Carpaccio
notwithstanding, I feel the need to share two recent incidents at my beloved
Larkfield Branch of Tesco.
The first one I
actually blame on Jamie Oliver. Now I need to be careful here as in the Martin
household, as with many all over Britain, young Jamie is a god. We have every
book her ever published and we even have his branded crockery!
So my criticism is
very specific but it did lead to a rather brilliant Tesco Moment (TM as we
shall call them from now on!).
My wife is a
fantastic cook and can knock something out at the drop of a hat and we have a
very well stocked cupboard so that whatever the young maestro throws at us, she
has.
I on the other hand
am a totally crap cook and I mean crap. Just because I am a fat bloke and have
a high level of expertise in eating fine food, does not mean I know how to
create it. Remember, this is the bloke who, years ago thought that making a packet
asparagus soup would be immeasurably improved if I replaced the 1.5 pints of
cold water required with red wine.
Bright pink,
asparagus tasting, thick wine, is most certainly not nice. Partly my approach
to being a very bad cook comes from the theory that if one measure if something
(cheese alcohol, garlic, you name it) is good for you, five must by definition
be five times better.
So when I cook, I go
word for word by the recipe. So I can reproduce a recipe quite well (the mayhem
in the kitchen during, and the mess afterwards is another matter, but as I
always clear up after I’ve cooked, who cares?).
I do try to cook once
a week and it is normally from a JO book.
His latest scam is
the 15 minute meals. Now even watching these on TV it is apparent that 15
minutes will not be enough, but I am fine with that as one of the assumptions
of being able to cook a meal in 15 minutes (versus just heating something up)
is that by definition, it’s got to be simple. Or so you’d think.
The recipe called for
two ingredients that even my wife’s well stocked cupboards didn’t have.
P: Jacqueline,
where’s the harissa paste, and what the fuck is it anyway.
J (very warily): Why
do you want harissa paste. We’ve run out anyway, it’s on the list! (Fuck me, it
was!!!!!)
P: I am making dinner
tonight, Jamie’s 15 minute fish tagine.
J: Oh OK, please
don’t make too much of a mess and open the doors as the fish will smell the
place out!
P: Yes dear (said in
that absent-minded not really paying attention kind of way). What about preserved
lemons?
Silence.
So I guessed I had to
buy them.
Off to Tesco then, in
between Xmas and New Year and it was heaving. I found the harissa paste easily
enough (a sort of quick alternative to using the ras el hanout or whatever it’s
bloody well called) but I could not find the preserved lemons.
So I had to admit
defeat, driven largely by the fact that my local Tesco appears to be the
preferred meeting place for local chav families. Do these people never go to
dinner parties at each others houses? Why, upon meeting at Tesco do they and
their multiple bloody chav kids, stand blocking an aisle sharing all of their
latest ways to claim benefit?
My defeat meant I had
to ask a Tesco Numpty (TN).
P: Excuse me mate,
but can you tell me where I will find preserved lemons?
TN (beaming in a way
that made me instantly suspicious): Yes sir, follow me.
So I did.
We arrived promptly,
as I rather dreaded we would, at the fresh lemon section.
TN: There you are!
P: These are fresh.
TN (still beaming
like he’d just discovered the Ark): Yes sir, how many would you like.
P: No, I am sure it
was me mumbling and not making myself heard above the din of the muttering
chavs, but I need PRESERVED lemons.
TN: Yes sir (now
looking at me like I was the idiot), here they are, how many would you like.
P: No, no no
(shouted), not FRESH (shouted), PRESERVED (Shouted).
TN: Well they are all
covered in wax, that preserves them, keeps them fresh for ages.
P: Oh for Christ’s
sake, don’t bother!
We parted company him
still beaming, me seething. Not so much at the stupidity of the TN, but at the
sheer madness of JO producing, and us falling for, a series and a book that
claims you can have dinner in 15 minutes.
Jamie, if you or one
of your many staff are reading this, and you can find preserved lemons in the
Larkfield area of Kent, have at it son, ley me know how you get on!
Now we actually have
a tagine at home, so I cooked a 90 minute fish tagine, following mostly his
recipe (preserved lemons apart) and it was very nice.
So rather like his 30
minute meals that took 30 minutes to prepare, 30 minutes to cook and 90 minutes
to clear up afterwards, his 15 minute meal, on this occasion, took 30 minutes
to prepare, 90 minutes to cook, an hour to clean up afterwards but TWO bloody
hours traipsing around Kent looking for ingredients.
15 minute meals my
arse!
The second incident
happened yesterday and was pure Tesco. Vintage Tesco in fact.
As previously stated,
the governor is a great cook and often does a curry. All herbs and spices
freshly prepared, ground and cooked. But she’d run out of onions, so could I
pop to Tesco and get some.
For me, the words
“could you just pop to Tesco and…..” are translated in my head into “here you
go silly boy, stick your dick into this mangle”, it strikes terror into my
heart.
But of course as
there is a curry at the end of it, and because the boss is asking/telling me, I
go.
I picked up the two
onions I needed and a bottle of Dry Martini.
Wandering back to the
checkout I heard that most terrible of Tesco calls “Code Red, all managers to
the checkout”. This is when you know your are in trouble as Tesco managers are
an odd breed. Thick skinned in a way of which a rhino would be proud,
unfailingly smiling (in the BA fuck you kind of way) and inept.
I joined a queue and
about a minute later the checkout next to me was opened by a manager who called
out next please.
I didn’t want to join
it, being happy to wait in line and be scanned through by the usual surly git,
but I was coerced by the general Englishness of my fellow sufferers who urged
me on with plenty of: after you, no after you malarkey.
So with slumped
shoulders I presented my two onions and bottle of Martini.
Tesco Manager (TM):
Good afternoon.
P: Hello.
TM: Would you like
help packing?
I sort of spluttered,
looked at my THREE items, looked at him and them back at my THREE items and
said:
P: Yes please!
He sort of
spluttered, looked at my THREE items, looked at me and said:
TM: But you only have
three items!
P: Yes, well spotted
my man. So knowing that I only had three items, and working on the safe
assumption that having made it into your bloody store, unaided, that my arms
are working perfectly well today, why on earth did you offer me help with my
packing? Was it a massive piss take or do I look like I need help?
TM (beaming in that
slightly nervous, please don’t kill me kind of way): We offer packing help to
everyone.
P: Why?
TM: Why?
P: Yes, why? Why do
you offer help packing to someone who clearly does not need it. Why not just
save on the waste of oxygen and the overall aggravation and say nothing?
TM: Well,
P: Don’t interrupt,
you bloody well started this by offering my a pointless and as it turns out,
non existent service. What next eh? This is madness!
TM: That’s £8.62 sir,
do you have a Club Card?
P: Is that another
rhetorical question or do you really want to know?
The exchange ended
there.
The only pleasure to
be had from the whole experience, the curry and Martini aside, was that I had
managed to back up six people behind me, all of whom appeared to enjoy our
little altercation.
1 comment:
You should be very proud you embarrassed someone just doing their job! Congratulations you sound like a major twat!
Post a Comment