Wednesday 21 December 2011

Sepia Saturday 106


Does this seem familiar?

Mithras, Persian sun god, bringer of spiritual light into darkness, he is truth, goodness and love.  In 1st Century Rome followed by Emperor, Soldier, Patrician, Artisan, Peasant, Slave for his qualities of discipline, duty, truthfulness and compassion.  His Birthday 25th December.




Saturnalia, Roman Festival 18th December to 25th December - a period of drunkenness and debauchery, in which the spiritual gives way to the carnal


 

Not much change in 2,000 years.

Seasonal Greetings to each and everyone.


Friday 16 December 2011

Sepia Saturday 105

 

Alan's posting this week, brings focuses our attention on Mrs Beeton and the extravagances of Victorian and Edwardian Dishes and Meals.  Mrs Beeton's main contribution was the bringing together the best recipes and household  practises of her day. She formalised them into a schedule of duties and accompanying etiquette for each social layer within the Victorian household.  Her attentions were mainly directed at the aspiring middle classes and provided a blueprint  for them to ape the very rich.  She detailed how each level, from the Mistress and Master of the House down to the lowliest scullery maid, should act and behave in any conceivable circumstance.

Whilst, she was not herself the developer of many of the recipes she brought to her readership, her treatment of them and her functioning of the household as lead her to be considered the originator of the Dinner Party.  For the rich this an almost daily event, and for the aspirant middle classes an event to relish.

The size of meals was almost legendary, and banquets were held with 12 courses and more, but for the main part they were merely sumptuous with a variety of dishes for each course, as the following menu for Queen Victoria's 1896 Christmas Dinner would suggest;


The menu is quite formalised and most follow the same format.
Potages - now refined into a soup or consomme course, and accompanied by Sherry
Poissons - fish course, or courses, with all manner of sea foods and fish. Served with a good white wine.
Entree - the entry to the main meal and would include such as vol-au-vants, Sweetbreads, mutton cutlets etc and accompanied by Champagne or claret
Releves - the main part of the meal - and would include roast joints, Poultry, Meat Pies etc and served with Burgundy.  This would be followed by a course of roast game Field fares, snipe, pheasants, wild duck etc served with a claret.
Entremets - This coursed tended to be divided into three;
Dressed vegetables
Fruit
Savoury such as devilled Sardines or cheese  - all served with an appropriate wine.

At this stage the table would be cleared and the guests provided with fresh glasses and plates for ices, fruit and nuts all accompanied with Madeira.

After this the ladies would leave the gentlemen to their pipes and brandy, and coffee which would be served to the Ladies in the drawing room and the gentlemen at the dinner table.

Contrast this with the poor, or most of the population.  The fare for most country dwellers was boiled pork or bacon, accompanied by vegetables boiled in the same pot. Probably the majority of homes did not have any form of range or oven, things were cooked (generally boiled) in a pot hung over the hearth.  In the major towns, the poor simply did not have cooking facilities and were fed mainly from the cooked meat shops.  This state of affair continued in to the 20th century.

A School Dinner menu in the Ryedale Folk Museum shows;

Penny Dinner - Boiled Pork, Meat Pudding and Vegetables
Farthing Dinner - Soup, Bread and Jam
Free Dinner - Cup of cocoa or Soup made from boiled meat Bones

This is clearly shown in a little History of Lockton, a Village in the North Yorkshire Moors, to which I claim an Ancestral connection.  The first chapter is given over to the account of the village in the pre-WW1 period through the recollection of Mary Ellen Boyes of her visits to her grandparents and family.  She discribes

"... For a typical dinner a piece of bacon was put into a big iron pan covered with water and hung on reckon crooks over the fire.  The bacon was usually very fat as the pigs killed weighed at least thirty stone and many forty or more. Then a Turnip in a net, cabbage and potatoes each in a net, were added. Half an hour before dinner dumplings were added.  First the liquid was served in a basin and called "a few broths", the dumplings and finally a plate of bacon and vegetables. I can't say I enjoyed it, neither did I like boiled sausages.  My uncle had quite a bit of land to shoot over but even pheasants were stewed. "
 What would the villagers have given for the following stop-over snack


for the royal family on its train journey to Balmoral.