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Wikipedia

York ham

York ham (French: jambon d'York, formerly often called "Yorkshire ham") is a characteristic type of ham that originated in Yorkshire, England. Like Parma or Westphalian ham, it is made by a dry curing process, but unlike them it is eaten cooked. At its best it is widely considered one of the finest hams. However, it has never enjoyed protected designation of origin status, and has been imitated in many places. Various productions, some of doubtful quality, have been sold as York hams. Contrary to common belief, York hams did not originate in the City of York.

Jambon d'York (Fränck Bail, catalogue of the 1893 Paris Salon)

Gastronomic reputation edit

 
York ham on the bone, breaded (Laurence Hudghton; Dukeshill)

In his classic Le guide culinaire (1921) Auguste Escoffier said it was difficult to decide what was the best ham in the world, but the preference should go to the Prague ham for serving hot and the York ham for serving cold, although the latter was excellent hot too.[1]

Charles Elmé Francatelli — formerly chief cook to Queen Victoria — wrote (1861):

York hams are justly considered the choicest among English hams; indeed, I am inclined to say that, excepting peculiarity of taste, no kind of hams is superior to a thorough good York ham.[2]

Tom Stobart's Cook's Encyclopedia (1980, repub. 2016) says York ham is "at its best, regarded everywhere as the finest type of cooked ham".[3]

Leto and Bode's The Larder Chef (2006), a professional cookbook, says that "York ham is considered to be one or the finest hams and is well known and appreciated as a delicacy on the Continent and elsewhere".[4]

Gastronomiac, a French-language online encyclopaedia says "Le jambon d'York, d'origine anglaise, est aujourd'hui un fleuron de la gastronomie française" (York ham, of English origin, is today an ornament of French gastronomy).[5]

Early history edit

 
View of a Yorkshire Farmhouse (G. Towler, Museum of North Craven Life)

Before refrigeration was developed country people preserved meat over the scarce months of winter by curing hams and other parts of the family pig. Regions developed their own cures.[6] According to historian[7] William Stubbs, from public records of 1166 it is evident that — for whatever reason — Henry II of England got his hams from Yorkshire.[8]

The British Agricultural Revolution signified larger food surpluses, sent to an increasingly national market. By mid 18th century Yorkshire had a London reputation for its hams. In 1740 Thomas Dyche said "this county of late years is become particularly famous for making and curing legs of pork into what are commonly called hams".[9] Ten years later William Ellis wrote:

Yorkshire, where Land, Workmen, Labour and Hogmeat, are extraordinary cheap, and their Water Carriage of Goods to London so convenient, send great Numbers of Hams every year out of that large County to the opulent City of London, so that there are now few Cheesemongers Shops there, but what sell their Hams for about five-pence a Pound.[10]

According to Malachy Postlethwayt (1766) there was sent to London "a kind of well prepared ham from Yorkshire".[11] In The Art of Cookery Made Plain and Easy (1796) Hannah Glasse wrote

Yorkshire is famous for hams; and the reason is this: their salt is much finer [better] than ours in London; it is a large clear salt, and gives the meat a fine flavour.[12]

Madam Johnson's Present had already said that 25 years before.[13]

From about 1760 there are advertisements in the provincial and colonial newspapers for 'Yorkshire hams' (e.g. "A Parcel of exceedingly fine YORKSHIRE HAMS"), or, less frequently at first, 'York hams' (e.g. "Finest York Hams in highest preservation").[14] By 1830 the usage 'York ham' was the more common of the two and thereafter predominated.[15] The expressions were interchangeable.[16]

York was described as famous for hams in a cookbook in 1845.[17] The phrase "the famous York hams" appears explicitly in comparative advertising in 1848,[18] and "the celebrated York hams" in 1857.[19] By 1861 Jambon d'York was in a book of menus for aspiring[20] French housewives[21] and an item that guests might hope to see served at balls in Paris.[22]

The first mention of York ham in a haute cuisine context is on 2 April 1851, when it appears on the menu — as jambon d'York — for a banquet given for Lord Stanley at the Merchant Taylors' Hall, London. It was one of 123 dishes served to the diners, all of whom were male; ladies watched from a gallery.[23]

Substitution, and generic use of name edit

As, increasingly, reputable products were sold in distant markets — where the consumer did not know the producer — it became easier for suppliers to substitute spurious versions. As Richard Wilk put it:

Branding began in antiquity as a means of assuring quality, by citing the geographical origin of a commodity, as in Irish beef, Port wine or a Yorkshire ham. But the power of such location-branding was gradually lost as commodity chains grew in size and complexity. Yorkshire ham became a generic term for a particular style of curing, a fate of local products as diverse as Cheddar cheese and Tequila.[24]

An author of a late Georgian book on domestic economy said

... it is all a farce. There is more Epping butter sold in London in a month than is made in a year; and perhaps more Yorkshire hams sold in one year than are made in Yorkshire in twenty. Therefore, let the economist [housekeeper] carry ready money to market, and buy every thing the best of its kind, not heeding from whence it comes.[25]

Although Ireland made excellent bacon, it also exported large numbers of hogs "hastily and improperly fattened" for the Liverpool and Bristol markets, where they were slaughtered while still unwell from the journey and cured in unhygenic conditions. Most of the hams sold in London as from York were said to be tainted hams from these imported Irish hogs.[26] An 1843 travel book agreed that London shopkeepers passed off Irish hams as and for York hams. [27] The Practical Cook, English and Foreign (1843) — its senior author claimed to have been cook to Princes Razumovsky and Esterházy — warned its readers:

York, Cumberland, Westmoreland, and Gloucestershire are famous for their hams, but a great proportion of the hams now sold as Yorkshire are Irish[17][28]

which was missed in the first edition of Mrs. Beeton's Book of Household Management[29] but picked up in the third.[30] One curer in Ireland sent almost his entire make of York hams to the cities of Hull and York.[31]

In Yorkshire, hams were farmhouse products; there was no ham or bacon factory in the county until the end of the Victorian era. Hence

 
Yorkshire ham — made in the U.S.A. (American magazine, 1919)

From time immemorial the name of 'York' Hams has been synonymous with a high-class product, and on the Continent at the present day [1898] Hams sold under that name may be met with in thousands, partioularly in France. It ia safe to say that few, if any of these, ever saw Yorkshire, and indeed it is common knowledge that most of them are prepared in the great factories of Ireland.[32]

They also came from America. An unsigned article in The Boston Journal of Chemistry noted:

Cheshire cheese and Yorkshire hams were never plentier in England than at the present time, and many of the innocent customers in that little island are asking some impertinent questions as regards the capabilities of these famous counties to supply such vast quantities as are on sale, duly labelled, everywhere. Undoubtedly so long as the resources of our cheese and pork factories hold out, the people of England will have an abundance.[33]

This was noticed in France. Urbain Dubois — who is credited with establishing the modern custom of serving dishes in sequential courses, instead of all at once — wrote that although York hams were reputed the best, the merchants of England sold many mediocre versions, which they got "from everywhere".[34]

Thus, "York" or "Yorkshire" did not guarantee high quality ham without a trustworthy supplier: one who put his personal reputation on the packaging that secured the goods. This concept was the origin of modern branding.[24]

What is York ham? edit

York ham does not have protected designation of origin status[35] and there is no universally agreed definition of what it is.

At various times it has been claimed that a York ham should have one or more of the following attributes: a rear thigh of a pig of the Large White breed, bred, reared and killed in Yorkshire, dry-cured and aged on the bone according to a traditional procedure, in the City of York; banjo-shaped, with very white fat, a characteristic, mild savour and meat of a light colour.

Those claims are considered and referenced in the remainder of this section, but in summary, few (or no) hams today fulfil every single one of those criteria, if they ever did. "York ham" is a style of ham.

Terminology edit

A ham (count noun) is a cured rear leg — specifically, the thigh — of a pig. Ham (mass noun) is meat from a ham, or should be. Bacon is cured meat from another part of the animal.[6]

Breed of pig edit

 
'Parian Duchess' (1860) a champion sow of the Large White ('Yorkshire') breed, said to be traditional for York ham

Several authors say York ham traditionally came from a pig of the Large White breed,[36][37][38][39][35][40] known in America as the Yorkshire Pig,[41] although York ham was being advertised before the breed was developed.

Origin of breed edit

The breed originated in 19th century Yorkshire, where industrial workers around Leeds, Keighley and Skipton had a strong tradition of keenly competitive, spare-time pig-breeding.[42] According to a Victorian academic, the Large White became famous and was taken up after a Keighley weaver, Joseph Tulley, entered one in the Royal Agricultural Society's 1851 Windsor exhibition. Tulley

by considerable skill and judgment, produced the most wonderful pigs ever seen in this or perhaps any country; and his famous strain proved to be the foundation of the entire race of our modern Large White breed, which was for many years called the 'Yorkshire breed.'

Tulley sold specimens to professional breeders at high prices and they spread round the world.[43]

The first herdbook for the Large White was published in 1884.[41] In 1954 it represented 76% of the total male pig population of the UK.[44]

The breed today edit

In recent years the Large White has seen a dramatic decline.[41] Today it is considered a breed at risk. Of about 50 members of the British Pig Association, only three have sizeable Large White herds,[44] and in 2022 there were only 355 registered Large Whites left.[45]

Geographical origin edit

 
The Old Ouse Bridge, York (William Marlow, York Museums Trust). York hams were not produced in York, but it was the market town from which country hams were shipped to London.

As foreshadowed, the connection with Yorkshire was gradually lost with the passage of time.

Fell v. Army & Navy Co-Operative Society (1877) was a dispute between traders about what was York ham. The Army & Navy Stores of London had ordered 500 York hams from a Sheffield supplier, but sent them back, saying they were not proper York hams, only hams from Scotch pigs fattened for the Yorkshire market. The supplier said they were proper York hams and sued for the financial loss. The case was tried by Lord Chief Justice Coleridge and a Yorkshire jury. The supplier proved the pigs had been fed, killed and cured in Yorkshire, but not that the pigs were bred in the county, nor did he claim the hams were cured in York. The jury found in his favour and the judge strongly agreed. A meat inspector testified he could tell they were Yorkshire killed and cured by the characteristic odour.[46] He said that if all York hams were bred in York that ancient city would be "one vast piggery".[47]

In 1897 a Bethnal Green trader was fined for supplying a Canadian ham, cured in America, invoiced as a York ham. The evidence was that a genuine Yorkshire ham sold for at least 50% more. The magistrate asked an inspector for the trade association if all York hams were made in Yorkshire, who replied that in adjacent counties the practice was to imitate, but it was done with English meat.[48][49] The Westminster Gazette commented:

This is immensely gratifying to our national pride. Yorkshire can, apparently, make no country claim to the title "York", but it must not be filched from us by enterprising traders across the water.[50]

In early 20th century American consumer protection law, American hams were not allowed to be sold in America as York hams, but had to be called "York style" or "York cut".[51] Since Yorkshire was a breed of pig, though, they could be called Yorkshire hams.

In 1966 The Guardian reported that tourists to York, asking where York ham was actually made, could get no satisfactory answer.[52] (A Swiss geographer had asked the same question in 1899: "I have searched in vain among the industrial buildings for the establishments where the famous hams are prepared, which have spread the gastronomic reputation of York throughout the world".)[53] The Birmingham Post said that a factory in Brierley Hill, near Birmingham, had been making the product since the 1860s, and now made four out of every five York hams. It did follow the traditional process, however, and was owned by Marsh & Baxter, the royal warrant holders.[54]

A 1966 article in The Times about traditional British food names said that "The three famous hams — Bradenham, York and Seager (Suffolk) come from all over the place. Birmingham produces 80 per cent of the York hams".[55] In 2002 a maker of Carmarthen ham in West Wales told the same newspaper it sold its rejects as York hams.[56] Yet again according to that newspaper (2003), a prominent maker of York ham — it was the current Royal Warrant holder — obtained most of its hams from pigs farmed outside Yorkshire; they were slaughtered in Shropshire.[57]

Jane Grigson's British Cookery (1984) said "Today, York ham has become a generalised term, meaning no more than a mild cured ham"; her opinion is cited in the current Oxford English Dictionary.[58]

The Oxford Companion to Food (2014) defines "York ham" as the name of a curing method, saying

'York hams' are made in countries other than England, not always as well as the original.[59]

City of York edit

 
The Market Cross with St Crux, York (George Fall, York Museums Trust)

Eighteenth-century York had no notable manufactures; its economy was based on its importance as a market centre, supplied by a wide surrounding area.[60] Hams were sent from the countryside to the market of that city, from where ships sailed to London via the River Ouse.[61] It has been suggested, but without substantiation, that they were called 'York' hams because they arrived in London on the York stagecoach.[62] More probably they arrived from York — which was a port — by sea. Before railways, coastal shipping was very much cheaper than carriage by land,[63] and the River Ouse was commercially navigated up to the City of York.[64] That they went by water is corroborated by William Ellis.[10] The sea journey need not have harmed them; indeed York hams were said to be at their best in India, for the sea voyage improved them.[65] The Oxford English Dictionary explains "York" can be used attributively in names of things originating in Yorkshire (the county), giving the example York ham.[58]

Some authors have claimed York ham originated in the City of York itself, though without documenting it back very far.[37][66] A common version is that York ham was "born" when a "butcher"[67] called Robert Burrow Atkinson opened a shop in Blossom Street and discovered the cellar was perfect for maturing hams. Atkinson's York ham was popular with racegoers; by the 1960s the business had long stopped selling hams.[36] Atkinson's premises were shown as a tourist attraction: the place where York hams originated, or at least, were made famous.[68] But these versions accept that Atkinson did not open his shop until 1861; by then, York hams were already famous in London and fashionable in Paris.[69] No 18th century author or early 19th century author says the famous hams of Yorkshire were made in York; Postlethwayt specifically mentions they were made and cured in the West Riding,[70] and Samuel Lewis the East Riding.[71]

Another purveyor was Scott's of Petersgate;[66][37] but they went out of business in 2008.[39] Country Life once claimed that York hams must be cured within 2 miles of the city centre, without saying who mandated that requirement.[72] Tom Stobart's Cook's Encyclopedia says

York hams are not made in York — the cure is a popular one which is used all over the world.[3]

Curing and maturing edit

 
Eliza Acton's 'genuine Yorkshire receipt' for curing ham

Like Parma ham or Westphalian ham, York hams are prepared by dry curing:[73] the old-fashioned farmhouse method of rubbing dry salt to partly dehydrate the meat.[74] According to The Larder Chef:

Cured, it is hung up to dry in cool cellars for up to 3-4 months. During this period a green mould grows on the ham, especially around the aitch bone and knuckle. This mould growth adds to the flavour and is easily washed off before cooking.[4][75]

The green mould is probably a penicillium and inhibits the growth of bacteria and the risk of the fat going rancid; instead of which it is hydrolysed.[76] Marsh & Baxter (not now a trading name), who were suppliers of hams by royal appointment, used to advertise that their York hams were dry-salted by hand for two months and then allowed to mature for three to four months to develop the unique flavour; this had been traditional for a century.[77] The firm contrasted the modern brine-injection method:

Today when people buy boiled ham they are usually buying what the trade knows as cooked gammon, which is a gammon of Wiltshire cut bacon needing only three weeks to produce and mature for cooking.[62]

For making York hams a similar slow dry curing and maturing process is used by the current (2022) Royal Warrant holders.[57][36] They state that they use salt and saltpetre, but no added nitrite.[6]

Smoked? edit

 
Both versions (pale dried, and smoked) advertised, 1921

Some authors[40][39] say York ham is smoked, others that this belief derives from the romantic[78] legend[35] that the original York ham was smoked on wood shavings left over from the building of York Minster.[37] The Larder Chef asserts it is not smoked,[73] while the Oxford Companion to Food asserts that it is.[59]

Probably the original York ham was made in both versions according to taste, like modern bacon. Eliza Acton (1847) had a detailed recipe where it was not smoked,[79] while The Magazine of Domestic Economy (1839) said of York or Yorkshire hams:

They are smoked in smoking-houses, where great numbers are fumigated at the same time, with wood, shavings, and a few aromatic herbs, the fire being made to smoulder and yield plenty of smoke by means of wet straw placed on the top. In some very refined ham manufactories, a few juniper berries are added, which certainly enhance the flavour of the ham.[65]

Thus the original Holland & Barrett (then a provision shop in Bishop's Stortford) advertised both versions. At a 1959 London tasting of French wines the importers paired them with six English hams: "York triple peat smoked, Wiltshire treacle-cured, Worcester and Suffolk sugar-cured, Devon dry-cured and York unsmoked". They said English cured hams would go with any wine.[80]

Other characteristics edit

 
A York ham with its traditional long cut, banjo shape, Mrs. Beeton, 1907

In the Fell v. Army and Navy case an experienced buyer said "A York-fed ham is a plump, thick ham, well rounded off at the shoulders. The fat is very white, and the flavour unmistakable".[46]

The Larder Chef says it is of a long cut and distinct banjo shape.[4] The current (2022) Royal Warrant holder explains "long-cut""

Essentially this involves removing the leg from the rest of the pig by following the shape and seams of the muscle, rather than just cutting across the muscle. Were we to use the standard cut, there would be a large cut face that during the lengthy curing and maturing process would become unpalatably dry and tough."[6]

Cooking edit

Unlike Parma or Westphalian hams, however, York ham is eaten cooked[73] (boiled, with or without subsequent baking).

English gastronomy edit

Alfred Suzanne's La Cuisine Anglaise (1894), a book that commended English culinary specialities to French readers ("we are forced to recognise the merit of some of them"),[81] said:

York ham enjoys a universal reputation... The manner usually employed by the English for cooking these is elementary. They simply boil in plenty of water without further seasoning, estimating that they have been sufficiently flavoured at the curing stage.

Before boiling it should be soaked in water to draw off excess salt. It should be wrapped in a cloth and simmered for three hours.

When you drain it, you remove the cloth that wraps it, and the ham is put in the pantry to be trimmed only on the next day, if it is to be eaten cold. But if it is to be eaten hot, remove the rind and put the ham back in a braiser with a bottle of sherry wine, then an hour before serving, put it in the oven. The wine in which the ham has been reheated, after it has been degreased and reduced, is mixed with the sauce which must accompany it on the table.[82]

 
Almanach de la Bonne Cuisine

It was common, particularly in the Victorian era, to serve it hot with Madeira sauce; Escoffier gives a recipe.[1]

French gastronomy edit

Some productions of French gastronomy were:

  • Jambon d'York à la gelée [jellied York ham];[83]
  • Dindonneau à la Royale [minced turkey poults and York ham with truffled calf sweetbreads and crayfish];[84]
  • Sandwichs au jambon d'York au beurre d'Isigny [ham sandwich].[85]

The illustration, a book of menus for aspiring French hostesses, had jambon d'York aux Petits Pois nouveaux.

In literature edit

In John Galsworthy's A Modern Comedy, in a scene set in the 1880s, Soames Forsyte wins a case for his uncle Swithin:

Uncle Swithin had asked him to dinner afterwards and given him York ham with Madeira sauce, and his special Heidsieck. He had never given anybody anything else.[86]

In Marcel Proust's novel In Search of Lost Time the stubborn Françoise gets it into her head that York ham is called New York ham, which she pronounces Nev'York. She would say to her kitchenmaid:

Go and fetch me a ham from Olida's. Madame told me especially to get a Nev'York.

Olida's was a real shop — also called Maison du Jambon d'York — founded in 1885, and near to where Proust lived in Paris.[87]

References and notes edit

  1. ^ a b Escoffier 1921, p. 352.
  2. ^ Francatelli 1861, p. 163.
  3. ^ a b Stobart 2016.
  4. ^ a b c Leto & Bode 2006, p. 180.
  5. ^ Corisey 2021.
  6. ^ a b c d Dukeshill, 24 February 2020.
  7. ^ The author signs himself "W. Cestr" (William, bishop of Chester); in 1888 the incumbent was William Stubbs, until recently the Regius Professor of History (Oxford).
  8. ^ Stubbs 1888, p. xi.
  9. ^ Dyche & Pardon 1740, YOR.
  10. ^ a b Ellis 1750, p. 111.
  11. ^ Postlethwayt 1766a, BRI.
  12. ^ Glasse 1796, p. 296.
  13. ^ Johnson 1770, pp. 129–130.
  14. ^ The British Library's online British Newspaper Archive gives, for all newspapers published before January 1800:
    1. for "Yorkshire ham(s)", advertisements in the following newspapers and dates:
    Manchester Mercury 18 November 1766, p.4;
    Kentish Gazette 17 July 1770, p.1;
    Kentish Gazette 7 February 1778, p.1;
    Northampton Mercury 22 June 1778, p.3;
    Kentish Gazette 16 October 1779, p.1;
    Royal Gazette of Jamaica 20 October 1779, p.7;
    Royal Gazette of Jamaica 22 January 1780, p.4;
    Kentish Gazette 15 April 1780, p.1;
    Royal Gazette of Jamaica 10 February 1781, p.11;
    Royal Gazette of Jamaica 17 March 1781, p.13;
    Calcutta Gazette 13 July 1786, p.2;
    Salisbury and Winchester Journal 14 January 1788, p.3;
    Salisbury and Winchester Journal 16 March 1789, p.3;
    Salisbury and Winchester Journal 27 July 1789, p.4;
    Royal Gazette of Jamaica 11 October 1794, p.20;
    Calcutta Gazette 23 October 1794, p.4;
    Caledonian Mercury 18 May 1795, p.1;
    Calcutta Gazette 5 November 1795, p.3;
    Calcutta Gazette 10 December 1795, p.3;
    Hampshire Chronicle 14 July 1798, p.3;
    Calcutta Gazette 28 November 1799, p.3;
    and 2. for "York ham(s)":
    Sussex Advertiser 26 July 1762, p.4;
    Madras Courier 17 July 1790, p.4;
    Calcutta Gazette 23 August 1792, p.3;
    Calcutta Gazette 1 August 1793, p.1;
    Calcutta Gazette 27 March 1794, p.3;
    Calcutta Gazette 5 February 1795, p.2;
    Calcutta Gazette 14 January 1796, p.2;
    Stamford Mercury 23 June 1797, p.2.
  15. ^ The British Newspaper Archive database reveals the following statistics:
    Number of newspaper articles that mention
    "York ham(s)" "Yorkshire ham(s)"
    1800–1810 31 70
    1810–1820 72 129
    1820–1830 342 240
    1830–1840 1,475 314
    1840–1850 1,312 148
    1850–1860 6,701 603
    1860–1870 9,387 1,422
    1870–1880 6,626 1,763
    1880–1890 6,212 3,217
    1890–1900 5,689 2,948
    1900–1910 6,484 1,545
    1910–1920 2,789 1,084
    1920–1930 4,538 469
    1930–1940 5,564 858
    1940–1950 274 34

    Nearly all hits are small or display ads. York ham was not available during the Second World War and the subsequent years of austerity.

    (Population of database: every newspaper in the British Newspaper Archive. Interrogation of database: through search engine provided. A hit (article) counts as one unit if it mentions the interrogated term one or more times.)

  16. ^ Thus The Practical Grocer: A Manual and Guide for the Grocer and Provision Merchant and Allied Trades, with Contributions by Specialists Trade Experts and Members of the Trades (1907) had:

    For example, while the “Jambon de York” accepted with gusto by the Parisian gourmet is a jambon of anywhere but York or Yorkshire, and the real Yorkshire ham is so little seen elsewhere that even experts in the trade sometimes say there is no longer any such thing as a real York ham, the writer recently had the assurance of a Tooley Street provision-merchant that he sells, all the year round in London, thousands of York hams made and cured in Yorkshire.

    (Simmonds 1907, p. 109)
  17. ^ a b Bregion & Miller 1845, p. 56.
  18. ^ Illustrated London News, 8 July 1848, p.14. The advertising campaign ran in several newspapers, and made no sense unless York hams were indeed famous.
  19. ^ In The Official Illustrated Guide to the Great Northern Railway (ed. George Measom, W.H. Smith and Son) p.159. The advertiser was a grocer in York itself who described his shop as "Depot for the celebrated York hams".
  20. ^ "We will give some new menus each year, because there are fashions in the menus as in dresses, and the hostess will be grateful to us for keeping her informed of the fashion for ceremonial dinners".
  21. ^ Almanach de la Bonne Cuisine, 1860, p.40
  22. ^ Rousseau 1861, p. 59. ("du champagne, du château-léoville, du madère, du punch, sans compter le filet de bæuf, le jambon d’York et la galantine!")
  23. ^ Morning Herald, 1851.
  24. ^ a b Wilk 2008, p. 98.
  25. ^ A Lady 1827, p. 203n.
  26. ^ A Correspondent 1839, pp. 113–4.
  27. ^ Hall 1843, p. 70.
  28. ^ For Bregion's claims see title page.
  29. ^ The 1861 edition did not mention York ham; she knew "York" or "Yorkshire" as a breed of pig; her readers were given directions on pig-keeping: Beeton 1861, pp. 365–8
  30. ^ The 1888 edition said "The best hams come from York, Cumberland and Westmoreland, or are reputed to do so; but many sold under those names are imported from Ireland or sent from the west of England: Beeton 1888, p. 530.
  31. ^ Rowlandson 1850, p. 592.
  32. ^ Douglas 1898, p. 81.
  33. ^ Nichols & Rolfe 1875, p. 89.
  34. ^ Dubois 1874, p. 361.
  35. ^ a b c Northern Living 2018.
  36. ^ a b c Webb 2011, p. 272.
  37. ^ a b c d Raffael 1993, p. 65.
  38. ^ Stirk n.d.
  39. ^ a b c Country Life, 25 November 2008.
  40. ^ a b Wilson & Trotter 2011.
  41. ^ a b c British Pig Association: Large White.
  42. ^ Youatt & Sidney 1860, pp. 9–16.
  43. ^ Long 1916, pp. 109–110. The author, a noted breeder himself, had been a professor at the Royal Agricultural College.
  44. ^ a b British Pig Association: Large White buying guide.
  45. ^ British Pig Association: Conservation.
  46. ^ a b Leeds Mercury, 23 March 1877.
  47. ^ Sheffield Independent, 24 March 1877.
  48. ^ The Times, 7 April 1897.
  49. ^ Food & Sanitation, 17 April 1897.
  50. ^ Westminster Gazette, 7 April 1897.
  51. ^ Melvin 1908, p. 30.
  52. ^ Parkin 1966, p. 3.
  53. ^ Strœhlin 1899, p. 105.
  54. ^ Birmingham Post, 19 December 1966.
  55. ^ The Times, 28 December 1966.
  56. ^ Pressdee 2002, p. 4(S).
  57. ^ a b Campion 2003, p. 4.
  58. ^ a b OED, 2022.
  59. ^ a b Davidson 2014, p. 379.
  60. ^ Tillott 1961, pp. 215–229.
  61. ^ Pearce 1843, pp. 118–9.
  62. ^ a b The Guardian, 20 October 1961.
  63. ^ Bogart 2013, pp. 2, 4, 5, 17.
  64. ^ Until 1757 the Ouse was tidal at York: Nicholson & Rainger n.d. In 1843 Robert Pearce wrote: "The navigation of the river Ouse too, has of late years, been greatly improved. The trustees, to whom the interests of the river are committed, have expended several thousand pounds in deepening and improving the bed of the river; and steamers now can ply at all hours from York to Hull. Vessels, also, of 160 tons burdens can come up to the staiths of York, many of which ply from London direct." (Pearce 1843, pp. 118).
  65. ^ a b A Correspondent 1839, p. 118.
  66. ^ a b Gordon 2016.
  67. ^ Atkinson was in fact a corn and provision merchant: Yorkshire Gazette, 13 June 1891, p.1.
  68. ^ Olivers of the Mount 2008.
  69. ^ See the sections Gastronomic reputation, Early history and Substitution and generic use of name (above).
  70. ^ Postlethwayt 1766b, p. YOR.
  71. ^ Lewis 1831, p. 629.
  72. ^ Geddes-Brown 2002, p. 81. In fact, Marsh & Baxter, the Royal Warrant holders, had not only cured their York hams near Birmingham for many years (see above, Curing and maturing) but has been advertising their product in Country Life since the 1930s (Country Life Archive)
  73. ^ a b c Leto & Bode 2006, p. 179.
  74. ^ Anthony & Lewis 1961, p. 28.
  75. ^ See likewise The Times, 28 December 1966.
  76. ^ Callow 1947, p. 273.
  77. ^ Illustrated News, 2 November 1973.
  78. ^ Geddes-Brown 2002, p. 81.
  79. ^ Acton 1847, pp. 242–3.
  80. ^ Burke 1959, p. 55.
  81. ^ "Fiers de notre supériorité culinaire, incontestable du reste, nous avons de tout temps trop négligé les mets d'origine étrangère et, dominés par d'absurdes préjugés, nous nous sommes toujours refusés à admettre qu'une autre nation que la nôtre pût produire de la bonne cuisine. C'est un tort, car, même en ne consultant que la liste des spécialités culinaires de nos voisins d'outre-Manche, nous sommes forcés de reconnaître le mérite de certaines d'entre elles". Suzanne 1894, pp. 1–2
  82. ^ Suzanne 1894, pp. 2, 154. (Wikipedia translation)
  83. ^ Garlin 1889, p. 164.
  84. ^ Garlin 1889, p. 201.
  85. ^ Garlin 1889, p. xxxiii.
  86. ^ Galsworthy 1929, p. 164.
  87. ^ Proust 2015, p. 19.

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york, french, jambon, york, formerly, often, called, yorkshire, characteristic, type, that, originated, yorkshire, england, like, parma, westphalian, made, curing, process, unlike, them, eaten, cooked, best, widely, considered, finest, hams, however, never, en. York ham French jambon d York formerly often called Yorkshire ham is a characteristic type of ham that originated in Yorkshire England Like Parma or Westphalian ham it is made by a dry curing process but unlike them it is eaten cooked At its best it is widely considered one of the finest hams However it has never enjoyed protected designation of origin status and has been imitated in many places Various productions some of doubtful quality have been sold as York hams Contrary to common belief York hams did not originate in the City of York Jambon d York Franck Bail catalogue of the 1893 Paris Salon Contents 1 Gastronomic reputation 2 Early history 3 Substitution and generic use of name 4 What is York ham 4 1 Terminology 4 2 Breed of pig 4 2 1 Origin of breed 4 2 2 The breed today 4 3 Geographical origin 4 4 City of York 4 5 Curing and maturing 4 6 Smoked 4 7 Other characteristics 5 Cooking 5 1 English gastronomy 5 2 French gastronomy 6 In literature 7 References and notes 8 SourcesGastronomic reputation edit nbsp York ham on the bone breaded Laurence Hudghton Dukeshill In his classic Le guide culinaire 1921 Auguste Escoffier said it was difficult to decide what was the best ham in the world but the preference should go to the Prague ham for serving hot and the York ham for serving cold although the latter was excellent hot too 1 Charles Elme Francatelli formerly chief cook to Queen Victoria wrote 1861 York hams are justly considered the choicest among English hams indeed I am inclined to say that excepting peculiarity of taste no kind of hams is superior to a thorough good York ham 2 Tom Stobart s Cook s Encyclopedia 1980 repub 2016 says York ham is at its best regarded everywhere as the finest type of cooked ham 3 Leto and Bode s The Larder Chef 2006 a professional cookbook says that York ham is considered to be one or the finest hams and is well known and appreciated as a delicacy on the Continent and elsewhere 4 Gastronomiac a French language online encyclopaedia says Le jambon d York d origine anglaise est aujourd hui un fleuron de la gastronomie francaise York ham of English origin is today an ornament of French gastronomy 5 Early history edit nbsp View of a Yorkshire Farmhouse G Towler Museum of North Craven Life Before refrigeration was developed country people preserved meat over the scarce months of winter by curing hams and other parts of the family pig Regions developed their own cures 6 According to historian 7 William Stubbs from public records of 1166 it is evident that for whatever reason Henry II of England got his hams from Yorkshire 8 The British Agricultural Revolution signified larger food surpluses sent to an increasingly national market By mid 18th century Yorkshire had a London reputation for its hams In 1740 Thomas Dyche said this county of late years is become particularly famous for making and curing legs of pork into what are commonly called hams 9 Ten years later William Ellis wrote Yorkshire where Land Workmen Labour and Hogmeat are extraordinary cheap and their Water Carriage of Goods to London so convenient send great Numbers of Hams every year out of that large County to the opulent City of London so that there are now few Cheesemongers Shops there but what sell their Hams for about five pence a Pound 10 According to Malachy Postlethwayt 1766 there was sent to London a kind of well prepared ham from Yorkshire 11 In The Art of Cookery Made Plain and Easy 1796 Hannah Glasse wroteYorkshire is famous for hams and the reason is this their salt is much finer better than ours in London it is a large clear salt and gives the meat a fine flavour 12 Madam Johnson s Present had already said that 25 years before 13 From about 1760 there are advertisements in the provincial and colonial newspapers for Yorkshire hams e g A Parcel of exceedingly fine YORKSHIRE HAMS or less frequently at first York hams e g Finest York Hams in highest preservation 14 By 1830 the usage York ham was the more common of the two and thereafter predominated 15 The expressions were interchangeable 16 York was described as famous for hams in a cookbook in 1845 17 The phrase the famous York hams appears explicitly in comparative advertising in 1848 18 and the celebrated York hams in 1857 19 By 1861 Jambon d York was in a book of menus for aspiring 20 French housewives 21 and an item that guests might hope to see served at balls in Paris 22 The first mention of York ham in a haute cuisine context is on 2 April 1851 when it appears on the menu as jambon d York for a banquet given for Lord Stanley at the Merchant Taylors Hall London It was one of 123 dishes served to the diners all of whom were male ladies watched from a gallery 23 Substitution and generic use of name editAs increasingly reputable products were sold in distant markets where the consumer did not know the producer it became easier for suppliers to substitute spurious versions As Richard Wilk put it Branding began in antiquity as a means of assuring quality by citing the geographical origin of a commodity as in Irish beef Port wine or a Yorkshire ham But the power of such location branding was gradually lost as commodity chains grew in size and complexity Yorkshire ham became a generic term for a particular style of curing a fate of local products as diverse as Cheddar cheese and Tequila 24 An author of a late Georgian book on domestic economy said it is all a farce There is more Epping butter sold in London in a month than is made in a year and perhaps more Yorkshire hams sold in one year than are made in Yorkshire in twenty Therefore let the economist housekeeper carry ready money to market and buy every thing the best of its kind not heeding from whence it comes 25 Although Ireland made excellent bacon it also exported large numbers of hogs hastily and improperly fattened for the Liverpool and Bristol markets where they were slaughtered while still unwell from the journey and cured in unhygenic conditions Most of the hams sold in London as from York were said to be tainted hams from these imported Irish hogs 26 An 1843 travel book agreed that London shopkeepers passed off Irish hams as and for York hams 27 The Practical Cook English and Foreign 1843 its senior author claimed to have been cook to Princes Razumovsky and Esterhazy warned its readers York Cumberland Westmoreland and Gloucestershire are famous for their hams but a great proportion of the hams now sold as Yorkshire are Irish 17 28 which was missed in the first edition of Mrs Beeton s Book of Household Management 29 but picked up in the third 30 One curer in Ireland sent almost his entire make of York hams to the cities of Hull and York 31 In Yorkshire hams were farmhouse products there was no ham or bacon factory in the county until the end of the Victorian era Hence nbsp Yorkshire ham made in the U S A American magazine 1919 From time immemorial the name of York Hams has been synonymous with a high class product and on the Continent at the present day 1898 Hams sold under that name may be met with in thousands partioularly in France It ia safe to say that few if any of these ever saw Yorkshire and indeed it is common knowledge that most of them are prepared in the great factories of Ireland 32 They also came from America An unsigned article in The Boston Journal of Chemistry noted Cheshire cheese and Yorkshire hams were never plentier in England than at the present time and many of the innocent customers in that little island are asking some impertinent questions as regards the capabilities of these famous counties to supply such vast quantities as are on sale duly labelled everywhere Undoubtedly so long as the resources of our cheese and pork factories hold out the people of England will have an abundance 33 This was noticed in France Urbain Dubois who is credited with establishing the modern custom of serving dishes in sequential courses instead of all at once wrote that although York hams were reputed the best the merchants of England sold many mediocre versions which they got from everywhere 34 Thus York or Yorkshire did not guarantee high quality ham without a trustworthy supplier one who put his personal reputation on the packaging that secured the goods This concept was the origin of modern branding 24 What is York ham editYork ham does not have protected designation of origin status 35 and there is no universally agreed definition of what it is At various times it has been claimed that a York ham should have one or more of the following attributes a rear thigh of a pig of the Large White breed bred reared and killed in Yorkshire dry cured and aged on the bone according to a traditional procedure in the City of York banjo shaped with very white fat a characteristic mild savour and meat of a light colour Those claims are considered and referenced in the remainder of this section but in summary few or no hams today fulfil every single one of those criteria if they ever did York ham is a style of ham Terminology edit A ham count noun is a cured rear leg specifically the thigh of a pig Ham mass noun is meat from a ham or should be Bacon is cured meat from another part of the animal 6 Breed of pig edit nbsp Parian Duchess 1860 a champion sow of the Large White Yorkshire breed said to be traditional for York hamSeveral authors say York ham traditionally came from a pig of the Large White breed 36 37 38 39 35 40 known in America as the Yorkshire Pig 41 although York ham was being advertised before the breed was developed Origin of breed editThe breed originated in 19th century Yorkshire where industrial workers around Leeds Keighley and Skipton had a strong tradition of keenly competitive spare time pig breeding 42 According to a Victorian academic the Large White became famous and was taken up after a Keighley weaver Joseph Tulley entered one in the Royal Agricultural Society s 1851 Windsor exhibition Tulleyby considerable skill and judgment produced the most wonderful pigs ever seen in this or perhaps any country and his famous strain proved to be the foundation of the entire race of our modern Large White breed which was for many years called the Yorkshire breed Tulley sold specimens to professional breeders at high prices and they spread round the world 43 The first herdbook for the Large White was published in 1884 41 In 1954 it represented 76 of the total male pig population of the UK 44 The breed today edit In recent years the Large White has seen a dramatic decline 41 Today it is considered a breed at risk Of about 50 members of the British Pig Association only three have sizeable Large White herds 44 and in 2022 there were only 355 registered Large Whites left 45 Geographical origin edit nbsp The Old Ouse Bridge York William Marlow York Museums Trust York hams were not produced in York but it was the market town from which country hams were shipped to London As foreshadowed the connection with Yorkshire was gradually lost with the passage of time Fell v Army amp Navy Co Operative Society 1877 was a dispute between traders about what was York ham The Army amp Navy Stores of London had ordered 500 York hams from a Sheffield supplier but sent them back saying they were not proper York hams only hams from Scotch pigs fattened for the Yorkshire market The supplier said they were proper York hams and sued for the financial loss The case was tried by Lord Chief Justice Coleridge and a Yorkshire jury The supplier proved the pigs had been fed killed and cured in Yorkshire but not that the pigs were bred in the county nor did he claim the hams were cured in York The jury found in his favour and the judge strongly agreed A meat inspector testified he could tell they were Yorkshire killed and cured by the characteristic odour 46 He said that if all York hams were bred in York that ancient city would be one vast piggery 47 In 1897 a Bethnal Green trader was fined for supplying a Canadian ham cured in America invoiced as a York ham The evidence was that a genuine Yorkshire ham sold for at least 50 more The magistrate asked an inspector for the trade association if all York hams were made in Yorkshire who replied that in adjacent counties the practice was to imitate but it was done with English meat 48 49 The Westminster Gazette commented This is immensely gratifying to our national pride Yorkshire can apparently make no country claim to the title York but it must not be filched from us by enterprising traders across the water 50 In early 20th century American consumer protection law American hams were not allowed to be sold in America as York hams but had to be called York style or York cut 51 Since Yorkshire was a breed of pig though they could be called Yorkshire hams In 1966 The Guardian reported that tourists to York asking where York ham was actually made could get no satisfactory answer 52 A Swiss geographer had asked the same question in 1899 I have searched in vain among the industrial buildings for the establishments where the famous hams are prepared which have spread the gastronomic reputation of York throughout the world 53 The Birmingham Post said that a factory in Brierley Hill near Birmingham had been making the product since the 1860s and now made four out of every five York hams It did follow the traditional process however and was owned by Marsh amp Baxter the royal warrant holders 54 A 1966 article in The Times about traditional British food names said that The three famous hams Bradenham York and Seager Suffolk come from all over the place Birmingham produces 80 per cent of the York hams 55 In 2002 a maker of Carmarthen ham in West Wales told the same newspaper it sold its rejects as York hams 56 Yet again according to that newspaper 2003 a prominent maker of York ham it was the current Royal Warrant holder obtained most of its hams from pigs farmed outside Yorkshire they were slaughtered in Shropshire 57 Jane Grigson s British Cookery 1984 said Today York ham has become a generalised term meaning no more than a mild cured ham her opinion is cited in the current Oxford English Dictionary 58 The Oxford Companion to Food 2014 defines York ham as the name of a curing method saying York hams are made in countries other than England not always as well as the original 59 City of York edit nbsp The Market Cross with St Crux York George Fall York Museums Trust Eighteenth century York had no notable manufactures its economy was based on its importance as a market centre supplied by a wide surrounding area 60 Hams were sent from the countryside to the market of that city from where ships sailed to London via the River Ouse 61 It has been suggested but without substantiation that they were called York hams because they arrived in London on the York stagecoach 62 More probably they arrived from York which was a port by sea Before railways coastal shipping was very much cheaper than carriage by land 63 and the River Ouse was commercially navigated up to the City of York 64 That they went by water is corroborated by William Ellis 10 The sea journey need not have harmed them indeed York hams were said to be at their best in India for the sea voyage improved them 65 The Oxford English Dictionary explains York can be used attributively in names of things originating in Yorkshire the county giving the example York ham 58 Some authors have claimed York ham originated in the City of York itself though without documenting it back very far 37 66 A common version is that York ham was born when a butcher 67 called Robert Burrow Atkinson opened a shop in Blossom Street and discovered the cellar was perfect for maturing hams Atkinson s York ham was popular with racegoers by the 1960s the business had long stopped selling hams 36 Atkinson s premises were shown as a tourist attraction the place where York hams originated or at least were made famous 68 But these versions accept that Atkinson did not open his shop until 1861 by then York hams were already famous in London and fashionable in Paris 69 No 18th century author or early 19th century author says the famous hams of Yorkshire were made in York Postlethwayt specifically mentions they were made and cured in the West Riding 70 and Samuel Lewis the East Riding 71 Another purveyor was Scott s of Petersgate 66 37 but they went out of business in 2008 39 Country Life once claimed that York hams must be cured within 2 miles of the city centre without saying who mandated that requirement 72 Tom Stobart s Cook s Encyclopedia saysYork hams are not made in York the cure is a popular one which is used all over the world 3 Curing and maturing edit nbsp Eliza Acton s genuine Yorkshire receipt for curing hamLike Parma ham or Westphalian ham York hams are prepared by dry curing 73 the old fashioned farmhouse method of rubbing dry salt to partly dehydrate the meat 74 According to The Larder Chef Cured it is hung up to dry in cool cellars for up to 3 4 months During this period a green mould grows on the ham especially around the aitch bone and knuckle This mould growth adds to the flavour and is easily washed off before cooking 4 75 The green mould is probably a penicillium and inhibits the growth of bacteria and the risk of the fat going rancid instead of which it is hydrolysed 76 Marsh amp Baxter not now a trading name who were suppliers of hams by royal appointment used to advertise that their York hams were dry salted by hand for two months and then allowed to mature for three to four months to develop the unique flavour this had been traditional for a century 77 The firm contrasted the modern brine injection method Today when people buy boiled ham they are usually buying what the trade knows as cooked gammon which is a gammon of Wiltshire cut bacon needing only three weeks to produce and mature for cooking 62 For making York hams a similar slow dry curing and maturing process is used by the current 2022 Royal Warrant holders 57 36 They state that they use salt and saltpetre but no added nitrite 6 Smoked edit nbsp Both versions pale dried and smoked advertised 1921Some authors 40 39 say York ham is smoked others that this belief derives from the romantic 78 legend 35 that the original York ham was smoked on wood shavings left over from the building of York Minster 37 The Larder Chef asserts it is not smoked 73 while the Oxford Companion to Food asserts that it is 59 Probably the original York ham was made in both versions according to taste like modern bacon Eliza Acton 1847 had a detailed recipe where it was not smoked 79 while The Magazine of Domestic Economy 1839 said of York or Yorkshire hams They are smoked in smoking houses where great numbers are fumigated at the same time with wood shavings and a few aromatic herbs the fire being made to smoulder and yield plenty of smoke by means of wet straw placed on the top In some very refined ham manufactories a few juniper berries are added which certainly enhance the flavour of the ham 65 Thus the original Holland amp Barrett then a provision shop in Bishop s Stortford advertised both versions At a 1959 London tasting of French wines the importers paired them with six English hams York triple peat smoked Wiltshire treacle cured Worcester and Suffolk sugar cured Devon dry cured and York unsmoked They said English cured hams would go with any wine 80 Other characteristics edit nbsp A York ham with its traditional long cut banjo shape Mrs Beeton 1907In the Fell v Army and Navy case an experienced buyer said A York fed ham is a plump thick ham well rounded off at the shoulders The fat is very white and the flavour unmistakable 46 The Larder Chef says it is of a long cut and distinct banjo shape 4 The current 2022 Royal Warrant holder explains long cut Essentially this involves removing the leg from the rest of the pig by following the shape and seams of the muscle rather than just cutting across the muscle Were we to use the standard cut there would be a large cut face that during the lengthy curing and maturing process would become unpalatably dry and tough 6 Cooking editUnlike Parma or Westphalian hams however York ham is eaten cooked 73 boiled with or without subsequent baking English gastronomy editAlfred Suzanne s La Cuisine Anglaise 1894 a book that commended English culinary specialities to French readers we are forced to recognise the merit of some of them 81 said York ham enjoys a universal reputation The manner usually employed by the English for cooking these is elementary They simply boil in plenty of water without further seasoning estimating that they have been sufficiently flavoured at the curing stage Before boiling it should be soaked in water to draw off excess salt It should be wrapped in a cloth and simmered for three hours When you drain it you remove the cloth that wraps it and the ham is put in the pantry to be trimmed only on the next day if it is to be eaten cold But if it is to be eaten hot remove the rind and put the ham back in a braiser with a bottle of sherry wine then an hour before serving put it in the oven The wine in which the ham has been reheated after it has been degreased and reduced is mixed with the sauce which must accompany it on the table 82 nbsp Almanach de la Bonne CuisineIt was common particularly in the Victorian era to serve it hot with Madeira sauce Escoffier gives a recipe 1 French gastronomy edit Some productions of French gastronomy were Jambon d York a la gelee jellied York ham 83 Dindonneau a la Royale minced turkey poults and York ham with truffled calf sweetbreads and crayfish 84 Sandwichs au jambon d York au beurre d Isigny ham sandwich 85 The illustration a book of menus for aspiring French hostesses had jambon d York aux Petits Pois nouveaux In literature editIn John Galsworthy s A Modern Comedy in a scene set in the 1880s Soames Forsyte wins a case for his uncle Swithin Uncle Swithin had asked him to dinner afterwards and given him York ham with Madeira sauce and his special Heidsieck He had never given anybody anything else 86 In Marcel Proust s novel In Search of Lost Time the stubborn Francoise gets it into her head that York ham is called New York ham which she pronounces Nev York She would say to her kitchenmaid Go and fetch me a ham from Olida s Madame told me especially to get a Nev York Olida s was a real shop also called Maison du Jambon d York founded in 1885 and near to where Proust lived in Paris 87 References and notes edit a b Escoffier 1921 p 352 Francatelli 1861 p 163 a b Stobart 2016 a b c Leto amp Bode 2006 p 180 Corisey 2021 a b c d Dukeshill 24 February 2020 The author signs himself W Cestr William bishop of Chester in 1888 the incumbent was William Stubbs until recently the Regius Professor of History Oxford Stubbs 1888 p xi Dyche amp Pardon 1740 YOR a b Ellis 1750 p 111 Postlethwayt 1766a BRI Glasse 1796 p 296 Johnson 1770 pp 129 130 The British Library s online British Newspaper Archive gives for all newspapers published before January 1800 1 for Yorkshire ham s advertisements in the following newspapers and dates Manchester Mercury 18 November 1766 p 4 Kentish Gazette 17 July 1770 p 1 Kentish Gazette 7 February 1778 p 1 Northampton Mercury 22 June 1778 p 3 Kentish Gazette 16 October 1779 p 1 Royal Gazette of Jamaica 20 October 1779 p 7 Royal Gazette of Jamaica 22 January 1780 p 4 Kentish Gazette 15 April 1780 p 1 Royal Gazette of Jamaica 10 February 1781 p 11 Royal Gazette of Jamaica 17 March 1781 p 13 Calcutta Gazette 13 July 1786 p 2 Salisbury and Winchester Journal 14 January 1788 p 3 Salisbury and Winchester Journal 16 March 1789 p 3 Salisbury and Winchester Journal 27 July 1789 p 4 Royal Gazette of Jamaica 11 October 1794 p 20 Calcutta Gazette 23 October 1794 p 4 Caledonian Mercury 18 May 1795 p 1 Calcutta Gazette 5 November 1795 p 3 Calcutta Gazette 10 December 1795 p 3 Hampshire Chronicle 14 July 1798 p 3 Calcutta Gazette 28 November 1799 p 3 and 2 for York ham s Sussex Advertiser 26 July 1762 p 4 Madras Courier 17 July 1790 p 4 Calcutta Gazette 23 August 1792 p 3 Calcutta Gazette 1 August 1793 p 1 Calcutta Gazette 27 March 1794 p 3 Calcutta Gazette 5 February 1795 p 2 Calcutta Gazette 14 January 1796 p 2 Stamford Mercury 23 June 1797 p 2 The British Newspaper Archive database reveals the following statistics Number of newspaper articles that mention York ham s Yorkshire ham s 1800 1810 31 701810 1820 72 1291820 1830 342 2401830 1840 1 475 3141840 1850 1 312 1481850 1860 6 701 6031860 1870 9 387 1 4221870 1880 6 626 1 7631880 1890 6 212 3 2171890 1900 5 689 2 9481900 1910 6 484 1 5451910 1920 2 789 1 0841920 1930 4 538 4691930 1940 5 564 8581940 1950 274 34Nearly all hits are small or display ads York ham was not available during the Second World War and the subsequent years of austerity Population of database every newspaper in the British Newspaper Archive Interrogation of database through search engine provided A hit article counts as one unit if it mentions the interrogated term one or more times Thus The Practical Grocer A Manual and Guide for the Grocer and Provision Merchant and Allied Trades with Contributions by Specialists Trade Experts and Members of the Trades 1907 had For example while the Jambon de York accepted with gusto by the Parisian gourmet is a jambon of anywhere but York or Yorkshire and the real Yorkshire ham is so little seen elsewhere that even experts in the trade sometimes say there is no longer any such thing as a real York ham the writer recently had the assurance of a Tooley Street provision merchant that he sells all the year round in London thousands of York hams made and cured in Yorkshire Simmonds 1907 p 109 a b Bregion amp Miller 1845 p 56 Illustrated London News 8 July 1848 p 14 The advertising campaign ran in several newspapers and made no sense unless York hams were indeed famous In The Official Illustrated Guide to the Great Northern Railway ed George Measom W H Smith and Son p 159 The advertiser was a grocer in York itself who described his shop as Depot for the celebrated York hams We will give some new menus each year because there are fashions in the menus as in dresses and the hostess will be grateful to us for keeping her informed of the fashion for ceremonial dinners Almanach de la Bonne Cuisine 1860 p 40 Rousseau 1861 p 59 du champagne du chateau leoville du madere du punch sans compter le filet de baeuf le jambon d York et la galantine Morning Herald 1851 a b Wilk 2008 p 98 A Lady 1827 p 203n A Correspondent 1839 pp 113 4 Hall 1843 p 70 For Bregion s claims see title page The 1861 edition did not mention York ham she knew York or Yorkshire as a breed of pig her readers were given directions on pig keeping Beeton 1861 pp 365 8 The 1888 edition said The best hams come from York Cumberland and Westmoreland or are reputed to do so but many sold under those names are imported from Ireland or sent from the west of England Beeton 1888 p 530 Rowlandson 1850 p 592 Douglas 1898 p 81 Nichols amp Rolfe 1875 p 89 Dubois 1874 p 361 a b c Northern Living 2018 a b c Webb 2011 p 272 a b c d Raffael 1993 p 65 Stirk n d a b c Country Life 25 November 2008 a b Wilson amp Trotter 2011 a b c British Pig Association Large White Youatt amp Sidney 1860 pp 9 16 Long 1916 pp 109 110 The author a noted breeder himself had been a professor at the Royal Agricultural College a b British Pig Association Large White buying guide British Pig Association Conservation a b Leeds Mercury 23 March 1877 Sheffield Independent 24 March 1877 The Times 7 April 1897 Food amp Sanitation 17 April 1897 Westminster Gazette 7 April 1897 Melvin 1908 p 30 Parkin 1966 p 3 Strœhlin 1899 p 105 Birmingham Post 19 December 1966 The Times 28 December 1966 Pressdee 2002 p 4 S a b Campion 2003 p 4 a b OED 2022 a b Davidson 2014 p 379 Tillott 1961 pp 215 229 Pearce 1843 pp 118 9 a b The Guardian 20 October 1961 Bogart 2013 pp 2 4 5 17 Until 1757 the Ouse was tidal at York Nicholson amp Rainger n d In 1843 Robert Pearce wrote The navigation of the river Ouse too has of late years been greatly improved The trustees to whom the interests of the river are committed have expended several thousand pounds in deepening and improving the bed of the river and steamers now can ply at all hours from York to Hull Vessels also of 160 tons burdens can come up to the staiths of York many of which ply from London direct Pearce 1843 pp 118 a b A Correspondent 1839 p 118 a b Gordon 2016 Atkinson was in fact a corn and provision merchant Yorkshire Gazette 13 June 1891 p 1 Olivers of the Mount 2008 See the sections Gastronomic reputation Early history and Substitution and generic use of name above Postlethwayt 1766b p YOR Lewis 1831 p 629 Geddes Brown 2002 p 81 In fact Marsh amp Baxter the Royal Warrant holders had not only cured their York hams near Birmingham for many years see above Curing and maturing but has been advertising their product in Country Life since the 1930s Country Life Archive a b c Leto amp Bode 2006 p 179 Anthony amp Lewis 1961 p 28 See likewise The Times 28 December 1966 Callow 1947 p 273 Illustrated News 2 November 1973 Geddes Brown 2002 p 81 Acton 1847 pp 242 3 Burke 1959 p 55 Fiers de notre superiorite culinaire incontestable du reste nous avons de tout temps trop neglige les mets d origine etrangere et domines par d absurdes prejuges nous nous sommes toujours refuses a admettre qu une autre nation que la notre put produire de la bonne cuisine C est un tort car meme en ne consultant que la liste des specialites culinaires de nos voisins d outre Manche nous sommes forces de reconnaitre le merite de certaines d entre elles Suzanne 1894 pp 1 2 Suzanne 1894 pp 2 154 Wikipedia translation Garlin 1889 p 164 Garlin 1889 p 201 Garlin 1889 p xxxiii Galsworthy 1929 p 164 Proust 2015 p 19 Sources edit A Brief History of English Ham Dukeshill 24 February 2020 Retrieved 13 May 2022 A Correspondent 1839 Bacon and Ham The Magazine of Domestic Economy London W S Orr IV October Retrieved 20 May 2022 A Lady 1827 Domestic Economy and Cookery for Rich and Poor London Longman Rees Orme Brown and Green Retrieved 26 May 2022 Acton Eliza 1847 Modern cookery in all its branches reduced to a system of easy practice for the use of private families in a series of receipts which have been strictly tested and are given with the most minute exactness 6th ed London Longman Brown Green and Longmans Retrieved 20 May 2022 Almanach de la Bonne Cuisine et de la Maitresse de Maison in French 5me Annee ed Paris Pagnerre 1860 Retrieved 18 June 2022 Anthony David J Lewis E Fordham 1961 Diseases of the Pig fifth ed Baltimore Williams and Wilkins Retrieved 17 May 2022 Beeton Isabella 1861 The book of household management comprising information for the mistress housekeeper cook kitchen maid butler footman coachman valet upper and under house maids lady s maid maid of all work laundry maid nurse and nurse maid monthly wet and sick nurses etc etc also sanitary medical and legal memoranda with a history of the origin properties and uses of all things connected with home life and comfort London S O Beeton Retrieved 15 May 2022 Beeton Isabella 1888 The Book of Household Management London and New York Ward Lock and Co Retrieved 13 May 2022 Bogart D 2013 The Transportation Revolution in Industrializing Britain A Survey University of California Irvine Department of Economics Working Papers 121306 Retrieved 31 May 2022 Bregion Joseph Miller Anne 1845 The Practical Cook English and Foreign London Chapman and Hall Retrieved 17 May 2022 Burke Helen 7 October 1959 A ham tasting too The Tatler amp Bystander p 55 Callow E H 1947 The Action of Salts and other Substances Used in the Curing of Bacon and Ham British Journal of Nutrition 1 2 3 269 274 doi 10 1079 BJN19470037 Campion Charles 24 May 2003 The best legs in town The Times p 4 Corisey Regis ed 2021 Jambon d York Gastronomiac Encylopedie Gastronomique in French Retrieved 11 May 2022 Davidson Alan 2014 Jaine Tom ed The Oxford Companion to Food 3rd ed Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 967733 7 Douglas Loudon M 1898 Bacon Curing Journal of the Royal Agricultural Society of England 9 3rd Series 68 108 Retrieved 12 June 2022 Dubois Urbain 1874 Cuisine Artistique Etudes de L Ecole Moderne in French Vol 2 Paris Librairie E Dente Retrieved 13 June 2022 Dyche Thomas Pardon William 1740 A New General English Dictionary with the Addition of the Several Market Towns in England and Wales 3rd ed London Richard Ware Retrieved 2 June 2022 Ellis William 1750 The Country Housewife s Family Companion London James Hodges Retrieved 2 June 2022 Escoffier Auguste 1921 Le Guide Culinaire The First Complete Translation Into English Translated by H L Cracknell R J Kaufmann New York Mayflower ISBN 0 8317 5478 8 Retrieved 18 May 2022 Fell and Another v Army and Navy Co Operative Society London Leeds Mercury 23 March 1877 p 6 Francatelli Charles Elme 1861 The Cook s Guide and Housekeeper s and Butler s Assistant London Richard Bentley Retrieved 17 June 2022 Galsworthy John 1929 The Silver Spoon A Modern Comedy Volume II New York Charles Scribner s Sons Retrieved 16 May 2022 Garlin Gustave 1889 Le Cuisiner Moderne ou Les Secrets de L Art Culinaire in French Vol 1 2nd ed Paris Garnier Freres Retrieved 17 June 2022 Geddes Brown Leslie 10 October 2002 Thought for Food Country Life p 81 Glasse Hannah 1796 The Art of Cookery Made Plain and Easy Which far excels any Thing of the Kind yet published London Longman and others Retrieved 13 May 2022 Gordon Maxine 5 December 2016 Charting the history of York ham The Press Retrieved 13 May 2022 Hall Mr and Mrs S C 1843 A Week at Killarney London Jeremiah How Retrieved 14 May 2022 Hargrove William 1818 History and Description of the Ancient City of York Vol 1 York William Alexander Retrieved 4 June 2022 Hooray for festive ham Country Life London Future Publishing Ltd 2008 Retrieved 9 May 2022 Johnson Mary 1770 Madam Johnson s Present or Every Young Woman s Companion in Useful and Universal Knowledge Dublin James Williams Retrieved 16 May 2022 Lewis Samuel 1831 A Topographical Dictionary of England Vol IV London S Lewis and Co Retrieved 2 June 2022 Leto Mario Jack Bode Willi Karl Heinrich 2006 The Larder Chef Food Preparation and Presentation fourth ed Elsevier ISBN 978 0 7506 6899 6 Long James 1916 The Book of the Pig Its Selection Breeding Feeding and Management 3rd ed London The Bazaar Exchange and Mart Office Retrieved 10 May 2022 March of the York ham to the Midlands Birmingham Post 19 December 1966 p 5 Melvin A D 1908 The Federal Meat Inspection Service Washington U S Department of Agriculture Retrieved 9 May 2022 Nichols James R Rolfe W J eds 1875 The Boston Journal of Chemistry Vol IX Boston Billings Clapp and Company Retrieved 13 June 2022 Nicholson Judy Rainger Chris n d The River Ouse Through Time PDF Fishergate Fulford and Heslington Local History Society Retrieved 4 June 2022 Northern Living 2018 The Origins of York Ham Northern Living Retrieved 9 May 2022 Notes of the day Westminster Gazette 7 April 1897 p 2 Olivers of the Mount 2008 History of 57 amp 59 Blossom Street Archived from the original on 8 November 2008 Parkin Michael 12 December 1966 Awkward questions about York ham The Guardian p 3 Pearce Robert R 1843 Ancient and Modern York Exhibiting a Statistical Survey of the City York John Linney Retrieved 2 June 2022 Police The Times 7 April 1897 p 4 Postlethwayt Malachy 1766a The Universal Dictionary of Trade and Commerce PDF Vol I 3rd ed London H Woodfall Retrieved 2 June 2022 Postlethwayt Malachy 1766b The Universal Dictionary of Trade and Commerce PDF Vol II 3rd ed London H Woodfall Retrieved 2 June 2022 Pressdee Colin 15 June 2002 Welsh ham s class act The Times p 4 S Proust Marcel 2015 Carter William C ed In the Shadow of Young Girls in Flower In Search of Lost Time Volume 2 Translated by Scott Moncrieff C K New Haven and London Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 18542 3 Raffael Michael 1993 In Search of the Ideal Ham Illustrated London News Rousseau Jean 1861 Paris Dansant in French Paris Michel Levy Freres Retrieved 18 June 2022 Rowlandson Thomas 1850 On the Breeding and Management of Pigs Journal of the Royal Agricultural Society of England XI XXV 574 607 Retrieved 13 June 2022 Simmonds W H 1907 Practical Grocer A Manual and Guide for the Grocer the Provision Merchant and Allied Trades Vol III London Gresham Retrieved 14 June 2022 Spectator in Hallamshire Sheffield Independent 24 March 1877 p 6 Stirk Anne n d Tease your tastebuds with York ham BBC Retrieved 9 May 2022 Stobart Tom 2016 Cook s Encyclopedia London Grub Street ISBN 978 1 910690 09 3 Strœhlin Ernest 1899 Souvenirs d Angleterre York et Canterbury Le Globe Revue genevoise de geographie in French 38 98 108 doi 10 3406 globe 1899 2141 Stubbs William W Cestr ed 1888 The Great Roll of the Pipe for the Twelfth Year of the Reign of King Henry the Second A D 1165 1166 Vol IX London The Pipe Roll Society Retrieved 18 May 2022 Suzanne Alfred 1894 La Cuisine Anglaise et la Patisserie Paris Retrieved 9 May 2022 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link The finest York ham in the world Illustrated London News 2 November 1973 p 8 The grand banquet to Lord Stanley Morning Herald London 3 April 1851 p 5 Three months to perfection The Guardian 20 October 1961 p 26 Tillott P M ed 1961 The eighteenth century Economy and poor relief A History of the County of York the City of York London Victoria County History British History Online pp 215 229 Retrieved 13 June 2022 Webb Andrew 2011 Food Britannia Random House ISBN 1 84794 623 2 Welcome to the British Pig Association British Big Association n d Retrieved 10 May 2022 Conservation British Pig Association n d Retrieved 10 May 2022 Large White British Pig Association n d Retrieved 7 May 2022 Large White buying guide British Pig Association n d Retrieved 10 May 2022 What s In A Name On British Dishes The Times 28 December 1966 p 9 Wilk Richard 2008 A taste of home The cultural and economic significance of European food exports to the Colonies In Nutzenadel Alexander Trentmann Frank eds Food and globalization Consumption markets and politics in the modern world PDF Oxford Berg ISBN 978 1 84520 679 6 Retrieved 12 June 2022 Wilson Carol Trotter Christopher 2011 The Whole Hog recipes and lore for everything but the oink Pavilion ISBN 1 86205 861 X York n 1 OED Online Oxford University Press March 2022 York ham Food amp Sanitation the Public Analytical Journal Vol VIII no 230 17 April 1897 pp 186 7 Retrieved 20 May 2022 Youatt William Sidney Samuel 1860 The Pig London and New York Routledge Warne amp Routledge Retrieved 9 May 2022 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title York ham amp oldid 1176997790, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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