Parkin (cake)
Yorkshire parkin | |
Alternative names | Perkin |
---|---|
Place of origin | England |
Region or state | Northern England - Lancashire, Yorkshire |
Main ingredients | Flour, oatmeal, molasses, lard or butter |
Cookbook: Parkin Media: Parkin |
Parkin or Perkin is a gingerbread cake traditionally made with oatmeal and black treacle,[1] which originated in northern England. Often associated with Yorkshire, particularly the Leeds area,[2] it is very widespread and popular elsewhere, notably in Lancashire. Parkin is baked to a hard cake but with resting becomes moist and even sometimes sticky. In Hull and East Yorkshire, it has a drier, more biscuit-like texture than in other areas. Parkin is traditionally eaten on Guy Fawkes Night,[3] 5 November, but is also enjoyed throughout the winter months. It is baked commercially throughout Yorkshire, but is mainly a domestic product in other areas.
Etymology
The origin of the word parkin is unknown. The first published dated reference to parkin was collected from 1728 from the West Yorkshire Quarter Sessions when Anne Whittaker was accused of stealing oatmeal to make parkin. The Lancashire weaver Tim Bobbin describes tharf cake in 1740- and this is recognisable as a parkin.[4] A possible older use of parkin is in the seventeenth century ballad 'The song of Arthur O'Bradley' that purports to describe a merry wedding from the time of Robin Hood (fourteenth century)
- When Arthur, to make their hearts merry
- Brought ales and parkin and perry.[5]
The tharf cake is of ancient Teutonic origin, as tharf or theorf meant unleavened, un-fermented, solid tough or sodden in Old English. John Wycliffe in his translation of the Bible in 1389 (Mark Ch.14.v. 1) calls unleavened bread a 'tharf loove'[lower-alpha 1][6]
History
Parkin is virtually unknown south of the Humber. It is eaten in an area where oats rather than wheat was the staple grain for the poor. It is closely related to tharf cakes - an unsweeted cake cooked on a griddle rather than baked.[7] The traditional time of the year for tharf cakes to be made was directly after the oat harvest in the first week in November. For festive occasions, the cake would be sweetened with honey. In the seventeenth century (about 1650) sugar started to be imported from Barbados[lower-alpha 2]- and molasses was a by-product of the refining process. Molasses was first used by apothecaries; to make a medicine theriaca, from which name the word treacle is derived.[8] As molasses became plentiful, or treacle as it became called at that time, it was substituted for honey in the preparation of tharf cakes.[9]
In Northern Europe honey was used as a medicine, for festive cakes and making mead; before 1750 sweetness was not a characteristic of everyday food. Honey cakes had a special festive significance. They were baked to be hard, but after storage for a couple of weeks they regained their moisture becoming soft and even sticky. Molasses has the hygroscopic property. German Lebkuchen and Pfefferkuchen were other examples of hygroscopic holiday ginger-breads. They too were baked hard in summer and allowed to moisten for consumption at Christmas.[10]
Though parkin and tharf cake appear to be synonymous- generally all parkins were sweet tharf cakes.[6]
Tharf cake
Parkin and tharf cake were used interchangeably in Lancashire and South Yorkshire until 1900. Over the 500 years the recipe and taste of these cakes have changed considerably. It was the food of the poor. Ovens were rare in the houses of the poor, and they generally had no access to public bakers before the 1820s, so cooked cakes on griddles or bakestones on an open fire.[11] The best parkin was made with fresh oatmeal, which fixes the date around the first week in November.
The festive cake
In southern Lancashire, and West Yorkshire parkin is inextricably linked to the Guy Fawkes Night celebration. Jennifer Stead, in her study Prodigal Frugality , identifies the link between Guy Fawkes and parkin as the bonfire .[10] The first two weeks in November had many Christian festivals, and like Celtic festivals that preceded them they were celebrated with a fire and ritual cakes. November starts with All Hallows Eve, that runs into All Saints Day (1 November), which is followed by All Souls Day.(2 November) Little Lent and the forty-day fast until Christmas, started at Martinmas. (11 November). On All Souls Day soul cakes were baked. The Martinmas fair was important being the traditional day when cattle were bought and sold, and servants were hired for the following year. It was also the date that cattle were slaughtered and salted to preserve them for the winter- and for general feasting and dancing.[12]
The Celtic festival of Samain,[lower-alpha 3] the festival of the dead on 1 November was celebrated with special cakes and bonfires. It was Christianised into All Hallows by the church in 837 A.D., and the culinary tradition continued. When Guy Fawkes in 1605 gave the English church a reason to celebrate with a bonfire, the tradition was adopted under the new name, just four days later on 5 November.[12] During the period of industrialisation many traditional holidays were discontinued but Guy Fawkes Night continued to be celebrated. In the nineteenth century (1862), parkin and treacle toffee with potatoes baked in the fire had become the traditional foods of Guy Fawkes Night, and in Leeds, November 5 became known as Parkin Night.[12]
Ingredients
The principal ingredients of a Yorkshire parkin are oatmeal, flour, black treacle (similar to molasses), fat (traditionally lard, but modern recipes use butter or margarine), and ginger. Oatmeal and treacle are generally considered distinctive features of Yorkshire parkin, whilst Lancashire Parkin is baked using Golden Syrup and extra sugar.
The flour used in parkin in England is self-raising, containing a small amount of chemical leavening agent. If this is not available, or if the proportion of oatmeal is high, it is essential to add a leavening agent, e.g. baking powder or a mixture of sodium bicarbonate and cream of tartar.
One of the key features of parkin is that it retains its texture well. It is baked to be hard, but after storing in a sealed tin or box for several days, it becomes soft again, the texture that is intended.
See also
References
Notes
Footnotes
- ↑ Roberts, Chris (2006). Heavy Words Lightly Thrown: The Reason Behind Rhyme. Thorndike Press. ISBN 0-7862-8517-6.
- ↑ Bates, Margaret (1964). Talking about Cakes. Penguin Books, p.88.
- ↑ Lepard, Dan (3 November 2007). "100-Year-Old Parkin". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 21 May 2010.
- ↑ Stead 1991, p. 170.
- ↑ Quoted in Carr, W (1828). The dialect of Craven. London.
- 1 2 Stead 1991, p. 161.
- ↑ Stead 1991.
- 1 2 Stead 1991, p. 157.
- ↑ Stead 1991, p. 159.
- 1 2 Stead 1991, p. 160.
- ↑ Stead 1991, p. 172.
- 1 2 3 Stead 1991, p. 162.
Bibliography
- Concise Oxford English Dictionary, s.v. parkin
- Stead, Jennifer; Wilson, C Anne; Brears, Peter; Hunter, Lynette; Pollard, Helen (1991). "6". In C. Anne Wilson. Traditional Food East and West of the Pennines. Edinburgh University Press. ISBN 0-7486-0118-X.
- BBC good food, Discussion of Parkin Day