There’s something lovely about going to the hairdressers and having my hair washed by someone else – I think it must be some deep-seated emotional flashback to being a child when my mum washed my hair. It immediately feels like I am in a deep relaxation and there is probably a study somewhere that has proved it stimulates the production of serotonin in the brain. I am not the best client at the hairdresser, though. I only go when I can no longer bear the state of my hair – which lately seems to take place around every 3 months. In the last couple of years, I have also starting to go to a “regular” hairdresser; previously, I would just go into any hairdresser that was nearest at the time I was having the “I MUST HAVE MY HAIRCUT” rant. This has led to some very odd haircuts – I would just say something like: “Please just tidy it up” and they would look blankly at me and start asking technical questions like, above the ears? below the ears? how long since you have had a haircut? do you have a fringe? The worst time was when I went into a very expensive “salon” in Canary Wharf one desperate lunchtime and asked for the next available appointment. They had someone free that minute so I sat down in the chair, having been draped in the “shawl” (there must be a proper word for that strange garment you have to wear while having your hair cut..suggestions welcome). A very young man approached the chair and asked me how I wanted it cut – I responded in my usual way and he started to comb through my hair very slowly and appeared to be thinking very deeply. He asked me again, and I just said “do whatever you feel would suit me”….and with that he rushed off and started muttering deeply to the other hairdressers, glancing at me every now and again….My first thought – I must have nits! He must have seem something moving on my head. Maybe I should just get up and pretend I changed my mind. The embarrassment was already excruciating and I braced myself as a different hairdresser came over. “I’m sorry”, she said, “It’s Gervais’s first day and he’s only just qualified, so he doesn’t feel comfortable enough to cut your hair but I would be very happy to”. I didn’t go back there ever again.
So it’s lovely having your hair washed, but that’s probably the highlight of the hairdressing trip for me. It starts going downhill when you have to sit in front of a mirror and stare at yourself for at least 30 minutes. Thankfully I take my glasses off so I just see some blurry features – but this causes a problem at the end when they hold the mirror up and you can’t see anything but you still say “great! thanks!”. Thing is, you can never see the back of your head anyway, so I am not sure why they show it to you. My new hairdresser (I have been to the same person about 6 times now, so I reckon he’s my hairdresser now) is really great. He makes me feel great because he doesn’t ask difficult questions about what I want done. He does use “product” on my hair, but not too much – I don’t like it when you move your head and your hair stays still – like it’s some sort of manmade fibre. He knows when I want to chat and when I just want to sit there and almost sleep while he snips away. I am glad we have found each other. Back home, I usually go and wash it straight away, remove all vestige of product and try and dry it the way it was before I had it cut. My hair seems to go into a shock mode just after being cut – it just looks sort of startled and out-ofplace on my head but after a week or so, thankfully, it’s back to normal.
I think my aversion to regular trips to the hairdressers was also a result of a childhood experience – my mum used to go to the hairdressers every week (I am SURE it was every week but it probably was once a month). And it would take hours. Clearly, I had to go along as my older brothers were in school but I was too young to stay at home on my own. I remember the boredom. I also remember the smell of perming lotion – my mum always had a shampoo and set and she sat for hours under that weird large helmet-style hair dryer hood thingy on wheels (probably worth a fortune now and only available on ebay). It was very noisy and hot, and I remember her trying to cock her head to hear what I was saying, but my bored moaning went mostly unheard. She would then sit for another age having the curlers out and her hair brushed and yet more hair drying….until finally the lacquer – tons of it, making the air thick with chemicals that caught the back of my throat. Her hair didn’t really move on it’s own accord all week. Dad used to call it her “Maggie Thatcher” look….
So I am newly shorn and feeling good. And I have just cooked some chicken and rice – one of husband’s favourites. The best thing is that you make it in one pan and put that on the table so everyone can just help themselves. Enjoy!
Serves 4 very well!
175g brown rice (you can use white basmati in your prefer – just cook for 15 mins less)
3 tbsp sunflower oil
8 chicken thighs – bone in and with skins
2 tbsp dried herbs (I use majoram, chicken seasoning, oregano, all spice)
1 onion (chopped)
1 red pepper and 1 green pepper (chopped)
3 garlic cloves (chopped)
1 tsp ground allspice berries
2 tsp turmeric
2 cm fresh root ginger – grated
1 red chilli – sliced into rings (I keep the seeds in as I like it hot)
600 ml chicken stock
3 sprigs of thyme
3 bay leaves
Wash the rice until the water runs clear. Season the chicken with the dried herbs. Heat the oil in a large pan that will take all the ingredients and brown the chicken pieces all over (about 3/4 minutes each side). Remove the chicken and set aside.


Put the onions, peppers and garlic in the pan and cook on a gentle heat for about 5 minutes until the peppers are soft.

Add the allspice, ginger, chilli and turmeric. Give everything a good stir.

Put the chicken back in the pan. Sprinkle the rice round the chicken and pour over the chicken stock – try and wash all the rice off the chicken if possible.

Add the thyme and bay leaves. Bring the pot to the boil and simmer for about 40 minutes. If you have an Aga, stick it in the bottom oven for about the same length of time. It’s ready when the rice is cooked through and the juices run clear when you stab a chicken piece. Delicious!
