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LitRev 'Recipe'
Here's the latest challenge.
Who's going to be the next Spherian to win lots of dough? It was no recipe for disaster last month - we were "cooking with gas", thanks to having Chris and Martin in the line-up. Good luck with mixing those ingredients and turning out a good poem. Please write, in verse form, some sort of recipe. Poems should, as always, rhyme and scan, in twenty-four lines or fewer. Send them to reach these offices (by email if you must/live abroad) by 29 November. (By post: The Literary Review, 44 Lexington Street, London W1F 0LW By email: editorial@literaryreview.co.uk) |
Jayne, I doubt if this is the "good poem" for which you were hoping ! But it was great fun to write.
Discomfort Food To a tin of baked beans add some chilli. Do not stint; spoon it in willy-nilly with, should you so please, cloves of garlic in threes for gilding this culinary lily. Use that fiercest of chillies, the Naga. Let it simmer for hours on the Aga till the reinforced steel of the pan starts to peel. Then serve with a great deal of lager. The effect on one’s gut is corrosive, cathartic, intense and erosive. It’s a dish to appeal to a masochist’s zeal to blow himself up with explosive. |
And great fun to read. Don't see why it shouldn't do well.
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Bravo, Martin. Have you read the recipes in 'Inside Mr Enderby' by Anthony Burgess?
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Martin,
I agree with Jerome. I love it, and the very clever title. Naga chillies have a gorgeous 'smokey' flavour, which I adore. (I can eat hotter stuff than anyone I know; it's been put to the test many times. My husband reckons I just have no nervous system! :D) |
Jayne, do I remember correctly that only subscribers are eligible to collect the big money prizes? I hope I'm wrong about that, although I seem to recall someone saying that at one point.
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I have a poem that is around ten years old that I suppose would work for this contest, and I'm pretty sure it's never been published:
CATCH OF THE DAY Making sure your knife is sharp draw it up along the carp so the scales come off the skin. Use it then to slice the belly, scoop out that disgusting jelly known as fish-gut, then begin lifting out the bones, filleting almost like a child playing on the ribs of some toy harp. Heat some oil in a skillet, add some pepper, freshly mill it, toss in garlic, add the zest of half a lemon to the sizzle, then balsamic, just a drizzle (do not skimp here, use the best). Turn the heat up, add the fish. Now warm up a serving dish. If you have a wine glass, fill it. |
Quote:
PS. You've got three 'some's in fairly quick succession there. Also, might I suggest a slight change to 'If you have a wine glass...' ? I'd assume they do have a wine glass, based on personal experience :rolleyes:, with something like Take your crystal wine glass. Fill it. |
Thanks. I know I'll need to revise this. I was pretty new to metrical writing when I wrote it.
Bummer about the prize. I sure hope Chis was a subscriber. I'm not sure they'd be allowed to penalize non-subscribers like that in the US. |
Turducken: or, Yorkshire Christmas Pudding Revived
Ask a turkey to swallow a pigeon seasoned with spices and buckshot (a smidgeon). Tell the turkey to swallow a pheasant (talons removed, or it may get unpleasant). The turkey then must gobble a chicken (with beak and comb and tail-feathers sticking). To swallow the chicken it downs a duck (freed from the muck, but quite out of luck). It swallows the duck to catch the chicken to catch the pheasant to catch the pigeon, seasoned with spices and buckshot (a smidgeon). Soon the turkey resembles a sow. It dies—so, now: encrust and bake it or spit- rotate it, hours long, as did ancient cooks of the Yorkshire of yore, when appetites, arms, and stomachs were strong. Tip: when roasting nested birds, more is more. So, stuff the whole turkey inside a bustard and baste it with lager and Coleman’s mustard. (and if you don’t have time to bake Cherpumple Pie, roly-poly some jam and float it in custard). ("Turducken" is a contemporary term for a dish of nested roasting birds, with roots in the Classical world and in 18th c Yorkshire) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turducken http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/arti...as-dinner.html http://theclearlydope.tumblr.com/pos...-water-board-a |
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