Two local lads, from Lisheen down the road, have stolen the hearts of everyone in West Cork. Everyone in Ireland, actually, and beyond.
Gary and Paul rode the open-topped bus into Skibbereen on Monday night and then spoke from the stage at Fairfield
Gary and Paul O’Donovan won a silver medal in Rio in their rowing pairs class. They row for the Skibbereen Rowing Club, a local club that punches way above its weight in national and international competitions. The coach credited with that is the brilliant, but mono-syllabic, Dominic Casey. Taking Gary and Paul under his wing, he turned them into the hard-working athletes they are.
In the window on the left, the boys’ mother, Trish O’Donovan, and their grandmother (Nana), Mary Doab
Their parents’ devotion was sterling. Eoghan Harris’s Independent interview with their Mother, Trish, is perhaps one of the most revealing pieces of journalism about the O’Donovan Brothers phenomenon and what it takes to support an Olympian.
Waiting for the Open-Topped Bus
Gary and Paul are also dream interviewees – every sentence is a sound bite, delivered in pure West Cork accents, with artless but articulate insouciance. Their interviews are now the stuff of legend – but if you haven’t already seen them, take a look at this one done before the final race. What shines through, and makes them so endearing, is that they take their training, but not themselves, seriously.
Above: Left, Stella and Hugh sporting their ‘occasion wear’; Right, this young man let me take his photo in his Shteak and Spuds shirt. Below: Many of the Skibbereen merchants had decorated their windows
The classic quotes have already been immortalised and the T-shirts have been selling like hot cakes in Skibbereen. The night of their homecoming it seemed like the whole of West Cork turned up to welcome them, including us! It was great fun to be there, in the streets, waiting for the open-topped bus, and then to see them on the stage, with Dominic Casey, so obviously having the time of their lives.
We, thousands of us, re-lived their big moment on an enormous screen in the Skibbereen Fairfield
Someone who came in for special praise in one of their interviews was the boys’ grandmother – their Nana (the first of the interviews on this page). Coming in cold and hungry from rowing, they gratefully wolfed down her home-made soup and ‘brown cake.’ Here in West Cork when we talk about a ‘cake of bread’ – what we mean is that solid round mass of white or brown home-made soda bread that is one of the staples of our diets, and that tourists have come to love.
It seemed like the whole of West Cork turned out to greet them
In honour of Gary and Paul and their Nana, and using only locally grown and organic vegetables purchased at Levis’s of Ballydehob Wednesday Farmers’ Market, here is my recipe for Nana’s Soup. It’s vegetarian and gluten-free – and totally delicious! Serve with a wedge of brown bread if gluten is OK for you. (I’ve become more sensitised to gluten issues recently as a dear little niece has been diagnosed with coeliac disease.)
Local growers sell their fresh vegetables at Levis’s pub in Ballydehob on Wednesday mornings
NANA’S SOUP: THE RECIPE
Vegetables: I used kabocha squash, onions, carrots, parsnips, potatoes and green beans, but you can use any robust vegetables that are in season.
Other ingredients: 1 can organic tomatoes, tapioca starch, vegetable stock (I used Marigold Swiss Veg Bouillon, but Knorr Veg Stock Pot is also gluten-free)), fresh or dried herbs.
Cut the squash in half, scoop out the seeds and roast in a hot oven for about 20 minutes. Leave to cool. Once cool, scoop out the flesh of the squash and chop roughly.
Peel and roughly chop the onions, potatoes, carrots and parsnips. Top and tail the green beans and cut in half or thirds. Chop the herbs (I used parsley sage, oregano and fennel from my garden, but any combination that suits you is fine).
Sweat the onions over medium heat in butter or olive oil until translucent. Over the onions, scatter about 2tbs of tapioca starch (this make it gluten-free, but if gluten is not a problem, just use flour) and stir until well mixed and starting to thicken. Pour in a can of organic tomatoes, the herbs, and a cup or two of vegetable stock. Stir until well mixed, then add all the vegetables. Bring to a boil, then turn down and simmer for at least an hour, preferably two or even three.
After a bowl of this, you too can Pull Like a Dog!
Those lad are class, as they say around here! And that soup looks delicious… its the season for soup now, isnt it? Wont have the bread though, much as I love it. I dont have coeliac, but bread does not agree with me.
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That sounds tragic, Ali – to love bread and have to avoid it. 😐
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Yes! Sigh! But sometimes I don’t and can get away with it! 😁
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Congratulations to the two Irish boys . Now that I have the recipe for the vegie soup what about the same for the Irish bread ?. Thanks for the blog . We are off to the Far East on the 14 th ie. to Nova Scotia , PEI , and the Ottawa valley and back to Victoria Oct. 9 th. Frank
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Hi Frank! Nice to ‘see’ you. Good idea – I will include the recipe in a future post. X
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Great post…. sorry to miss it. I really fancy one of those tee shirts!
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Want me to get one for you? I think they’re still for sale in the credit union.
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#pulllikeadog
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I think you have it just right when you say that they take their rowing seriously but not themselves – what a breath of fresh air they are amongst the Olympians and great ambassadors for Ireland!
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Yes – no hint of privilege about them at all.
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We watched them on The Late Late and were wowed all over again. Those young men are a credit to their family and their parish. Great to see them getting such a warm and rousing welcome home. Wish we’d been there!
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It was a wonderful occasion. Nothing but feel good.
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