This recipe, however, has an entirely literary provenance: the minute I read about Ezra'a hopes for the restaurant in Dinner at the Homesick Restaurant, his plan for a soup made with garlic and love, I knew I had to eat it. Which meant, first, I had to come up with a recipe and cook it. I am not trying to replicate the recipe that the character had in mind, not that I could; but no matter, for this is the sort of soup that came into my head as I read. (I've spared you the gizzards — because I couldn't, in any case, get them past the home front.) With any other writer, there might be a danger of the title's being cloying or sentimental, but how — really — is that possible in an Anne Tyler novel? Your soul gets flayed on every page: I don't think any writer has managed to be so piercing and unrelentingly intense and plain downbeat at the same time.
There's not a sentence of hers I don't love, but after reading any of her books, a soup like this is what I need.
— from "Soup made with garlic and love," in Nigella Kitchen, by Nigella Lawson.
Last night's soup wasn't Nigella-perfect, but I think next time it will be. Maybe I should read some Anne Tyler.
No comments:
Post a Comment