There are
a few items which are requisites of civilized living – or at any rate, of
civilized cooking and dining. I
used to speculate as to what, if burgled, I would have to immediately replace. In my kitchen, it was my Cuisinart food processor. At that time, I didn’t
have a Kitchenaid mixer, so that magnificent tool was not in the running. Now, I think I use it lots more. In short, I couldn’t do without it.
But, then there are other, more humble things to consider ……
Ana was
coming for dinner and a movie, and for once, I actually had the meal prepared
on time. Just about the time she
was due to arrive, I had everything ready - even Margaret and Tobias were fed
and Margaret had gone potty – and I was about to open a bottle of wine. I turned, and somehow my sleeve got
caught on the corkscrew. It fell
onto the floor and into its three pieces, and went scuttling across the
room. I found two of the parts,
but could not find the third, and the most important, part. Margaret offered to help, but the two
of us were flummoxed. It was nowhere. I got out a flashlight and
looked under the stove and the refrigerator. Nothing! I
looked in my “things drawer,” for a spare, but apparently, I only had the
one. How can one possibly have
dinner if one does not have a corkscrew?
Ana arrived, and was horrified at our dilemma. We could not have wine with our meal without a
corkscrew! We had a moment of
silence, and both prayed to St. Anthony to help us find the corkscrew. Being a Catholic, and an Italian
Catholic at that, he would certainly understand the absolute necessity of this
little bit of plastic and metal.
Sure enough, as soon as we had prayed, I looked under the refrigerator
again, and there, among the dust mice, was the rogue corkscrew. We thanked St. A, and sat down to a
very nice meal of barley soup (the first of the season,) and a pear salad –
also the first of the season.
My little
corkscrew is a bit of a miracle.
It works every time, and pulls that cork straight out. I first read about it years ago in some
cooking magazine (probably Gourmet,)
and as I always had cork pulling troubles, I rushed out and got
one. Given its plasticness and unimpressive looks, it was sort of expensive, but it was altogether worth it. As my father was a lover of both wine
and gadgets, I got him one for a Christmas present that year. I could tell that, when he opened his
gift, he was shocked that I had gotten him such a humble present. But when he opened the bottle of wine
for dinner, his face lit up. “This
is really nice,” he said. “I can
see why you knew I would like it.”
Vindicated by technology!
This was probably thirty years ago, when hot technology consisted of
such things. Incidentally, I got
Pauline one too, and we both are still using the same ones all these years
later. I am now thinking that
maybe I had better invest in a backup, just to avert some future dinnertime
disaster.
Very Basic Pear Salad
For the vinaigrette:
1 tablespoon rice vinegar,
1 teaspoon Dijon mustard,
3 tablespoons olive oil,
salt and pepper
For the salad,
2 ripe pears, peeled and sliced,
a nice bed of rocket,
a sprinkling of walnuts, and
a sprinkling of broken feta.
Very Qwik-N-EZ!
Thoroughly mix the vinaigrette ingredients. Artistically lay the pear slices on the
bed of rocket, pour the vinaigrette over them, and sprinkle on the walnuts and
feta. So simple! So yummy!
2 comments:
I love an old gadget that works so well. And it fell apart and still works - that falls into 'they don't make em like that anymore' category.
How can a photo of a corkscrew be so lovely!
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