Who’d have thought a dozen oysters and half a bottle of cava could have such devastating consequences? Either that or the clotted cream, the sun or the pasties (the Cornish kind you eat, not the ones you twirl, silly!).
Since Wednesday’s molluscular treat this writer has been tethered to the, ahem, “facilities” by the state of her guts (shades of Chuck Palahniuk). As I’m only 20 paces from the beach that’s not too much of a tragedy except that the incoming banks of cloud carried on a brisk Atlantic wind make it not as attractive a proposition as it was a few days ago when I was slapping on the factor 30 suncream. Let’s look on the bright side, though. Nuthin’ like a gastric upset or a tapeworm to trim the tum and mark a welcome return to one’s summer sillhouette.
“I grow old, I grow old. I shall wear the bottoms of my trousers rolled.” Or at least wrapped up in thermals and my padded waterproof faux berber jacket with hood. I’d look like something that fell off the back of the Countryside Alliance if it weren’t for the fact that I don’t exactly fit the profile. Fooled by the sun earlier in the week, I took a trepidatious paddle in the sea up to my knees and beat a hasty retreat, not because filmmaker Nick Broomfield was chasing me with a camera, but because my feet immediately grew numb with cold.
Only mad dogs and Englishmen swim in the early summer sea. You have to wait til September for the sea to heat up enough in these heah parts for any sane person to fully immerse. Unless you are an energy-frazzling toddler or a surfer. By the way, isn’t it amazing how a black rubber wetsuit can turn the average fat-slob Brit into a god, sleeked down and held in in all the right places? (And bulging where needed.)
Today is the start of Bob Devereux’s Literary festival, beginning at 12.30 with daily open readings in Norway Square and various other events at the Arts Club (Cafe Frug nights), the Mariners Gallery, and Bob’s own wonderful Salthouse Gallery. I’m reading from The Chop House on Sunday with my mate Rod Bullimore who’s reading from his Unfinished Novels — memories of dead teachers, and generally larking about for the duration.
More info on the festival here
More on St Ives courtesy of Steve McIntosh here
Just to keep you going until I get home and upload pix and videos, here’s one I made last year of local musician Steve Jones performing Coconut Skins by Damien Rice.
Wish you were here …
Steve Jones at last September’s arts festival in The Salthouse Gallery
Anna’s food blog here:
http://annacheneats.blogspot.com/
All better now, thankfully, Louise.
Will be returning with industrial size cartons of clotted cream and the best scones evah! So round my place early in the week after next for tea and culcher.
"Who'd have thought a dozen oysters and half a bottle of cava could have such devastating consequences? Either that or the clotted cream, the sun or the pasties (the Cornish kind you eat, not the ones you twirl, silly!)."
Get well soon……
Though can I just say that I recall visiting a nice ickle cafe a couple of yrs ago in St Ives who did the most divine and utterly gorgeous freshly baked scones, with clotted cream and jam. Oh the memories….