Last week, in my story featuring quail, I included a
recipe from Simpson's Cookery, Improved
and Modernised by John Simpson (Cook), published in London in 1834. The dish was for Quails au Gratin, and the final instruction was to serve them with Gipsey Sauce. I intended to include the
recipe for this sauce in the post, but it turned out, as you will see, to be
rather long and involved. I also decided that the concept is worthy of a little
further exploration.
First, the name of the sauce. Gipsey is quite clearly the author’s alternative spelling of gipsy or gypsy – a derogatory and now politically incorrect term for one of
the Romani people. Dishes named for ‘gypsies’ were quite common in the
nineteenth century, and they often incorporated implications of stolen game or
eggs or suchlike, or foraged ingredients, or occasionally simple dishes cooked
in one pan over a fire. An example that springs to mind is Gypsy Toast as one of the many alternative names for or French Toast
or pain perdu.
John Simpson also refers to his sauce as sauce à la Bohémienne, and he also suggests
it for partridges, turkey, and neck of veal. Other cookery books of the time
refer to a style of cooking or a sauce à
la Zingara. The word zingara (or zingano) is derived from the Italian name
for a ‘gypsy,’ and one or other form of this word (cinganes, singari etc) has been attested in English since the
sixteenth century.
So, without further ado, here is Gipsey Sauce, à la John Simpson.
No. 71- Gipsey Sauce.
Sweat
two ounces of truffles, chopped very fine, in a glass of Madeira or sherry,
with half a bay-leaf and a little garlick; fill up with brown Italian sauce
(No. 68). When it has sufficiently boiled, take out the garlick and bay-leaf,
skim and pass it through the cullender spoon.
No. 68. Brown Italian Sauce.
Chop
an eschalot, pass it in a stewpan with a spoonful of oil or a little butter, a
clove, a blade of mace, a few pepper-corns, a little ham, and a small piece of
bayleaf; when fried a little, add two table-spoonfuls of mushrooms chopped very
fine, which pass also a few minutes: add two ragout spoonfuls of Spanish sauce (No.
63) and one of brown consomme (No. 5). Stir the whole over the fire till it
boils; draw it to the corner and let it simmer fifteen or twenty minutes; skim
it and strain through a cullender spoon.
No. 63. Spanish or Brown Sauce.
Add
some brown consomme (No. 5), boiling, to some brown roux (No. 42) in a stewpan;
do not mix them over the fire; let them be well mixed. Put it on a brisk fire,
and add brown consomme till your sauce is of the consistency of melted butter:
stir without intermission; let it boil; thin it sufficiently with consomme for
all the scum and fat to rise; put it on the corner of the stove to clarify,
with a few mushroom trimmings, truffles if you have them, a seasoned faggot
(No. 16), a few green onions and pepper-corns, a blade of mace, a little
allspice, and a piece of ham. When thoroughly cleared and skimmed, strain it
through a tammy into a basin, stirring occasionally till cold. This is the
basis of the greater part of the brown sauces.
No. 5. Blond de Veau, or Veal Gravy, or Brown
Stock.
Lay
slices of York ham on the bottom of a thick stewpan, buttered, on these some
pieces of veal—the chump may be used: add enough stock to moisten the meat
half-way up, and let it sweat over a brisk fire. Attend closely lest it burn,
and when the moisture is reduced, pierce the meat to let all the gravy run from
it; reduce the liquor to a glaze, and let it stew till brown. Put your pan on
red-hot ashes, to prevent its burning; stir without ceasing, to colour your glaze
uniformly throughout; turning your meat from time to time, that it may not
stick to the pan. Moisten with hot broth when your glaze is sufficiently
coloured; it will burn if it is sticking to the stewpan when placed on the
fire. Season with mushrooms, parsley, and green onions. An hour and a half's
boiling will suffice. Take off the fat, as in the preceding, and strain the
gravy through a silk sieve.
No. 42. Brown Roux, or Thickening.
As
above, observing that you use six table-spoonfuls of flour, as it must not be
so thick. Make this on a rather stronger fire, and let it take a nut brown
colour very gradually: be careful that it does not burn, for the slightest,
catch would cause it to be speckled with dark spots, and embitter your sauces.
No. 41. White Roux, or Thickening.
Clarify
four ounces of butter, with which mix about eight table-spoonfuls of flour in a
stewpan, on a slow fire; stir it well with a wooden spoon till perfectly
smooth. Be particularly careful that it is not deeper coloured than cream.
Place it over a dead fire a quarter of an hour, stirring occasionally; you may
use it directly if wanted, or it will keep, for which purpose put it in a pot.
The above, when mixed with about five pints of stock, will be of the
consistence of cream.
No. 16. Faggot.
Is
a bunch of parsley (the size varies of course), a bayleaf, and a sprig of
thyme, tied up closely. When any thing beyond this is required, it is specified
in the article.
Are you exhausted yet?
5 comments:
Eating is really one of my hobby i mean part of my life. I love going to a place and at the same time taste their delicious and most wanted food.I want to taste something that is new to my palate.
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Somehow I fail to see how such a complicated sauce (with so many steps and such ingredients) would be cooked by travelers over a fire...
Sandra
Love this infinite recursion of sauciness.
When I was a child, my parents belonged to a cookbook book club. One of the titles they purchased was Larousse Gastronomique. It used to drive my mother crazy, trying to cook anything from it because it was arranged much like this recipe for Gypsy Sauce, one recipe nested within another, within another, ad nauseum.
I still have the book, but I've never tried to use it!
This particular recipe would not have been cooked over a fire.It is an example of the use of the word 'gypsy' for recipes which used foraged ingredients (such as mushrooms/truffles). The name "gyspsy" was often also used for very simple dishes which could be cooked over a fire - such as the Gypsy Toast which I mentioned in the post. I was was attemptingto show that there is no single specific style or ingredient used in dishes called Gypsy something-or-other.
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