Sunday, 3 March 2013

British Pie Week: 4th – 10th March 2013



What is British Pie Week?
British Pie Week is a week where we in the UK celebrate this brilliant pastry filled invention. It would appear that British Pie Week was the idea of the company “Jus Rol” who make readymade pastry: http://www.jusrol.co.uk (the company name: “Jus Rol” came about – allegedly - after the ladies working in the bakery were asked what they did with the pastry cuttings and they replied - "we just roll it out ...!")

History of the Pie:
  • The first pies appeared around 9500 BC in the Egyptian Neolithic period or New Stone Age. Early pies were in the form of galettes (flat / round or freeform crusty cakes) wrapping honey as a treat inside a cover of ground oats / wheat / rye or barley.
  • Historians believe the Ancient Greeks invented pie pastry which was a flour-water paste wrapped around meat and provided a lightweight sealed holder for long sea journeys.
  • Through sea travel this knowledge was transferred to the Romans who having conquered parts of Northern Europe and southern Spain were far more practiced at using salt and spices to preserve and flavour their meats.
  • Apicius a 1st century Roman cookbook made mention of various recipes that involved pie cases.
  • With the advancement of the Roman Empire and its excellent road transport system pie cooking quickly spread throughout Europe.
  • As Medieval cooks had restricted access to ovens due to the cost of constructing ovens and the need for huge supplies of fuel - pies were a popular food that could be easily cooked over an open fire.
  • The English tradition of meat pies dates back to the Middle Ages when an open top pie crust was used as the container for serving the meat and was called a coffyn (the word used for a basket or box).
  • Song birds were a fine delicacy at that time and were protected by Royal Law. At the coronation of eight-year old English King Henry VI (1422–1461) in 1429 "Partryche and Pecock enhackyll" pie was served. This consisted of a cooked peacock mounted in its skin on top of a peacock filled pie. 
  • European royal cooks would often place a cooked bird on top of a large pie to identify its contents – this led to pre-Victorian cooks placing a porcelain ornament on a pie to release steam and to identify it.
  • The Pilgrim Fathers and early settlers took their pie recipes with them to America where they adapted their ingredients and techniques available to them. Thanks to the Native North Americans their first pies were based on berries and fruits.
  • Pies remained a core food staple of travelling and working people in colder northern European countries with regional variations based on both locally grown and available meats as well as the locally farmed cereal crop.
Types of pastry used in Pies:
Pies are a mainstay of English cooking and different pastries are used for different types of pies:  

  • Short Crust Pastry – used in basic pies such as meat & potato / steak pie / chicken and mushroom / minced beef and onion / lamb / game. In recent years more exotic fillings have begun to appear such as: balti curry.
  • Hot Water Pastry – used in scotch pie / pork pie. Melton Mowbray pork pies are the classic pork pie and are world renowned.
Melton Mowbray Pork Pie
Steak & Kidney Pudding
  • Puff Pastry – used in pot pies
  • Suet Pastry – used in steak and kidney puddings (the original filling in this pudding was steak and oyster).








Other Types of Pies:

  • Open pies or flans – mostly served for dessert usually filled with seasonal fruit.
  • Cornish pasty – this is a crescent shaped “pie” that is traditionally filled with beef / onion / swede and potato. The pasty has a crimped edge that makes it easier to hold (I think the crimped edge is the best part of the pasty J). Nowadays there are lots of other fillings on offer such as: lamb & mint / cheese & onion / steak & stilton plus many, many more.
Cornish Pasty

Worldwide Variations:
United Kingdom / Australia / South Africa and New Zealand
  • Meat pies with fillings such as steak / lamb / steak and kidney /minced beef or chicken and mushroom are popular in these countries as take-away snacks. In British Fish & Chip shops pies are served with chips as an alternative to fish and chips.
America
Pot Pie
  • Pot pies with a flaky crust and bottom are very popular in American. They are generally filled with meat (usually beef/ chicken or turkey) / gravy and mixed vegetables (potatoes / carrots and peas). Frozen pot pies are often sold in supermarkets in an individual serving size.
Worldwide
    Apple Pie (a la mode) 
  • Fruit pies are popular everywhere. In America when fruit pie is served with a scoop of ice cream the dish is called “pie à la mode” however many sweet pies are served this way. The most popular pie in the USA is apple pie though any pie with sweet fillings may be served “à la mode”. The combination of pie and ice cream and possibly the name too - is thought to have been made popular in the mid-1890s in the United States. 
Pie throwing:
Cream filled or topped pies are favourite props for humour. Throwing a pie in a person's face has been a staple of film comedy since Ben Turpin received one in Mr. Flip in 1909 and you may also find a pie throwing stall at many school / village & church fetes in the UK – it’s a great way to raise money and you get to throw a pie in the face of a teacher / minor celebrity / etc.
Recipe:
We will be eating a homemade pie this week – steak & mushroom (I think) to celebrate British Pie Week J Here is a link for a recipe for a steak and ale pie you could try:
http://allrecipes.co.uk/recipe/5137/steak-and-ale-pie.aspx

Andria Owen

Wednesday, 27 February 2013

St David's Day





When is St. David's Day?
St David's Day is celebrated on 1st March every year.

Who is St David?
Saint David is the patron saint of Wales.
Very little is known about St David for certain. The little information there is - is based on an account of his life written by Rhigyfarch towards the end of the 11th century therefore we are unsure how much of the historical manuscripts are fact as opposed to legend.
St David (Dewi Sant) was born towards the end of the fifth century. He was a Celtic monk / abbot and bishop who also became the archbishop of Wales. During his life he helped spread the word of Christianity to pagan tribes across Wales and western England.
It is claimed that Saint David was a tall and physically strong man who allegedly ate a very frugal diet of bread and herbs. It is also claimed that he drank only water. 
The most famous story about Saint David tells how he was preaching to a huge crowd and the ground is said to have risen up so that he was standing on a hill and everyone had a better chance of seeing and hearing him.

St David’s Day Celebrations
Cardiff:
Parades are held throughout Wales to celebrate St David’s Day with the largest parade being held in Cardiff. The parade is formally attended by either the Queen or the Prince of Wales and is a mixture of both folklore and military tattoo. Other than the parade – celebrations include concerts & festivals.
Colwyn Bay:
An annual parade through the town centre is now held with several hundred citizens and schoolchildren taking part with other events centred around the parade.
Prestatyn closes the top of the High Street – this is to allow local schools to participate in Welsh singing and local fundraising.
St David's Week festival was inaugurated in Swansea in 2009 with a variety of musical / sporting and cultural events being held throughout the city to mark the national day.
Organises yearly events to celebrate St. David's Day which include a Welsh themed week of fireworks / parades and Disney characters dressed in traditional Welsh attire.



St. David's Day Festival - National Day of Wales is the largest annual event of its kind in the United States encompassing an eisteddfod (this is a Welsh festival of music / literature and performance) / Celtic marketplace / classes and a concert.
  
What are the national emblems of Wales?
The national emblems of Wales are dragons / daffodils and leeks.
Dragons:
The dragon has come to symbolise the fiery Welsh nation who are proud and defiant in the face of adversity (usually in battles with the English).
Legend claims the symbol of the red dragon was sported on a crest by Arthur - son of Uthr Bendragon. It has been said that the father saw a dragon in the sky predicting his son would be king.
Other trains of thought believe the dragon symbol probably found its way into Wales via Rome - when the Roman legions arrived on Welsh shores sporting the mythical / fire-breathing creature as an emblem.
During the Medieval era Welsh poets would compare their brave leaders to dragons and between 1485 and 1603 the dragon formed part of the arms of the Tudor dynasty.
The dragon re-surfaced again in the 19th century when it appeared as the royal badge for Wales in 1807. From then onwards the red dragon was frequently used as a symbol in Welsh patriotic societies and was finally officially recognised by the Queen in 1959.

St David's Day is commemorated by the wearing of daffodils or leeks. Both plants are traditionally regarded as national emblems.
Leeks:
There are many explanations of how the leek came to be adopted as the national emblem of Wales – a few are:
·      One is that St David advised the Welsh on the eve of battle with the Saxons to wear leeks in their caps to distinguish friend from foe.
·         It was believed that eating leeks encouraged good health and happiness
·    Shakespeare mentions in Henry V that the Welsh archers wore leeks at the battle of Agincourt in 1415.
Daffodils:
In total contrast the daffodil is a much younger emblem that gained popularity in the 19th century. Women were especially fond of the bright / cheerful flower as an emblem of Wales.
At the beginning of the 20th century it became even more closely associated with the Principality when Welshman and British Prime Minster David Lloyd George wore it on St David's Day and at ceremonies to mark the investiture of the then Prince of Wales.

What is the National Dress of Wales?
On St David's Day some children in Wales dress in their national costume which consists of:
·         tall black hat
·         white frilled cap
·         long dress









The flag of St David:
 






The National Flag of Wales:
The national flag of Wales depicts a fiery red dragon (Y Ddraig Goch) against a green and white background.



By Andria Owen

Friday, 15 February 2013

Jorvik Viking Festival 2013


1000 years ago when Vikings ruled York great celebrations took place in February called ‘Jolablot’. These celebrations heralded the coming of spring and the survival of winter hardships and were long forgotten until the 1980s when York Archaeological Trust revived Jolablot.

The annual Jorvik Viking Festival is organised by the York Archaeological Trust (they are also responsible for the Jorvik Viking Centre) and is a city-wide celebration of York’s Viking heritage.
This festival is recognised as the largest Viking Festival in Europe attracting thousands of visitors to the city of York. With Viking re-enactors from across Europe attending the festival and enjoying its programme of family-friendly events including guided walks / lectures and battle re-enactments many people return to celebrate the festival year after year to take part and lap up the atmosphere.
The dates of this year’s Jorvik Viking Festival are: Saturday 16th February 2013 until Sunday 24th February 2013 – for a full list of what’s going on and where it’s happening check out details here: http://jorvik-viking-centre.co.uk/festivals/festival-fringe-2013/



Andria Owen

Thursday, 14 February 2013

Kissing Friday (An old and now redundant custom)




When is Kissing Friday?:
Kissing Friday always falls on the Friday after Ash Wednesday

What is / was the custom?:
English schoolboys were entitled to demand a kiss from schoolgirls without fear of punishment or rejection. If the schoolgirl agreed that was great for both of them however is she refused the boy was then allowed to pinch the girl on the bottom. This custom lasted until at least the 1940s (which in today’s world is probably for the best really J)

Sileby


Local custom:
In Sileby – Leicestershire: Kissing Friday was called Nippy Hug Day. Here adult men joined in the fun where they could demand a kiss from the woman of their choice however if their request was denied – the men had the right to 'louse’ (or pinch) the woman's bottom – this was a reference to pinching off lice (the same rules applied as they did with the schoolboys) 




Other information: 
Another blog has also written about this - Kissing Friday and also four other strangest traditions in the UK - check out the blog at:  

http://www.essentialtravel.co.uk/blog/strangest-british-traditions.html  


Andria Owen