were from a Cordon Bleu magazine - a French apple tart (I remember just deciding to make it one afternoon when I was on my own at home, and it was picture perfect and tasted great) and a julienne potato cake, which is still a favourite with us. One week, my dad (who cooked so rarely it might as well have been never) got it into his head he would make chocolate eclairs from the magazine. They were fantastic. But however much we pleaded, he never made them again.
Anyway, enough reminiscing about Cordon Bleu magazines. Bet some of you have got stories as well. I imagine they revolutionised cooking in the UK. M's mum clearly used them a lot.
Have a great day, everyone.
Grey here too, CG. A bit more rain forecast for today. Long way to go, though, before we get enough to make a difference. But anything is better than nothing.
M up the valley and friend duly arrived last night. Bearing gifts - a full set of Cordon Bleu magazines. The first issue in the collection dates from 1968 and cost 4/6d. Quite a sum of money for a weekly magazine in those days . My mum bought a later series and I really wanted to save them from the tip when I cleared out her house last year but couldn't. My mum's were much thicker and I don't remember them being structured in the same way. Anyway, M brought me these, saving his mum's from their local tip. So familiar but at the same time very different to my mum's. And odd to see the menu for the week on the back. Aspirational, obviously, but women must have spent hours and hours just cooking, cleaning and washing-up. I only had a week of it with YH and that was enough! First things I ever cooked were from a Cordon Bleu magazine - a French apple tart (I remember just deciding to make it one afternoon when I was on my own at home, and it was picture perfect and tasted great) and a julienne potato cake, which is still a favourite with us. One week, my dad (who cooked so rarely it might as well have been never) got it into his head he would make chocolate eclairs from the magazine. They were fantastic. But however much we pleaded, he never made them again.
Anyway, enough reminiscing about Cordon Bleu magazines. Bet some of you have got stories as well. I imagine they revolutionised cooking in the UK. M's mum clearly used them a lot.
Have a great day, everyone.
Comment