SC - food preserving
Philip W. Troy
troy at asan.com
Tue Apr 15 15:50:06 PDT 1997
Mark Harris wrote:
> Hmm. Wax is used to seal cheeses for preserving them now. I assume
> it was done in period even though wax was expensive. Is there any
> evidence of wax being used to seal meats? Or perhaps as seals on
> jars of vegatables? If so, would this be period canning?
>
> Stefan li Rous
> markh at risc.sps.mot.com
Wax was, as you point out, expensive. I understand one Elizabethan
method of sealing jars is with a piece of parchment soaked in brandy,
folded down over the opening and tied in place with a loop of string
around the mouth of the jar. This might be augmented with a sheet of
pig's bladder (kind of like sausage casing) tied on in the same way.
Also, a lot of what we use wax for was accomplished with regular fat. I
think I have a cheese recipe somewhere which calls for wrapping the
finished cheese in a sort of "bandage" with a round top, bottom, and a
strip around the edge. This is still done today, but it would then be
brushed with melted wax. The period instructions, if I remember
correctly, call for tallow or lard.
By the way, this method of sealing in wax-impregnated cloth is used
today in the manufacture of Prosciutto di Parma, and some dry sausages.
Perhaps it's an Italian thing.
I'm getting hungry!
Adamantius
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