While out for a wintry walk recently, the talk turned to our
expectations of the large afternoon tea we were planning to conclude with. Well,
I say ‘the talk turned,’ but actually it was all we talked about.
‘Chocolate cake, obvs,’ said Honesty Girl.
‘A freshly-baked scone,’ said Sweary Mary, ‘and no-one
better blimmin’ tell me I’m putting on the cream and jam in the wrong order’
(this with a hard stare at me. It’s jam first, people. Jam first).
‘Some kind of sponge cake,’ Sherpa Sal said. ‘Followed by half
a scone, with butter, then jam, then cream.’
‘Cake first?!’ we all yelled. And ‘Butter?!’
Sweary Mary spoke for us all: ‘You don’t need butter if
you’re having blinkin’ cream.’
‘I do,’ said Sal calmly. She takes enough exercise to
counteract the chlorestoral, I suppose. And in her defence, at least she puts on
the jam and cream in the right order.
As for me, all I could think about were the finger
sandwiches. I adore them. I find sandwiches which aren’t finger-shaped
disappointing, and as most sandwiches can’t be bothered to be anything but
triangles or oblongs I am disappointed a lot.
It was quite cold and muddy on the walk, so by the time we
stumbled into Badgers Tea Room in Alfriston, my mind was just one big finger
sandwich. Badgers fancies itself as dainty, so it requests that you remove
muddy footwear, or put blue plastic bags (supplied) over your boots. It also
has a sign saying that it welcomes ‘well-behaved children’ so naturally there
weren’t any children in the place; no parent knows what a ‘well-behaved child’
actually looks like in the eyes of a tearoom proprietor, but we all suspect
that only a gagged and immobile one will be acceptable.
I plastic-ed my boots, reasoning that this slightly tedious
chore was just bringing me closer to a plate of f.s. Don’t worry, I did get
them: while dramatic tension is all very well when writing about trivial
matters such as love, betrayal and death, it is not suitable for something as
important as the finger sandwich.
We sat next to a roaring fire, and ordered with the
abandonment of people who have walked a long way while discussing food. The
finger sandwiches were magnificent: egg mayo –gotta have egg mayo – smoked
salmon, tuna, and cucumber. Badgers was so good, there wasn’t even the
inevitable rogue sandwich: sometimes it’s an indefinable paste, sometimes a boring
one, like cheddar. I can’t remember when I was happier, scoffing the sandwiches
and Sherpa Sal’s spare half-scone, and criticising Sweary Mary for her layering
technique. Finger sandwiches are truly the foodstuffs of heaven. I went home
determined to start making them all the time, all with different fillings, but
at lunch next day I just chucked a tin of tuna onto a piece of bread as usual, and
lived with the residual disillusionment.
Published in VivaLewes.com. Picture by Katie Moorman
Published in VivaLewes.com. Picture by Katie Moorman