Saint Valentines Day
Rant
‘……. and definitely no
heart shaped puddings, croutons, chocolates, starters,
potatoes or garnishes’, I conclude when the staff
ask if we are doing anything special for
Valentine’s night?’
The telephone rings.
‘Are you doing anything special for
Valentine’s night’
I take a deep breath tempted to say: ‘Yes,
I’m banning all parties of two who book three
months before the event knowing that they
wouldn’t normally eat here, and when they do just
because it happens to be some trumped up celebration
kept alive by money grubbing firms who use every
opportunity to extract cash out of people they are
usually miserable, dull, pernickety, unsophisticated
and bourgeois’, but what I actually say is:
‘No, just the usual menu at the usual
price’.
I refuse point blank to commercialise it. I will not
advertise in the local paper with their predictable
line drawings of people holding hands over a dinner
table. I will not order roses at over inflated prices
‘for the ladies’. I am certainly not going
to put on a sick, smoochy selection of tired croonings
about ‘lurve’ on the stereo by Barry
Manilow or Michael Ball or Phil Collins
……. deep breaths…. .. deep
breaths…… keep calm. The
commercialisation of Christmas is bad enough, and trust
a saint to put his oar in six weeks after the supposed
birth of Jesus and six before his demise. Was he
working for a greetings card firm or perhaps Interflora
to notice a gap in the market and say, ‘Hey, six
weeks after Christmas, having felt gloomy through
January, paid off their credit cards, possibly having
finished the remnants of the turkey as soup, curry and
rissoles, people will be ready to celebrate something -
ANYTHING. And if the bunch that come are anything like
the usual crew and are supposed to be the last of the
true romantics then God help us.
It seems a strange way to celebrate love anyway -
sitting opposite each other in a public place for two
hours and stuffing your faces with food and drink. I
can think of much better things to celebrate in this
way. How about a Sex and Debauchery night - eat and
drink as much as you can and then see if you’re
capable of anything sinful after that.
According to my research Saint Valentine was a third
century Christian martyr who was clubbed to death for
helping persecuted Christians. He seems an unlikely
icon to spawn a billion cheesy cards and as many cheap
sentiments. What is more likely is that it was
originally a pagan festival celebrating the start of
the bird mating season and as with most of our
festivals had some Christian symbolism grafted onto it.
Perhaps I’m biased but I just do not understand
this association of food with love and sex. I know film
makers use eating as an allegory for sex but that is
because they can’t always show the real thing.
Advertisers try to sell us every thing from cars to
chocolate bars with heavy sexual innuendo- ‘Just
me and my Magnum’ - Yes, thank you, we get the
point. The meat association’s advertising
campaign called ‘Recipe for Love’, now that
was a leap of the imagination, getting us to associate
a lump of flesh from the back of an animal with love. I
suppose their reasoning is that to cook a meal for
somebody is an act of love - so that’s why I feel
exhausted after cooking fifty meals.
The problem for restaurants is that you could fill the
restaurant five times over in theory but what you end
up with is only 65% occupancy because they are all
twos. The ways of overcoming it are not always
acceptable. Cramming in lots of small tables is not
very practical, asking people to share tables would be
unpopular to say the least. The nearest you get to a
compromise is to do two sittings. But I haven’t
yet had the courage to suggest a ‘make love
first, eat later sitting’.
The heart symbol for love and romance is rather gross
when you start to think about it. Luckily it is very
much removed from the real thing by being an
approximation in shape and usually made out of
chocolate or pink satin. It would be a brave restaurant
that served stuffed heart or heart shaped steak tartare
on Valentine’s night. Do we still really believe
the heart to be the organ for all this emotional
stress. I think not, we are far too sophisticated for
that. We realise the brain is where it all stems from
causing the heart to respond by beating faster.
Stomachs too are very sensitive to emotion - they
lurch, flutter and contract probably more than the
heart. But its too late to change a few thousand years
of tradition. ‘I love you with all my
gizzard’ - nah, I don’t think so.