Showing posts with label anglophilia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label anglophilia. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 30, 2013

Postcard From Bronte Country: The Full Bronte

After traipsing around the Peak District for nearly a week, the next stop on my somewhat literary-inspired solo trip was Haworth, home of the Bronte sisters and the delightful Yorkshire accent.

I first read Wuthering Heights when I was 15, and may have watched the 1992 movie version a dozen or so times possibly because it starred Ralph Fiennes. Allegedly.



Over the years, I went on to read Jane EyreAgnes GreyVillette, and The Tenant of Wildfell Hall. I also read a good portion of Elizabeth Gaskell's The Life of Charlotte Bronte, commissioned by her father Patrick after her death and became increasingly intrigued by the isolated lives of the three sisters and their brother Branwell. So when I started planning this trip, Haworth was at the top of the list both because of the Bronte connection and the outstanding beauty of Yorkshire. Walking on the windswept moors sounded like a nice contrast to the picturesque beauty of the Peak District.

England really does offer a variety of different landscapes for such a small place. A local man I met commented that "In France it's vineyard after vineyard. Beautiful, but it's all the same. Here, everything is so different even just a couple hours away." Indeed, Yorkshire might as well have been another country. In any case, it certainly felt like I was traveling father than just two hours north. I took a local bus from Eyam to the train station in Sheffield. From there it was a  an hour ride to Leeds. Because of cancellations of some earlier trains, mine was so packed I couldn't even take my seat and was made to stand, along with a dozen other people, in the crowded entryway for the journey. In Leeds I switched to a local train for a half hour ride to the town of Keighley. There is a bus that runs from Keighley to Haworth with a stop near the YHA where I stayed, but I didn't learn this until later. Instead, during my research I had read about a steam engine that did a loop through the Worth Valley, stopping at Haworth, and thought this would be a cool alternative to paying for a cab. I bought a round trip ticket because I thought I would take it back to Keighley in a few days, then while on the train realized it wasn't running during the week since it was no longer summer. So, for 10 GBP I road a steam engine for 20 minutes. 


                      The steam train on it's way back to 1862

I was also expecting Haworth to be tiny--comparable to the size of Eyam--but it is not. It was much bigger, though apparently not big enough to have a library--kind of sad, considering its most famous locals. As I got off the train the conductor helped me with my bag and asked where I was staying. When I said the YHA he suggested I should probably get a cab, since the hostel was at the top of a steep hill. I laughed and said I was used to hills, having just come from the Peak District.

I went along my way and nearly broke my neck on the two steps down to the street. An older couple who had been on the train with me and watched me almost fall on my face also inquired where I was staying. When I cheerily answered that I was close by at the YHA they, like the conductor, said I should try to take a taxi or the bus, which they were waiting for. "It's just at the top of the hill, but it's a steep walk," they warned. I had read a lot about the hills of the Peak District, but no one had really said anything about Haworth. I decided to heed their warning and got on the bus with them. True to their word it was a short ride, no more than five minutes, but it was up a long incline. The YHA is housed in the former mansion of a wool merchant and, as luck would have it, my room was on the top floor, four flights up. However, I was promised that the views were worth it. 



Indeed, the stress of taking a bus, two trains, a steam train, and another bus ride to get here all melted away when I saw this:



The town of Haworth has a reputation as being a mucky, dirty place (more on that in a minute) but I was struck by its beauty long before I even reached the moors. I would walk up and down that hill nearly every day during my stay, but the view pictured above always filled me with excitement. Well, maybe not on the way up but sometimes fun stuff like horse peek-a-boo would happen to keep me entertained: 

                                             I see you!

There was also a little old lady whose front yard was entirely covered with little ceramic gnomes who always greeted me with a 'Hullo love!" as I was walking by. The whole place is really quite charming and I always felt comfortable and safe walking around, even as a solo female traveler. I have a hunch that the Brontes attract many types like me. 



Even after days spent walking up the steep mounts of the Peak District, I was surprised by how hilly Haworth was. The main street was about a fifteen minute walk from the hostel but the street itself is one of the steepest I've ever encountered. Why anyone thought this was the ideal place to build a town, I have no idea. Just the thought of carting stones up that road makes my back hurt. However, the top of the street offers some amazing views. The village has also done a nice job of preserving many of its historical buildings on Main street--so many, in fact, that the Brontes would recognize much of the area today.


At the top of Main street is the parish church, the parsonage which is now the Bronte Parsonage Museum, and the cemetery where an estimated 40,000 bodies have been buried since the 17th century. 



This, of course, wasn't very good planning and the overcrowded graveyard poisoned the water of the village below. Typhus, dysentery, scarlet fever and consumption (now known as tuberculosis) were prevalent. Over 40% of the town's children died before age 6 while the average life expectancy was only 26. During his tenure as curate Patrick Bronte worked to improve sanitation in the village. The churchyard was even shut down for a time by order of the Queen after an investigation by the General Board of Health. Some blame the village's abysmal sanitation for killing the Brontes themselves, though this is unclear. Today, however, conditions are much improved at the main street is lined with a number of lovely shops and cafes. I spend a good deal of time in Cobbles and Clay, first drawn by the promise of free wifi and then by the delicious food.

                       The first of many Yorkshire scones...

The day after I arrived I visited the Bronte Parsonage museum, which has been set up to look as it did when the family lived there. It is a wonderful home museum and feels very personal, perhaps because home was such a major part of their lives. The sisters lived, worked, and, in the case of Charlotte and Emily, died here. 



There are a number of items owned by the Brontes on display, including some of Charlotte Bronte's tiny wedding clothes (she was 4ft 9 in.) and the couch where Emily supposedly died. One can look at the dining room where the sisters did most of their writing, often taking turns walking around the table discussing their novels aloud.  The Brontes were plagued by tragedy which seemed to come in waves. The first contained the deaths of their mother from cancer in 1821 followed by the two eldest siblings, Maria and Elizabeth, in 1825. The second wave struck in 1848 with the sudden death of Branwell (most likely due to his drinking and opium habits) followed by Emily, who was ill with tuberculosis three months later.  Anne, also ill with tuberculosis, set out for the coast the following May to try a sea cure but died in Scarborough four days after her arrival. She was 29. This would be too much to bear for anyone, but for these uncommonly close siblings, Charlotte's grief is unimaginable. She threw herself into her writing, publishing Shirley and Villette, and traveled to London, enjoying the celebrity of her newfound literary fame. Charlotte did eventually find some happiness at the end of her life after marrying Arthur Nichols, her father's curate, in 1854. But, as seems to be the fate of the Brontes, this happiness was short-lived. She died less than a year later in 1855, in the early stages of pregnancy, shortly before her 39th birthday. Their father, Patrick Bronte, continued to live in the house until his death in 1861 at the age of 84 having outlived his wife and all six children. 



After leaving the museum I was, understandably, left with a sense of overwhelming sadness. Behind the museum is a path leading onto the moors so beloved by the sisters. One can walk along Bronte Way to Bronte Falls, a good  2 mile hike from the museum. Another mile beyond that is Top Withens which, according to local legend, was the inspiration for Wuthering Heights



Between such a tragic family history and their dramatic surroundings it becomes very obvious why the Brontes wrote the way they did. Charlotte once called Haworth a 'strange, uncivilized little place.' The landscape is rugged and raw and when the wind blows (which is normally the case) it chills you to the bone. And yet, it is one of the most beautiful places I have ever been. 



"This is certainly a beautiful country! In all England, I do not believe I could have fixed on a situation so completely removed from the stir of society."~Wuthering Heights


The sisters walked on the moors daily, in all kinds of weather, and it was fun to imagine Emily or Charlotte or Anne going over plot points and character development in their heads along the very same path I was taking. Haunting is the best word I can think of to describe it. 


If the Peak District is like being on a movie set, a visit to the moors really feels like being in a Bronte novel.


 




It took me about two hours to reach Bronte Falls, which is at the bottom of a steep little valley and provides a nice respite before turning back or heading on towards Top Withens. The creek seemed pretty high when I visited but I guess it can be closer to a trickle if it hasn't rained. There is supposedly a chair shaped rock that Charlotte used to sit on but I couldn't find it.
  

After resting a bit, I climbed up the rocky face of the valley towards Top Withens but ultimately decided against making the hike because 1.) I was exhausted 2.) I still had to walk all the way back to the hostel 3.) I wanted to get off the moors before it got dark. By the time I got back, all I wanted to do was soak in a hot bath but had to settle for a hot shower instead. 




The following day it rained, which was just as well. The leg injury I had sustained the previous month needed some rest so I used the morning to get some writing done and then explored more of the town in the late afternoon when the rain let up a bit. Though all the while the moors were on my mind. When I woke up the next morning the sun was shining, though it was supposed to rain all day. But my time in the midlands of England had taught me not to trust the weather forecast--it seemed to change on a dime. I thought of Top Withens and decided to take a chance. 



In Wuthering Heights, Cathy claims that "I'm sure I should be myself were I once among the heather on those hills," and indeed there is something so stimulating about walking there. Though I had spent four hours walking to and from the falls, I was excited to return just two days later for an even longer hike. I packed a light lunch, charged my ipod, and layered up. When I left, the sun was gone and the sky had turned a light gray, but no rain fell. By the time I reached Bronte Falls to eat lunch, the sky had darkened but this was my last chance to get there before leaving Haworth and there was no way I was turning back. 



You can see Top Withens from a mile away. It is nothing more than a dark blip on the hill, but it looms ahead of you as you walk towards it. 


During my two hikes I took a cue from the Brontes and thought about pieces I was working on, but mostly I just focused on being there and being alone in the moment. I got a lot of funny looks when I told people I was going to be traveling alone for parts of my travels and even though there were times when it was a challenge, I'm so glad I did it. Hiking on the moors was one of the best experiences of this whole trip and as much as I want other people to see and understand how beautiful it is, I'm so glad I was there by myself. In those moments when we are truly alone we can learn things that would otherwise elude us and walking the moors is a great place for some deep contemplation.



"Wuthering" is Yorkshire slag for bad weather and by the time I reached Top Withens, the wind started blowing and scatterings of rain drops came and went. I was cold and my cheeks and nose were red with windburn. I was exhausted and my hip throbbed, yet I felt exhilarated. 



"Pure, bracing ventilation they must have up there at all times, indeed: one may guess the power of the north wind blowing over the edge, by the excessive slant of a few stunted firs at the end of the house; and by a range of gaunt thorns all stretching their limbs one way, as if craving alms of the sun. "~Wuthering Heights



I spent a long time at Top Withens despite the chilly wind and rain because I wanted to absorb as much as possible. When I had downloaded the pictures from the previous day I was immediately disappointed because I realized that I hadn't truly captured what I had experienced. As lovely as they are, it's just not the same. Not even close. 

And even though I'm fairly certain that hike is the reason I was still limping 2 weeks later, walking in Emily's footsteps  and taking in the landscape that helped inspire her work was truly one of the most awe-inspiring moments of my life. 

Sunday, September 29, 2013

Trip Update: Month Two


This post is long overdue but free wifi has been scarce over the past couple of weeks. At the hotel in London they were charging 7 (!) pounds a day, which I didn't pay of course. Here in Paris wifi is free but, well, I'm in Paris. I want to give Bronte country and London the attention they deserve, so it may be awhile before I post again. But for now I figure I'd do an update on where I've been, where I am, and where I'm going:


Places I've Been: The Peaks District, Haworth, York, London, and Salisbury.


Where I am: The Hotel de Louvre in Paris until Oct. 2nd

Where I'm Going: On Wednesday James and I will take the train from Paris to Munich where we will meet up with my cousins for Oktoberfest. James heads back to the US on the 6th but I'm staying on through the month with my cousins and interrailing to Italy. I'm calling it Eurotrip Part Three: The Cousining. Our route will take us to Prague, Vienna, Budapest, Dubrovnik, Split, Florence, Sienna, and finally ending in Rome. 



In truth, I am pretty exhausted--I know, tough life--but we've been packing in a lot of stuff during James' visit and as much as I like playing tour guide and interpreter, it can wear on a person after awhile. Hopefully I'll be able to relax a bit and recharge in Munich and Prague, where we're spending four days each before moving on to a faster travel schedule. In the meantime, I'll continue eating and siteseeing my way through Paris. Mangez bien!

Friday, August 23, 2013

Postcard From London: An Afternoon In Kensington




The way I decide what to do with my days is a combination of touristy stuff and life stuff, i.e. "I should go see ___ but I also need to buy milk." Today I decided to go to Kensington because they have a Whole Foods and I wanted some 'green' shampoo. I also thought I could walk around Kensington Palace and maybe see that exhibit about famous royal dresses. 

On a whim, or more truthfully because I got on the wrong train, I ended up in my old neighborhood and was shocked at how very little had changed: There was the KFC I never went to and the cafe where my mom insulted a waiter by asking if she was going to get mad cow disease from eating the ribeye. And, rather shockingly, there was the very same homeless man panhandling in the very same spot outside Barclay's. His hair was mostly grey now and his dog was different but hey, I had changed too. 

As I walked down the street, I realized that as much as I had always told myself (and other people) that I would return to London one day, there really had been no guarantee. Yet, here I was, seven years older and twenty pounds heavier, walking down the very same street in the very same neighborhood I had lived in. What a gift, I thought to myself. How lucky that I was able to do this. It very easily could never have happened. 

I didn't make it to the Fashion Rules exhibit because I wasn't about to shell out 15 pounds to the monarchy. Pssh. They should pay for their own exhibit about themselves, I reasoned. Then I paid the equivalent of $12 for a bottle of shampoo, but at least it will last a while and actually do something.

Anyways, I returned home later to yet another rejection email from a literary journal and despite where I was and what I had just experienced, I felt like a total failure. After wallowing for a few minutes and tweeting about my wallowing to my 37 followers, I realized that the way I was defining success was making me miserable. I could literally be walking around my favorite city on a beautiful summer day, having an actual life experience--but not getting a story published in a journal that probably very few people read, other than those who have been published in it themselves, could ruin everything. I could see myself willing to trade this whole day or even this whole trip for a published story. And for what? What, exactly, would it do for my life? Could it really make me any happier or more satisfied than I am right now? I'm not sure anymore. I do know that I need to change my way of thinking--easier said than done, of course, but necessary.  

Saturday, August 3, 2013

Dispatch from London: Week One


 "What was I doing here alone in great London? What should I do on the morrow? What prospects had I in life? What friends had I on earth? Whence did I come? Whither should I go? What should I do?"~Villette

That quote may be a bit dramatic, but I've identified with it more than once this week. A three month trip abroad is all well and good  in theory until one day you're at the airport saying goodbye to people you won't see for weeks on end. I know though that the beginning is the hardest part, but that is also what makes it an adventure. 

I've only been here a few days but have already learned some new things about myself, namely that I cannot sleep in a room with 14 other people. I know, I know, I have nothing to complain about. But still, between the jetlag, a cold that I think was brought on by pre-trip stress, and four hours of sleep a night max, I've been pretty worn out. Nonetheless, I've still managed to log  a decent amount of sightseeing in each day. Of course, at the end of it I'm ready for bed (not that anyone around here let's me sleep). Tomorrow I'll stay in the housesitting  house which is lovely and hopefully I'll be back to normal by Sunday. In the meantime, here are some thoughts and photos:


~Oh last week's Emily, there is so much I want to tell you, so many things you need to be warned of, like B.O. so strong that it can be smelt from across a hostel dorm room--even through the privacy curtains. And you think you're tired now? Just wait...

~I started the week with a visit to the Museum of London, which was very interesting and free. I learnt all about the origins of London, the fall of the Roman empire, the devastation wrought by the Black Death and the fire of 1666, and I saw this amazing hat from an exhibit on the Vauxhall Pleasure Gardens:



Screw the 90s, this is the kind of fashion that needs to make a comeback!



~Imagine cooking in this ancient Roman kitchen. Or rather, imagine your indentured servant doing the cooking.



~The museum is right around the remains of the old Londinium wall built by the Romans. There's something to be said here about the intersection of modern life and antiquity by someone much more clever than myself.

~London smells the same, not in a bad way and it wasn't something I remembered until I started walking around, but it definitely has a distinctive scent all it's own. Like they say, scent is the strongest link to memory.

~I've been walking far too much, but I can't help it. There is something to see seemingly on every street. Just one more block, I'll tell myself. Ok, now just one more. One more. My feet and hips will be happy for a day or two of rest. Of course, when I get shots like these of Saint Paul's, it's all worth it:




~This city is still shockingly expensive. I've probably spent 30 GBP on the tube alone and I've only used it twice a day. That's also without going to any of the expensive touristy places, i.e. The Tower, Buckingham Palace, Westminster Abbey, etc. Instead, I've mostly stuck to free things like Regent's Park and walking along the Thames. Even still, the great travelcard vs oyster card debate seems to have been settled. Once James comes and we hit all the sites in central London, we'll both have to get travelcards.  

~There really is nothing like an English cuppa. I don't know if it's the water or the tea bags, but either way I can't replicate it back home so I'll have to enjoy it while I'm here. 



~I've been telling James about the Brit's obsession with sandwiches for weeks now ("And the sandwiches, so many different kinds! Ones you've never even dreamed of!") But really, I think this picture says more than I ever could: 



~On that note, I'm very much looking forward to having a kitchen to cook in. The food at the hostel wasn't half bad and pretty cheap but the menu was limited. I went to the corner store yesterday and got some snacks to mix things up a bit:


I demand to know why Kit Kat is keeping Chunky peanut butter out of the states!

Wednesday, July 24, 2013

Reliving London


July 2nd, 2006
"I already know I'm going to miss this city. I can feel it in my stomach..."

On Monday at approximately 9 am I will touch down in London seven years after leaving. Far too much time has passed, but life got in the way--as it always does. I've spent the better part of a year planning this trip, this escape, and yet I've been filled with anxiety about all the what ifs: What if my luggage gets lost? What if my credit cards don't work? What if someone steals my computer? What if I want to come home?

While looking for my combination lock this afternoon, I found the diary I kept while I was in London: 

 July 26th, 2006
"I believe one must always be curious, seeking out new experiences to live a full life. Never allow yourself to get bored or get stuck in a rut. There is too much out there to explore." 

In all honesty, I'm pretty sure the Emily of then would be disappointed with the Emily of today and how scared she is right now--to say nothing of the rut I've found myself in for the past couple of years.  Reading this reminded me of how happy I was, how fulfilled I felt while living in London. Of course, it's only natural to feel nervous before taking a big leap but I don't want it to color my time there. I want to be past all that. 

Perhaps all adventurers feel this way beforehand. Even the idea that this time next week I'll be writing from London seems unreal. Sometimes when we are separated from someone or something we care about it exists only in our memory for so long that it is no longer a part of reality. Instead, it becomes the fantastic,  the untouchable living only in our imagination.  To be able to go back to this place is a gift. 

July 2nd, 2006
"I want my life to always be like this, filled with music, culture, writing, excitement...leafy trees and wide sidewalks."

I want to be this person again. I've tried to be, but the day to day work of getting by can muddle things. Hopefully this time away will help me sort things out.

Thursday, June 27, 2013

Trip Update: Housesitting in London


Isn't it funny how things come together all of a sudden? That's how the last week has been. I've been thinking about this trip since January but actual, important details like when I'm leaving and where I'll be going were up in the air until now. This was in large part due to my trying to get a housesitting gig for part of the trip which, I am now happy to report, was successful! I'll be house/dogsitting in Golders Green in London for three weeks starting August 3rd. Partly what caught my eye about this listing was the area. I never got around to exploring Hampstead Heath last time I was in London and the family I'll be helping out lives right near by. 

I kind of fell into housesitting after college when I did it for a family in nearby West Hartford for about six weeks. At the time it was nice to be out of my mom's house for a while, even if it was only a couple of miles away. I house/dog sat for them a couple more times and also did occasional catsitting for a neighbor before I moved to Boston. When I started reading about long-term traveling housesitting was mentioned as a great way to save money while traveling. I read a couple of blogs and bought this very informative e-book by Dalene and Peter Heck of Hecktic Travels who have been housesitting all over the world for years. After some more research I set up an account with TrustedHousesitters.com and after a few months of diligent emailing I got a gig.

 Aside from free accommodation, housesitting also promotes the kind of travel I'm interested in--slow--and allows you to immerse yourself in the local culture in a way staying in a hotel never can. I would never be able to afford to stay in London this long so I'm looking forward to spending some quality time in my little borough. The Peak district and Yorkshire are still on the agenda, but I'm absolutely thrilled to be able to stay in my favorite city for three weeks. And, of course, the chance to have a dog for a bit is a nice bonus :)

Last year I started reading Imagined London by the wonderful Anna Quindlen but I had to stop because it made me too...I dunno...sad. I wanted to be back in London but at that point it was impossible. But now, with this trip on the horizon, reading this has only made me more excited. It's always been hard for me to explain why I felt so drawn to this city more than any other place, long before I ever went there, but Quindlen nailed it when she wrote "If you have spent your days in an armchair with a book, your nights reading yourself to sleep, then London is the central character in so much of what you have read that it is as though it is your imaginary home, a place whose lineaments are as clear as those of your own living room..." For me, being in London is the closest I can get to living inside my imagination.I can't wait to go home.

Monday, March 4, 2013

Literary Eats: Treacle Tarts from Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll





Lewis Carroll was the pen name of Oxford don and mathematician Charles Lutwidge Dodgson. Though Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland wasn’t his first published work, it was by far his most popular. Children and adults alike were enchanted by Wonderland’s fanciful imagery, anthropomorphic animal characters, and nonsensical language. Though Dodgson’s literary legacy has been marred by debate concerning the true nature of his relationship with Alice Liddell, the youngest daughter of Henry Liddell, dean of Oxford’s Christchurch College, his work is arguably even more popular today thanks to the 1951 Disney cartoon and Tim Burton’s 2010 pseudo-gothic movie Alice in Wonderland. Aside from the arresting visuals provided in both the book and its many film versions, some of the most famous scenes are built around some very British traditions: The infamous Mad Hatter’s tea party, the depiction of the royal court, and a game of croquet. A number of traditional British foods are mentioned as well, but there is one that causes an uproar:

The King and Queen of Hearts were seated on their throne when they arrived, with a great crowd assembled about them--all sorts of little birds and beasts, as well as the whole pack of cards: the Knave was standing before them, in chains, with a soldier on each side to guard him; and near the King was the White Rabbit, with a trumpet in one hand, and a scroll of parchment in the other. In the very middle of the court was a table, with a large dish of tarts upon it: they looked so good, that it made Alice quite hungry to look at them--`I wish they'd get the trial done,' she thought, `and hand round the refreshments!' But there seemed to be no chance of this, so she began looking at everything about her, to pass away the time.

Later on the Duchess’ cook (and pepper aficionado) is being questioned about the tarts:

Alice guessed who it was, even before she got into the court, by the way the people near the door began sneezing all at once.
'Give your evidence,' said the King.
'Shan't,' said the cook.
The King looked anxiously at the White Rabbit, who said in a low voice, 'Your Majesty must cross-examine this witness.'
'Well, if I must, I must,' the King said, with a melancholy air, and, after folding his arms and frowning at the cook till his eyes were nearly out of sight, he said in a deep voice, 'What are tarts made of?'
'Pepper, mostly,' said the cook.
'Treacle,' said a sleepy voice behind her.
'Collar that Dormouse,' the Queen shrieked out. Behead that Dormouse! Turn that Dormouse out of court! Suppress him! Pinch him! Off with his whiskers!'

Treacle tart has long held a place in British literature and is even mentioned as Harry Potter's favorite dessert. It would seem that nothing could be more aptly named than the syrupy sweet treacle tart. It turns out that anything from pancake syrup to dark molasses are, in fact, referred to as treacle in the UK, but traditionally golden syrup is used for the tart. I turned to 19th century housekeeping Goddess Mrs. Beeton for a classic recipe:


Treacle Tart

Ingredients:

450g golden syrup

4 oz soft white crumbs

1 tsp lemon juice

8 oz plain flour

1/2 tsp salt

4 oz unsalted butter 

flour for rolling out


Directions:

1) Set the oven at 400ºF

2) To make the pastry, sift the flour and salt into a bowl, then rub in the butter until the mixture resembles fine breadcrumbs. Add enough cold water to make a stiff dough. Press the dough together with your fingertips.

3) Roll out the pastry on a lightly floured surface and use just over three-quarters of it to line a 20 cm / 8 inch pie plate. Poke with a fork several times over.

4) Melt the syrup in a saucepan. Stir in the breadcrumbs and lemon juice, and then pour the mixture into the prepared pastry. Bake for 30 minutes.




I can see why this would be a popular British dessert--it is ridiculously SWEET, and if there was one take away from my time spent in London, it was that the Brits love their sweets. When my mom came to visit me, she commented that this was why their teeth were so bad.

I served this with some vanilla ice cream, which is obviously historically inaccurate, but I needed something to balance out the sweetness. There are a lot of modern takes on this recipe that include cream, which probably make it more palatable to today's taste buds. I will say though, that this all butter crust is delicious. Some things just stand the test of time.