Table Manners with Jessie and Lennie Ware - S2 Ep 4: Amol Rajan
Episode Date: March 7, 2018Is there anything Amol Rajan hasn’t done? Presenter of The One Show, youngest editor of the Independent newspaper, judge on Masterchef, and now currently the BBC’s Media Editor. Over a savoury che...esecake he manages to makes us laugh with his penchant for Del Boy dinners and nearly gives mum a heart attack with his last minute vegetarian request. Pass the piña coladas, let's get started! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Transcript
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Hello and welcome to our podcast Table Manners. I'm Jessie Ware and I'm sat here with my mother.
Sitting darling. I'm sitting here. I'm sitting here with my mother. Now I have to say I have
decided to try and stop swearing as much. Good. Because there's been lots of conversations,
not only with you, but with my in-laws.
They've even said I swear too much.
And they've never criticised me.
I think you put off older listeners.
OK.
And also, you're a princess.
Princesses don't swear.
Yeah.
Basically, I apologise to everybody
who has experienced my potty mouth during the last series
and I will endeavour to improve and learn from my mistakes
and I'm going to just try and say less fucks and that's it.
Well, I'm relieved because I think you swear a bit much
and I can swear.
It's going to be really difficult for me because... But you
have got a child, Jessie. I know. And we don't want her first, you know her first word, we
thought it was duck, but we're not sure. Okay, so we've got sugar, fiddlesticks. Yeah. That's
just not going to... Frigging. No, I don't think that's a word. Is that a swear word?
Friggin'. No, I'm not.
Is that a swear word?
They say it in America a lot, friggin'.
Or freaking.
That's what they say in America.
Freaking.
Don't they?
I'm not saying freaking.
Tonight's guest is Amol Rajan.
Yeah, he's the media editor for the BBC.
Yeah, and when he's not doing that...
The one show.
The one show.
BBC News.
MasterChef.
MasterChef.
Plus Newsnight.
I remember when he was on The Right Stuff.
That's where I remember watching him on Channel 5.
Oh, I remember him when he was editor of The Independent.
Oh, well, there you go.
However, Amol decided to tell us in an email this morning,
oh, I'm so sorry, I forgot to tell you
that I have turned vegetarian for the new year.
That was okay.
But I'm a flexitarian, he says.
Little did he know that Ginger Pig had kindly given us some beautiful beef short ribs, two kilos worth.
And I've been marinating them in wine and rosemary and garlic.
That'll be okay, darling.
So, George Ezra's about to get four-day marinated short ribs when we do the next podcast.
Let's not tell him.
Okay.
But, so it's meant we've had to think on our feet, hasn't it, Mum?
Yeah.
So what are we doing tonight?
I'm doing a savoury cheesecake that he will not regret.
So isn't that just a key?
No, it is not.
Why?
It's like a cheesecake because it's got all the things you put in a sweet cheesecake,
but it doesn't have sugar and it has onions and courgettes in
so it's a courgette savoury cheesecake.
I don't, I've never made a cheesecake.
With a biscuit base.
A buttery biscuit base.
A buttery biscuit base with parmesan in, made with tuck biscuits.
Tuck biscuits?
Yeah.
Hmm.
So it's a savoury cheesecake.
I'm doing the pudding.
Yeah.
It's a bit of a lazy pudding, but it looks
really nice. It's
poached plums with
muscat,
dessert wine,
cardamom, and I've put some black
pepper on the top. I don't know if it's going to
work, I just think that's going to be quite nice.
And then we're
going to serve it with creme fraiche
and
the most delicious ginger oat cookie.
That you've made?
No.
Jessica.
I bought them in a really good farm shop in Dorset.
Okay.
All right, fine.
So tonight we have a mole rajan coming up on Table Manners.
I've got red wine that is available.
Will you drink red wine?
I'm well up for that.
Okay, fine.
Thank you very much.
Right, I can't call you
Moley on this.
Yes, you can.
I can't really.
So can you just pronounce
your name because
we've all been saying it wrong
because I've never called you Moley.
You know,
it's a really funny thing.
I got an email
from the BBC
pronunciation unit
and you get,
you get,
this week,
just the other day
because I did start the week
on Radio 4 this week
and basically,
clearly,
a lot of the guests were saying a mole, a mole, saying it in all sorts of ways.
And I got an email, a very pompous email, being like, I'm sorry, but this is a very
serious question.
There are many people within the BBC who are actually slightly concerned they're pronouncing
your name wrong.
And I thought that was nice.
I thought that was nice.
Yes.
So I responded, as I always do, by saying, basically, you pretend there's an E on the
end.
And if you're in your garden and you saw a mole, you say it's a mole but it's amazing how many problems and look at the last
name well it's funny you should mention that it's it's rajan right yeah but so one big problem i've
had so i used to work at the foreign office and you'd ring people up and be like it's a mole from
the foreign office and they'd be like you're you're a spy and you're
telling us this is really weird but i'll tell you something very weird which i've never said
in public ever before and i'm immediately going to regret is that to a certain kind of man from a
privileged background my surname really throws them it's something about the raj it like brings
back these sort of imperial colonial memories yeah They think you're going to come in on
an elephant.
Or that you're going to sort of be like
waving one of those weird fans
or something
on a veranda. Justin Webb
from the Today programme literally
introduced me, has done on air.
We're joined now by our media editor
Amol Rajan.
So Ranjan, what do you think about...
Ranjan.
Oh my God.
I had breakfast once with Lionel Barber, who's the editor of the FT,
and he definitely knows my name's Amol.
And I rang him about an hour after we'd had this hour-long breakfast,
and he picks up the phone and he goes,
Hello, Rajan.
Oh, that's so balmy.
I think it's because the Raj really throws people.
So anyway, my name is a mere nine letters, but it's caused me tremendous
problems in the short
course of my life. And I should also say now
given we're talking about my name, that Amol Rajan
is an anagram of major anal.
Becky loves that. Oh dear.
Thank you.
Thank you, Amol.
Rajan Rajan
no I'm joking
thank you Jessie Ware
for having me
no listen
it's such a pleasure
to have you
and we have so much
to talk about
and firstly
we have to talk about
you being a
bloody vegetarian
I'm sorry
what
the last I saw
was you
soaking gammon
at Christmas time
in Coca-Cola or something.
It's a very good recipe.
That is a Nigella recipe.
Well, you won't do that.
That's why I went for short ribs, babe.
I've got short ribs with marinade.
Have you made them already?
No, no, no.
We're giving them to George Ezra.
Don't worry.
We have to do emergency.
So you were thinking, I could give these short ribs to a mole.
I could give them to George Ezra.
And you're thinking, I might as well prioritize.
That's fair enough.
We wanted to respect your
vegetarianism. So the first thing to say is
it's not because I'm from some sort of
very religious background I mean I'm sort of culturally
of Hindu heritage it's not that at all
I have flirted with vegetarianism many
many times in my life and I am basically
the thing about being vegetarian is
it's I think it's the right thing to do but I also
think it's so boring because it turns every meal
time into a kind of ethical exercise
in a way that you really don't want it to be.
But basically, I think that intellectually,
I'm completely persuaded of the case on, first of all,
the grounds of animal welfare, because I think animals
that are highly sentient experience terrible suffering
as a result of the food industry, and I think that's really bad.
Secondly, I'm not some sort of card carrying environmentalist but suddenly having become a
father um becoming a parent very similar time to you yeah i suddenly in a weird sort of way really
care about the world 100 years from now 150 years from now in a way that i didn't before
and if you think that climate change is happening and it's caused by humanity, the single biggest thing you can do is not recycle your silly plastic bags into one pile or another,
but is stop eating beef, which is in every single way the most environmental.
That's what Sam said.
Did you watch What the Health and Cowspiracy?
And you watch What the Health and Cowspiracy.
I didn't see Cowspiracy.
I saw What the Health, which persuaded me of the third thing, which is my health.
There's obviously good things about eating meat, spiritually, I saw What the Health, which persuaded me of the third thing, which is my health. And I'm, it's not, I can't, you know,
there's obviously good things about eating meat,
but I just eat healthier when I stop eating meat.
If you guys had said,
I'm afraid we've cooked you a beef lasagna,
I'd have loved it.
Babe, I... I love the taste of meat.
I love the...
I toyed with...
Toying with me.
Well, I just thought, well, you know...
Cheers.
Cheers.
Cheers.
Cheers. Cheers. I'm just going well, you know, we had, cheers,
cheers,
cheers.
I'm just going to check
that the garlic's not burning.
But I think that if,
how much red meat
did you eat there?
I mean,
so I was a,
so I was a restaurant critic
for six years.
I go on one of my many jobs,
which is,
this is going to be awkward
when I do it on MasterChef,
but I go on MasterChef.
Yeah,
how are you going to do this,
Ben?
This is,
well, I think I'm going to adopt of uh what we call a flexitarian pose in which I'm
going to briefly become a hypocrite and shamelessly uh eat meat because it's really fun and I know
that's that's terrible and I should say that I know when you talk about being vegetarian it's
hard not to talk in a way that a makes other people feel bad and i have for 20
years eaten more meat than you know i love pizza pepperoni and beef and all the rest of it something
and i've flirted with vegetarianism in the past i have to say something about becoming a dad
just changed it it just it just made it i know it so weird, just suddenly it wasn't about me. But if you're Hindi, then...
My family are vegan.
They don't eat meat.
So I started eating...
So you were brought up not eating meat.
So is that why you kind of ate so much meat,
because you were kind of making up for lost time?
I remember, like, it was yesterday,
the first time at the bottom of Franciscan Road in Tooting.
I know.
I went to, you know, Franciscan Road,
there was the old Smith brothers there,
down the road from my old
school Graveney um there was a Dallas chicken and I remember the first the first time I ate a
succulent piece of chicken breast coated in breadcrumbs I swear I could have run into the
back of the into the back of the kitchen and just smothered myself in that breadcrumb recipe it was
so and it was it was an act of rebellion and an act of transgression and I love the taste of meat so much.
Did your parents know that you tried it?
Don't ask questions like that.
I don't think they knew that.
Do they still think you're...
No, no, no, no, no, no.
It's not like that smoking, drinking thing
when you get into your 30s
and you're confessing to your parents
on a podcast that you have tried alcohol.
No, they know that I ate meat for a long time i think my parents were um you know of indian heritage and my dad was uh from quite a conservative
culture he was tamil my mum was from a much more liberal culture but between them my mum was from
west india between them they're quite liberal asian parents they sort of said you know find your own
way do your own thing they didn't force god down throat. They didn't do any of that stuff. And so they were quite
understanding about it. But I think they probably slightly disapproved. And I think they, they're
both Hindu and I'm not, you know, I was culturally Hindu, but not particularly religious. I think
they found the slaughter of cows particularly difficult. And I have to say, I really like
cows.
difficult and I have to say I really like cows are you a good cook I am in my imagination and I I are you adventurous I'm not as adventurous this is awful and it's gonna sound like product
placement but basically when I've got mates coming around on a saturday i get very excited on a tuesday and my wife charlie who you know
or charlotte is an amazing cook used to work in the world of food and when we did when i was a
restaurant well she worked she worked at a deli in um in a place outside topsham in next to where
she's from in in devon and she knows a lot about cooking and there's this weird thing that so much
of food i mean food is relationships right it's a way of navigating families and basically there's this
weird thing that we just know that if Charlie cooks the food it's going to be better so I kind
of often let her take the lead I'm sous chef do you really help honestly no but I do really help
and also there is I think one of the key things to a successful
relationship not that I know much about it is you've got to work out who does
which task and we take ownership of different courses so I will do the
starters or the sides and she will do the main can I have an example of a
starter that you would do or a side okay what was the last what was the last kind of dinner party you had and what
was it she cooked an amazing she what did she cook she cooked an amazing fish pie and she left the
bacon out of it because of her flexitarian husband i've never had bacon in a fish pie before do you
eat fish have you well i did this particular occasion bacon belongs in a fish pie what does
i did not know never had that this is excellent for the cookbook thank you so much
and what would be really nice is a few charred iceberg lettuces
on the side
maybe some peas with a bit of butter
lemon parsley
little jam
on a griddled pan
on a griddled pan
I tell you the best meal I ever cooked
because of not because of the taste but because of what it represented was just after our son was born pan. Yeah, just on a griddle pan. I tell you, the best meal that I ever cooked because
of,
not because of
the taste,
but because
of what it
represented was
just after our
son was born.
We were on
maternity leave,
paternity leave,
and you know
that thing
post becoming
a parent where
there's this
few weeks where
it's just you're
in this little
bubble and
day turns into
night.
It's a fog
and you're
exhausted.
Becky,
my manager,
got me the
best gift ever. It was cook delivery, frozen exhausted. Becky, my manager, got me the best gift ever.
It was cook delivery frozen meals.
Cook?
No.
They are.
No, yeah.
Can they be our sponsor?
The beef stroganoff is incredible.
They've got a shopping crouch end, which is so good.
Have they?
Abbeyville.
Abbeyville Road.
I know people that have pretended they've cooked their dinner party
and actually it's been cooked.
And actually you wouldn't have been able to sell it.
The only thing is the portions are small.
They're a bit small.
They are.
So you need double.
But go on, sorry, back to yours.
I did this roast chicken.
I really like doing cloves of garlic,
which you clearly have done tonight.
If you roast garlic garlic you just take the
edge off it
it loses its
sharpness
and we did
these wonderful
vegetables
it was parsnips
and carrots
and sweet potatoes
few people know
that sweet potato
when you cook it
the sweetness
comes out
it caramelises
and I just did
this meal
which was
chicken and veg
and it was
you know
it was the moment
that it was like
two became three and we sat there
you know lenny this is don't get emotional it's meant to be funny i'm trying to be trying to be
deeply romantic everyone's laughing but no but actually food does that to you it's about
relationships and you know i will never ever forget sitting there and i think we i think we
shed a tear and it was just like we're a family now
and the thing that told us we're a family now
was that we're eating together
it wasn't because you were tired and you were crying
you didn't know how to keep the baby from crying
maybe
I don't know how you could live without
a roast
roast is the best thing on earth
beef or chicken
I love beef or lamb.
Or lamb.
Yeah.
Do you have good curry recipes?
I know everyone says their mum is the best cook in the world.
But my mum really is the best cook in the world.
And one of the things...
Are you guys into Indian food?
Do you like it?
So much.
So much.
Mum was going to do a curry tonight.
I was going to do a curry I was going to do
a monkfish curry
mum
oh
but we thought
no
I love monkfish curry
I'd love
how would you have done it
you'd have made
a little masala
curry masala
garlic
curry powder
onion garlic
but we thought
maybe it wasn't
but also
why cook a curry
for someone
whose mum
cooks the best curry
yeah it's true
okay what's her best dish?
So probably she makes this tamarind chutney.
Do you know tamarind chutney?
Oh, yeah, tamarind chutney.
I think it's a difficult...
I've never cooked well with tamarind,
but I'm obviously not doing it right.
I don't know.
But you've never had the fresh fruit, darling.
No, it's true.
But Indian food, I think a lot of people,
I'm sure everyone comes from anywhere that isn't England and says this,
but a lot of people who love curry basically like quite sloppy kormas
and things like that, which are northwestern.
You like dry curry.
So my dad is from Tamil Nadu, which is in southeast India.
And my mum is from Pune, which is the ninth biggest city next to Bombay in Maharashtra.
And my mum and dad are they could be from two
different planets so they're both indian but india is a continent country has a more diversity there
than is imaginable and you could almost say a sort of spanish person and a slovakian have more in
common than my mum and dad you know my dad is from a culture which is um conservative ritualistic
quite cautious quite um introspective.
My mum is a kind of happy-go-lucky, playing cards, having a good time thing.
And their food is completely different.
And in Southeast India, it's all about pulses and lentils and rice is the crop.
So you get idli, dosa, coconut chutney.
My mum is from West India, which is about rotis and bhajis and all that kind of thing.
So you get the best of both worlds worlds what did they talk to each other how where did they meet and what language
did they speak it's an amazing story actually my mum and dad had an arranged marriage and there's
something really they live so far away were they related no because what happened is my dad so my
dad was one of they're both one of 11 one of 11. And my dad is, there's no other way of saying it,
my dad's a genius.
He's extraordinarily intellectual.
If you said to him, what's 27 times 27?
He'd say it's 729.
And he'd be very...
Is that actually the correct answer?
That is the correct answer, yeah.
Because you're a genius.
I'm not a genius.
That was showing off without meaning to.
So my dad, so this is an amazing thing.
My dad grew up in Southeast India.
He got all of his, my dad especially,
is from a very, very, very, very poor background.
And that's a big part of my drive to do well in life.
And he went to Delhi to earn some money
so he could get his sisters married.
And he had an older brother who sadly passed away,
my uncle Srinivasan.
And there was this extraordinary thing
that he worked in this ammunition factory,
and he went up one day, I think it was March 1977,
to see my dad and said,
look, Farid, that's my dad's name,
we've got all your younger sisters married,
and we're very grateful for what you did on that front,
but mum, my grandmother, who's sadly no longer alive,
is very worried about you, because you're her favourite child
and you're still single and you're 34,
which is very old in those days to get married.
There's a beautiful girl at Miami Initiates factory.
Would you consider her for marriage?
This is like every Indian novel I've ever read.
And my dad, who wanted nothing to do with it, said,
look, I'll cut you a deal.
And he was very close to his older brother.
He said, I'll see the girl, because that's how they taught.
How old was he then?
Dad was 34, mum was 13.
So he was a bit older.
Yeah, so he was 34, mum was 29.
And he said, I'll see the girl, and I'm happy to meet her,
but if I don't like her,
and I'm not trying to sound like a chauvinist,
it's just that's how they talked back then. If I don't like her and I'm not trying to sound like a chauvinist it's just that's
how they talked back then if I don't like her then I want you guys to leave me alone and I'm
going to go and be a poet in the Himalayas and my uncle wrote a letter on yellow parchment paper
which he delivered by freight train I think it was March of 26 1976 to my mother and said my dear sunanda from her colleague um as you may remember i have a
handsome brother he rides a motorcycle he is intellectually able uh he earns a good living
and he's a loyal and decent person and so on and um so they arranged a meeting and i remember
reading i had the letter i've got the letter the original letter which was delivered by
very unreliable freight train back in those days.
It would have taken four days.
And I remember showing the letter to people at my wedding and saying,
if I hadn't been for this letter, none of you would be here and I wouldn't be.
And there's something, I think, incredibly romantic about that arranged marriage.
People think of arranged marriages as somehow a kind of dry economic arrangement.
But there's something cool about that, don't you think?
I think it's gorgeous.
I'm just going to say this now.
I've bloody burnt the garlic on the roast potatoes.
I love burnt garlic.
Really? Big time. Really? roast potatoes I love burnt garlic really?
big time
really?
no I love it
okay well
we have
mum
do you want to tell
it's a savoury cheesecake
with courgette
beautiful
for me that just sounds like
either a quiche or a souffle
well I made it once before
and it was great
is mascarpone the base?
no
that's what I thought
no it's got cream cheese, sour cream.
It's got ordinary cheese.
It's got onions.
It's got courgettes in.
It's going to be delicious.
It might be.
Then we've got a slow roasted tomato rocket salad.
And then we've got...
Balsamic dressing I see.
Yeah, it's basically...
I put a bit of glaze on there.
And then we've got a roasted cauliflower with hazelnuts and bits and bobs in there.
And some burnt
roast potatoes
that's funny
it's a bit of a funny one
but
you're vegetarians
this is what happens
the short ribs
are still marinating
if this is a punishment
sign me up
because this looks fantastic
how do you get
the MasterChef gig
did you just luck out there
I did luck out in a big way so MasterChef is did you just luck out there I did luck out
in a big way
so MasterChef
is one of the
most fun jobs
you could possibly do
yeah I bet
I do it like
a couple of times
a year
and
it's
yeah
it's really
unbelievably fun
if you're a restaurant
critic
eventually they kind of
eventually come for you
on those shows
so Great British Menu
and MasterChef.
And yeah, I did a couple of shows
and it seems really straightforward.
You turn up, you eat eight courses
and you have strong opinions about food.
I think actually,
because you're conscious of being on TV,
I think you've got to try...
I know it's a really fun gig.
Do you have to try really hard to be constructive on MasterChef?
Because I think it's quite easy to go up there and be kind of, well, I hate your blueberries or, you know, whatever, whatever.
I think you've got to try very hard to say something that people at home will actually learn from.
But they turn you into a mean person.
They turn you into a mean person.
But you in particular.
You in particular.
Do I come across as mean?
Tom thinks you come across really mean.
Well, I try so hard to be nice.
If you're going to nail the MasterChef critique,
the first thing you need is the sound of crockery.
Oh, yeah.
Okay, we've got that.
And then you need the sound of the first cut in.
Oh.
The food has just gone off.
What does that say
about your buttery biscuit face, love?
It just ended up on the floor.
That was weird.
Hang on a second.
That has never happened
on MasterChef, ever.
Okay, it's all right.
God, this is a podcast.
It's all right, it's all right.
You can have another bit.
No, three second rule?
No, no, I want to eat that.
No, I don't mind three second rule. I'm so into the three second rule. Do you mind if I eat this? No. It's alright, it's alright. You can have another bit. No, three second rule? No, no, I want to eat that.
No, I don't mind three second rule.
I'm so into the three second rule.
Do you mind if I eat this?
No.
I hope you like it.
It is good mum.
I told you it's nice.
It's good.
It's not like a potato.
Mmmmm.
Now is that your master chef?
What do you think?
That's my genuine.
Okay.
It's really tasty.
For me it's really oniony.
Oh my gosh.
That's incredible. Love that. This is becoming a bit master chef. It's really oniony. Oh my gosh. That's incredible.
This is becoming a bit MasterChef.
No, I like this. It's got a
absolute key thing is it's got a fluffy
quiche texture, the cheesecake bit.
The top of it's not burnt but
it's just cooked enough to give it a slightly caramelised
flavour. But it's all about the biscuit.
It's all about the biscuit. Do you like the biscuit?
The biscuit's incredible. I love that you nearly
just took Michelle Rue Jr's
thing
you nearly just said
the base is cooked
to perfection
the base is cooked
to perfection
I mean to bring it back
to you
because this is about you
it's not about me
it's about you
I
your
profile has
got bigger and bigger
I feel like over the last year or two.
Where you're a master chef, you're on The One Show, you're hosting Radio 2 programme.
Are you?
Yeah, Radio 2, yeah.
I'm on the 10 o'clock news now.
Are you?
Which is quite fun.
I'm that guy now on the news who goes, da-da-da-da, Amal Rajan, BBC News.
That's so exciting.
It is exciting.
And there's something unbelievably thrilling
about live broadcast and about broadcast.
The magic, it just, it will never die.
The magic of TV and radio is just,
it's so exhilarating.
It's so, so, so cool.
It must be quite similar to when I do a live show
and you can kind of get it wrong and whatever.
But then when it works out, you're kind of like,
okay, cool.
So for pudding, we have something that actually I ate
with my mother-in-law this weekend in Dorset.
And it's poached plums
with some cardamom and muscat dessert wine
I've never
cooked with it
and then with
creme fraiche
and a ginger
cookie
did you make
the ginger cookie
no babe
good
because like
I don't have time
for that
and these ones
are excellent
they're from this
amazing farm shop
called Washington
Pool Farm Shop
which I love
and actually
did you watch
the last series
of Broadchurch
yeah
where Lenny Henry
worked
yeah
that is the farm shop
really
yes
oh wow
Lenny Henry
was so good
in that series
I thought he was
not excellent
in it
really
no
I want to ask
because okay
how many
meals out
do you get to go on being a restaurant critic critic i want this
gig it's an amazing gig such a good like basically dates are sorted marriages are sorted um i used to
go out for maybe it's all takes a bit of a backward step when you become a parent. Yes, it does. God, this is such first world stuff.
Two to three meals a week.
And...
Still?
No, no, not anymore.
No, this was before Winston.
Oh, cardamom.
I've just got to...
Yeah, especially if we...
Yeah, which is very Indian.
Yes.
Very Indian.
I love cooking with cardamom.
Cardamom is gorgeous.
And I put black pepper on the plums, which I've never done before, but I feel like that
means that it can be our cookbook.
Sorry, Tessa.
This is our recipe now.
Are you more of a dessert person or a mains?
I'm a dessert fanatic.
Are you?
I love dessert.
Just like Greg Wallace.
Do you know what?
I have about three chocolate things a day.
I love sweet stuff so much.
So when I was a kid, I was very, very fat.
I was like 15 stone.
Thank you for looking at this episode.
I was fatty too. You look like an stone. Don't, thank you for looking at this episode. I was,
I was fatty too.
Oh,
you look like an under eater to me.
You did just not eat that much
by the way.
You held back.
Lenny,
I mean,
I,
I,
I was very,
very fat as a kid.
Very,
very fat.
I mean,
I was,
I mean,
obese,
seriously obese.
Um,
and I,
I think that affected my personality
in some quite bad ways but basically i love sweet
stuff so much and i would have left my own devices i would eat three or four sweet things a day
today i had a chocolate brownie today from itsu you get these incredible gingerbread things with
like a kind of ginger yogurty thing and it's got chocolate chips and it's got chocolate brownie
things i have one of those i don't eat like dime bars anymore but i eat kind of ginger yogurty thing and it's got chocolate chips and it's got chocolate brownie things and I have one of those.
I don't eat like dime bars anymore but I eat kind of.
I love a dime bar though.
When you go to Ikea and you get. It's stuck in your teeth.
No but they're so good the little minis.
Top five chocolates.
Well I'm not the biggest chocolate person but Lindor Balls.
I'm talking about chocolate bars in the newsagent.
Oh okay.
Okay fine.
Drifter.
Number one. Oh really? Dr fine. Drifter, number one.
Oh, really?
Drifter, with those delicious bits of wafer and caramel.
Come on.
Drifter, number one.
Toffee Crisp, number two.
You must like a boost, then.
I love a boost.
I love a double-decker.
I love a double-decker.
They look very underrated.
With that nougat, beautiful, beautiful texture.
Did you just say nougat?
Nougat.
Oh, my God.
Nougat.
Master Chef Critic mispronounces nougat nougat oh my god nougat master chef critic
mispronounces nougat
oh my god
I love it
lion bars
I thought that lion bars
was too much going on
rice krispies
insurance favourite
he dreams about lion bars
as he told us
on our podcast
what about
Kit Kat chunky
Kit Kat chunky orange
remember when they
whisper golds
oh
last year
I had two very severe allergic reactions
and I ended up in A&E both times
and I went to the doctor
my wife quite understandably
said what the hell is going on
you need to get this checked out
I went to the doctor and I did one of those allergy tests
where they put 20 sort of pricks in your skin
don't tell me now that I've just fed you something that you're allergic to
and he said you're allergic to birch
pollen and something called mugwort.
I've got no idea what mugwort is. And he said you shouldn't
eat any nuts.
And the thing is
but he said it's alright to eat cooked hazelnuts
cooked nuts and I've eaten
lots of nuts since and I
can't identify what it is
that I'm allergic to. But it seems
that it's not hazelnuts
because I'm still alive
but if I die
if I die
between now
and the podcast
going out
and it's an allergic reaction
I just want you guys
to know I had a fantastic time
and I
the condition
of the whole arrangement
is that you've
both got to give speeches
at the memorial
oh stop it
and talk about
what a great
I'm sorry.
Vegetarian.
You emailed us to tell us you were a fucking vegetarian,
but you didn't say that you had a potential deadly nut allergy.
But the other thing is dermatolary is coming on.
Oh, fantastic.
Yeah, but we can't cook with nuts
because his wife's allergic to them.
So he might...
They obviously kiss a lot still.
They're like the only couple that still...
I know.
I know.
Have they had children?
I know.
Well, he does a lot of hugging,
doesn't he?
He does love a hug.
So fair enough.
It's quite thoughtful.
He's just the most considerate
man in the world.
I sort of think
he's the kind of guy
you'd like to be your mate
or brother or something.
We do ask every guest,
what is your worst table manner
to experience
when you're out
for dinner in somebody else or do you have a bad table manner yourself i feel very strongly about
this subject okay brilliant um i actually really despise i'm afraid to say the militancy of some
english table manners when i went to um university up in Cambridge, I found this absolute galaxy of rules
about how you,
so small fork on the outside,
and obviously now I'm immersed in stuff,
I've been in a restaurant.
So did you have to do lots of formal dinners?
I did some,
I mean, I just,
I didn't really care about the rules.
Which college were you at?
I was down in college,
and all the formality,
luckily through people like Matt Bolton,
I didn't have to,
you know,
I was able to be myself
which is wonderful
that I did turn up
in corduroys
and I quickly abandoned them
but I find
I find table manners
this is probably
a terrible thing
to say on a podcast
called table manners
but I find table manners
often a way of enforcing
basically class differences
and a way of excluding people
on the grounds
of them not knowing
certain rules
which I think are a poor basis on which to exclude them from your membership or whatever.
So I don't...
So how do they hold their knives?
You don't notice?
I don't care.
And also, I think it's to see in table manners.
There's so much that is table manners.
There's, you know, how do you hold your knife and fork?
There's, you know, do you have your elbows on the table?
And then there's, I think table manners is what kind of person are you at the table?
Do you listen?
Do you, are you generous with your servings?
There's so much more to the morality of being at a table than do you know etiquette?
And I suppose that's the answer to your question i think
etiquette in england is a way of making lots of people who aren't from certain backgrounds
feel inferior and i think that that's the worst of table manners the best of table manners is being
a loving generous person at the table and i think you can have a huge amount of table manners
without necessarily having etiquette that is indeed what you have been tonight thank you so much for being here
it's been one of the great honours of my life I can't tell you how excited I've been about this
as good as when you became the editor of the independent is it up there it's better your
favourite meal favourite meal what would be yours well I speak as a vegetarian, but I would have a pepperoni pizza and a pina colada.
Where would your...
And I love...
Do you like pepperoni pizza?
I mean, I've had more pepperoni pizzas
than you've had challah bread.
Trust me.
I would have a double pepperoni pizza
for breakfast, lunch and dinner every day for the rest of my life.
There's different types of pizza.
So are you going like dirty pizza
or are you going thin crust?
Dirty, obviously,
but absolutely key
to the manufacture of pizzas
is you've got to spread the tomato sauce
towards the edge of the bread.
I know, I agree.
These people that turn up
on these takeaways,
£40 for two pizzas or whatever,
and there's an inch and a half of crust.
I agree.
Unblemished by tomato sauce, let alone the cheese.
It's your best take.
There's a very good Stroud Green Road Pizza Papagone.
You can get a fantastic, apart from the, I mean,
mango is the one thing that I'd want if it was a desert island,
but you get a fantastic pepperoni pizza.
You get a very good pina colada.
Nice and strong.
Not too much ice.
And tiramisu.
You get the pina colada at the place.
Pina colada.
Yeah, yeah.
Pina colada.
You go to an Italian restaurant and you order a pina colada.
Absolutely right.
When you're out on a date.
Absolutely right.
With my wife.
Does she have a pina colada too?
No, she's a very classy lady.
Has a glass of wine.
Glass of wine.
Gin and tonic.
Something very smart
yeah but she
she tolerates
you're there
you're like Del Boy
Del Boy's my hero
all I've ever wanted
in my life
is to be
Del Boy
I've watched every
episode of
Only Fool's Horses
a thousand times
we watched them
on repeat as a kid
Del Boy and
David Jason
are the biggest
influences in my life
in the world
and if I could get
close to being as successful as him in the universe I'd be a happy man thanks so much I'm really glad we
learned about pina coladas and Del Boy basically being your hero it was such a pleasure and I hope
Table Manners takes over the world because it's the best podcast in the world and to be a small
part of it has been a great privilege.
Mum, your savoury cheesecake was a massive hit.
See, I told you.
And I am not going to lie,
I felt rather underwhelmed
when I...
You heard about it.
Yeah, and honestly,
it was brilliant.
Did you really like it?
I really liked it. Yeah it's good isn't it? It's clever. It's really clever. Because it's actually
like a cheesecake but not sweet. That's really really really good. Good. I think he enjoyed it.
I think he did. I wanted him to eat a little bit more. I felt like he was holding back. Yeah.
he was holding back. Yeah. He'd bring champagne though. He did bring champagne. Yeah. Good guess. And he could tell you story after story. I loved the story
about his mum and dad. It was so romantic. But I do feel like he was almost... Like a
nita de sal. He was almost like interviewing us by the end. He's very
good at his job. Oh yeah he knows what's what. And even though he's like a mate
from South London, he's very good at his job. Oh, yeah. He knows what's what. And even though he's like a mate from South London,
he's very good at his job.
He kind of really turns it.
He was like, but no, Lenny, you are.
But yeah, he's very polite and chivalrous and respectful and fun.
And interesting.
Thank you so much, Amal, for being on.
Loved him.
We've absolutely loved having you on it.
And we did rinse
his phone book. Did we?
Yeah, for new guests. Did we?
Yeah, we did. Thanks so much
for listening to Table Manners.
If you like us, please
subscribe and rate
us and remember, we
only accept five stars. Thank you.
Excuse me. What? How do you
subscribe? What do you mean when me. What? How do you subscribe?
What do you mean when you say that? Just click subscribe.
I've never done that.
How do you do that?
Have you got your phone on you?
No, but when I get it,
because I do five stars every day,
probably about eight times,
and it says we've accepted your five stars.
Do you put in different names?
No, it's always the same,
and it always says...
It always says...
Subscribe.
Oh, I haven't got that.
Please, Mum,
we may go shoot back to the top
if you press subscribe.
Yeah, I probably will.
I'll keep doing it.
What's your username?
I didn't know
I had to have a username.
I hope your five stars
are still working.
I just get it...
I get it on the thingy,
on the podcast charts.
I can so imagine Mum
just going there,
refresh five star
that's what i do of course thank you we've got a lot of five stars about 500
the music you've listened to on table manners is by peter duffy and pete fraser
and table manners is produced by cup and Nuzzle.
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