The Jewish Chronicle

Fruitcake is key to holiday bliss

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IWROTE MOST of this article in my head, while lying in a bubbling hot tub, looking over at a field of fluffy Somerset sheep, the beating sun overhead and an icecold drink close to hand. So far, so fairy-tale. Indeed, the two weeks we are spending in this idyllic setting were meant to be a celebratio­n of our silver wedding anniversar­y; just me, my husband, a luxury cottage, two bicycles and miles and miles of patchwork countrysid­e — our idea of bliss.

Well, if man plans and God laughs, as they say, then coronaviru­s turns everything upside down on its head and rips it into tiny shreds. Thanks to the cancellati­on of sleepaway camps this summer, my current hot tub companion is not my husband, but my nearly11-year-old daughter, who seems to think a Jacuzzi is essentiall­y a personal-sized swimming pool and keeps tripping over my legs as she bobs repeatedly from one side of it to the other.

Said husband is indoors, trying to figure out how to work the state-of-the-art telescope that came with the cottage, though minus any comprehens­ible instructio­ns. He and the daughter have plans to do some star-gazing later; not that she needs any more encouragem­ent to stay up unfeasibly late.

A quick mental calculatio­n reveals that this is in fact our 20th self-catering staycation, of which only two have been child-free. In our collective memory, there are many moments we like to fondly recall — “the one where the baby screamed all the way up the mountain”, for example, “the one where the child fell off her bike and rolled down a hill into a thicket of gorse bushes” and, a personal favourite, “the one where everyone got locked out on a balcony”.

I’m not sure what the optimum age to take a child on a holiday like this one is, but judging by the current rate of ERPM (eye-rolls per minute), it’s not nearly-11. If it wasn’t for the Xbox and Smart TV, I fear she may have hitched a ride straight back to London.

I have learned tricks over the years though — inspired by my own memories of holidaying with my parents in kosher hotels in

Bournemout­h, where afternoon tea was everyone’s daily highlight, I find small bursts of activity followed by regular and copious snacks work well for fractious preteens and parents alike. Nothing says familial harmony like a large slab of buttered fruitcake.

And despite the unexpected expansion of our holiday party, for my quarter-of-century hubby and me (and, I’d guess, our daughter, though she’d never admit it) it is shaping up to be a truly delightful vacation. In the first few days alone, we’ve cycled through a nature reserve and along a picturesqu­e canal, visited the majestic Cheddar Gorge, picked apples on a cider farm and drunk more bottles of local apple juice than the number of empties that can fit in the cottage’s recycling bin.

At Cheddar, I particular­ly enjoyed a game of “spot the fellow Jew”, spying a woman with hair so beautiful that it could only be a sheitel; a hypothesis strongly supported by the knee-length denim skirt she was sporting. I excitedly elbowed my husband to alert him to our first sighting of the holiday. He scoffed at my detective skills, but was forced to concede when her husband appeared moments later, complete with black velvet kippah and flying tzitzit strings. A few steps further into the gorge we came across another obviously Jewish family — we beamed at each other like members of some sort of secret society as we crossed paths, with a mumbled “Shalom” as the universal password.

Indeed, I’ve had more face-toface interactio­ns with other people in the past 72 hours than in the entire preceding five months. Despite the fact that I didn’t really feel like I was lacking anything during the weeks spent hunkered down at home, I’ve revelled in every casual “hello” and “hot weather today isn’t it?” comment shared with random passers-by.

Interestin­gly, my vivid dreams about being out and about with crowds of people have also dissipated —human beings, it seems, are social creatures, whether they like it or not.

So, with over half of our holiday still to come, while my daughter is fruitlessl­y trying to get us to promise not to shlep her on any more walks, I’m happily checking the weather forecast to work out how many more uses I can get out of the hot tub and the cycles. The other day, as we picnicked in the sunshine, a cheery cyclist called out:“Who needs to go abroad?” as he hurtled by. I couldn’t agree more. And now, if you’ll excuse me, it’s time for afternoon tea.

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PHOTO: PIXABAY
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