Gingerbread is a very ancient treat, enjoyed in the distant
past by the rich and powerful all year round, but indulged in by ordinary folk
only on special occasions. It could be argued that gingerbread is seasonal at
any time of the year, but there is something about the combination of dark
colours and warm spices that suggest the winter months. Once upon a time these
warm spices (including the sugar) were exotic imported (and therefore
expensive) ingredients, considered suitable and affordable for special feast
days and fairs. I assume that this combination of dark, sweet warmth and relative
expense has something to do with the particular popularity of gingerbread at autumnal
and wintry northern hemisphere celebrations – which in Britain includes Halloween
(this week’s inspiration), Guy Fawkes’ Night (November 5th), and
Christmas.
As you will know, if you are a regular reader, I have a
particular fondness for gingerbread, and from time to time try to add something
different to the archive Through the Ageswith Gingerbread. Having said that, there are many gingerbread recipes scattered
through the blog which I have not gotten around to adding to that special page,
but I will, folks, I will.
English travellers to The Continent in times past
occasionally commented on the difference between English gingerbread and the
European version – one writer going so far as to say that French gingerbread
was a ‘deceit’, as it contained no ginger. There is no deceit at all - French ‘gingerbread’
does not pretend to be gingery, it is pain
d’épices – literally, ‘spice bread’. There does seem to be a particularly British
pride in the ability to tolerate very hot spicy dishes, I assume as a rather
tortuous sideline to the pride in The Empire and all she provided. A curry was
not a curry to many a returnee from his outpost in India unless it was
blisteringly, eye-wateringly hot, and a man not a man who could not eat it with
pale dry calm.
This fascination with spicy-hot foods extends to
gingerbread. In the north of England (Lancashire?) there are mentions of a form
of ‘hot gingerbread, having in it a mixture of ginger and Cayenne, causing the
most ridiculous contortions of feature in the unfortunate being who partakes of
it.’ There was also something called ‘lolly-banger’ (in Somerset? There is much
research still to do on this), which is described as a very thick, very hot
gingerbread, enriched by raisins.
I give you
two recipes for gingerbread today; a benign-sounding ‘lemon’ gingerbread, which
contains cayenne pepper, and ‘Indian’ gingerbread (from a Scottish cookery
book) which does not.
Lemon Gingerbread.
Lemon Gingerbread.
Grate the
rinds of two or three lemons, and ad the juice to a glass of brandy: then mix
the grated lemon in a pound of flour, make a hole in the flour, pour in half a
pound of treacle, half a pound of butter melted, the lemon-juice and brandy,
and mix all up together with half an ounce of ground ginger and a quarter of an
ounce of cayenne pepper.
A New System of Domestic Cookery, by Mrs
Rundell (1808)
Indian
Gingerbread.
Take twelve
ounces of pounded loaf sugar, a quarter of a pound of fresh butter, one pound
of dried flour, two ounces of pounded ginger, and of cloves and cinnamon a
quarter of an ounce each. Mix the ginger and spice with the flour; put the
sugar and a small tea-cupful of water into a sauce-pan; when it is dissolved,
add the butter, and as soon as it is melted, mix it with the flour and other
things; work it up, and form the paste into cakes or nuts, and bake them upon
tins.
The Practice of Cookery adapted to the
business of everyday life, by Mrs Dalgairns (1830)
Quotation for the Day.
Marilyn Wann
I love your suggestion as to why the British love hot spices!
ReplyDeleteMy mothers parkin was always eaten before it could "rest" for a couple of weeks to make it even moister and stickier, she used to hide it in the airing cupboard but yeah we always found it, I would love to be able to buy it in the shops. I wonder if you ever saw Open All Hours the UK series with the Jamaican Ginger cake they were flogging, because it (was out of date) had bedroom properties Hah what a laugh, been reading your blog for years, I am intrigued by the wartime ration recipes for some reason. Thanks for your wealth of knowledge. Pixal
ReplyDeletehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wvreolohmgY ... for reference to my comment but keep it to yourself ey? lol
ReplyDeleteHi Pixal. I didnt see the program you mentioned. Parkin is not difficult to make - there is a recipe in the blog somewhere - you could try it!
ReplyDeleteHi LIz. There is certainly a fascination with hot-savoury dishes in Britain, but it was interesting to find it extending to cake!
ReplyDelete