The cake run 2: chorley cakes

Saturday 13 July 2024

Sometimes you’ve earned your cake even if you haven’t done any running…

Chorley Cakes from Cissy Green’s Bakery

Yes, I haven’t even run an inch today, nor in the last fortnight actually. Why? Well it all began with a cough!

Oh the cough. One hacking, gravelly, sounding like a person-with-a-40-year-smoking-habit cough. The ghastly, spluttering monstrosity started about 8 weeks ago. I thought half term would see it off, but it did not. Upon my return to work, I struggled to function, clinging onto a huge water bottle and gasping for breath every time I tried to get a sentence out in the classroom. I visited the Pharmacist, polished off box after box of Lemsips and consumed my own body-weight in honey. And still I barked on!

“Have you got the 100 day cough?” colleagues would ask,

“Could it be pneumonia?”

Have you considered TB?”

Everyone had a theory. And everyday I was wiped out; fights of stairs looked like mountains, my back and chest ached all the time and I felt as if my motivation to do anything at all, even eat, had evaporated.

So, about 4 weeks in, I went to see my GP. I was prescribed precautionary antibiotics plus a steroid spray and was sent for an xray.

Two days later, I awoke at 3 am,  making the most horrendous din. In my head I sounded like an angry seal, the offspring,who came racing in, claimed that I sounded ‘in human‘ and ‘like a siren’ as they found me careering around the room seemingly gasping for breath. It calmed down after 10 minutes but I was made to call 111 who labelled this as ‘Stridor Breathing‘ and, having heard my other symptoms, ordered me off to A and E …whereupon we waited for 7 hours before being discharged home.

Later that same afternoon however, I was summoned to the GP… and it is here that everything changed. My x-ray results were on the screen. The GP read them out quickly to an uncomprehending me. He immediately called radiology  and, via speaker phone, I heard them telling him that yes, I did need a follow up CT scan and that it was marked as ‘urgent’.

“Why did they say urgent?” I asked, still a little at sea.

The GP mumbled about something needing to ‘rule our the worst’. Upon arriving home from work, less than 24 hours later, I found my GP actually at the door hand delivering an appointment for the very next day. The light was beginning to dawn.

So when you say urgent … you really do mean it!

I spent half an hour the next morning being CT-ed with iodine ink.

Now I began to feel alarmed. I re-read the x-ray report.  It told me that I was on the ‘2 week pathway’. I looked that up. One word. Cancer .

I sat, with a cup of tea, my usually busy mind feeling as if it had been replaced with a blank white board of blind panic.

Not a great week followed. It became difficult to focus at work. I didn’t tell my mum, who was ill. I couldn’t tell Small Boy, who was mid-A levels. My closest friends were terrific, and my boss took me off some duties, which helped enormously. But mostly, I just steeled myself for a long and lonely wait.

But such anxiety is difficult to recall now because… thankfully me this tale has a happy ending. The ‘all clear’ letter arrived by post. The Lung Cancer team discharged me back to Primary Care, with nothing more than a recommendation for a steroid inhaler, and I was overjoyed to be sent!

So, come on, no jogging but surely I’ve earned this week’s cake? And what a belter it is, none other than a Cissy Greens Chorley cake.

‘Is that the same as an Eccles Cake?’ I hear you cry.

Actually, not quite. There is less fruit in the Chorley cake and shortcrust pastry replaces the flaky casing of the Eccles variety. And therein, to my mind lies the secret. With a generous helping of butter, that crisp but crumbly pastry is a triumph, melting seamlessly into the soft rich fruit. For me, a self confessed non-sweet-toother, this is cake heaven. Fellow tasters suggest a 9,  but, as I could happily devour a full plate of these beauties, I’m going out on a limb with a cheeky 9.5 and a bold claim that ‘this will take some beating’.

And next week, providing my wheezing is fully back under control, I’ll be back to running and cake sampling to test that out…

The cake run 1: Angel Cakes

Saturday 15 June 2024

Angel cakes from Cissy Greens Bakery

Hard to pinpoint exactly when our weekend run became as much about ‘the cake’ as it did the exercise; but it has!  And… well who could argue that it’s a blooming fantastic addition to any weekend routine!

We still doggedly rendezvous every Saturday morning to take on the Lancashire hills. Drinking in the beautiful, tranquil countryside which reminds you that life is for living, not just getting by, as we recharge the batteries and get the heart pumping. But my limbs, now in their 50s sometimes, can need a bit of extra motivation these days …and cake will do that for you!

Oh yes, knowing that coffee, catch-up and a slice of something delicious awaits… well it  really spurs you on to see that run through to the end!

And, having spread the net wide to savour the confectionery offerings from a range of establishments, we thought it would be fun to celebrate ( and rate) each weekly discovery.  And kicking us off to a super strong start are the Angel Cakes from Cissy Greens Bakery.

Described as a ‘true taste of history’, Cissy Greens was opened in the late 1800s by Cissy who was born into a baking family. As a child, she made pies as a passion of hers, but  soon expanded to include sweet treats too.

Sweet treats; well there is no better word to describe our post-run angel cakes. The bake is perfection, airy, light and delicious. The butter cream is smooth, sweet and luxurious, For me there is a bit too much of the filling but that’s just me, (always a girl who prefers her cake to the icing) and I am outvoted by fellow tasters.

We polish off every last crumb and award an impressive 9 out of 10.

Next week we stick at Cissy’s for the Chorley cake … or is this local version actually a ‘Rossendale cake’? Whichever is the correct name, I cannot wait to give it a try…