The Stinking Bishop and the Shop Girl–A British Romance

 

Photo licensed via Creative Commons by Flickr member winestyr
Photo licensed via Creative Commons by Flickr member winestyr

It is a tawdry tale.  A tale of woe.  Of unrequited lust.  Of temptations to be seen but not touched or tasted.

Of cheese.

Of what?

Of cheese.

***

Sometimes stories don’t travel the trajectory we expect.  Oftentimes, in fact.   In this story, the Stinking Bishop is not a sinister church cleric–although that would be the beginning of a great tale.  No, in this case, the Stinking Bishop is simply a British cheese named after a sinister church cleric.  A singular cheese of considerable stench.

Let me preface this story by saying that I am no fan of stinky cheese. On a visit with us in England, my father-in-law once mused, “How can something that smells so bad taste so good?”  My answer: it can’t!   Nature throws out certain warning signs that we shouldn’t ignore:  the glaring red hourglass on the belly of a Black Widow Spider, the earth-shaking roar of an angry lion. These are nature’s way of telling us to run–run fast and run far– we are in mortal danger!  And then there is the smell of very stinky cheese–same principle, folks.  Why would you want to eat the stuff?  But, I digress.  I did have a story to tell.

My husband likes a stinky cheese.  If it smells rotten and has veins of mold (blue, black, green–he has no prejudice), then he’s in!  My basic policy is that any mouth that eats that stuff will not be allowed near my mouth for 24 hours.  Sometimes this policy keeps him out of trouble, but other times the cheese is too powerful a mistress.

And so, when he heard of Stinking Bishop–the ultimate bombshell, the Marilyn Monroe of stinky cheeses–he was, sight unseen, smitten.  But the stuff turned out to be elusive.  To the point that he nearly believed it was a fable, a mirage, a Fata Morgana.

He had nearly given up his quest for the fabled cheese, when we found ourselves at Castle Howard in Yorkshire, England.  (Read this aloud in a dramatic voice, and channel all the best scenes from Monty Python and The Holy Grail, and you’ll understand the great and rediculous heart swell that overtook my husband as the following events unfolded.)

After a day spent touring the estate and playing with our children in the gardens,  we visited the shop–a sort of European farm market.  And there it was in the case of cheeses, shining as if an aura surrounded it and emitting a sound only perceptible to the true of heart–a siren song to draw in weary travelers.  Stinking Bishop cheese.

STINKING BISHOP CHEESE read the sign before the humble wheel.  You wouldn’t have known you were in the presence of greatness if not for that sign–it was like that scene in Indiana Jones where he has to pick the true Holy Grail from a room full of faux grails.  THE Grail is humble, unassuming.  As was my husband’s beloved cheese.  Or, at least, it looked that way.

As James approached the counter, the shop girl was handing samples of cheeses to prospective buyers.  I think James was drooling a little.  When his time came, he said, “I’d like to sample the Stinking Bishop, please.”   The shop girl recoiled from his advances.  Then she leaned over the counter and half-whispered, “Sir, we don’t open that cheese in the store.”   My husband’s whole countenance dropped.

He looked at me.  “No,” I said.  “But,” he said.  “No,” I said.  Then I leaned, as the shop girl had done a moment earlier, and said “We can’t carry that cheese in the car.”

Katie playing dress up at Castle Howard. AKA, "Someone call the medic, they are opening the cheese!"
“Katie playing dress up at Castle Howard.” Or, as I’ve come to think of it, “Someone call the medic, they are opening the cheese!”

He understood that I was right.  There are some things that are too powerful to be schlepped around in the profane world.  And WAY too powerful to sit, enclosed in the tight space of  a warm car.

The day did come when he was able to possess the object of his desire.  I can’t tell you much about that moment.  I was not in the room at the time.  I was, purposefully, not in the room at the time.  What’s more, we simply don’t speak of it.  It’s his private moment: an obsession that I can’t understand, but a conquest that I would not want to sully.  Some things are just too powerful.

 

 

 

 

Throwback Thursday: In Alabama, Lovin’ the BBQ, Hatin’ the Spiders

Dreamland BBQ

We will soon  bid a fond farewell to Alabama  and begin  waking up to glorious German mornings.   So before we begin the tales of our travels in Germany, it’s time to collect a few thoughts on what we’ll miss, and what we will not miss, about Bama:

I will NOT miss the Black Widow spiders.  Horrible!  And everywhere!  Terrifying little beasts.  (Can you tell I have spider issues?)  They overtook our patio furniture and moved into our mailbox last year when we left for 3 weeks of summer vacation.  After that,  I took to wearing big, yellow dishwashing gloves each time I’d go to retrieve the mail.  I’m sure the neighbors talked–but I don’t care.  I was doing my best to keep up the eccentric Southerner  image and warding off Black Widow bites at the same time.  Seemed like a win-win situation to me.  All the same, I can happily live without Black Widows.

I can also live without the summers that continue into the holiday season.  No living nativity should include Baby Jesus in a sunhat and swim diapers.  Not that Bethlehem is known for its blizzards… but…let’s save that digression for another day.  I’m just saying,   September really ought to be the outer wall of summer, after which Mother Nature should change out the seasonal scenery for you.  Any less than four seasons, and the climate is veering off toward abhorrent.  (Any more than four seasons, and it gets pretty weird too.)

And, no, I won’t miss all the giant trucks that never sound like they have mufflers.  Which is funny, because they do have mufflers. (Thanks to their monster tires, you can actually  look up and see the mufflers looming overhead when they pass.   Maybe they are just decorative mufflers.  Or maybe they are really extra sound pipes, like a church organ.  Clever… but I still don’t get it.)

I WILL miss the BBQ from Dreamland Barbecue.  And the banana pudding.  Yum!  Some of the best BBQ ever–right up there with Stamey’s BBQ and Chandler’s Beef BBQ in North Carolina.

I will definitely miss the neighbors–some native Alabamians, some not.  All friendly.  All funny.  All standing rabidly on one side or the other of the Alabama/Auburn rivalry.

I’ll also  miss the way store clerks strike up long conversations with you like they’ve known you all their lives.    I’ve a feeling that won’t happen much in Germany. . .and, anyway, it will be a while before my vocabulary isn’t exhausted in a three minute conversation.

Back to things I’m not fond of–I’m not usually a big fan of lists like this:  what I love/what I hate about _____.  There’s a lot to love about any place.  And I’ve never met a place that, no matter how great, didn’t have it’s low points.  But, as Melville said, “There is no quality in this world that is not what it is merely by contrast…Nothing exists in itself.”   Life is a study in contrasts, so bring them on!  A little sour in the sweet provides the necessary punch.

And punch line.  Let’s be honest, it’s those “what I don’t like” lists that provide the laughs.   Where  would we be without the horrors, the gaffes, the Stinking Bishop amongst the cheeses?   But that, my friends, is a tale  for the morrow.  See you then!

 

 

 

My Name is Mud

TandT header travels and tomes
©2014, A. Stephenson

Ich heiβe Schlamm.

And every German person will know it when I open my mouth.

Here’s the thing: the German language makes me nervous.  I’ve traveled in Germany before, and my tourist-German is passable.  Mostly passable.  When I throw in some charades and a German-English dictionary in pocket.  I can do this.  Yes, I can.

But I am, somewhere deep down, terrified of the German language.  It comes from freshman year German classes at Davidson College.  Well, no. . .it comes from my sad and sorry performance in freshman year German classes at Davidson.  Out of nearly a year of German classes, there was only one week when my professor complemented me on my accent and abilities.  And I was on death’s doorstep with the flu.  Strangled by phlegm and fever, but excelling at the guttural language.    (Too bad this week didn’t coincide with the German presentation I had to deliver weeks later where I not only didn’t have the phlegm working for me, but I was uncharacteristically gripped by stage fright and began speaking in French…a language at which I am also no genius.)

I know that I can become a competent communicator in German. After all, I learned to muddle through in Turkish, with no previous background.  Do I anticipate erudite and articulate?  No, I’m being realistic here.  But I want to be good enough.  Respectful of the country, the culture, and able to move freely about and really talk to people.

But this memory of freshman year German is a problem.  Perhaps I’m just not capable of speaking German.  Or perhaps I spent too much time at the fraternity court and not enough time studying.  Maybe my mind just doesn’t process the German language?  Or maybe the way to absorb all of those 1980’s language lab audio tapes wasn’t to sleep through them and trust in the quasi-science of learning by osmosis.  Or maybe. . .

Maybe I just need to crack open some books and study again–but then mostly just throw myself into it.

Here’s what I know about myself now that I didn’t really understand before.  I can’t effectively learn declensions and conjugations from books and lists.  My mind doesn’t function in charts and graphs and conjugations–that section of my brain  left on vacation 40 something years ago and it isn’t coming back.  What I can do is listen.  I like sounds.  I like cadence and intonation.   I can gather up vocabulary like pebbles by a pond, and once I watch and listen for long enough, I can send them out skipping and skittering over the water gloriously.  I will be an eccentric speaker, perhaps–with Frankensteinian grammar–but I will speak readily and joyfully and maybe even, should I be so lucky as to suffer from a cold or the flu, brilliantly.

My name is Franken-mud.

 

Speaking of the Weather

 

We’re having some weather in Alabama this week.   That’s euphemistic for “all hell broke loose on the weather front a few days ago,” or, in this case, “Tornado, ho!”  Two nights ago, the tornado sirens went off from 1 a.m. until nearly 2 a.m.,  and the children, dogs, and I sat in the laundry room with our bike helmets at the ready.  The sirens were totally unnecessary: the storm had been beating the house so violently that we were already awake and assuming the touch down in Oz would come at any moment.

Apparently, this is part of the Alabama experience.  Just like it was part of the West Texas experience.  And like a massive earthquake was part of the Turkey experience.  Mother Nature is eager to let you know that, wherever you go, you can’t outsmart her.  That’s her prerogative.

But that’s not my point . . .

All of this “weather” has got me to thinking about England.  And I have a bone to pick…with Winnie the Pooh.

Yes,  the bear with the blustery day adventures.    [insert a ‘Bah Humbug’ here]  His tale raises an issue of honesty amongst  A.A. Milne and his British compatriots. Lovely people, the lot of you, so please don’t take this the wrong way, but you are horrible fibbers and obfuscators where the weather is concerned. Yes, you are. Don’t deny it.

Winnie the Pooh and the Blustery Day.   Over in America, this title conjures imagines of  a lovely, warm wind wafting the wee bear about.   No mortal danger.

!!! No mortal danger???  The woods get “floodier and floodier,” Owl’s house is demolished, and Piglet is caught in a whirlpool!  This is a blustery day?   Well, in the Queen’s English, apparently so. . .

Soon after moving to England, I learned that anytime the weather prediction calls for a “fresh” day or “blustery” afternoon, you’d better zip up the coat (the WARM coat) or batten down the hatches. Batten down, board up, and leave town if possible.  But a British weatherman won’t say that.  They are an understated breed.

In Alabama, a funnel cloud forms and sirens go off.  In the Carolinas, hurricanes hit and we are told to board up and move out.   In England, we are told only “It will be a blustery afternoon.”

Case in point: the year is 2007 and I’m listening to the BBC weatherman call for a blustery day tomorrow. Next thing you know, I’m walking my children to school in  80 mile an hour wind. Blustery?  That’s hurricane-grade weather!   And still the evening news says, “It was a blustery day, with winds of 80 miles an hour.”  Just like that.   No biggie.

These storms closed down nothing in England—and while I admire a stiff upper lip sometimes, I am not such a fan of  young school children skittering uncontrollably across the street on their walk to school  or patio furniture launching itself  into the tree tops where it will dangle, precariously, over passersby in the street.    I’m not bitter, but that was my furniture in the treetops.  (And me in the treetops trying to rescue it.)  And that was the Stephenson family skittering out into the street.  (And me carrying my daughter’s large keyboard on my back, windsail-esque, and flying out into the street at each gust. . . while my 8 year old shrieked in abject terror—fearing either that I’d be hit by a car or take sail over the rooftops, I’m not sure which.)

So that’s a little bit of a rant, but let me just suggest that truth in advertising is a good thing.   Maybe weather forecasters and Mr. Milne should consider a slight renaming of  these “gusty” days:   “bat-out-of-hell blustery day” would get the point across.  Winnie the Pooh and the Bat-out-of-Hell Blustery Day.  It does have a ring to it.

And all of this begs a traveler’s question:  are Americans spastic about the weather, or are Brits absolutely inert about it?    The answer is. . .yes.

Apparently, even weather is a culturally-bound experience.

Und so, wie ist das Wetter in Deutschland?

Wrigley Field, Chicago–100 years old today

I promised to regale you with tales of travels abroad, but I’m still stateside and this is an important digression…

Consider this:

  • Today is Wrigley Field’s 100th birthday
  • Wrigley falls within the realm of my travels.  We lived in Chicago ’92-94 and had an apartment with a view of Wrigley Field. (Granted, you had to look over the transient hotel across the street, and all of the fire engines regularly gathered there when the tenants threw flaming mattresses out the windows.  But if you could pull your eyes away from that spectacle, Wrigley Field stood proud in the distance.)
  • There’s nothing better than a Cubs game,  a chili dog,  and a 7th inning stretch with Harry Carray and company singing “Take Me Out to the Ballgame.”
  • And who cares if the Cubs aren’t known for winning?  They’re known for the billy goat curse–that’s far more interesting. (Don’t know it?  Look it up–it involves a tavern owner and his smelly billy goat being expelled from the park in the 30’s or 40’s.  The owner, subsequently, cursed Wrigley Field.  Silly?  The team hasn’t gone to the world series since the 40’s.  I’m just sayin’.  A goat curse is way cooler than a winning streak.)

So today I’m celebrating America’s best:  Cubs baseball, chili dogs, and maybe I’ll even serve up a little apple pie.  God Bless America!

Check out this amusing article on CBS: http://www.cbsnews.com/news/wrigley-field-celebrates-100th-birthday/