One more jubilee post for the time being, folks, for the royalists,
the pudding fans, the word lovers, and the eternally historically curious
amongst you.
The word ‘jubilee’ was originally from the concept of a ‘jubilee
year’, which, as I understand it, is a Jewish concept. The Oxford English indicates that the phrase has been in use in the
English language since the fourteenth century, and explains it thus:
“Jubilee Year”: A year of emancipation and restoration, which
according to the institution in Lev. xxv was to be kept every fifty years, and
to be proclaimed by the blast of trumpets throughout the land; during it the
fields were to be left uncultivated, Hebrew slaves were to be set free, and
lands and houses in the open country or unwalled towns that had been sold were
to revert to their former owners or their heirs.”
And later:
A year instituted by Boniface VIII in 1300 as a year of remission
from the penal consequences of sin, during which plenary indulgence might be
obtained by a pilgrimage to Rome, the visiting of certain churches there, the
giving of alms, fasting three days, and the performance of other pious works.
It was at first appointed to take place every hundred years,
but the period was afterwards shortened to fifty, thirty-three, and twenty-five
years, and now ‘an extraordinary jubilee is granted at any time either to the
whole Church or to particular countries or cities, and not necessarily or even
usually for a whole year’ ( Cath. Dict. 1885).
In time, the concept became expanded to encompass any ‘time of
restitution, remission, or release’, or a ‘season or occasion of joyful
celebration or general rejoicing.’ More specifically, it came to refer to:
The fiftieth anniversary of an event; the celebration of the
completion of fifty years of reign, of activity, or continuance in any
business, occupation, rank or condition. silver jubilee (after silver wedding),
a name for the celebration for the twenty-fifth anniversary; so diamond
jubilee, applied to the celebration of the sixtieth year of the reign of Queen
Victoria.
I don’t know if there is a particular qualifier for a seventieth
anniversary, but given the apparent good health of Queen Elizabeth, and the longevity
of her mother, I hope English wordsmiths are already onto it.
Given that any family or organisation can celebrate their own
jubilees, there is no shortage of ‘jubilee puddings’ in the caveat that there
is no knowledge or promise of any royal connections whatsoever in any of them.
Firstly, a variation on the universally popular theme of baked
apples.
Jubilee Pudding.
Take six well-shaped
apples, remove the cores, and put a piece of cinnamon in each. Placethe apples
in a flat-bottomed basin, and pour a teaspoonful of brandy over each. Cover the
top with a sheet of paper, and set in a pan ofboiling water to steam. When soft
remove the cinnamon, and put a teaspoonful of strawberry jam in its place. Then
dish them up in a pyramid, and pour over them all half a pint of whipped cream,
flavoured with vanilla and sweetened with sugar.
Warwick Examiner and Times (St. Lucia, Qld.) May 16,
1896
And a jelly studded with jewelled fruits.
Jubilee Pudding.
Make a pint of claret
jelly: pour it into a small border mould; whip half a pint of cream in which is
a quarter of an ounce of dissolved gelatine. When it is whipped solid, stir in
one ounce of candied angelica, one ounce of preserved ginger, and one ounce of
preserved apricot – the ginger and angelica cut small. Set on ice; then turn
out. Pile the whipped cream and fruit in the centre, and decorate according to
fancy.
Choice Cookery, (Bedford, MA, 1889) by
Catherine Owen
And a choice of two steamed puddings, in case you live in one of the
cooler parts of the world.
Jubilee Pudding
“641” (Melbourne) asks for
a recipe for jubilee pudding which appeared some considerable time ago in these
columns.
The recipe required may be
one of the following: - (1) Put 2oz. of butter m a basin with quarter pound of
sugar, the juice of half a lemon a little grated rind, a grate of nutmeg, and a
pinch of powdered cinnamon. Work the butter to a cream, add two eggs, and beat
for five minutes Then put in quarter pound of breadcrumbs, 3oz. sultanas, 2oz
currants, 1 oz, crystallised ginger (chopped small), 1 ½ oz. chopped apple, l
oz. of either raspberry or plum jam. Mix all together, put in a buttered mould,
and steam for two hours. Serve with sweet sauce or cream. (2) One egg, two
tablespoonfuls sugar, one and a half cupfuls milk, one tablespoonful butter,
one cupful flour, one teaspoonful baking powder. Flavour with grated lemon rind
or essence of lemon. Steam in a buttered mould for 35 minutes. Serve with sauce
or jam.
The Argus (Melbourne, Vic.) 14 July 1920
Quotation for the Day
Ponder well on this point: the pleasant hours of our life are all
connected by a more or less tangible link, with some memory of the table.
Charles Pierre Monselet (1825-1888)
Steamed pudding one reads like it would work.
ReplyDeleteI do love a good steamed pudding (served with good custard, of course) - and even here in Qld it is getting chilly enough at night to make one .... think I had better hie me to the kitchen.
ReplyDeleteLet us know how it goes if you try it. Sounds good. We're headed into the US South Summer - not good steamed pudding weather.
ReplyDelete