Saturday, 21 March 2026

Cookin'

I've always loved cooking. In fact my first website in the late 1990s (Geocities, anyone?) was given over to recipes that were floating my boat at the time. And it was around that time I wrote a piece for Delicious magazine that combined food & drink, and music. Always a heady mix.

It was also a period when I immersed myself in Saturday morning TV cookery shows. I couldn't get enough of 'em. Having been brought up on The Galloping Gourmet, Floyd and Delia there was, thanks to Oliver, Rhodes et al, a new gang in town. I even invested in all the spin-off books that came out on their coattails not least everything that the enchanting Rachel Allen lent her name to. Add to those all the pre-loved tomes I was snapping up in secondhand bookshops and I'd amassed quite the culinary library - including Len Deighton's fabulous Action Cook Book from 1965. God bless you, Len.

An extract from the foreword: Four hectic years ago Len Deighton began his cookstrips in the London Observer and serious cooking enthusiasts seized upon them without being sure that this was the same man who spoke over Soviet radio, talked with Hollywood lawyers and wrote the sort of spy thrillers that had to be submitted to the War Office before publication. It is.

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Before I sign off, I can't not mention my favourite cookery show theme. It comes from an era when cookery programmes were very proper, very correct. And, for the most part, very dull. Farmhouse Kitchen, made by Yorkshire Television, was stultifyingly dull. It first aired in 1971 and was presented by Dorothy Sleightholme. Suffice it to say she was no Fanny Craddock. But the show's 40 second musical ident was something else altogether. I came to know it from the Loungecore revolution of the mid 90s. Maybe you did too...

Reg Wale - Fruity Flutes


Reg Wale (1906-1998)
Dorothy Sleightholme (1915-1983)
Len Deighton (1929-2026)

6 comments:

  1. I don't know Farmhouse Kitchen at all, but that's a great tune - pastoral with a hint of prog!
    I do like the look of that book cover too.

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    1. That sums it up to a tee! And the book is great. Its pages are essentially the strips as they would have appeared in the newspaper. Bet you could pick it up on eBay for a song,

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  2. I preferred Eric Ambler's 'Aperitifs For All Occasions' (1959)

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  3. RIP Len. The Ipcress File one of my favourite films. Just seen one of his cookstrips - nice visual way of getting a recipe down.

    The chefs/cooks you mention bring back a fair bit of nostalgia as does the theme music. The Galloping Gourmet was always watched in our house - he did like slurping wine between steps didn't he or was that Keith Floyd, or both of them!?

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    1. Floyd was always a hero of mine. I'll never forget meeting the great man at his gaff in Totnes many moons ago.

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