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Interview
with Nigel Slater (page 2)
by Gregg Shapiro, January 10,
2005
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1 / 2 - Home
AE:
You mentioned coming to that realization later rather than at the time
it was happening, did you find that in writing the book, especially because
it is a memoir, that things were just revealing themselves to you, that
you hadn’t thought about otherwise?
NS:
It’s so funny that you should say that because I had no idea, with
that kind of sitting there (writing), that I hadn’t really thought
about. The biggest thing was the fact that I never had the chance to say
goodbye to my mother. In the 1960s, parents, or my parents, were so keen
on protecting their children, that they felt, “we can’t possibly
let that child go to a funeral at nine years old,” when in fact
what I missed was saying goodbye. The last words I ever said to my mother
were so awful – we had this terrible row. That came out, but also
this need for comfort. This desperate need that I replaced with food.
After my mother died, there was no affection. My father didn’t really
show affection at all. Occasionally he’d let me climb on his lap
or something, but he wasn’t an affectionate man. Eating, and that
feel of food in the mouth, is all part of comfort and affection and warmth,
and I think that a lot of the reason that I turned to food was because
I was actually quite a lonely child. When I was writing the book, over
and over again, there were little things that explained themselves to
me, like the fact that one of the reasons that I tend to lack confidence
in so many things is that my father always told me I wasn’t very
good at something. “You’re hopeless at sport. You’re
not good at helping in the garden.”
AE:
It was the kind of thing a parent would say, not meaning to be mean, but
in hopes of spurring a child on to strive to do better.
NS:
Gregg, you are so right. It was his way, which wasn’t the best way,
to try to encourage me to be the man that the wanted. He wanted a proper
lad who did sport and would go into the family engineering business and
get his hands dirty. What he could actually see was happening was a little
boy who would rather make cakes and scones, than do woodwork, metalwork
and play sport. It was his was of encouraging me, but what he did was
knock the confidence out of me.
AE:
Would you say that the experience of writing about your parents was a
positive one for you?
NS:
Yes, very much so. I’ve still a bit of anger towards my dad, which
I didn’t realize was there, but it is definitely. And my mom…there
are so many things. To this day I wish she was still here. She was somebody
that I had a very short time with. The other point, when I started to
put things down in black and white, I realized I hadn’t given my
stepmother a chance. Right from the word go, I thought she was trying
to replace my mother. She was intruding on my life and diverting my father’s
affections away from me. All I saw was this woman coming in, taking my
dad away from me and trying to Mom. She couldn’t be Mom, because
no one could replace Mom. I think, with hindsight, that I should have
given her a bit more of a chance. She was up against a little boy who
said, “I hate you,” right from the word go.
AE:
Was making the leap from writing about food in a weekly food column (in
London's The Observer) to writing about yourself an easy or difficult
thing to do?
NS:
It was easy in as much as my cooking column has always been a
bit of a confessional (laughs). It is always very personal, so that bit
was all right. I suppose that what was difficult was that I had gone from
writing introductions to recipes – a thousand ways to say, “this
is delicious, have a go and make it” – to what I call “grown-up
writing.” There was the question, is anybody going to want to know
these tiny details about my life? There was a patch in the book, towards
the end, where I thought, I’m not sure this is what I want to do.
I’ve never followed the celebrity route. I’ve always kept
slightly in the shadows really, because I’m more comfortable there.
I’ve never courted celebrity and suddenly, I was writing the most
intimate memoir that any food person has ever written. I was thinking,
“This isn’t me.” For the food world, I’ve always
been quite private, and there was this warts and all memoir. That was
something to deal with, that so many people knew a lot about my life and
what have you, that hadn’t before.
AE:
Especially considering that you wrote about sexual development and encounters.
For instance, beginning on page twelve, you wrote about your childhood
encounters with Josh the gardener, who was later dismissed.
NS:
Part of it was not necessarily a sexual thing, it was partly the fact
that he was someone who connected with me and paid attention to me. I
do remember him as being this very strikingly beautiful young guy. Obviously
there is that curiosity that young boys have for adults, but it really
much more of this feeling of connecting with this guy. He was somebody
who would pick me up and put their arms around me and carry me on their
shoulders and have fun with. I suppose in a way it was sexual. He certainly
had no qualms about taking his clothes off and having a stroke wash when
he came in from work. I don’t know whether it was that natural thing
where people are very comfortable with that sort of thing or if it was
sexual, but I was very comfortable with all that.
AE:
Finally, were there any foods that you left out because they simply didn’t
inspire you to write about them?
NS:
(Laughs) No, I don’t think so. I was very lucky in tracking
down most of the foods that I ate as a child. There were only a couple
of things that were no longer produced. I tracked them all down and bought
them and I actually ate them as I was writing about them. It was so strange,
because I didn’t even have to put them in my mouth. Some of the
things I just unwrapped and I got the smell and it would take me back
to be eight years old again. This was huge fun. It was candy bars that
I hadn’t eaten for thirty or forty years; I was loving them. And
then, certain instant desserts, that I hadn’t even dreamt of buying
– it (the package) said “Serves four.” (Laughs) rubbish,
I ate the lot. It was great. It was like being there again.
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