Monday 24 December 2007

The Gentle Art of Eating Christmas Cake

When I left the parental abode for the Leichhardt Ladies' Hostel #1 (before it became the Petersham Ladies' & Periodic Gent's Hostel, then the Leichhardt Ladies' Hostel #2, Slightly Closer to Annandale), it was a December. I was wide-eyed and giddy at the prospect of kibbutzing it up with three comrades, a cat and the über-roaches of the Inner West. Me mum (blessed be her name) was convinced that I would starve to death within days, and so she brought into being the biggest, brandy-soddenest, almond-studdedest Christmas cake the world hath ever known. It was my sharehouse dowry. I put it on the kitchen table in the Leichhardt Ladies' Hostel, and repaired into my room to discuss Schopenhauer with the local arthropods. The next morning, three layers of glad wrap had been gnawed away by a feline tooth, the top of the cake bore catmouthsized depressions, Max purred plumply from a kitchen chair.

This year I have lived on my ownsome. No cat, no cockroaches, no fellow house-citizens. And me mum (blessed be her name) made me the same old Christmas cake she's made every year for the last seven years. She said something about my taking some in to work. And feeding it to my neighbours.





Neighbours? Colleagues? Pah! Here lie the remains of me mum's Christmas cake 07, the entirety of which was consumed over a two week period within the walls of Hôtel Harlot. I say this with pride. This was a sturdy cake.

Naysayers: marzipans at twelve paces.

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

"Look on my cake, ye mighty, and despair"

--- Aussie Mum dias

Martin Kingsley said...

Anon dost win at life, I declare, my corpulent cake-consuming bulk rolling with heaving laughter even as I type this.

Milly Kvistmush, all.

M L Jassy said...

My annual christmas cake given me by surrogate grand-aunt family-friend Rae is waiting for me on top of the fridge until I return from Asian climes. Keep Max far, far away from it. The long arm of the paw is a powerful one; his tail alone could swish the plastic white lid of the 1950s cake box with nary a twitch. On that note, happy summering.

Maria said...

I am puddinged, caked out.

And there is half a Christmas pudding left there in that there kitchen.

Trouble is, when we did such a good job of devouring the last one, Mum obligingly made a second - even bigger. Oh, but she loves her pudding.

Alexis, Baron von Harlot said...

Sticky dates to pudding your diary ...