Date: Fri 19-Dec-1997
Date: Fri 19-Dec-1997
Publication: Bee
Author: SHANNO
Quick Words:
Oliver-Christmas-Victorian
Full Text:
Just What Were Those Victorians Drinking On Christmas Day???
(with graphics, recipes & 2 dropquotes)
City sophisticates were too hip for Christmas, out of fashion as it was in the
19th Century.
Management of firms like Scrooge and Marley, as well as the more humane,
frequently felt people would fare better in the drafty confines of their
offices that at home toasting the day.
BY JOHN OLIVER
People in Victorian England did not live as long as we do today, didn't surf
the Net, didn't have cell phones or microwave ovens. On the other hand, they
never had to spend a rainy December Saturday in the swirling vortex of the
Danbury Fair Mall with three toy-crazed kids, either. So we may be pretty much
even.
Early Victorians didn't do much Christmas shopping at all -- with or without
kids. As late as 1830, December 25 was not a major London holiday, unless it
happened to fall on Sunday. No wonder Charles Dickens has Cratchit ask for the
day off; even benevolent enployers would have expented staff to show up.
In addition, the "haves'" view that lower orders, or "have nots," spent
Christmas in distilled abandon weighed heavily in real life. Management of
firms like Scrooge and Marley, as well as the more humane, frequently felt
people would fare better in the drafty confines of their offices that at home
toasting the day.
There were, however, joyous celebrations and parties on Christmas Day,
characterized by an abundance (some would argue, an over abundance) of
covivial drinking. It is also true that behavior differed dramatically between
town and country.
City sophisticates were too hip for Christmas, out of fashion as it was in the
19th Century. Their entertaining may have been akin to a high-spirited
cocktail party (without cocktails as yet uninvented, they imbibed the
libations of the time, about which more in a minute).
People in rural England celebrated Christmas more in a way we would recognize:
lots of decorations, lavish dinners, and the like. They were regarded as quite
quaint for this. The warmly glowing scenes in The Pickwick Papers , for
example, were set far from London for the same reason products labeled "Made
in Vermont" sell better: it seems a more natural and appealing place.
Whether city or country, high-born Victorians or the bootless and unhorsed,
all Victorians celebrated Christmas with drinks we would find extraordinary
today. Creating the concoctions with a jumble of happily opinionated
assistants was as enjoyable as the result itself. And Smoking Bishop, Wassail,
Lamb's Wool and Negus, for example, were nothing if not concoctions.
Brown sugar, cinnamon, allspice, nutmeg, mace, lemons, cloves, ginger, Seville
oranges, raisins, crab apples and eggs were just a few of the things that
combined, in various recipes, with ale, port, ruby port, claret (British
English for a wine from Bordeaux), rum, sherry, and hard cider.
There was reason for all the alchemy. We expect modern food and drink to be
consistent. Bud Light, due to no mall effort by its brewer, never, ever
changes. Such was not the case much before the 20th Century, so for Dickens
and his contemporaries, adding sugar and spices typically improved the taste
of the beer, wine or spirits.
(There is a note of this today when we describe fine cognacs as V.S.O.P.: very
special, old, pale. "Pale" meant a clear liquid absent the additives used to
mask an inferior product.)
English middle- and upper-class entertaining in the early years of the 19th
Century was characterized by a stunning enormity of food and drink. The
Christmas Dickens brought so vividly to life portrayed this to all of England,
along with a heartfelt appreciation for dancing, games, laughter, kindness,
generosity to the poor, the warm company of those we love and the comfort one
takes from friendship.
Doesn't sound like a wholly bad Christmas, does it? How `bout a little Negus?
Readers thirsting for more are recommended to Edward Hewett and W.F. Axton's
Convivial Dickens (Ohio University Press, Athens, Ohio, 1983). This book, the
basis of the foregoing article, is not the most charming work of scholarship
ever, but it's close.
Merry Christmas, Newtown!
John Oliver, a resident of Newtown, continues to search for the perfect
Christmas shopping experience.
WASSAIL
3 pts brown ale (or 2 pts pale ale and 1 pt stout)
« lb white sugar
1 tsp mixed spices (cinnamon or allspice, nutmeg, and mace)
6 cloves
7 roasted crabs (or sour apples)
1 pt hard cider
3 lemon slices
Put the beer, cider, sugar and cloves into a large enamelled pan and stir at
the stove until the sugar dissolves and the mixture is quite hot. Have the
roasted apples (35 minutes at 400§) ready, laid in the bottom of the serving
bowl and dusted with the spices. Pour in the hot mixture, float the lemon
rings, and decorate the bowl with holly sprigs. Serve.
(Note: The roasted cranberries may be peeled, cored and mashed before being
added to the bowl.)
BROWN BETTY substitues toast (on which the spices are put) for the apples, and
brown sugar for white. In addition, brandy at the ratio of one part to four of
ale is required, together with a quartered lemon.
JESUS COLEGE,
OXFORD, WASSAIL
(Served on the feast of St. David)
« lb brown sugar
6 pts dark beer
4 wine glasses sherry
Grated nutmeg
Grated ginger
Lemon slices
Dissolve sugar in a pint of heated beer and add grated nutmeg and ginger to
taste. Then add sherry and remaining beer. Heat but do not boil. Pour out to
serve in an earthenware pitcher or a Wassail bowl. Float lemon slices.
A variant of Wassail unglamorously called Cold Swig was made from a half pound
of sugar, six pints of beer, four wineglasses of Sherry, and some nutmeg and
ginger. After that had stood for three hours, two or three slices of toast and
lemon were added. The mixture was bottled and then drunk a few days later,
when it was reputed to effervesce.
Parting Cups, variously compounded of mild ale or light beer, nutmeg, sugar,
and either Sherry or lemons, were a further variant, sometimes thinned with a
bottle of soda water, and employed as a send-off to departing family or
friends.
LAMB'S WOOL I
1 qt dark beer or old ale
4 oz brown sugar
1-inch stick cinnamon
6 cloves
2 eggs
Grated ginger to taste
Heat the beer, sugar and spices together. Beat eggs well in a basin. When the
sugar has dissolved and the beer is hot, not boiling, pour it into an
earthenware jug, and from the jug rapidly into the basin of eggs. As quickly
as possible pour back and forth until a thick froth is raised. Then serve in
small rummers (drinking cups).
LAMB'S WOOL II
« doz roasted tart apples
4 oz brown sugar
1 qt strong ale or dark beer
Grated nutmeg
Grated ginger
Pulp the roasted apples and mix with sugar, spices, and hot beer until the
ingredients are thoroughly melded and the whole is quite hot, but not boiling.
Serve from an earthenware pitcher or Wassail bowl, as above.
A Note on Lamb's Wool. Lamb's Wool was sometimes called Brasenose Ale, after
the college at Oxford where it was a postprnadial drink on Shrove Tuesday.
The more daring may wish to make a spectacle out of the mixing of Lamb's Wool
by pouring the jugs back and forth at some distance, thereby gaining the
effect of a "Yard of Flannel."
BISHOP AND ITS
CLERICAL BROTHERS
2 or 3 Seville or other tart oranges (such as tangeloes), each studded with a
dozen cloves or so
Grated nutmeg
« lb sugar
1 lemon
3 bottles Ruby Port
Roast oranges in a 400§ oven (or on the hearth) until brown. Grate only the
yellow of the lemon rind. Quarter the roasted oranges and place in a large
saucepan with sugar, juice of a lemon, and grated rind. Add wine and heat to
simmer until the ingredients are well blended, stirring the while. Serve hot
in warm mugs sprinkled with freshly ground nutmeg.
The hierarchy of Bishop's clerical colleagues was determined by the color of
the wine, thus: Pope=Burgundy; Cardinal=Champagne or Rhine wine;
Archbishop=claret (or less frequently Sherry or Marsala); Bishop=Ruby Port;
Protestant Bishop=claret and a little rum, with lemons; Churchwarden=Grand
Rousillon (with tea or ale, Champagne, ginger and cherry brandy with a dash of
Port); Chorister=white wine with beaten eggs; and Beadle=raisin and ginger
wines.
Some authorities advocate cloved lemons instead of oranges. Others recommend
starting with whisked eggs into which the other ingredients are mixed, so
bringing Bishop closer to Lamb's Wool.
One-upsmen will seek out a cone of loaf sugar or, failing that, sugar cubes
for grating the lemon rind, thus adding both ingredients at once as it was
done in Dickens' day.
