I
have referred to John
Bickerdyke’s The
Curiosities of Ale & Beer, (1889) in previous posts, but he has much more of interest to
share with you. I give you some selected snippets:
Thoroton, in
his Nottinghamshire gives an account of a shepherd who kept ale to sell in the
Church of Thorpe. He was the sole inhabitant of a village depopulated by inclosure.
Besides the Ales already mentioned, there were Bid-Ales, Bride-Ales, Give-Ales,
Cuckoo-Ales, Help-Ales, Tithe-Ales, Leet-AIes, Lamb-Ales, Midsummer-Ales,
Scot-Ales, and Weddyn-Ales. Some of these are sufficiently explained by their
names. … Bride-Ale, also called
Bride-bush, Bride-wain and Bride-stake, was the custom of the bride selling ale
on the wedding-day, for which she received by way of contribution any sum or
present which her friends chose to give her. In the Christen State of Matrimony (1545) we read: "When they come
home from the church, then beginneth excesse of eatyng and drynking, and as
much is waisted in one daye as were sufficient for the two newe-married folkes
halfe si yeare to lyve upon." Modern wedding breakfasts and the presents
given to the happy pair are, doubtless, descendants of this old custom. In
Norway at the present day, a peasant's wedding is celebrated with much the same
ceremony as the old English Bride-Ale. Ale is handed round to the guests, and
they are each expected to contribute, according to their ability, to form a
purse to assist the bride in commencing housekeeping.
… The old
custom of Cuckoo-Ale appears to have been only of local observance. In
Shropshire the advent of the first cuckoo was celebrated by general feasting
amongst the working classes; as soon as his first note was heard, even if early
in the day, the men would leave their work and spend the rest of the day in
mirth and jollity.
… The
Tithe-Ale was a repast of bread, cheese, and ale, provided by the recipient of
the tithe and enjoyed by the tithe-payers. …
Leet-Ales, in
some parts of England, denoted the dinner given at the Court Leet of a Manor to
the jury and customary tenants. Another somewhat similar custom was known by
the name of Drink-lean, and was a festive day kept by the tenants and vassals
of the Lord of the Manor, or, as some say, a potation of ale provided by the
tenants for the entertainment of the Lord or his steward. The origin of the
term is not known; it probably has not connection with the effect which a lover
of old ale said that the beverage had upon him. “I always find it makes me
lean,” said he. “Lean!” cries his friend in amazement; “why, I always thought
ale made folks fat.” “That may be,” was the reply, “but it makes me lean, for
all that – against a lamp-post.”
… Foot-Ales
seem to have meant not so much feasts as sums of money paid to purchase ale on a man’s
entertaining a new situation. We still talk of a man “paying his footing.”
As the recipe for the day, I
give you a nice beer cake. I know that technically, beer is not ale, although
we often use the terms interchangeably today, so this will have to do!
Beer Spice Cake.
1 cup beer, 1 cup seedless
raisins , 3 cups sifted cake flour, 3 teaspoons baking powder, ¼ teaspoon baking
soda, ½ teaspoon salt, ½ teaspoon
cinnamon, ½ cup shortening, 1 ¼ cups sugar, 2 eggs, separated.
Turn
beer over raisins. (If cold, and carefully poured, it will not foam and will be
easy to measure.) Let stand 15 minutes.
Mix and sift together three times flour, baking powder, baking soda, salt and
raisins. Add cinnamon. Cream shortening, until soft. Add sugar gradually,
beating until light and fluffy after each addition. Add egg yolks. Blend well.
Add flour alternately with beer, a small amount at a time, beating until smooth
after each addition. Fold in stiffly beaten egg whites. Turn into 2 greased
loaf tines (6 x 10 x 2 in.) and bake in a moderate oven (275 degrees F) thirty
minutes or until done.
Beer in the American Home (1937) by Eloise Davison, for the
United Brewers Industrial
Foundation.
All very interesting. My Morris and sword-dancing friends still have occasions called (Sword) Ales. My detail-radar was struck first by the sizes of the loaf pans and then more forcefully by the temperature suggested in the recipe. 275F, really?
ReplyDeleteHI bklynharuspex. I am sometimes (often?) guilty of a rapid or no proof read of my own transcriptions, but you are right - they do sound odd. I will check the original source as soon as I get time and let you know if there are any changes! Keep that radar switched on!
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