Orange Pippin is generally eaten raw, although it can successfully be used in pies, tarts and cooked desserts. Some aromatic dessert apples have been used for single-variety juices.
TECHNIQUE:
See Bramley’s Seedling (p. 111) for details about rootstocks. Cox’s are not suitable for cultivation in the northern half of England, or in areas of high rainfall. They require free-draining soils, and are mostly concentrated in the south-east of Britain. Optimum pollination time is mid-May; the tree is of medium vigour and is a good cropper, but prone to mildew, scab and canker which are controlled by lime sulphur sprays. For commercial production, the fruit is chemically analysed to determine storage potential; picking is then carried out by hand. Cox’s are picked in late September and early October. Grading is by diameter (sizes are set according to variety) and by quality (EU standards, for appearance) into Grade 1 or Grade 2. Storage in controlled atmosphere (low in oxygen, high in carbon dioxide) and temperature allows Cox’s to be kept until spring.
REGION OF PRODUCTION:
SOUTH ENGLAND.
Egremont Russet Apple
DESCRIPTION:
A MID-SEASON DESSERT APPLE. DESCRIBED BY MORGAN & RICHARDS (1993) AS A MEDIUM-SIZED APPLE (5-7CM DIAMETER), FLAT-ROUND IN SHAPE, THE BASIN BROAD AND QUITE DEEP, THE EYE LARGE AND OPEN, THE SEPALS BROAD-BASED, AND QUITE DOWNY; THE CAVITY NARROW AND SHALLOW, LINED WITH RUSSET; THE STALK VERY SHORT AND QUITE THIN; THE COLOUR IS CHARACTERIZED BY OCHRE RUSSET (ROUGH-TEXTURED AREAS OF SKIN) WITH A SLIGHT ORANGE FLUSH ON GOLD GROUND COLOUR; THE FLESH IS CREAM COLOURED AND THE FLAVOUR IS NUTTY, WITH A SMOKY TANNIC DRYNESS DEVELOPING ON KEEPING.
HISTORY:
Russet pippins were described in the seventeenth century. This may simply have indicated red-flushed apples, as the word russet also carries a meaning of redness. Russet in the sense of rough-skinned does not seem to have been used until late in Victoria’s reign. It was in the second half of the nineteenth century that the Egremont Russet was first noted. Exactly where it originated is unknown: it was first recorded in Somerset, but the name suggests a link with the estate of Lord Egremont at Petworth (Sussex). The head gardener from the estate maintained that it was raised there (Morgan & Richards, 1993). It was commercialized in the early twentieth century but suffered from being in season at the same time as the Cox’s Orange Pippin. However, demand has continued and the Russet is still available.
The enthusiasm of the British for after-dinner drinking of port accompanied by fruit and nuts is one reason for their affection for the russets as a group. Their especial flavour, reminiscent of nuts and spice, and happy balance of sweetness and acidity matched that of the wine far better than any other style of dessert apple.
TECHNIQUE:
See Bramley’s Seedling (p. 111) for details about rootstocks. Optimum pollination time for Egremont Russet is early May; the tree is of medium vigour and upright habit, hardy and a good cropper; it is resistant to scab but prone to bitter pit. Picking is by hand in late September and early October. Grading is by diameter (sizes are set according to variety) and by quality (EU standards, for appearance) into Grade 1 or Grade 2. Egremont Russet can be stored for only a short time.
REGION OF PRODUCTION:
SOUTH ENGLAND.
Lord Derby Apple
DESCRIPTION:
A MID-SEASON COOKING APPLE, LARGE, ROUND-CONICAL TO OBLONG-CONICAL, GREEN, WITH SLIGHT PINK OR PURPLE ON CHEEK. FLAVOUR: STRONG, ACID, REQUIRES SUGAR.
HISTORY:
This apple was raised in the mid-nineteenth century in Cheshire, and commercialized shortly afterwards. It is possible that the apple originated from a seedling of the older English cooking variety called, because of its profile, the Catshead. This had been known since the early seventeenth century, and was popular for making dumplings in the 1800s. Unlike the codlin type of cooking apples, Lord Derby keeps its shape when cooked. Other cooking apples in season at this time are the old variety known as Harvey, first recorded in the 1600s, and Stirling Castle, both of which cook to a purée. They are now rare and little grown. Lord Derby is especially good in pies.
TECHNIQUE:
See entry on Cox’s Orange Pippin for more details of apple growing.
REGION OF PRODUCTION:
SOUTH ENGLAND.
Samphire
DESCRIPTION:
THE LEAVES OF MARSH SAMPHIRE GROW IN BRIGHT GREEN SPEARS, SOMETIMES DESCRIBED AS LOOKING ‘LIKE A BRANCH OF CORAL’. FLAVOUR: VERY SALTY.
ROCK SAMPHIRE IS MORE PINNATE, GROWING ON ROCKY CLIFFS AND SLOPES BY THE COAST.
HISTORY:
There are 2 forms of samphire. The first, and original, is rock samphire (Crithmum maritimum). The second is marsh samphire, once more commonly known as glasswort (Salicornia stricta) because it was used as a source of soda for glassmaking. Glasswort is found on many tidal marshes around the British coast. It is very common, and best known in Norfolk. Spencer (1994) observes that, unlike rock samphire, which was highly esteemed in the past, marsh samphire was historically a food for the poor. In the late nineteenth century it was a substitute for the increasingly rare rock samphire. Since the second half of the twentieth century, marsh samphire has become better known generally.
Rock samphire still grows abundantly on the coasts of southern Britain. It was the subject of a much-quoted line in King Lear, when Edgar wishes to deceive blind Gloucester into thinking he is on the cliffs at Dover: ‘Half way down hangs one that gathers samphire, dreadful trade!’ he exclaims.
Culpeper the herbalist remarked in 1656 that samphire was not as much used as it was, but the statement was no barrier to a battery of seventeenth- and eighteenth-century recipes, especially for pickles, the form that mostly reached the table. Nor was it in such short supply that it could not be hawked on the streets of London as ‘Cress marine!’ However, the curious intelligence of John Evelyn (1699) wished to pursue the possibility of cultivating the plant, to assure supplies, much as they did, he observed, in France. His venture was of little success and the plant here has remained obstinately wild. Evelyn included a recipe for pickling samphire ‘the Dover way’ - it was Mr John Bullen of Dover who sent him his experimental seeds, a descendant, perhaps, of Edgar’s labourer.
It is possible that there was insufficient rock samphire to maintain a large-scale trade, or the dangers of clifftop gathering were too fatal, but there are signs at the end of the eighteenth century that supplies were running out and a substitute was needed. Here we might bring forward another poet’s reference, John Phillips:
How from a scraggy rock, whose prominence
Half overshades the ocean, hardy men
Fearless of rending winds, and dashing waves,
Cut samphire, to excite the squeamish gust
Of pamper’d luxury…
Hugh Smythson in Compleat Family Physician (1781) lets fall that it was ‘not often brought genuine to London. The more easily gathered glasswort, already the object of industrial exploitation for the glass trade, was a willing candidate, but it is not entirely clear that its offer, or that of its vendors, was ever taken up. There may have been a plethora of early recipes, but there are few in Victoria’s reign, implying an acceptance of the scarcity of the original plant (Tee, 1983).
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