‘The reapers leave their beds before the
sun
And gleaners follow when home toils are
done
To pick the littered ear the reaper
leaves
And glean in open fields among the
sheaves’
From
‘August’ by John Clare (1793-1864)
The first of August is half way between the
Summer Solstice and the Autumn Equinox. This is when the agricultural cycle
moves from growing to ripening and harvest. In pre-Christian times this was
celebrated at the pagan festival of Lughnasadh and Lammas is its Christian
successor.
Lammas marks the gathering in of the first
summer harvest. In Saxon and medieval societies, when the first grain crop of
the year was ready to cut it was an occasion of enormous importance and relief.
There were two main times when starvation threatened in agricultural societies
- early spring and immediately before harvest time. At Lammas the medieval
housewife could bake new bread from the first cut of the grain. No wonder it
was a time to celebrate.
When Lughnasadh became Lammas, the first
bread was offered at a special mass. The word Lammas derives from the Anglo
Saxon ‘hlafmaesse’ - meaning ‘loaf mass’ so technically people were celebrating
not the raw grain but the bread made with it - which may distinguish Lammas
from Church’s Harvest festival, when all is safely gathered in later in the
season, and which is actually a Victorian innovation. Its origin is in
Morwenstow in Cornwall when in 1843 the extremely eccentric Rev R.S. Hawker
reinvented it . The country custom of ‘crying the neck’ marks the other end of
harvest time and we’ll get there in September.
This is Samuel Palmer's picture 'The
Harvest Moon' clearly showing women gleaning and painted in 1833. I just love
Palmer's pictures.
Lammas Day was a traditional day for
feasting and craft festivals. It was also a quarter day when rents fall due. No
question that it has to be bread then. So I’ve made what in our house is always
called ‘Dinkelsbuhl Bread’, for the simple reason that I first saw it in a
baker’s window there sometime in the 1980s, and I’ve made it for special
occasions ever since. Dinkelsbuhl is a fabulous mediaeval town on the
Romantischerstrasse in Germany . You can vary the toppings according to what
you have in store. I usually use caraway, sesame, poppy seeds, oats and bran.
This might be a good time to mention some
of the numerous superstitions associated with bread making. My Grandmother made
four loaves of bread a week, on Tuesday and Friday. She always marked the dough
with a cross before putting it to rise, and Friday bread was regarded as much
more likely to go wrong, Friday not being an auspicious day for most
undertakings. Two loaves stuck together produce a ‘kissing crust’. Bread must
never be thrown in the fire - it’s the staff of life - don’t burn it. Bread is
a symbol of wealth and welcome, something to be worked for and fought for and
every new loaf is a small kitchen miracle.
There's really no recipe for this, you make some rolls - white or wholemeal according to your preference and then brush them lightly with an egg wash after you formed them. Put your toppings on a series of saucers and dip each one. Assemble the crown of rolls either on a flat baking tray or in a large round tin if you want to keep a neat shape - I don't. Bake as normal. I often make this and take it to parties instead of a bottle of wine (check with your hostess first!).
There's really no recipe for this, you make some rolls - white or wholemeal according to your preference and then brush them lightly with an egg wash after you formed them. Put your toppings on a series of saucers and dip each one. Assemble the crown of rolls either on a flat baking tray or in a large round tin if you want to keep a neat shape - I don't. Bake as normal. I often make this and take it to parties instead of a bottle of wine (check with your hostess first!).
It
was on a Lammas night,
When
corn rigs are bonie,
Beneath
the moon's unclouded light,
I
held away to Annie:
The
time flew by, wi tentless heed,
Till
'tween the late and early;
Wi'
sma' persuasion she agreed
To
see me thro' the barley.
From
‘Harvest Moon’ by Robert Burns (1759-1796)
2 comments:
and they have started harvesting up here in Lincolnshire... I must bake bread today!
Oh for the Lincolnshire wolds! - rolling hills, big skies...Dom in his kitchen..x
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