Clarissa Dickson Wright; 1947-2014

Clarissa Dickson WrightBritish cookery gets a bad rap, at least here in the States it does.  We see references to things like animal fats (horrors!), offal, greasy pastry, lumpy gravy-sluiced meats and pies, and other “nasty things”.  Americans have managed to thoroughly remove the concept that nature exists in our food.  Chicken was apparently created in a factory, splayed across a styrofoam tray, wrapped in plastic, purchased from your local supermarket on sale at $1.95 a pound.  Animal fats are regarded as “disgusting”.  Ditto things like anchovies, fruit cakes, sardines, herring, liver, sweetbeads; really pretty much all foods with strong taste.

Of course, lots of British food is done badly, as is much food everywhere.  When I lived in Rome, which has splendid food, there is enough crap food served in tourist restaurants to sink the Costa Concordia.  McDonalds has invaded every point of the globe. All over the world, industrial food is flooding the market with tasteless, dubious products.  Bad pastry is always bad; lemon curd from a jar tastes like Joy dishwashing liquid.

To my mind, life is too short to eat bad food.  Chef Michael Chow once was quoted “to eat a bad meal is expensive, a waste.”  I could not agree more.

So when I discovered the “Two Fat Ladies” cookery show I was enthralled.  This pair of women represented a confluence of so many things I love; eccentricity, humor, story-telling, excellent food, and a totally uncompromising attitude towards what we eat and how we live.  Their derision towards low-fat foods, supermarkets, vegetarianism, and many other contemporary food rules was splendidly refreshing.  Watching Clarissa and Jennifer use proper ingredients, salt, lard, butter, meat, and use them well reinforces the idea that quality is king when it comes to food.

While Jennifer was the more engaging of the duo, I always have found Clarissa Dickson Wright to be particularly compelling; I admired her for her courage and forthright nature.  She pushed the envelope and gave me the courage to create and consume good food without guilt; watching her spread butter on spatchcocked chicken or slices of bread in the manner of frosting a cake, listening to her insist that lard is the only fat to use to make a proper bubble and squeak gave me permission to use good ingredients and create wonderful things to eat.

Long before Whole Foods ushered in a fetish for “fresh and local”, Clarissa was insisting on proper food and was procuring it from farmers and artisans on Two Fat Ladies.  We watched Jennifer and Clarissa zoom onto farmsteads on a vintage Triumph motorbike to visit the deer or pigs or cattle which would be their roasts or medallions or chops when they returned to the kitchen.

Clarissa spoke openly about her battle with alcoholism; as a person also recovering from an excessive drink habit, I admire her willingness to share her stories; it is not easy to share these stories, especially as so many people simply do not understand alcoholism and view it as a personal weakness as opposed to the great personal strength it takes to manage to remain sober on a day to day basis.

I blame Clarissa and Jennifer for my current routine of the weekly 50 mile drive to procure a large percentage of my food directly from farmers; for my haphazard attempts at growing vegetables all over my urban yard; for my heavy use of American-culinary taboos of fats, small “fishy” fish, egg-laden dishes, and willingness to try any type of food imaginable.

Clarissa Dickson Wright expanded my world, and for that I am truly grateful.

4 thoughts

  1. Lovely tribute and I can’t agree more. I have cooked and eaten a lot of foods I would not have tried because of the Two Fat Ladies. Having spent a lot of time in France, I also have more appreciation for British cooks as a result of their cosmopolitan approach to cooking. I have cooked pheasant, wild boar sausages, tomato summer pudding, lamb shoulder, fish roasted in salt and many other things. I also love Clarissa’s work after TFL. Her History of British Food, Spilling the Beans, Rifling Through My Drawers and Game Cookbook with Johnny Scott are a few great ones.

  2. Thank you for reminding me of the “Two Fat Ladies!” Sad to hear Ms. Wright has moved on to the other side. Nice tribute, Josh!

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