My fiancé and I were on a merry
frolic through Myer’s kitchenware section, zapping items for our gift registry
when, on a whim, we beeped the tag for a shiny KitchenAid stand mixer.
It was the first time I’d even
touched a mixer, let alone considered owning one. My feelings about cooking have vacillated between short
bursts of enthusiasm and misery.
When I first moved into my little flat, I spent many hours in my kitchen
with Nigella Bites splayed across the
dining table, whisking, chopping, manically zesting lemons, creaming butter and
sugar. I lovingly ladled gooey
muffin mixtures into trays, hurled bread dough onto the bench with gusto, snuck
into the kitchen late at night to savour chewy mouthfuls of freshly baked brownies.
This initial culinary enthusiasm waned
when life got busy and I succumbed to dinners of tinned tuna on crackers. My weekly trips for trolleys laden with
fresh groceries became rushed expeditions for “Deli Reduced” sausage rolls ten
minutes before the shop shut. Sometimes,
I found myself hunched over my tiny sink, weeping while scrubbing dishes with
my hands encased in sweaty gloves, despairing that I’d never have time to write
a Booker prize winning masterpiece because all my evenings would spiral into bleak
cycles of cooking and washing up.
So, imagine my trepidation when
it transpired that my cavalier use of the Myer scan gun resulted in some
generous friends chipping in for a mixer as an engagement present. I stood with my hand over my mouth as
my beloved hefted an ‘Almond Cream’ mixer out of its behemoth box and hoisted
it onto the kitchen bench. The
silver bowl glimmered mutinously; there was nowhere to store it except in full
view, where it aroused guilt every time I caught glimpse of it in all its
unused, sparkling glory.
In the weekends that followed, my
heart sank like a botched soufflé as my partner uttered the dreaded words:
“Let’s bake today”. Despite
KitchenAid’s claims that the mixer would “make food triumphs thrillingly easy”,
baking was never simple. We drove
across town to three different Asian grocery stores on a quest for matcha, one
spoonful of which we used for a batch of Martha Stewart’s green tea
shortbread. We shuffled social
engagements to accommodate cake baking times, rang neighbours’ doorbells to
borrow a rolling pin, jostled each other in the kitchen reaching for bulging
bags of flour, knocking cascades of icing sugar across the floor.
At a recent family lunch, we unveiled
a pumpkin cake with almond icing to a sceptical audience. I’ll confess that the sight of the men
putting down their beers, leaving the vicinity of the television and slicing some
generous second helpings for themselves was kind of gratifying.


2 comments:
Yum! PUMPKIN CAKE!
I bought one of these Kitchenaid mixers once, and I quite madly gave it as a gift to a girlfriend as she had expensive tastes (literally). Though we'd been together two years, we lasted only a month from that point and the Kitchenaid mixer was never seen again.
So I hope they're useful, but I don't actually miss not having one. And you will notice that all the attachments that go with it really sting the back pocket too !
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