Sunday, June 08, 2008

Day 689: I Wonder About Toast Racks

I am attempting to give myself an immediate and cheap 'permanent' hairstyle by sticking a knife in the toaster. My PopTart* is stuck!!!

Some time later, I am seated at the breakfast table of our palatial Quebec mansion. Sundry toasted goods are strewn over the table like so many pieces of flotsam and jetsam; crumbs loll on the carpet; tiny patches of steam gather on the table where the toast has fallen; slowly, it becomes soggy. A dog barks in the distance; someone, somewhere, is playing Genesis' "I Know What I Like (In Your Wardrobe)". (Me, I'm just a lawnmower.)

The pathologist with whom I share a house (and occasionally toothbrush, if we are on a journey and I have forgotten mine) sighs as he watches me bend my toast backwards and forthwards. "We need a toast rack", I say.

Suddenly I am in every British hotel everywhere. It is the morning and we are sitting in the 'restaurant'. There is a big window, and through it I can see the sea; it is probably Bournemouth. Old ladies and men are walking up and down the front in macintoshes and their umbrellas are being blown inside out. They would like to be sitting inside a tea shop drinking cups of tea and eating macaroons, but they are not.

A lady in a burgundy uniform approaches: do I want tea or coffee, and do I want my toast white or brown?

I know what is coming next!!!!! There is a pot of tea, and there is toast. It is in a toast rack. It is cut in triangles and it is going cold, but cold in a non-soggy style; it is becoming chewy. On it, you must put butter and Marmite or jam or marmalade from a plastic pod. You will eat it all, and the lady will come with your scrambled egg and lone sausage, and she will put it down and she will say: "more toast?", and you will say, "yes". One hour later you will still be eating toast.

"A toast rack?", says the pathologist. I push the cat off the table, where she is trying to make sweet love to the cheese. "You can't get those here. When I think of England, I think of toast racks. I don't think I've seen them anywhere else."

"When you think about England you think about toast racks?", I roar, wiping jam from my eye. "You could be thinking about all sorts of things, like the Queen, and Shakespeare, and Gordon Brown's glass eye, or our newspapers (which are better than yours) or Nigella Lawson's bosoms, and you say toast racks?"

The pathologist looks unmoved. Over the following months, I visit a great many shops looking for a toast rack. There are none. I try and find on the line in Canada; there appear to be none, unless on a ghastly 'British Fayre' web-site. My mother asks: "is there anything you want from England?", for she is coming to visit. When she arrives a week later, she brings with her a toast rack, and my father.

It is helping a very great deal. Despite its many practical benefits (holds toast and prevents it from becoming soggy), it also helps alleviate the constant confusion generated by the fact that petrol stations do not sell Ginster's Cornish Pasties, or that it is impossible to buy a good newspaper or knickers that fit: in short, my toast rack is alleviating my homesickness (whilst providing an excellent practical service). What a boon!


*I am not really making PopTarts. Do not worry. I am toasting bread that I have made with my own hands from straw and the dust from the cat litter tray. Or that, at least, is what it tastes like.

In other news, I offer you some film of Genesis performing I Know What I Like (In Your Wardrobe). "What the cocking hell is Peter Gabriel doing, and why are you suddenly so very interested in early Genesis?", I hear you cry. It is a long story, my friends, and one that is not without some embarrassment.

34 comments:

Captain Dumbass said...

Dear God! What the hell was that? Good thing I'm already in therapy.

Dave Shelton said...

Whereas I now have an embarrassing urge to hear Supper's Ready for the first time in about 20 years.

You're a bad influence, Monkey!

Keep it up.

JonathanM said...

Once every twenty years would be about right I think, Dave.

Special K said...

I discovered toast racks on my first trip to England with my family - we all went home with one. Why they're not more universal, I'll never understand...

NON-WORKINGMONKEY said...

Special K - a woman of great good sense, I see. I shall turn immediately to the business of importing said toast racks. You see if I don't.

Jonathan, Dave - quite ghastly, the whole affair. I'll have to email you privitt-ly about what I was doing on Friday night, but suffice to say it involved the Bell Centre, The Musical Box (Quebec's premier Genesis tribute band), my father, my mother and the pathologist.

Zoo Keeper - shrieks, what fun! What kind? Freudian, with just a hint of Klein? Do tell.

Anonymous said...

You had me at Ginster's Cornish Pasties. Right now, this minute, I would pay $200 for one of those monsters...$300 if you throw in a Lucozade Sport (orange)

JonathanM said...

Please do,I am agog, but go easy on me; I was in the audience for the very first Genisis live album, recorded at The De Monfort Hall in Leicester and now, because of your blog, I am having flashbacks, man.

Anonymous said...

... Andc this post reminds me of why I so very much like reading your weblog.

But you couldn't pay me good money to eat my toast from a toast rack. What, hard toast with cold butter on it! Eugh. Having said that, the bit about the hotel sounds great. More tea.

The video: you scare me. But in a fun way.

Dave Shelton said...

Oh well, so long as it was Quebec's premier Genesis tribute band and not, say, the fourth best one then surely that's fine.

Do tell all.

Anonymous said...

Oh excellent - a chance to clear up something I've wondered for at LEAST ten minutes. This English toast rack thing - one toasts the bread, correct? Getting it all lovely and crispy and hot. Now, in my mind that's the moment to butter the toast because the butter melts into all the tiny little toasty craters and becomes incredibly yummy and must be consumed at once. However apparently the English mind goes, "Ah, I have heated my bread! I must now carefully place it in this here rack so that it can become cold again and more chewy than crispy. Then I will scrape butter over it, leaving it all congealed on the surface. MMMMMM! Tasty!" Is this correct? Because although I do love your Walkers crisps and your interesting variety of celebrity chefs I do not quite understand this. If one eats the toast immediately it does not go soggy. The point is to remove it from the toaster and butter and eat it at once.

Anonymous said...

Jonathan, Dave - All I want to say is that I liked it! If you were in that audience at The De Monfort Hall in Leicester (and I have no reason to doubt you, of course) you would have found it very strange 35 years later watching a reincarnation of almost that very same concert! I will educate NWM in the finer nuances of early Genesis (yes there are some you doubters out there!)

Dave Shelton said...

I'm from Leicester originally, as it happens, so was well acquainted with the De Montfort Hall in my youth. Never saw Genesis there (or anywhere else for that matter). My older brother was the really big Genesis fan and I absorbed a lot of it by osmosis. I remain guiltily fond of a fair bit of it (though without having heard any of it in a while) up until, ooh, I don't know, the one with Afterglow on it.

Hmm, I fear I may have said too much. Do I need to seek out the pearl handled revolver now?

Waffle said...

Despite being British myself, I am wholly with Megan on this one. When in said hotels in Bournemouth you describe so finely, I have to place the cold congealed toast rack victims either under the teapot, or sandwiched inside the teapot lid to reheat and melt butter. Thereby drawing attention to myself in a thoroughly un-British way.
Also, aha, Monkey, it is you and your ilk that have made 'Greggs the Bakers' and their range of horrid ersatz pasties such a success in Brussels. Bad monkey.

WrathofDawn said...

Toast racks are harder to understand than Yorkshire accents.

But I did love this post. It made me laugh uproariously.

Now to watch the video. And hope I can keep my sanity.

WrathofDawn said...

Having watched the video, all I can say is... that's what comes of using toast racks.

NON-WORKINGMONKEY said...

Father, Dave, Jonathan - I suggest a little 'reunion', perhaps at the next 'gig' of "Genesis In The Cage"? (You may find their link here!, not that MonkeyFather needs any direction!!!!!!!!)

Jaywalker. How dare you. Just because I notice the lack of something does not mean that I am a fan of it! For e.g., I notice the lack of the bubonic plague, but I would not lick a plague-carrying rat!!!! Get back to writing your excellent blog, woman.

Dawn. Yes. That is all I can say.

Megan. Ms B. You are "Americans", are you not? I am just saying!!! That means your houses are centrally heated, etc etc, ergo the whole toast/hot/melty dynamic is one that is real to you. I should point out however that I am my father's daughter (OR SO MONKEYMOTHER SAYS), and he is a man who, as a child, would put his toast on the windowsill to chill.

Anonymous said...

I love all this early genesis business. Nothing to be embarassed about at all. Peter Gabriel is both a mad fucker and a genius in my opinion. Seen both the real thing and The Musical Box and they're uncannily realistic!

Dave, my Genesis/older brother situation is almost identical.

Strange to be talking to you through someone else's coments.

About Genesis.

Chris, Brighton

Anonymous said...

im a little late, but i have to agree with megan and i am english born and bred (albeit a norrtherner, meaning i can actually understand the yorkshire accent :( however i dont understand toast racks) the perfect toast is warburtons thickest white bread, lightly toasted until golden, then lavishly smothered in clover - i have weaned myself off proper butter but margarine is just wrong) then eaten STANDING UP NEXT TO THE TOASTER whilst the next two slices are toasting



ahem...yes i am mildly toast obsessed.

As for the video unfortunately i cant ever see any of the wondrous videos imbedded in this blog as i access from work...and i am quite a young person so not really old enough to appreciate them i think. sorry! :)

JonathanM said...

Monkeyfather - I organized the school trip; a bus from Melton Mowbray and therefore got a ticket free. The week before it was probably Lindisfarne supported by Capability Brown. I do remember enjoying it and they were miles better than Uriah Heep, I'll give you that.

Monkey, you are a tease, I can't get your link to work.

LĂ©onie said...

Toast racks hark back to Ye Olden Tymes when people would try to get illicit currency to each other whilst disguised as large slices of granary bread.

These brave folk would first be set on fire for a bit, and then, if they still didn't cough up the dough, forced onto the rack for further torture. They are the much unsung heroes of their age and, interestingly, also where the phrase "best thing since sliced bread" comes from.

They are celebrated still in the chintzy restaurants of small hotels in Eastbourne.

Anonymous said...

Jonathanm, could this be what NWM was trying to link to? Don't blame me!
http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=CBBWarGqAuk
...and...
http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=mh8BYzGVdJo
Toast Racks or Peter Gabriel? Gabriel any day.

The Accidental Author said...

NWM - what a fab blog. I found you through Jaywalker's equally fab one. I see you've been using my bread recipe :)) I never thought about missing toast racks, but now you come to mention it.... VLiF

Icy Mt. said...

NWM,
This blog is great. I was a WorkingMonkey for quite some time. Then I discovered some of the things that you have discovered, like almost everything else is more important than work but I still need to go there because I have a few dependents. This realization caused (and continues to cause) me no small amount of discomfort as I slowly but surely move the slider on the psychic balance beam from Working to Non-Working Monkey. In the past six months the balance shifted over. Unfortunately, I wasn't really mentally prepared for this and I landed on my Non-Working MonkeyButt like a kid whose see-saw partner just stepped off. I'm currently attempting to fill the hole left by all that self-imposed working stuff I used to carry around all the time. This is not as hard as it could have been since I have never owned a cellphone or Blackberry. It's not easy but I'm getting better day by day.
Thanks,
Icy Mt.

Mr Farty said...

How bizarre to see Mr Collins with hair! It gave me quite a shock.

I can still remember having toast from a toastrack in a Brighton B&B in 1979, and being surprised at how warm it was. Good times.

Thank you for giving me a good laugh.

--Farts

Anonymous said...

Dearest, I feel that that windowsill story encapsulates the essence of your toast rack thing. And I will treasure the image of that small boy...

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Anonymous said...

I had never heard of toast racks before reading this (pardon me, I am French) but did actually came across this one recently. Therefore, I thought about you. Therefore, I am leaving a comment. I think that's it.

JonathanM said...

Thank you Monkeyfather, it has taken me three days, but I have finally recovered.

apprentice said...

Ah yes the toast rack, one of our many symbols of civility, dying out now, killed off by Starbucks' muffins the size of puff balls.

Then there's the plain or pan bread debate. Plain heels/doorstops made with MDF flour make the best toast.

Icy Mt. said...

Oh, and, that's no "Excellent Birds" but pretty good. I think he's pushing his cosmic lawn mower.

Anonymous said...

i see no shame - no shame at ALL - in liking early genesis.
and i also like bendy cardboard toast. it's the only kind i'm not afraid of.

Katy Newton said...

It so happens that I own the very toast rack depicted at the start of your post! It is splendid, and works a treat.

hemcoined said...

I would not lick a plague-carrying rat!!!! Get back to writing your excellent blog, woman.

Loading Arm

Patent Solicitor said...

It's weird how toast racks don't seem to be much of a thing anymore, I always see them in hotels, but not so much on the high street! Anyway, this post made me chuckle a lot.

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