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Dartmoor Cider Makers
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There are many small
producers of Cider on Dartmoor, Dartmoor Cider like much of the home
produced cider leaves the mass producers way behind, the flavour
captured with the care of the dedicated small producer who lets face,
drinks his or her own is always going to be excellent, we thought it
may be of interest to some to outline the history of Cider in the
uk. This document was compiled by Gillian Grafton. The contents are as
accurate as possible , but no liability is accepted.
A History of Apple Growing in the UK
Apples
probably arose in the Caucusus, Turkestan, and adjoining areas, where
wild apples (Malus silvestris and Malus pumila) still grow. Natural
hybridisation betweem M. pumila and M. silvestris gave rise to edible
(non-sour) apples similar to modern forms, without the intervention of
people. Apples then spread throughout the fertile crescent (Persia,
Caspian Sea to Turkey, Palestine and Egypt). The first written account
of an apple orchard is found in The Odyssey (written 900-800 BC). Varro
(116-27 BC) wrote on the propogation of apples and described their
storage, including the construction of an apple store. Pliny (first
century AD) described how farmers would auction the fruit on the trees,
a practice still carried out in some Kent orchards. Malus
silvestris grew wild in Britain in Neolithic times, evidence for its
use as food has been found at the Windmill Hill site in Wiltshire.
However, there is no evidence that there was any attempt to cultivate
the trees. Druids are believed to have planted apple trees near sacred
oak groves but these probably served as hosts for mistletoe which was
very important to the Druids. Traces of apples dating to Roman times
have also been found in Bermondsey and Doncaster. During the period of
the Roman invasion of Britain, army veterans were given settlements on
which to grow fruits (as an inducement to stay), and thus apple
orchards were introduced into Britain. Following the Roman
occupation there were waves of invasions of Britain by the Jutes,
Saxons, and Danes. This led to abandonment of the orchards. When
Christianity was re-established in England (in Kent in AD 597 by St.
Augustin) orchards were established in monasteries. The monasteries
housed both men and women and were self-sufficient. Despite repeated
Viking attacks the majority survived. The monastery at Ely
(Cambridgeshire) was particularly famous for its orchards and
vineyards. A manuscript (circa 1165) of part of the plan of the garden
of Christ Church monastery in Canterbury shows a pomerium, an apple
garden, consisting of apples and pears for eating and apples for cider
making. Similarly in 1275 Battle Abbey in Somerset records the sale of
cider to the public. The Norman Conquest of 1066 brought the most
profound changes to apple growing in Britain. Not least of these
changes was the replacement of the Church establishment by
French-speaking Normans. The Normans had a strong tradition of apple
growing and cider making. They introduced many apple types to Britain,
the first recorded of which were the Pearmain and the Costard. The
Pearmain was particularly valued for cider making. The Pearmain (Old
English Pearmain) was first recorded in 1204. The manor of Runham
(Norfolk) had to pay to the Exchequer each year 200 Pearmains and 4
hogsheads of cider made from Pearmains. The Costard was first recorded
in 1296 when 100 fruits were sold for 1 shilling. In 1325 29 Costard
apple trees were recorded as having been sold for 3 shillings. The name
Costard is preserved in the word costermonger, originally a seller of
Costard apples. The Black Death and the Wars of the Roses led to a
decline in fruit cultivation, but this decline was reversed by Henry
VIII. In 1533, Richard Harris, fruiterer to the king, began a program
of importation of apple trees from France, and apple growing underwent
a large expansion. Harris planted a model orchard at Teynham which was
used to distribute trees to other growers. Apple orchards were
extensively planted in Kent in the 16th and 17th centuries. The growing
of apples was also well advanced in Herefordshire, Gloucestershire, and
Worcestershire. The bulk of these apples was used for cider making. The
building of canals in the late 18th century expanded the market for
cider. By the end of the century it was estimated that 10,000 hogsheads
(1 hogshead = 110 gallons) of cider were exported each year from
Worcestershire alone. Towards the end of the 18th century the
quality of fruit crops declined because of canker and also because of
poor orchard management. Cider orchards declined in Herefordshire as it
became more profitable to farm wheat and cattle. Protection of the
fruit market during the Napoleonic Wars, and high tariffs on imported
fruit after the wars led to an expansion of new orchard planting in the
1820s and 1830s. The lowering of these tariffs in 1837 caused a
collapse in the apple market. This led to Kent apple growers turning
their cooking apples into cider which was of such poor quality that
there were generalised protests. The situation continued until 1870
when industrialisation of the country led to increased per capita
income and fruits once again became profitable. During the decline
of apple production the Woolhope Naturalists' Field Club decided to
undertake a survey of the Herefordshire orchards. They appointed Dr.
Robert Hogg to undertake the survey. Hogg was already well know having
been the secretary of the short-lived (1854-1864), but influential
British Pomological Society. The survey was published between 1876 and
1885 as the Illustrated Herefordshire Pomona. The club distributed
grafts of 92 different apple varieties and successfully revived old
valued cider apples such as the Foxwhelph and Skyme's Kernel. The club
also visited Rouen in 1884 and selected Normandy apple varieties for
introduction into Herefordshire. These include Medaille d'Or and
Michelin which are still grown today. A scientific approach to
fruit growing first resulted from the establishment of the Royal
Horticultural Society. The first centre devoted to fruit experiments
was the Woburn Experimental Fruit Farm, a private establishment set up
in 1894 by the Duke of Bedford and Spencer Pickering. This also had a
limited existence. In 1903 the fruit research station was established
at Long Ashton, Bristol, as the National Fruit and Cider Institute.
Following amalgamation with the University of Bristol in 1912 this
became the Long Ashton Research Station. In 1913 a second site was
opened in Kent, the East Malling Research Station. At the end of 1986
the Pomology Division of the Long Ashton Research Station was
transferred to the AFRC Institute of Horticultural Research (the East
Malling Research Station) and the cider research was transferred to the
AFRC Institute of Food Research at Norwich and Reading. The Long Ashton
site was sold and is now owned by a private cider making firm. Trees
from the unique collection are now propogated at the Royal Botanic
Gardens in Kew, the Royal Horticultural Society gardens at Wisley, and
the National Fruit Collection at the Brogdale Horticultural Trust in
Kent. Apple growing is presently a much smaller industry than in
the past. In 1877 there were 23,000 acres of apples in Devon, 22,000 in
Herefordshire, 21,000 in Somerset, 9,000 in Worcestershire, 8,000 in
Gloucestershire, and 6,000 in Kent. By 1979 the acreage of cider apples
in Herefordshire and Worcestershire taken together was only just over
6,000.
A History of Cider Making in the UK
Although
apple orchards were established in England by the Romans there is no
evidence of cider making until the Norman Conquest. Cider making was
certainly established in Europe before then. One of the earliest
references to it was by Charlemagne at the beginning of the 9th
century. After the Norman Conquest there are definite records of
cider production in the monasteries of England. In the main apple
growing counties, including Kent, Somerset and Hampshire, most manors
had their own cider presses and made their own cider. Monasteries
regularly sold cider to the public. At Battle Abbey in Sussec records
show that in 1369, 3 tuns of cider were sold for 55 shillings. In
medieval times, cider making was an important industry in Kent, and in
the time of Henry II, Kentish cider mills were noted for their strong
spiced cider. Workers in the monastery orchards in the 13th century
received a daily allowance of cider as part of their wages, a practice
continued until very recently in the west of England. Cider and
apples were widely regarded as having health giving properties. In his
herbal, Gerard advises There is an ointment made with the pulp of
apples and swine's grease and rose water, which is used to beautify the
face, and to take away the roughness of the skin, called in shops
pomatum of the apples whereof it is made. The ointment was used to
soften the skin and fade freckles. Cider drinking was widely supposed
to promote longevity as this chorus from a Devonshire cider drinking
song shows:
I were brought up on cider And I be a hundred and two But still that be 'nuthin when you come to think Me father and mother be still in the pink And they were brought up on cider Of the rare old Tavistock brew And me Granfer drinks quarts For he's one of the sports That were brought up on cider too
Other
traditions are associated with cider, most notably the Wassail. Farmers
and farm workers used to salute the apple trees in a ceremony known as
wassailing. Wassail or Wass Hal means Be Thou of Good Health. The time
of the wassail varied from Christmas Eve to Twelfth Night. Participants
carried jugs of cider into the orchards, drank a health to the trees
and the anticipated next year's crop, and poured cider around the tree
roots. During the wassailing a great deal of noise was created by
banging pots and pans. Wheat flour cakes were eaten at these ceremonies
and small pieces of the cake were dipped in cider and placed in the
forks of the trees as a thanksgiving to the spirit of the tree. In
the 17th century, attention started to be paid to both the apple
varieties used for cider making and the quality of the cider. In his
Discourse of Husbandrie used in Brabant and Flanders (1645), Samuel
Hartlib stated his concerns about the poor quality of the apples used
in England for cider making. He praised the cider made in Normandy and
northern Spain using specially selected apple varieties. Things
evidently hadn't improved by the end of the 18th century. D. Marshall
in his book, The Rural Economy of Gloucestershire published in 1796
described the three principal drinks made in the county at the time.
They were cider, perry and a cider made jointly from apples and pears.
He lamented the poor quality of much of the cider then produced, saying
"A palate accustomed to sweet cider would judge the rough cider of the
farm houses to be a mixture of vinegar and water, with a portion of
dissolved alum to give it a roughness." He then went on to describe in
great detail the most common forms of cider mills and presses and gave
strong recommendations as to the processes to adopt for the production
of good quality cider. The usual method of harvesting apples was
to send men with long slender poles or rods (polting lugs) to beat the
trees. Women with baskets then collected the fallen fruit. He condemed
the practice, stating "The criterion of a due degree of ripeness is
that of the fruit's falling spontaneously from the tree. Nature is the
best judge of this crisis. No art has yet been discovered, to mature
unripe fruit, in any way equal to nature's process. Fruit, in all human
probability, does not quit the tree (in an undisturbed state) until it
has received its full complement of nourishment." The book gave much
sensible advice on the storage of the fruit and its milling. After the
pressing Marshall stated that most farm cider makers reground the
residue with water for a "family drink". One of the 18th century
methods of cider making condemned by Marshall was described by A.
fothergill, a physician commissioned to determine the extent of copper
contamination of ciders. He described the production of cuit cider
thus: "Cyder wine prepared after the method communicated by Dr. Rush,
as practised in America, viz by evapourating in a brewing copper the
fresh apple-juice till half of it be consumed. The remainder is then
immediately conveyed into a wooden cooler, and afterwards is put into a
proper cask, with an addition of yeast and fermented in the ordinary
way. The process is evidently borrowed from what has long been
practised on the recent juice of the grape, under the term of vin cuit,
or boiled wine, not only in Italy but also in the islands of the
Archipelago, from time immemorial." The report further states that the
practice was much imitated in England, and especially in the west of
England. The author condems the process stating that "The evapouration
of the must by long boiling not only occassions an unnecessary waste of
both liquor and fuel, but also dissipates certain essential principles,
without which the liquor can never undergo a complete fermentation, and
without a complete fermentation there can be no perfect wine. Hence
boiled wines are generally crude and heavy and flat, liable to produce
indigestion, flatulency and diarrheoa." The report condems the
inconsistency in production especially the conduct of fermentation.
Some brewers used open vats, some closed hogsheads and some even tried
to prevent the fermentation under the impression that it was a fault.
There was no use of thermometers, "And that for fining down the liquor,
many have recourse to that odious article, bullock's blood, when the
intention might be much better answered by whites of eggs, or
isinglass." The author highly recommend cider and perry produced by
more straight forward traditional methods: "When the must is prepared
from the choicest fruit and undergoes the exact degree of vinous
fermentation requisite to its perfection, the acid and the sweet are
thus admirably blended with the aqueous, oily and spiritous principles,
and the whole imbued with the grateful flavours of the rinds, and the
agreable aromatick butter of the kernels; it assumes a new character;
grows lively, sparkling and exhilerating; and when completely mellowed
by time, the liquor becomes at once highly delicious to the palate, and
congenial to the constitution, superior in every respect to most other
English wines, and perhaps not inferior to many of the foreign wines." Following
the attention given to the improvement of cider during the 18th
century, there was much planting of cider apples in Herefordshire,
Gloucestershire, Somerset, and Devon. Cider was very popular and on
farms in the West Country workers received a daily allocation of cider
as part of their wages. Cider was supplied to ships in Bristol harbour
and was often shipped by sea from Devon to London. Once in London it
was often adulterated and sold as imported wine. Attention began
to be paid to cider apple varieties. The Foxwhelp, which appeared in
the mid 17th century, became popular and was used in the finest ciders.
According to Hugh Staffor, the Styre or Stiar apple was noted for
producing a bold, masculine, and strong cider and at one time was
almost the only apple esteemed for producing rough cider. In Devon at
the beginning of the 18th century, Royal Wilding came into prominence.
Other varieties were alse developed such as Meadgate, White-Sour, the
Irish Cockagee, and Elliot. Somerset, not reknowned for good cider
until then, gave rise to the most famous cider apple of all, the
Kingston Black (Black Taunton). In the 19th century much of the
art of cider making which had been developed during the 17th and 18th
centuries seems to have been lost. Revival of interest in cider apples
was encouraged by G.W. Radcliffe Cooke of Hellens, Herefordshire who,
in 1898, wrote A Book about Cider and Perry. Neville Grenville of
Glastonbury, Somerset, in co-operation with the Bath and West and
Southern Counties Society aided by small grants from the Board of
Agriculture, began experiments on cider production in 1893. These
experiments were one of the factors leading to the setting up of the
National Fruit and Cider Institute. In 1903 apple varieties
included Foxwhelp in Herefordshire, Sweet Alford and Woodbine in Devon,
Morgan's Sweet in Somerset and Kingston Black. The National Fruit and
Cider Institue ran extensive trials in the mid 1930s leading to the
widespread use of Yarlington Mill, a seedling raised in Somerset at the
end of the 19th century. The 20th century has led to a marked
change to factory production of cider in Britain. Factories buy fruit
from France and now import concentrated apple juice from abroad. There
has been some interest from the larger producers in locally produced
apples accompanied by a welcome improvement in the standard of cider.
However, it is still true to say that the best ciders are produced by
small farms using their own cider apples which on Dartmoor there are
many.
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