Do you ever
wonder what sort of pots, pans, and other paraphernalia furnished the kitchens
of our ancestors? We can get a bit of an idea from old wills and household
inventories - although these of course only show us what was owned by the
reasonably well-to-do.
I am not
exactly sure what ‘pot-clips’ are, but they appear reasonably regularly in
household inventories and wills in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.
They seem to be paired items, which suggests that my first thought, that they
were something like pot hooks, is not correct. I am confident that one of you
will enlighten me on the true nature of pot-clips (or pott-clips as they are
more commonly spelled.)
The
inventory of the contents of Hunweake, the house of Elizabeth Hutton, widow, in
1565 listed the contents of each room separately. The Kitchinge (I have taken some liberties in transcribing this, to
make it easier to read) contents included:
One great
cawdren [cauldron] with an iron band, three little old cawdrens, five pa’nes,
five brasse potts, a possenett, two iron potts, two fryenge pa’nes, a drepinge
panne, a girdyron and three paire of pott clips, five spits, a payre of
cobyrons, a paire of tonges, aporr and an fyre shule. A flesh axe, a choppinge
knife and a myncinge knife and a gullye ...... garnishe of pewter vessel, a doz
and ditto of pottingers and twoo hand basens, a new basen and ewer of tynne.
In another
inventory and value of the household goods of a tenant in West Chevington,
Northumberland, taken in 1605 we find included:
2 caldrons,
4 potts, 4 pannes, price 46s. 8d. ; 16 peace of putter, fyve candlestickes, and
two salts, price 14s. 4d.; 1 potte and a ketle, price 16s. ; 6 cheastes and
thre coffers, price 16s.; 7 tubes, 6 barrels, 2 skeales, pannes, mealles, and
dishes, price 15s. 8d. ; 2 beddes, 2 chayres, 2 formes, and a borde, price 5s.
6d. ; 2 fyer crokes, a payre of tongs, and a paire of pott clips, price 2s.
As the
recipe for the day, I give you a fine dish to cook in your pot, pipkin,
saucepan, slow cooker, pressure cooker, or perhaps your small cauldron.
To boyle a leg of mutton with
Lemmons.
When your Mutton is halfe boyled,
take it up, cut it in small peeces: put it into a pipkin, and cover it close,
put thereto the best of the broth, as muche as shall cover your mutton, your
Lemmons being sliced verie thin, and quartered, and Currans, put in pepper
grosse beaten, and so let them boyle together, and when they bee well boyled,
season it with a little Vergious, sugar, pepper grosse beaten, and a little
Saunders, so lay it in fine dishes upon soppes. It will make three messe for
the table.
The good Huswives hand-maid, for
Cookerie in her Kitchin (1597)
Quotation for the Day.
If pale
beans bubble for you in a red earthenware pot, you can often decline the
dinners of sumptuous hosts.
Martial's Epigrams
I may be wrong, but in a book called Forgotten Household Crafts, by John Seymour there is a picture of "detachable pot hangers". These were a pair of 'clips' that attached to a ring in the centre and were attached with hooks at the distal ends to a pot's handles to hang from the hook over the fire. Here is a picture (I hope it works)
ReplyDeletehttp://tinyurl.com/6o246h7
Got it, thanks Fay. Things always seem obvious, once they are obvious, dont they? :)
ReplyDeleteHave not found much on these clips, but there were some pottery pot clips that were used on pot lids to secure them I believe.
ReplyDeleteKeith.
http://woodsrunnersdiary.blogspot.com.au/