Today’s story needs no commentary from me – it is
entire and interesting in itself, even to the extent of including several
recipes. Whether or not you fish, hunt, or for other reasons camp in the great
outdoors, here is how to do it in nineteenth-century style, courtesy of Instructions to
Young Sportsmen: In All that Relates to Guns and Shooting, by Lt. Col. Peter Hawker (London, 1830) is as much
advice (for the time being) as you would want to receive in one
GENERAL ADVICE FOR THE HEALTH AND
COMFORT
OF A YOUNG SPORTSMAN.
The last part of the
work that it would afford me any pleasure to dilate on
is that of cookery. For it is an old, though a just,
observation, that we should eat to live; not
live to eat. But when, by adding a short paragraph or two, I can,
perhaps, put some of our young sportsmen, or young
"foragers," up to what, in the language of the
present day, is called a "wrinkle," I may possibly be the means of
saving them from unnecessarily hard fare, when quartered in a small
public house, on some shooting or fishing excursion. As many of the
little publicans live chiefly on fat pork and tea; or, if on the coast,
red herrings; the experienced traveller well knows that, when in a retired
place of this sort, where, from the very circumstance of the misery
attending it, there are the fewer sportsmen, and, consequently, there
is to be had the best diversion, we have often to depend a
little on our wits for procuring the necessaries of life. If even a nobleman
(who is, of course, by common people, thought in the greatest extreme
better than a gentleman without a title) were to enter an alehouse,
the most that could be procured for him would be mutton or beef, both
perhaps as tough, and with as little fat, as the boots or gaiters on
his legs. A chop or steak is provided. If he does not eat it, he may
starve: if he does, his pleasure for the next day is possibly destroyed by his
unpleasant sufferings from indigestion. He gets some sour beer, which gives him
the heart-bum, and probably calls for brandy, or gin; the one
execrably bad and unwholesome; the other of the worst quality, and, of course, mixed with water,
by which adulteration is derived the greatest part of the publican's profit.
The spirit merchants make it, what they call above proof, in order to allow
for its being diluted, the
doing which, so far from dishonesty, is now the common practice, not only with
many respectable innkeepers, but by retail merchants themselves.
Our young sportsman, at last, retires to a miserable
chamber and a worse bed; where, for want of ordering
it to be properly aired, he gets the rheumatism; and, from
the draughts of air that penetrate the room, he is attacked with the
tooth-ache. He rises to a breakfast of bad tea, without
milk; and then starts for his day's sport, so (to use a
fashionable term) "bedevilled" that he cannot "touch a
feather:" and, in the evening, returns to his second
edition of misery.
On the other hand, an old campaigner would, under such
circumstances, do tolerably well, and have his complete revenge on
the fish or fowl of the place.
His plan,
knowing the improbability of getting any thing to eat, would
be to provide himself with a hand-basket at the last country town
which he had to pass through, before he reached his
exile; and there stock it with whatever good things presented
themselves. He, then arrives at the
pothouse, which the distance, or the badness of the roads, might oblige
him to do the previous day. His first order is for his
sheets and bedding to be put before a good fire. If he arrives
too late at night for this, let him, rather than lie between sheets which are
not properly aired, sleep with only the blankets. He then, supposing he would
not be at the trouble of carrying meat, sends for his beef or mutton. Having secured
this for the next day's dinner, he takes out of his basket something
ready dressed, or some eggs, or a string of sausages, or a few kidneys; or a
fowl to broil, a cake or two of portable soup, or a little mock turtle,
ready to warm; or, in short, any other
things that the town may have afforded; and with this, he makes
up his dinner on the day of his arrival. If the beer is sour, and he
does not choose to be troubled with carrying bottles of other
beverage, he is provided with a
Little carbonate of soda, which
will correct the acid; a little nutmeg or powdered ginger, to take
off the unpleasant taste; and, with a spoonful of brown
sugar and a toast, he will make tolerably
palatable that, which, before, was scarcely good
enough to quench the thirst.
He will
know better than to call for brandy or gin, but will order rum, knowing that that is
a spirit* which would soon be spoiled by any tricks or adulteration. He will
have in his basket some lemons, or a bottle of lemon
acid, and make a bowl of punch, recollecting the proportions of
One sour,
Two sweet;
Four strong,
Four strong,
And eight weak.
* If a
sportsman likes to take a flask of spirit, as a guard against cold, a
stomach-ache, &c, he will, I think, find nothing equal to the
real Highland Scotch, or Irish, whisky. Or,
if he cannot get this, a little extrait d’absinthe Suisse; from
the celebrated Mr. Johnson, No. 2, Colonnade, Pall-mall; or Mr. Sargenson, at
No. 5, who is one of the best and cheapest spirit
merchants in London.
This is
quite the focus for good punch, which any shallow-headed boy may remember, by
learning it as a bad rhyme.
It may be
necessary to observe, that, by first pounding the sugar
fine, you can of course measure it to a nicety, by means of a
wineglass, as well as the lemon juice, and the other liquids.
Also, that half the acid of Seville orange juice is better
than all of lemon juice; and further,, in making punch, the spirit
should be used as the finishing ingredient; though put in another
jug; AND THE SHERBERT POURED UPON IT.
But
as to the improvements of pink champain, hot jellies, arrack, limes,
&c., it would be out of place to talk of such luxuries here,
though of course, after professing to give the focus for good punch, it becomes a necessary caution against error, to except that which
is composed with all the dainties of an alderman; who, by the way, is
welcome to my share of them; as well as to that of the gout
after them. Here we have spoken of hot punch.
Now for cold; which, being
merely intended as a cool beverage, requires to be much weaker.
For this, I cannot do better than copy a
receipt that was given me, some years ago, when quartered at Glasgow,
where cold punch was universally drank; and where its excellence was
only to be equalled by the hospitality of the inhabitants. It is
"A wine glass nearly full
of best refined lump sugar pounded.
Twelve ditto of cold spring water.
A lime, and half a lemon [or, if no lime, a whole
lemon, which
might yield about half a wine glass full of juice]
Two wine glasses brimfull
of old Jamaica rum.
Let the sugar be well melted, and the lemons
thoroughly amalgamated with it, and the water, before you add the spirit."
Or, to be
much more brief, I will say, for cold punch,
One sour,
Two sweet;
Four strong,
Four strong,
Twenty weak;
As here
we have only to repeat the old rhyme, and change the eight
into a twenty. If I could make it shorter, and more simple, I would.
For those worthies, who think it a good
joke to metamorphose a man into what he would not
like to be called, by making him drunk, this beverage, if introduced
by way of a sequel to wine, is one of the most certain to answer
their purpose: because it is so cooling, and grateful to the thirst, that the
more he drinks the more he requires of it, instead of beginning to find
it unpleasant, like wine, hot punch,
or other more potent liquors. I name this, not as a lesson to the wag, but as a caution to the unwary.
… The old
sportsman then retires to his well-aired bed, where he is provided with the
best of counterpanes, a good box- or gunning-coat, or a cloak; and, after
passing a good night, he rises to breakfast. If he has brought no tea with him,
he makes palatable that of the place, by beating up the yolk of an egg (first
with a little cold water to prevent its curdling) as a good substitute for milk
or cream, a little powdered ginger, and a teaspoonful of rum. He then,
previously to taking the field, desires a man to prepare some greaves, which he
might carry for his dogs, or get, for them, some meat; and deputes a person to
the cooking of that intended for himself; which, if bad in quality, as will
most likely be the case, there is but one good and easy way of dressing. This I
shall now translate from my French recipe: viz.—Let
your servant take
Three
pounds of meat, a large carrot, two onions, and two turnips. [The Frenchman
adds also a cabbage: here John Bull may please himself.] Put them into two
quarts of water, to simmer away till reduced to three pints. Let him season the
soup to the taste, with pepper, salt, herbs, &c. &c. He must then cut
off square about a pound of the fattest part of the meat, and put it aside,
letting the rest boil completely to pieces. After he has well skimmed off the
fat, and strained the soup, let him put it by till wanted.
On your
return, while seeing your dogs fed, which every sportsman ought to do,
Let the
soup be put on the fire for twenty minutes, with some fresh vegetables (if you
like to have them), and, for the last ten minutes, boil again the square piece
of meat which was reserved. Another necessary part of the recipe also should be
prescribed, lest the dish should fall into disrepute. To prevent the deputy
cook from helping himself, and filling it up with water, let him have a
partnership in the concern; and when he has occasion to quit the room, he
should either lock the door, or leave one of your relay dogs for a sentry.
You will
then have a good wholesome gravy soup to begin with; and, afterwards, some
tender meat, which if
Eat with mustard, a little raw parsley chopped fine, and a few
anchovies,
you will,
it is presumed, find an excellent dish. A pot of anchovies might easily be
carried in a portmanteau, being, of all the luxuries from an oil shop, one of
the most portable and the most useful. But nothing is worse than a mock
anchovy, which is merely a salted bleak, or other inferior small fish,
flavoured with a little anchovy liquor. Within these few years, however, the
supply has been so good, that you will generally be served with the real
Gorgona fish at any respectable oil shop. But Mr. Burgess has now, I believe,
the largest and choicest importation. Signor Bassano, who was also famous for
anchovies, has now set up again at No. 27, Jermyn-street.
Be
careful to keep anchovies in a small stone
jar; as an earthen one might break with them, and spoil your clothes.
Let me
now add the simple receipt for as wholesome a mess as any one who can
"rough it" would wish for—the dinner, of all others, for an
invalid—and an alternative against starvation, where there is not even a piece
of meat to be got.
Have a fowl skinned and quartered;
Put it over the fire in a quart of cold water;
Boil it full two hours:
Then add two ounces (or a handful) of pearl barley;
Three blades of mace; about two dozen peppercorns; and
Salt to your taste;
Then let all boil together for one more hour:
And it
may be eat immediately; or put by, to warm again whenever you want it.
The convenience of this camp cooking is, that it will serve for
any kind of fowl. For instance, if you have an old barn door hen; old game that
is shot all to pieces; two or three couple of gulls; coots; or even curlews,—by
consigning them in this manner, to constant boiling and steam, you make those
birds eatable and digestible, which, in roasting, or common cooking, would
prove offensive in taste, and hard in substance.
N. B. The
pearl barley (or rice, by the way, if
you prefer it) does well with all poultry, and birds of white flesh. But with
coarse birds (here we cease to have a dish for invalids), such as curlews, herons, gulls, or coots, it becomes
necessary to omit the pearl barley; because you there require onion; fish
sauce; lemon, and even a glass of madeira, if you can get it; similar to
dressing a turtle, or making giblet soup. This you would, of course, make
stronger, and boil, perhaps, an hour more than chicken soup. All such messes
may be eat with anchovy, curry powder, or what you may fancy, to give them an
additional goût.
An old
sportsman, having thus far subsisted tolerably well, may, afterwards, with the
help of his gun or fishing-rod, be enabled to fare decently, and enjoy good
sport; while some poor helpless exotic would have spurned the very soil of the
place; left it in disgust, before he had killed a bird or a fish; and, as
likely as not, be laid up and fleeced at the next inn, and there saddled with
some country apothecary.
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Glamping!
sherbeRt?
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