I cut up a
beautiful sweet winter pineapple the other day – it cost me the princely sum of
two dollars from the farmers’ market. The bargain was some compensation for the
current exorbitant price of bananas, which is due to the devastation wreaked by
the dreadful floods and cyclones we have had this year in Queensland.
Early
references to the pine-apple can occasionally be confusing, as the same name
refers to what we would now call the pine-nut. This is because historically the
word ‘apple’ has often been used as a generic word for ‘fruit’, which is also
loosely interpreted by non-botanists to include some seeds, vegetables, herbs
etc. If the English language had chosen to adapt the name ‘ananas’, this
particular culinary history topic would be a little easier to unravel.
One of the earliest
descriptions of the pineapple in English occurs in A new account of East-India and
Persia (1698) by
John Fryer (1698)
Ananas, or Pine-Apple, the most admired for
Taste.
The fruit
the English call a Pine-apple (the Moors, Ananas) because of the
resemblance, cuts within as firm as a Pippin; Seedy, if not fully ripe: the
Taste inclinable to Tartness, though most excellently qualified by a dulcid
Sapor that imposes upon the Imagination and Gustative Faculty a Fancy that it
relishes of any Fruit a Man likes, and some will swear it: It grows on a thick
Stalk like an Artichoke, emitting a Tuft of Leafs upon the Crown ; the Leafs
a-kin to a Cardms Afininus ( as has been partly related already); the
Juice will corrode any Iron or Knife, like Limon.
The fruit is
a type of bromeliad, and it is of course a product of the New World, hence
unknown in Europe until into the sixteenth century, and little known until into
the seventeenth century. They were also extraordinarily expensive until
relatively recent times in Britain and Europe, as they require rather more
tropical weather than offered by those parts of the world. Horace Walpole, Earl of Orford mentions in a
letter in 1746 having ‘given a guinea for two pine-apples’, which highlights my
bargain of 2011 somewhat.
In spite of
their expense, English cookery books of the eighteenth century did occasionally
feature recipes for pineapples. I give you a method of preserving this rare and
exotic fruit whole, from The Lady’s
Assistant for Regulating and Supplying the Table, by Charlotte Mason (1787)
Green Pine-apple preserved.
Let it lie
in salt and water six days; put it into a saucepan, with some vine-leaves top and
bottom, fill up the pan with the salt and water, set it over a flow fire till
it becomes green, then put it into a thin cool syrup in a jar, so that it may
be covered ; the next day boil the syrup, pour it carefully on, lest the top of
the apple should break ; let it stand two months, (observe if the syrup changes
in that time, boil it up again two or three times, letting it be cool before it
is put to the apple) then boil a rich syrup, with two or three pounds of sugar,
according to the size of the apple; boil and scum it, with a little ginger, the
outside scraped ; when almost cold, put it to the apple well drained; tie it
close down.
Quotation for the Day.
A table, a chair, a bowl of fruit and a violin; what else does a man
need to be happy?
Albert
Einstein.
I too have gone from buying bananas to pineapples from the fantastic farmers markets we have up on the Sunshine Coast. If you're ever up in this area I'd love to shout a coffee!
ReplyDeleteThere's an interesting reference to pineapple cultivation in Jane Austen's Northanger Abbey, where the General "laments" that his "pinery" yielded only one hundred in the year past. Presumably, this was cultivation under glass, since the mention occurs quite close to his enquiries after her friend's management of his "succession houses". Don't hit me if my quotations aren't exact -- I'm doing this from memory and it's been over a year since I read Northanger Abbey.
ReplyDeletePete - I love Jane Austen, but had no recollection of this mention. I am off to re-read Northanger Abbey right now!
ReplyDeleteMaureen - I am going to take you up on that offer one day. I come up to Caloundra fairly often, where are you? Email me at theoldfoodie@fastmail.fm.
ReplyDeleteIt would be nice to meet face to face.
Janet