This article from The Guardian, by a couple of authors flogging their book about jelly, does make some interesting points:
Jelly is the ultimate party food, an animal-based dessert that predates Christ and was eaten by Henry VIII for both the first and second course of his 1521 Garter Banquet.Jelly predates Christ? Given the lack of refrigeration, how did they get them to set? Or is this just a Brisbane-centric lack of understanding, as I guess in many countries leaving it out overnight may well be enough. What about this claim:
Slap a jelly on your dinner table and guests will be hypnotized by its lewd wobbling and your kitchen prowess.Easily hypnotised, those English.
I like the start of the next paragraph:
The origins of jelly are shrouded in mystery..Wait a minute. This article has already referred to "before Christ" and "mystery." Clearly, this is material for the next Dan Brown novel. The secret of the origin of jelly is almost certainly being covered up in the foundations of the Temple in Jerusalem. I can see an important plot revelation already: you know those bits of paper being stuck in the Wailing Wall? - they're jelly recipes! You heard it here first.
The article then explains more history:
With sugar wildly expensive, sweet jelly became a potent status symbol. It remained at the centre of the tables of the rich and powerful well into the early 20th century. Ingredients, moulds, ice for refrigeration and the labour to clarify weird gelling agents like hartshorn and the swim bladders of sturgeon were all expensive.I think this is something to share with the kids with great gusto when they are next served jelly: "You're eating like a King or a millionaire, you know!" "Bill Gates has swimming pools filled with jelly, it always impresses his guests."
A final important point:
Yes, jellying today is ridiculously simple. But you must respect the jelly.We always stand to attention and salute while the bagpipes play during the ceremonial Presentation of the Jelly at our house.
"We always stand to attention and salute while the bagpipes play during the ceremonial Presentation of the Jelly at our house."
ReplyDeleteAs well you should..........