Cheese Dream/Cheese Nightmare
Wavering, unsteady and unsure of foot, the Food Urchin
stands atop a hill and he stands alone. The sky is dark yet pierced by a halo
of rising amber light and casting through this hue is a mist of fine rain,
which coats the Food Urchin’s face like a heavy, wet flannel; he is soaked
through but he is happy. And he is happy because after an impromptu repose upon
a speeding train, known to some as ‘The Vomit Comet’, the Food Urchin managed
to get off at the right stop this time around. And not at some godforsaken coastal
town at the end of the line. Smiling, he looks up through the brume, trying to
view the stars but there is too much light pollution. So the Food Urchin moves
on, steadying himself against the incline, leaning back to counter gravity and
promptly trips and falls over as he steps off the kerb.
Eventually, the Food Urchin makes it to the front door and after
some intense negotiation with a key and a Yale lock; he quietly tiptoes across
the threshold, gently dropping his keys to the side. Suddenly a clatter of
metal shatters the silence and under his breath, the Food Urchin curses the
radiator for being on the wrong side of the hall. Thirsty, he staggers forth
into the kitchen, opens a cupboard in the blackness and with trembling fingers,
reaches in, moving objects from side to side. Unable to find a proper
receptacle, the Food Urchin settles for a jar of some description, pops the lid
and walks to the sink to fill it up with water. After gulping down the sweet,
lumpy, raspberry flavoured liquid, he turns and leans on the side and ponders
for a moment. He was sure that the glass cabinet was always on the right hand
side.
Releasing some indiscreet wind from yonder and with stomach
grumbling, the Food Urchin steps forward to the humming cupboard. He taps and
listens and then opens the door and is immediately bathed in bright, white,
glorious light. With eyes widened in beatific joy, the Food Urchin surveys the
many, many marvellous things to eat. A plate of cling film wrapped roast chicken.
A jar of pickled eggs. A ramekin of strange, creamy, glutinous matter. And then
he sees it; the cheeses, the cheeses that was sent days before and shared at a recent
dinner party. Beautiful, wonderful, soft, flinty, nutty cheeses. Cheeses that
raised eyebrows and rolled eyeballs with each delicate bite, echoing groans of
pleasure around the room. Orgasmic cheeses.
“Hmm cheeses,” the Food Urchin whispers to himself and so he
leans forward and grabs the remaining piece of Old Lochnagar; a fine, mature,
lingering cheese and finishes it without thought. Like the wild, feral caveman he
is. Squinting at a clock hanging in the gloom, the Food Urchin shakes his head
and then stands and brushes crumbs of cheese from his chest onto the floor. He
unbuttons his shirt, pulls down his jeans, wiggles and kicks his y-fronts
across the room and then walks upstairs to his boudoir, naked as the day he was
born, except for the odd pair of socks that remain on his feet, releasing more indiscreet
wind along the way.
Sinking his head into the pillow, the Food Urchin drifts
into a deep sleep almost immediately and as the curtain of unconsciousness falls,
a paracosmic world rises up to meet him, catching and enveloping him in a
blanket, in the form of a fluffy cloud. Unaware of his predicament or any sense
of reality, the Food Urchin wakes and peers over the side and surveys a strange
land beneath him. A land of rolling hills and vast vistas, of huge mountains
and enormous lakes. Forest meets dessert, which then bleeds into roaming
savannas. And in the distance, shines a golden shimmering sun. That the star is
rich and yellow does not seem strange to the Food Urchin but the palette of the
scenery does, which runs through a spectrum from cream to red with the odd
flash of thin blue. The hills look waxy and scarlet; the vistas are pale with
cracks of copper. The mountains tower in dusky orange and the lakes ripple
with warm ochre.
Slowly, as he descends, the Food Urchin begins to see more
clearly. And then the penny drops. And so does the cloud, which suddenly swoops
down, almost in recognition of the fact. With arms aloft, the Food Urchin bellows
out a triumphant yell.
“This is must the fabled Land of Cheeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeese!”
Now speeding at speeds close to the speed of sound, the
cloud zeroes in on a massive, triangular chunk of Swiss cheese and deposits the
Food Urchin into one its many holes with a veritable plop. Sliding further downwards,
as though riding a gigantic flume, twisting and turning from left to right, the
Food Urchin emits a squeal of pure happiness. Before looping 360 and coughing up
a little bit of sick. Faster and faster still, he carries on, shooting down and
down and with the wind whistling past his ears, the Food Urchin begins to panic.
And then, from out of nowhere a hole appears in the distance like a white hot
penny which grows and grows, until finally, the Food Urchin is shot out like a
cork into the air. Now, tumbling like a rag doll, the Food Urchin is screaming
but his landing is soft and sure and a cheer rings out in tumultuous applause.
Blinking, it takes the Food Urchin a short while to get used
to his surroundings but he is soon aware that dozens of eyes are set upon
him. And that he is sat square, right in middle of a huge round of camembert, all
sticky and gooey. Cautiously, tentatively, he rises.
The crowd roars “Welcome to the Land of Cheese!” And a large
piece of Montgomery Cheddar steps forward, with open hand and says, “We’ve been
expecting you.”
Feeling curiously at ease, the Food Urchin steps down and
waves at the odd-looking bunch standing before him. Essentially, the figures
all look like various varieties of cheese. Except these cheeses have arms and
legs, with a face at their centre; like some character from a children’s book.
Like Roger Hargreaves’ long forgotten Mr Cheese. And one by one they step
forward. A tall cylindrical fellow introduces themselves as Mr Ragstone. A
squat, tough looking chap firmly grasps the Food Urchin’s hand, before barking “Berkswells’
the name, unpasteurised is the game.” And a pleasant looking Mrs Kirkham winks
a curt “Ow do” before swanning off into the background.
Before long, Montgomery, who seems to be the leader of the
gang, makes a signal and music springs out of nowhere.
“Let’s get this party started!” he yells and everyone simultaneously
starts dancing, getting into the groove; raving as if the end of the world were
nigh. Swept up by the emotions of the scenes unfolding, the Food Urchin can’t
help but join in, punching the air with every thudding baseline. With arms
wrapped around his new found compadres, the Food Urchin’s heart pounds and waves
of euphoria wash over him as he and his fellow cheese friends begin to bounce
in perfect unison.
“You’re one of us bro! You’re one of us!” shouts a lively
character known as The Bishop, who wafts in and out, pungently cutting moves,
throwing shapes. Big fish, little fish, cardboard box. The vibe drops for just
one second as a moody and mouldy veined hunk of cheese barges past, shouldering
the Food Urchin in the chest, but Montgomery is on hand to calm things down.
“Don’t mind Mr Stichelton, he’s still raw about not getting the same PDO as Mr Stilton. Don’t worry, he’ll get over it.”
So the Food Urchin simply shrugs and gets on with the
business of executing some awe-inspiring body popping, to the frenzied whoops of
the crowd.
As is always the case, good things must come to an end and
after what seems like hours and hours of dancing, one by one, the cheeses,
sweating, happy yet exhausted drift off and disappear into the background. Mr Brie
from Cornwall is so runny from the night’s efforts that he simply dribbles into
the ground. The music fades away and the Food Urchin, dripping and fragrant, smelling
mostly of cheese, finds himself standing all alone again, staring up into the
sky.
In the corner of his eye, the Food Urchin spots a doorway
situated in a massive truckle of Black Bomber, a doorway he hadn’t noticed
before. So he walks up, turns the handle and walks straight through and finds
himself in a strangely familiar room; a kitchen in fact, adorned with fairy
lights with walls swathed in blood red paint.
A voice breaks the silence and seductively purrs. “Hello FU,
I’ve been waiting for you.” And out of the shadows steps Nigella Lawson,
wearing a figure hugging black dress with plunging neckline and holding a
saucepan.
“I thought we could have a midnight feast. You do like
fondue, don’t you, FU?”
Grinning a lopsided grin and with lazy eye, the Food Urchin
simply nods and then gulps as Nigella lifts a finger and delicately plunges an
index finger into the pan. As she pulls her finger out, the Food Urchin groans inwardly.
Slowly she brings the glistening, molten cheese coated digit up to her mouth and
with a wicked glint in her eye, licks her finger clean. Abashed, nervous and
anxious, the Food Urchin looks down, only to discover that he is wearing nothing but
his socks. His bloody odd socks. Like a cat, stalking her prey, Nigella walks up
towards the Food Urchin swinging the pan to her side, unconcerned that liquid
cheese is flying everywhere.
The Food Urchin tries to interject. “Nigella, the fondue, its
going everyw…..” But she silences him by pressing a finger to his lips and
drops the pan to the floor. Placing her arms on his broad shoulders, Nigella
shakes her hair and stares at the Food Urchin with those big brown eyes. The
Food Urchin knows what is going to happen, it’s inevitable, things have gone
past the point of no return. So he steps forward, with one foot stepping into a
puddle of warm, curdling cheese and he does what he has to do. He kisses her, with
tongues.
Writhing in the throes of passion, Nigella grips the Food
Urchin’s head and begins to run her hands over his naked, sweaty, cheesy back,
clawing him, willing him, wanting him. Gasping, the Food Urchin surfaces for
air before sucking back down onto her hot, hot lips and Nigella begins to run a
finger, one solitary finger down his neck, down his back and down in between his
buttocks. This comes as quite a shock.
“Nigella! No! I am not that kinda guy,” the Food Urchin
pants, delirious with lust and fever and so he takes a moment to focus, to
focus on those beautiful brown eyes.
Except Nigella isn’t in his arms anymore. The brown eyes
remain the same but something isn’t quite right. It’s something to do with the
beard.
And then realisation dawns and to the Food Urchin’s horror,
Nigella Lawson has changed into Russell Brand and the Food Urchin is locked
firmly in his embrace.
“WHAT THE HELL? NIGELLA? WHAT HAVE YOU DONE WITH NIGELLA?”
“What do you mean what have I done with Nigella? What slander! I AM NIGELLA! Now come here and let me slip my elongated digitus secundus manus in between your perpendiculars!”
Screaming, the Food Urchin tries to free himself from the former
sex addicts’ grasp, using all his strength, all his might. But skinny Russell is too
strong, having seemingly wrapped himself around the Food Urchin. Choking,
smothering, squeezing, throttling, voices laughing, hairy chest, flashing
teeth, gnashing at chunks of cheese, pungent, dripping, into the black, fading,
fading, into the black, screaming, drowning, drowning…….
A firm hand plunges in and grabs the Food Urchin even more
firmly by the scruff of the neck and whips him back out, out of this nightmare,
out from underneath the duvet. Into the cool, calm, quiet of a night on planet
Earth and far, far away from the Land of Cheese.
“Are you OK Dan?”
“Ah, ah, yeah, yeah, I’m OK.”
“What time did you get in?”
“I….I don’t know…”
“Did you eat some cheese again before coming to bed?”
“Yeah, I.. I think I did.”
“I don’t know why you do it to yourself. I really don’t. Now
c’mon, try to get some sleep.”
And after laying his throbbing head back onto his sodden
pillow, the Food Urchin vows to never ever do that again, to eat cheese before
bed.
Never, ever again.
Ever.
Many thanks goes to Farmison.com for sending me a range of their cheeses to sample. The Old Lochnagar, Golden Cross, Dunsyre Blue and aptly named Finn were all absolutely delicious. Apologies however for not going ahead with a more straight forward sort of review. I sort of got carried away.
I blame your cheeses.
Comments
Meemalee - yes and he is still in there.
Lisa - Is it? I am not so sure, still having nightmares
Simon - That line of thinking is what gets you into trouble in the first place.
Susan - I know, what a frigging stud eh?!