1/2 June: Thomas Hardy and a Sheep Shearing Supper



'It was the first day of June, and the sheep-shearing season culminated, the landscape, even to the leanest pasture, being all health and colour. Every green was young, every pore was open, and every stalk was swollen with racing currents of juice...'


Thomas Hardy (1840-1926) ‘Far from the Madding Crowd’


I have a love-hate relationship with Hardy’s novels. I feel weak spirited that I can’t read the dark novels - Tess and Jude - I find them too upsetting, but I love the lighter ones; ‘Under the Greenwood Tree’ and ‘Far from the Madding Crowd’ in particular. Hardy was born on 2 June 1840, so tomorrow would have been his 170th birthday.


Sheep formed the back bone of the British economy up to the Industrial Revolution, hence the woolsack on which the Lord Chancellor a sits on formal occasions. Like many events in the agricultural year, sheep shearing was a communal activity and an opportunity for neighbours to get together after a lot of hard work.




In FFTMC on the first day of June, after the shearing is done, Bathsheba Everdene and her workers have supper together. As the old illustration shows above Bathsheba is inside the house and shares in the event through the window. Farmer Boldwood turns up and Gabriel Oak is moved from his seat at the other end of the table to make way for him. This is just after the touching episode when Gabriel tries to teach Bathsheba how to hold the sheep shears by holding her hands in his own. She rebuffs him then, and again now when she makes him give up his seat to Farmer Boldwood. We want her to marry Gabriel the shepherd all along, but we have to wait until the end of the novel for a resolution.


There’s a shepherd in Shakespeare’s ‘Winters Tale’ too, this is his son the clown speaking:


‘I cannot do't without counters. Let me see; what am I to buy for our sheep-shearing feast? Three pound of sugar, five pound of currants, rice, - what will this sister of mine do with rice? But my father hath made her mistress of the feast, and she lays it on.......I must have saffron to colour the warden pies; mace; dates?--none, that's out of my note; nutmegs, seven; a race or two of ginger, but that I may beg; four pound of prunes, and as many of raisins o' the sun.


Warden pies eh ? The Warden Pear takes its name from the Cistercian Abbey at Warden in Bedfordshire. It’s a small cooking pear, but in its absence I used small Conference pears.


Warden Pie


12oz buttery shortcrust pastry


4 firm pears peeled

2 oz caster sugar

Good pinch saffron threads

Squeeze of lemon juice

1⁄2 tsp ginger

1/2 tsp nutmeg

Handful raisins

2 tablespoons of brown sugar

1 oz butter


Line a pie dish with half the pastry. Core and halve the pears lengthways. Put the saffron into about half a pint of hot water and add 2 oz sugar and the lemon juice. Simmer until the saffron has coloured the syrup and the sugar has dissolved. Simmer the pears long enough to soften them up a bit - how long depends on how large and ripe the pears are. Let the pears cool in the syrup then take them out (keep the syrup) and set the pears into the pie dish. Scatter the brown sugar over the pears, and sprinkle spices and raisins on top (and a few slivers of unsalted butter). Lay the top crust over, cut to size, and crimp the edges. I made a fancy decoration of a pear branch on the top with my pastry scraps. Brush with egg and bake at 170c until the crust is golden - 45 minutes or so. Strain out the saffron from the syrup and boil it down until is is really syrupy and serve with the pie and lots of cream.


'Our sheep-shear is over and supper is past

Here's an health to our mistresse all in a full glasse

For she is a goode 'ooman and provides us with cheere

Here's an health to our mistress, so drink up your beere!'


Anonymous 16c Ballad


8 comments:

Anonymous said...

You have a lovely and unusual blog here that's as good to read as to smaple the recipes from. Thank you!

Anonymous said...

or sample even!!!

Unknown said...

Thanks Emmalene - yours too!

thecatalanway said...

I must try this one - I bought some pastry last week and then didn't have time to do anything with it so here is the answer ! Getting time to cook as well as write is my present preoccupation love Kate x

Choclette said...

What about the shooting and hanging in FFTMC? The only one of Hardy's I've read that was light was the Woodlanders. I have read Tess, but like you find it too upsetting to read again and have never even tried Jude.

Choclette said...

Forgot to mention the pie - which look lovely.

Unknown said...

yep of course and poor Fanny as well. I think its just Tess and Jude really, Judde has horrible child murder and Tess I feel sorry for but she REALLY annoys me too. I quite liked the Mayor of Casterbridge but I haven't relooked at that for years...So as I say a love hate thing. I loved the film of FFTMC too - Alan Bates - yummy

Mike said...

Very interesting. There is a recreation of the Sheep Shearing Supper tomorrow Sat 2nd May 2015 in the garden at Hardy's Cottage by the New Hardy Players. http://hardyonline.org/2015/04/25/another-chance-to-see-woodland-words-coming-up-on-2-may/