Wednesday, 11 September 2013
The future for the Museum of Kitchenalia
Dear
Friends. Apologies for the lack of recent posts or activity relating to
the Museum of Kitchenalia. I have also received many requests for talks
and queries relating to objects. The Museum is currently temporarily
disbanded as I am on Maternity leave. We are also in the process of a
relocation plan and looking to hopefully display some of the items
within new business premises in the next two years within the South West
region. We hope to be up and active again soon and hope that you will
continue to support us and your interest in kitchenalia along the way.
Thank you.
Monday, 11 March 2013
Museum of Kitchenalia featured in Wiltshire Life Magazine
The April edition of Wiltshire Life Magazine includes a fantastic feature by Fiona Scott, on the Museum of Kitchenalia. Go and buy your copy from all good retailers and in the meantime read an extract here.
Friday, 8 February 2013
Shrove Tuesday!
Shrove Tuesday!
Next Tuesday 12th
is Shrove Tuesday, once also called Mischief Day and the last day
before Lent, when any rich luxury foods were used up in the house
like; eggs, milk, meat and butter, prior to fasting for forty days.
In Toni Arthur's
iconic early 1980's book All the Year Round, http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/offer-listing/0140313206/ref=dp_olp_0?ie=UTF8&condition=all
she
talks about all the different regional traditional dishes that were
made on Shrove Tuesday like broth in Scotland, doughnuts in
Hertfordshire, frying pan pudding in Lincolnshire and pea soup in
Cornwall. But of course the most famous is pancakes!
Toni
quotes an old West Somerset rhyme once recited in homes locally after
eating pancakes:
Tippety, tippety
tin,
Give me a pancake
and I'll come in.
Tipperty,
tipperty toe,
Give me a pancake
and then I'll go.
Georgian
cookery writer Hannah Glasse provides us with her own recipe of 1780,
in which she includes several variations of pancake; those made with
cinnamon, mace and nutmeg.
However
her basic pancake recipe reads like this:
To make pancakes
'Take
a quart of milk, beat in six or eight eggs, leaving half the whites
out; mix it well till your batter is of a fine thickness. You must
observe to mix your flour first with a little milk, then add the rest
by degrees; put in two spoonfuls of beaten ginger, a glass of brandy,
a little salt, stir all together, make your stew pan very clean, put
in a piece of butter as big as a walnut, then pour in a ladleful of
batter, which will make a pancake, moving the pan round that the
batter be all over the pan; shake the pan, and when yo think that the
side is enough, toss it; if you can't, turn it cleverly, and when
both sides are done, lay it in a dish before the fire, and so do the
rest'.
Hannah
cautions 'you must take care they are dry; when you send
them to table throw a little sugar over them'.
Objects from the Museum of Kitchenalia that might have been used to
make this recipe in the past include
![]() | |
Two 'rat-tail' handled forks, both attributed to Daniel & Arter (Birmingham) c.1890
©Museum of Kitchenalia
| |
![]() | |
Pearlware Pottery Ladle mid 1800's ©Museum of Kitchenalia |
![]() |
Gill measure from the early 1900's©Museum of Kitchenalia |
Monday, 21 January 2013
Farmhouse Breakfast Week!
It's Farmhouse Breakfast Week! Visit http://www.shakeupyourwakeup.com/ to find out more.
There are many variations on the
history of the cooked British breakfast, which really began to evolve
in the 19th century. Mrs.Beeton cites anything from
boiled eggs, potato bread, broiled mushrooms, to potted hare, broiled
pheasant and partridge as dishes to be eaten at breakfast. And here is one of her recipes for fried ham and eggs:
'Cut the ham into slices,
and take care that they are of the- same thickness in every part. Cut
off the rind, and if the ham should be particularly hard and salt, it
will be found an improvement to soak it for about 10 minutes in hot
water, and then dry it in a cloth. Put it into a cold frying-pan, set
it over the fire, and turn the slices 3 or 4 times whilst they are
cooking. When done, place them on a dish, which should be kept hot in
front of the fire during the time the eggs are being poached. Poach
the eggs, slip them on to the slices of ham, and serve quickly.
Time.— 7 or 8 minutes to broil the ham'.
According to the 1900 edition of
British Popular Customs Present and Past, people
from the Isle of Man (Manks) traditionally ate Sollaghyn for breakfast, which was a
type of porridge.
Common-sense Papers on Cookery by A. G. Payne written in 1877 talks at
length about the many variations of bacon and egg breakfasts and the
benefits of adding sausages to the plate.
'The great advantage in making sausages
at home
is, first and principally, that you
know what is in
them; secondly, that you can flavour
them to suit
your taste.'
To make your own sausages in the early
1900s you could have used one of these from the Museum of Kitchenalia
![]() |
Post 1921 meat grinder
© Museum of Kitchenalia
|
You may well also have a cruet set like
this on the table to season your breakfast.
![]() |
Cruet Set circa 1890s
© Museum of Kitchenalia
|
And for the strong armed, one of these
Marmalade Cutters would provide you with all the shredded citrus you
need for your toast.
![]() | ||||||||||
Follows & Bate, 'Rapid' Marmalade Cutter, circa 1920-1936 | © Museum of Kitchenalia |
|
Sunday, 13 January 2013
Types of Kitchens
Whilst most of us
associate the history of the British kitchen with those that we visit
on display in large historic houses or dramatised in period dramas on
television. There are many and varied kitchens to be considered. Such
as those that can be distinguished between the wealthy and poor, the
urban and rural kitchen as well as the armed service kitchens, the
Hospital kitchen, public kitchens to serve the poor and the Workhouse
kitchens as well as the commercial kitchens in restaurants, factory
canteens and other catering establishments.
The World War One
German Prisoner of War camps in Britain reveal interesting
photographic archives, such as those documented at Alexandra Palace,
London, some of which are available to view from the collections at
the Imperial War Museum, like this photograph from their Air Ministry
Collection.
![]() |
The kitchen at
Alexandra Palace internment camp, Imperial War Museum http://www.cabinetwarrooms.org.uk/collections/item/object/205222753)
|
These often
forgotten camps; the main ones of which were located at Donnington
Hall, Alexandra Palace, Dorchester, Handforth, Lofthouse Park and
Eastcote are captured in comprehensive images in the 1916 'German
Prisoners in Great Britain',published by Tillotson & Son Ltd.
The British
Government's 1824 publication detailing regulations of Barracks,
lists the contents of the Officers' Mess Room kitchen including:
One range
One fender
One shovel
One poker
One jack
Two spits
One iron or copper
boiler
Basically the bare
minimum was available to roast or boil food over an open range.
The Foundling
Hospital was a Children's home for unwanted or deserted children,
established in 1741. Now a Museum whose collections tell the story of
the original Foundling Hospital. http://www.foundlingmuseum.org.uk/
A report for the Society For Bettering The Condition And
Increasing The Comforts Of The Poor details the Foundling
kitchen and its fittings that were modified in 1796 by Count Rumford;
an Anglo-American Physicist and Inventor, who worked prolifically in
the field of kitchen innovation. Best known for the Rumford
Fireplace. The kitchen was 17 x 21 feet with two large Rumford iron
boilers divided into economic double boilers heated by one small fire
and a 5 foot 'roasting machine'. The kitchen at the Foundling became
a benchmark for other public industrial kitchens for their ability
to remain productive, safe, healthy and economical.
Monday, 7 January 2013
Epiphany and Twelfth Night Cake
Yesterday marked Epiphany, or the end of the Christmas season (Twelfth Night) in the Christian calendar.
Twelfth Cake was once popularly eaten in homes across England after tea to mark the occasion.
One of the first references to this cake appears in 1774 when a bean and a pea were inserted into the cake.
Whoever was served the bean and pea were made king and queen for the day, while other friends and family became their maids of honour and ministers of state respectively.
This tradition changed slightly over the years. During the 19th century a wedding ring, thimble and sixpence were stirred into the mixture. Whoever was served these items would either marry, become wealthy or die as a spinster that same year, depending on what they received.
Twelfth Cake was rather similar to what we know as Christmas Cake today and it was heavily iced and ornately decorated. The 19th century Anglo/American cook William Kitchiner wrote a recipe for icing a Twelfth Cake in 1830:
Twelfth Cake was once popularly eaten in homes across England after tea to mark the occasion.
One of the first references to this cake appears in 1774 when a bean and a pea were inserted into the cake.
Whoever was served the bean and pea were made king and queen for the day, while other friends and family became their maids of honour and ministers of state respectively.
This tradition changed slightly over the years. During the 19th century a wedding ring, thimble and sixpence were stirred into the mixture. Whoever was served these items would either marry, become wealthy or die as a spinster that same year, depending on what they received.
Twelfth Cake was rather similar to what we know as Christmas Cake today and it was heavily iced and ornately decorated. The 19th century Anglo/American cook William Kitchiner wrote a recipe for icing a Twelfth Cake in 1830:
'Icing,
for Twelfth or Bride Cake —(No. 84.)
Take
one pound of double refined Sugar, pounded
and
sifted through a lawn sieve ; — put into a pan
quite
free from grease,—break in the whites of six
eggs,
and as much powder Blue as will lie on a
sixpence
;— beat it well with a spattle (spatula) for ten minutes,
then
squeeze in the juice of a Lemon, and
beat
it till it becomes thick and transparent. Set
the
cake you intend to Ice, in an oven or warm
place,
five minutes, — then spread over the top and
sides
with the mixture as smooth as possible ; — if
for
a Wedding Cake only, plain Ice it; — if for a
Twelfth
Cake, ornament it with Gum Paste, (sugar paste) or fancy
articles
of any description.'
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)