Asparagus and Poached Egg on Toast with Spicy Crumbs
I drank too much port last night. My Dad and my uncle Stu had rattled into Paddington that morning at elevenish. The three of us are Swindon Town fans – a hereditary disease. Swindon were playing Millwall, potentially for promotion to the Championship if results went our way. Our aim for the day was perverse: We didn’t have tickets for the match but we wanted to soak up the atmosphere, to drink in riverside pubs, to be part of it. On the other hand we wanted to avoid Millwall fans, to avoid the score, to be apart from it. That tryst of hope and fear familiar to any football fan.
The more we drank, the more fear won out. Dad and Stu had to catch their return train from Paddington at five. From Butler ’s Wharf near Tower Bridge we scuttled back west along the river in a slow boat, disembarking at Embankment so they could easily hop on the Bakerloo up to Paddington when time pressed. A last drink to impress them before they went: Gordon’s Wine Bar. A drunkard’s crypt of a bar, all dripping catacombs, tallow-lit barrels and braying atmosphere. Port, sold by the schooner. Or the slightly larger beaker. Which we ordered. Twice.
Half a bottle of port each, then Dad and Stu bow-legged it, bladders bulging, for their train. We’d avoided the score so far, but now, alone, I was intrigued. I staggered up the road to find a pub with Sky so I could catch the results. Swindon had lost. The agony of the play-offs beckoned. I had another pint. I chatted to a Millwall fan. I was woozy.
So, last night I was sick. Twice. I drank too much port.
This morning I felt rough as guts and wanted something pure and fresh to put in my mouth and purge me of my sin. Something that tasted of grass and of the sea. Something smooth but spicy to hug and punch me. Something of an apology to Helena . This is the breakfast I made.
You will need…
Asparagus
Two large eggs
Wholemeal bread
Two anchovies
Some chilli flakes
Olive Oil
Parsley
How to cook it…
Snap the woody ends off the asparagus by bending each spear. It will snap at its natural breaking point.
Boil till tender in plenty of salted water then drain and keep fresh in cold water.
Poach your eggs as you like. This recipe works best if the yolks are runny as toddler’s tears though.
Whilst the eggs and asparagus are looking after themselves hew off two thick slices of bread and toast. Chop the parsley.
Put the toast on a nice plate and drizzle with some olive oil and sprinkle with some salt. Put the asparagus neatly on top.
How to put it all together…
Put the poached egg on top of that and grind some pepper over it all.
Sprinkle over some of the spicy, crispy crumbs.
Sprinkle over some chopped parsley.
Eat it and get over your hangover!
I've always been dubious about eggs and asparagus (its so great on its own...why the egg?) but this goes a long way to convincing me. On a separate note, what's all this about football? Seems like folly to me.
ReplyDeleteLucy, Lucy, Lucy.
ReplyDeleteNew and fascinating aspects of my character reveal themselves on a daily basis. Some are inspiring and respectable (I once gave a dying otter mouth to mouth); others are sickening and reprehensible (I like football. I like eggs with asparagus). I'm afraid that's just the walking paradox I am.
Hopefully you can love me for my faults as well as my many, many favourable facets.