Posts Tagged ‘diary’

The Mouse and the Mousse

Tuesday, August 31st, 2010

It’s been quite a week for me. I enjoy being busy but we do all have limits, and I think I may have come close to reaching my own. The first two days of last week were busy but manageable: you may have seen the announcement about The Household Academy? I spent my Monday and Tuesday orchestrating some PR for that, as well as liaising with logo designers and web developers. In the midst of all this, my iron decided to break! Last Sunday I was suddenly aware of a brown sappy liquid oozing out of the steam holes. I decided to de-scale the iron, but this did not fix the problem when I went to iron once more the day after. Thankfully, I had ironed pretty much everything that I needed to iron and so I wasn’t left with a huge pile of creased clothes, napkins and tea towels.

In preparation for guests on Wednesday I made a blackberry and almond tart on Tuesday afternoon. It’s one of my favourite puddings, and quite simple to make. You do a basic shortcrust pastry, then spread a layer of blackberry jam on top, then mix together ground almonds, eggs, sugar, butter and then pour on top of the jam layer/pastry; dot some whole blackberries on top and bake. The result is delicious – especially when served warm with ice cream. (Please note, I had a bit of an accident with the pastry, so that wasn’t as perfect as I’d like it – so this tart had a rustic feel.)

Blackberry and Almond Tart

Because I had two sets of houseguests this week, the first set were staying on Wednesday night, the second were staying on Friday, this left a 24-hour period to turnaround the guest bedroom and bathroom. I only have one set of sheets for downstairs at the moment so after the first couple of guests departed on Thursday morning, I was washing and ironing the linen in readiness for the next set of guests. Of course, I realized early on Wednesday morning that I’d have to do this and didn’t have a working iron in the flat. I moved one or two appointments around and rushed off to John Lewis to buy a new one. This is where my week started to get frantic. Having bought the new iron I then went off to lunch with a friend (having made a bolognaise sauce for a lasagna), and then into a meeting about a potential project (don’t get too excited – it’ll be a long way off yet). I then collected one of the guests from the train station and we came back to the flat, where I finished off the lasagna ready to cook later.

My guests loved both the lasagna and the tart, which was good. We all enjoyed seeing each other – there’s nothing I love more than entertaining people… (and one day, who knows, I may meet some entertaining people… – old joke!). After the guests left on Thursday morning I then stripped the downstairs bedroom and started to wash the sheets. As these were in the machine I shot off to the BBC to speak to Radio Manchester about table manners and dining etiquette, and then came back to begin ironing the sheets to then pause to speak to a journalist for a website called ‘Working Mums’.

Having ironed the sheets, I then had to make the bed downstairs and then get ready for a photoshoot I was having at the flat. It was just as well the shoot was going to be focused around domesticity as I had the ironing board out, towels on airers, and all sorts going on in the flat.

By Thursday evening I had no energy at all. People always laugh when I say that photoshoots can be very tiring!

Friday morning I was up early to clean the guest bathroom. I love clean bathrooms – and I hate dirty ones. There’s nothing worse than a dirty bathroom, I feel. It’s so unpleasant to see grimy surfaces and scum that has built up behind taps, etc. I am shivering just thinking about it.

I then went to meet my second houseguests at their new house in south Manchester (they were moving some of their stuff in a few weeks early before they move-in properly). Well. I may not be visiting them much. We walked into the house before one friend screamed, “mouse!” and then we both ran out onto the street flapping and wailing. It caused the builders opposite much merriment. The house, which they are renting, is not in the best of conditions… I mean, there’s a mouse! That sums it up, really. But as Imogen and I walked around the house (having run up the stairs so that we weren’t on the same floor as the creature) she said, ‘Oh, William, I don’t think they’ve finished cleaning it’. To which I replied, tartly, ‘I don’t think they’ve started’.

We then returned to my rodent-free flat (if I ever did get a mouse I’d sell) for dinner – I cooked tuna and two-cheese pasta (the two cheeses being cottage cheese and cheddar), and then served up chocolate mousse. They left me on Saturday afternoon and I was very glad to have the flat back to myself. I love having guests and it’s a lovely feeling when they arrive… but it’s a nicer feeling when they all leave!!

Long Time No Blog

Wednesday, August 4th, 2010

Yes, all right. I realise I haven’t filed a blog in a few weeks. I was fully aware of this, but when my 13-year-old cousin, Harry, rang me this evening and said ‘can I remind you that you haven’t done a blog since the 15th July, William?’ I felt that perhaps I should pen something to fill you all in on what’s been happening.

I am preparing to go on holiday with all my family (including the aforementioned cousin) to Italy as of this Friday. We are going to Le Marche region of the country; I don’t usually get excited before holidays, Christmases or birthdays but for some reason for this summer’s holiday I am really very excited and super hyped. It will probably be dreadful – I always find that the greater the anticipation, the bigger the disappointment.

I’ve been spending the last couple of weeks down south. I was in London a fortnight ago (I blogged about that, as regular readers will know), but it was my mother’s birthday on one weekend, and I also had a few other family commitments I had to be down here for so I decided that rather than bouncing up and down the country, I’d just stay in one place until after Italy, when I shall return to Manchester.

Sadly, being down south does mean that I come face-to-face with the gym and my trainer. In fact, I have a new trainer. No, I am not that un-fit and flabby that I need two instructors, but my normal trainer Andy has been taking some time off to spend with his new child so on the days that he is not there, I have Tom, who is equally as good a task-master as Andy. As I type I have just finished making Tom and Andy a cheesecake – I do feel I should be making them a salad, not a calorific pudding, but I have decided that I shall fatten them up in order to make me look slimmer.

They have me doing runs/jogs/canters/walks/crawls. I don’t like going out on the public roads as there is a risk of people seeing me who I know (or that know me). I don’t really want to bump into someone when I am a sweaty, lolloping mess. Every time we pass someone I know I have to shout ‘I’m training him!’ whilst pointing at Andy or Tom. I don’t think the passers-by believe me for a second, but I am sure someone will one day.

I went for a run around the country lanes where my parents live this morning, safe in the knowledge that I know very few people in the immediate area (partly as there are very few houses!). How wrong I was. Five minutes in and I bump into Her Majesty’s Lord Lieutenant for Bristol, who lives two houses away from my parents and whom we know. I hope she doesn’t report her sighting of me in my jogging gear to Her Majesty; I’d imagine the Knighthood will be off.

Biscotti

Biscotti

Culinary-wise, I’ve made two cheesecakes, but also some biscotti. Something I’ve never made before but had always wanted to try. I have to say, for someone who has never made them before, I am very pleased with the results. It did take me 4 hours (one has to cook the biscotti twice – indeed that is what ‘biscotti’ means: twice baked). The recipe was for 60. I really should have scaled it down. My parents and I now have biscotti coming out of every airtight container in the house. I’ve been taking biscotti round to every social engagement (however informal) just to get rid of it by the time we go to Italy… the home of biscotti!

I shall endeavor to blog from Italy… but I’m not promising anything. That said, my cousin will be with me, so I’m sure he’ll remind me.

London: Florists, Big Brother, & Picture Frames

Thursday, July 15th, 2010

My most sincere apologies for not submitting a blog entry for last week. This was partly because I was busy on the weekend (which is when I normally sit down and ‘blog’) but also because there was very little of note to write about. But this week has been quite the reverse.

I write this on a Wednesday. I am up in London for the week, mainly on a ‘jolly’ (as my agent, Laura, called it yesterday) – although I did/do have some business-related meetings scheduled.

I arrived on Monday and spent most of that day shopping. I bought a coat, which I am told is technically called a ‘blouson’. Someone said yesterday I looked like something out of Miami Vice. I’ve never watched that show (too young!): was that a compliment? Maybe its best I don’t know. The afternoon was spent reading my book whilst sitting on a deck chair in St James’s Park. It was jolly nice indeed.

After a relatively calm day on Monday, Tuesday was quite the opposite. I had been asked to pop along to Western House, home of BBC Radio 2, to do a piece for BBC Scotland, from the contribution studios. In said studios, there is a book on the wall that has a plaque above it that reads the following: ‘We ask contributors to sign this book which we will auction for Children in Need [a UK Charity] at the end of the year’. I felt I should do my bit for charity and proceeded to sign… just under Kylie Minogue’s autograph! Previous entries included the actor Simon Callow (yes, the one I sat next to a few weeks ago in Oxford) and the writer Lynne Truss. Whoever wins the book in the auction is going to feel cheated when they read my name. They’ll wonder who I am. But one day it’ll be worth something… perhaps… maybe… I hope so.

After speaking to Scotland (about whether we rely too much on mobile phones) I then went to kill an hour walking around the National Gallery. As I tweeted on the day, there are some lovely frames there. After that, I walked down Whitehall to Smith Square, where I had a meeting. As I walked past Number 10 Downing Street, the gates opened for a delivery truck to get through. My mind wondered and I began to ask myself what would happen if I suddenly ran through the open gates up to the main door, whether I’d get shot. In America, I think it would almost be a definite (I now feel like I am an expert in American politics having watched so much of ‘The West Wing’!)

After I came out of my meeting I had a call from my agent (@laurajgraham) to say that Big Brother’s Little Brother wanted me to film a piece with them. After many calls between me, the researcher, the producer, Laura, and the travel supervisor, we set it all up for Wednesday.

Then, as that was all being sorted, I had another call from Laura saying the Scottish Daily Record wanted to get a quote or two from me, so I dealt with that before heading off to Highbury to meet a friend (@steve_charles) for dinner and then to watch him perform at a stand-up comedy night.

I shall share with you now what is possibly going to be my best story for quite some time. Sadly, the London Underground was playing up and so Steve was late and so we went and bought some sandwiches from Tesco Express. There was no convenient park bench nearby (no park, either) so we perched ourselves on a low wall just outside the supermarket (who says I don’t slum it from time to time?) As we were tucking into our dinner (his chicken and stuffing, mine a chicken Caesar), we noticed a magazine lying on the pavement nearby. It was a copy of Stylist. I noticed the date of the magazine – it was the most recent one. My mind whirred slightly before I exclaimed: ‘I’m in that!’ I picked it up quickly and opened to page 41 and there was my name, quoted in an article about Carla Bruni. We both found this very amusing.

Wednesday was an early start to get ready in time to set off for Elstree to film for Big Brother’s Little Brother. I’ve been lucky enough to work on the last three series of this British TV icon: love it or loathe it, it has certainly changed the British TV landscape. (For non-UK readers, this summer is the last UK series of Big Brother.) The premise for the shoot was that one of the housemates, who had been evicted the previous week, was a bit of a ‘Jack the lad’ personality; I was going to turn him into a gentleman – polish the edges, so to speak. Nathan (for that is his name) was a willing pupil and hopefully it’ll end up a nice fun, tongue-in-cheek piece (airing Friday, E4, 6.30pm).

William and Nathan

Master and pupil: William with Nathan from Big Brother UK Series 11

That is what has happened so far in London. I’ve found two new favourite shops: Pulbrook & Gould on Sloane Street (a wonderful florist) and Thomas Goode & Co on South Audley Street (a furniture and china shop). They are the sort of shops you walk around and go ‘aaaaah’ and ‘gosh’ and ‘wow’ at most of the stock. Both worth a visit, in my opinion.