Nigel Slater is the author of a collection of bestselling books and presenter of five BBC One series. He has been food columnist for the Observer for twenty years. His books include the classics Appetite, The Kitchen Diaries I and II, and the critically acclaimed two-volume Tender. His award-winning memoir Toast the story of a boys hunger won six major awards and is now a BBC film starring Helena Bonham Carter and Freddie Highmore. His writing has won the National Book Award, the Glenfiddich Trophy, the Andr Simon Memorial Prize, the James Beard Award and the British Biography of the Year.
The Kitchen Diaries I and II
Tender Volumes I and II
Eating for England
Toast the story of a boys hunger
Appetite
Nigel Slaters Real Food
Real Cooking
The 30-Minute Cook
Real Fast Food
For James Thompson
Early in 1991, I received a letter from Louise Haines, from the publishers Michael Joseph, enquiring whether I had ever considered writing a book. She had read a piece I had written in a magazine and wondered whether we could meet up. I replied that I was flattered and grateful but felt that writing a book was beyond me. Two days later she had talked me into lunch. A meal at which we hatched the idea for my first book, Real Fast Food, which was published in autumn 1992. Twenty-one years, ten cookery books, a memoir, a collection of essays and a change of publisher behind us, she remains my editor. I can never thank her enough.
Louise, this book is for you.
To: James Thompson, for his endless inspiration, wisdom, support and friendship. Without you there would be no books, no television series and my life wouldnt be half as much fun. Thank you, sir, for everything.
My gratitude and love also goes to Victoria Barnsley, Jonathan Lovekin, Allan Jenkins, Ruaridh Nicoll, Gareth Grundy, Michelle Kane, Georgia Mason, Olly Rowse, Jane Middleton, Annie Lee, David Pearson, Gary Simpson, Araminta Whitley, Rosemary Scoular, Sophie Hughes, Richard Stepney at Fourth Floor, Rob Watson and everyone at ph9 and Dalton Wong and George Ashwell at Twenty Two Training. Thank you too to Jenny Zarins for allowing us to use her thoughtful portrait of me. And a big shout out to everyone at the Observer and all my followers on Twitter @nigelslater. Thank you one and all.
Sometimes we cook purely for the pleasure of it, understanding the provenance of our ingredients, choosing them with great care, thoughtfully taking them on the journey from shop to plate. We seek out the perfect recipe and take our time, lovingly preparing our dinner from scratch. There are times when we might want to take the whole business even more seriously, meeting those who produced it or, if we have the space, growing some of it for ourselves. We want to consider it, discuss it, perhaps even write about it and photograph it.
But sometimes, we just want to eat.
This little book is for those times. The days when we have barely an hour to cook. The times we just want something delicious on a plate at the end of our working day. Yes, we can phone for a pizza, a Chinese or Indian takeaway. We can drop by that Vietnamese place on the way home or pick up a ready-made microwavable delight from the supermarket. But as much as I enjoy the odd takeaway, I have always found dinner is more life-enhancing when I have done more than open a box or picked up the phone. There is something, however quickly, for ourselves, or for someone else. That is why I have written this book and why its subtitle is The Little Book of Fast Food. A collection of recipes that you can have on the table in less than an hour.
By fast I do not mean thoughtless or careless. There is great joy to be had in a perfectly cooked steak, its fat crisping lightly on the grill; a single fillet of spanking fresh fish singing to itself, quietly, in butter; a baked potato whose flesh has been mashed and freckled with rust-red, fat-peppered chorizo. Simple things, done well. Go up a notch and there is a thin, gold and white frittata of goats cheese; a light chicken rag with thyme and spring onion; or a broth made with pork ribs and dark stars of anise. Even at its most complex, a Thai vegetable curry is made in minutes once you have blitzed the lemon grass, ginger, chillies, garlic and coriander to a yellow-green paste in the food processor. Making yourself and others something good to eat can be so little trouble and so much pleasure. And much more satisfying than coming home to a meal in a box.
This book
Twenty-one years ago, I wrote my first book, Real Fast Food a collection of ideas and recipes for something to eat that you could get on the table within half an hour or so. Still in print, it is a book of which I am very fond and I wish it well, but looking at those 350 or so recipes twenty years on, I realise how much our everyday eating has changed. How once unusual ingredients are now accessible in every supermarket; how our recipes are more adventurous; the way fresh ingredients are now essential and once frowned-upon shortcuts are now used without apology. Real Fast Food is still relevant but our eating has moved on. What seemed new and interesting two decades ago is now everyday. The speeded-up variations of well-known classics still stand, but there are several recipes that now seem somewhat naive, others that are no longer to my taste (we move on) and, if truth be told, there are one or two that should probably never have been there in the first place.
Although I am far from the most prolific of writers, I have written ten or so books since then, including one or two hefty tomes. For some time now I have wanted to return to the subject of fast food, to update that dear little book and bring it in line with modern eating. That is what you have in your hands. A little book of straightforward, contemporary recipes, quick or particularly easy to get to the table. A collection of recipes that are fast, simple and, I hope, fun.
The recipes
I have every respect for the time-honoured recipe. Those faultless blueprints whose every detail must be adhered to. I appreciate the classic dishes and prefer them to be carried out in their original style rather than tweaked and re-invented. That said, I have no wish to eat as if the clocks have stopped, life is too short to attempt perfection every day and to be inhibited by someone elses set of rules. Cooking should, surely, be a light-hearted, spirited affair, alive with invention, experimentation, appetite and a sense of adventure.
The recipes here are straightforward and within the grasp of most of us. I would like to think that many of them will work for those who have never cooked anything in their lives. It is not a book of detailed, pedantic, obsessively honed directions. Written in a short style, they are, I hope, both practical and inspirational. Accompanying many of the recipes are ideas that have bounced off them, a scattering of notes, suggestions and narrative recipes that might also interest you. Think of them as little extras.
The recipes are generally for two, but are easy enough to double up. The stumbling blocks of increasing the quantities of ingredients such as gelatine and yeast have no place in this book. Most of the ingredients are fresh but I have taken a few shortcuts, such as using canned beans rather than the dried sort that need soaking and long cooking; the occasional sheet of frozen puff pastry; a tub of decent mayonnaise and even, on a couple of occasions, the ready-made bechamel sauce that you can get in Tetra Paks from Italian delis. These are shortcuts I find useful for everyday cooking.