The second of four short Christmas stories written and read by author and poet Michael Smith, filmed by Nick Seaton. Watch the stories – as they are released – here or download them as podcasts from iTunes or read them below

The bitter cold had started digging its heels in, and London seemed lonelier, harsher this winter… I remember one night me and D walking for miles around Mayfair and St James’, hands clasped tight into our pockets, pockets of coats too thin for the cold spell that had come, frozen to the marrow, looking into the windows of oyster bars and shops that sold thousand pound grouse hunting jackets and silver shoehorns, trying to guess which tramps would freeze to death on the sparkling frosty pavement before the dawn was up…


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by TOAST ( 05.12.12 )

By Jared Brown

This season of chilly nights and winter storms cries out for hot drinks by the fireplace. Before central heating became the norm, every household had a selection of recipes for hot punches, flips, nogs, and grogs. The ring of the toddy stick, stirring up a tankard of spirit, boiling water, and brown sugar was as celebrated as sleigh bells.

In 1823, all Britain was entranced by a mixture called Gin Twist. It was so popular William Maginn wrote a 145-line poem extolling its virtues that appeared in many newspapers. Soon after, poet John Timb penned a shorter verse hailing Gin Twist and the previous poem. It might seem like excessive praise for a drink comprised of gin, sugar, boiling water, and a lemon twist… until you taste it…

 

GIN TWIST

40ml gin

25ml fresh lemon juice (juice of half a lemon)

1 heaping tablespoonful of sugar, to taste

120-150ml boiling water

Combine the ingredients in a teacup, mug or Irish coffee mug. Stir. Garnish with a lemon twist.

The garnish, from which the drink takes its name, was originally employed as testament that this was a true winter luxury: a drink made with fresh lemon juice as proven by the twist!

 


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by TOAST ( 03.12.12 )

The first of four short Christmas stories written and read by author and poet Michael Smith, filmed by Nick Seaton. Watch the stories – as they are released – here or download them as podcasts from iTunes or read them below. 

It was during a washed-out trip to France… Sunday was wet and stormy, and as a last resort we drove off to Lourdes, first glimpsed from a distance as a big dramatic biblical mountain half shrouded in mist, the kind a little child might think God lived on, and Moses might come down from all fiery-eyed with a contract on two tablets…

The outskirts of Lourdes were as sad and tacky as you might expect, all cheap hotels and fake Irish pubs, wall-to-wall holy pizza and souvenir shops full of Marys with neon halos, a kind of Blackpool or Las Vegas of Catholicism that was utterly phoney and intriguing… I liked it, but for all the wrong reasons…


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by TOAST ( 27.11.12 )

Sara Wheeler posts her third and final Chinese dispatch from the Buddhist monastery of Labrang Tashi Khyil.

Skeins of black-haired pilgrims walked around the perimeter of the Labrang monastery, chanting softly and spinning prayer wheels. They moved quickly, and their sheepskin boots had tamped the mud hard. The sun had only just appeared above Dragon Mountain, but the air no longer carried a Himalayan chill.

Labrang Tashi Khyil, founded in 1709, is the most important Buddhist monastery outside Tibet proper. Situated in the far south west of Gansu province in the dead centre of China, it perches near the lip of the Tibetan plateau on the Daxia, a fast-flowing tributary of the Yellow River. You can see why its founder – a monk who became the first Living Buddha – chose that particular spot. Labrang sits in a perfect bowl formed by the ridgebacks of the Dragon and Phoenix mountains. For centuries it formed the middle of a web of trading routes, and Han Chinese, Hui muslims, Tibetans and Mongolians gathered in the monastic lanes to barter horses, salt and tea…


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by TOAST ( 15.11.12 )

Orlando Gough

I have written a cookbook that has just been published by Toast. The obvious question that must be addressed is: does the world need another damn cookbook? Shouldn’t there be a moratorium on cookery writing until we’ve actually cooked some of the recipes? Nigel, Nigella, Nigelissima, bust.

It makes its appearance at a time when the tables of cookery books in bookshops are in danger of buckling under the strain of large volumes of food porn, and TV programmes unrelated to cookery are becoming extinct. Fantastically extravagant claims are being made for food – spiritual, artistic, philosophical. Restaurant menus are full of purple prose, and we’re offered the opportunity to gorge on aged beef and underage veg.

A backlash against foodism is under way. The excellently stroppy Guardian journalist Steven Poole has written a diatribe called You Aren’t What You Eat, which brilliantly skewers foodie pretension and foodie rhetoric. Predictably, he has spiky support from the great Jonathan Meades, who takes particular delight in Poole’s attack on a classic piece of foodie bollocks from Anthony Bourdain, writing about the chef Thomas Keller: ‘You haven’t seen how he handles fish, gently laying it down on the board and caressing it, approaching it warily, respectfully, as if communicating with an old friend.’ But the fish is dead! says Meades. Is Keller a medium? Or a necrophiliac fish-fiddler?

I can only defend my cookbook on grounds of lack of pretension. It’s a formalized version of a hand-written recipe book I’ve kept since I was a child. For me, cookery is about enjoyment, hospitality, sociability. I do a job (composing) which is mostly solitary, and which I find difficult and elusive. Cooking is an opportunity to do something comparatively easy with comparatively quick and reliable results. It’s about pottering around the kitchen listening to music, about trying to cook good food with inexpensive ingredients, about reading lots of different recipes for the same dish, about occasionally experimenting with something left-field like pickled melon (wonderful), but more likely about making pasta carbonara for the nth time while trying to decide whether to use egg yolks or whole eggs (the jury’s out). And then it’s about enjoying the results, and the chat.

I should have been put off by my first effort to give a big dinner. Soon after I arrived at university – too soon – my naughty friend Nigel (no, not that Nigel), who had, seductively, already spent time in prison somewhere in the Middle East, and I decided to give a party. We invited about 100 people, significantly more people than we actually knew. Names appeared on the guest list by osmosis. Nigel was front-of-house, which meant effectively that he did bugger all except to hunt down some dope, and I was in the kitchen – or rather in several kitchens, because no one we knew had a kitchen big enough. I made duck with cherries from the Cordon Bleu Cookbook – an insane choice since it meant i) spending a fortune on ducks ii) sidelining any vegetarians iii) making an enormous quantity of demi-glace sauce for the first (and as it turned out only) time. Demi-glace sauce is a sophisticated kind of brown sauce that takes practice. Considering my lack of experience, it was like trying to play a Beethoven piano concerto when you’re on Grade 5 piano. The ducks were distributed around town to various friends, and I ran around like a headless chicken (duck) between them, checking on their progress. I remember a network of scuzzy gas cookers with ovens groaning with unevenly cooked poultry. Fat everywhere. Heat like the engine room of a ship. Who knows if the dish was a success, because the party was overrun by gatecrashers, and the food was eaten almost exclusively by people I’d never met and would never see again.

For more on Orlando’s own book Orlando Gough Recipe Journal click here. 


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by TOAST ( 12.11.12 )

Dr Sally Bayley.

I was recently visiting a friend in Hampstead and naturally was offered tea. I was alarmed to find that, for her, tea came without biscuits. ‘What, not even a decent gingernut?’ I exclaimed, instinctively. Tea, surely, should always be served with a biscuit or two: something I have tried to insist upon in my local pub where I often ask for tea and where, occasionally, a snug little muffin sidles in alongside my mug. Admittedly, pubs are perhaps not the best places to begin demanding tea and biscuits. But it is definitely a biscuit I want, not a muffin…


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by TOAST ( 26.10.12 )

Jon Day.

To Southwold in Suffolk, where the long sandy beaches with their abrupt drop offs provide good conditions for sea angling. The mackerel and bass will be moving on by now: autumn is the time for flatfish.

We rig up our long beachcasting rods on a beach to the south of the pier, near the centre of town. Though tempted by the cove to the north labelled ‘Sole Bay’ on our maps, the wizened bait-shop owner who sells us our ragworm baits tells us that the commercial fishermen have moved in, and there aren’t many sole left there. He’s a friendly, patient man; happy to answer our questions while his friends, a group of Jehovah’s witnesses, stand by. He taps his scriptures while we um and ah over weights and rigs. He is a fisher of men, but doesn’t try to convert us…


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by TOAST ( 19.10.12 )
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by TOAST ( 12.10.12 )

In the second of three dispatches from China, Sara Wheeler takes in the city of Xi’an at dusk.

At owl light, lamps glimmered from the eaves of the Bell Tower, casting shadows on the cobbles and hanging lanterns.  For a while the brick facing of the ramparts glowed in the dusk; then darkness smudged them out, and I cycled on.

The fourteenth-century Xi’an city walls remain intact (uniquely in China), and a 14-kilometre bike ride on top of them gives a snapshot of that city’s tumultuous history. Situated in the heart of the country more than a thousand kilometres south-west of Beijing, Xi’an (pronounced See Ann), is the place where it all began..


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by TOAST ( 09.10.12 )

The new window display in our Notting Hill shop is a revelation for us – quietly demanding attention (we don’t like to shout) while opening up the view through the window and into our light, airy and tactile new shop-fit.

Initially inspired by the meadows of Tusheti, Georgia (the location for our Autumn book), our visual merchandising team drew on the work of Piet Oudolf (a long-time favourite of our Managing Director, Jessica Seaton, see picture below) and the principles of living architecture (see Brooklyn Grange Farm) to design a mild steel container filled with maidenhair ferns (Adiantum), mexican feather grass (Stipa), coral flowers (Heuchrea), chinese fountain grass (Pennisetum alopecuroides) and mind-your-own-business (Helxine Soleirolii). We like it so much that we’ve created smaller versions for all our shops


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by TOAST ( 01.10.12 )
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