26 APRIL 2008, Page 18

‘H ello Barbara,’ Emma says as she hauls the Hoover in

through the front door. I can’t disguise my confusion. ‘As in Tom and Barbara. You know, from The Good Life.’ I don’t get it, at first. I still think of myself as this London chick — well, probably old broiler would be more accurate. But definitely a little bit urban and sophisticated. I can hold my own at a media dinner on Madison Avenue — at least I’m sure I could, if I hadn’t given up flying. Our house has all sorts of cool stuff in it. Hasn’t it?

I look around. There are sheets and pants hanging from a makeshift drying rack in the hall, which has seen heavy action since we gave up the tumble dryer last year. Across the way, a junior thicket of broad beans seems to have sprouted in the spot where I’ve always planned to spend afternoons reading on Granny’s old Corbu recliner. I can’t even see my desk for papers, photographs and old copies of the Ecologist waiting to be filed.

‘I wish,’ I say wryly, thinking of Felicity Kendal’s enviable bum. I’m about to explain how far we are from keeping a pig when I get a whiff of about-to-be burnt bread and rush into the kitchen to save my sunflower and flaxseed spelt loaf from the oven. It’s not burnt, but also not exactly risen. And it seems to be stuck to the side of the pan, for some reason. Perhaps hemp oil — which I used instead of olive, in a desperate attempt to infiltrate some Omega 3s, 6s and 9s into our diets — isn’t up to much in the anti-stick department?

It’s been about five years since we last ate fish, and I’m worried that Notty’s concentration in class may be suffering from our determination to save world fish stocks.

I scrape the bread on to a drying rack in two pieces, and dash into the garden to take advantage of a gap between rain clouds.

I’m about to start planting out the beans into the vegetable patch when I remember that I have promised our kids a ‘Night Off’. We are going to flick the mains switch at 5.30 and eat, play games, bath and go to bed by candlelight, undisturbed by a single electric current. I hadn’t taken into account that this would mean bye-bye Mr Oven too. I quickly bung in the pork, and manage to peel a few potatoes (Delia: they still taste better than Smash), and plant out a few li of beans and spinach before the end school day.

the way home, Alfie asks whether we can use the laptop, since it is fully charged. I growl and send him into the garden to play football against the dog. Notty helps fold up sheets and mash potato. We are lighting candles when Mark arrives home. As it begins to get dark, we take the meat out of the oven and switch off the mains.

Something magic has happened. The Chinese laundry-greenhouse looks beautiful in the flickering light. The pork is perfect. Even the bread doesn’t taste too bad, and we can hear the sound of silence. Everything is more fun than usual, and suddenly, our Good Life seems just a little bit glamorous too.