Fool’s Gold – A History of British Saffron by Sam Bilton

£20.00

ISBN-13: 9781909248748
Publication: 8th September 2022
256 pages; 234 x 156 mm; paperback with flaps;
60 colour photographs;
70 recipes for traditional saffron biscuits, cakes and savoury dishes;
Price: £18.00 / $ 25.00

Description

Saffron has allured us with its golden hues throughout time. It was the darling of the Medieval kitchen, the saviour of the apothecary’s chest and gave cloth a regal glow. Unlike many spices, such as cinnamon, nutmeg and cloves, saffron can be successfully grown in England. From the middle ages through to the eighteenth century there was a thriving saffron industry in this country. Some people even claimed English saffron was the best to be found in the world. So renowned was the town of Chipping Walden for saffron production that it adopted the spice’s name at some point during the fifteenth century (it is now known as Saffron Walden).

Despite its expense, saffron was used extensively in British cookery particularly during the medieval era. It was also valued for its medicinal properties and was said to cure everything from melancholy to the plague. However, as tastes change our ardour for saffron waned and so with it the need and desire to farm it. By the end of the nineteenth century saffron production in England had all but disappeared, although there is a current day revival. Saffron is now a spice more commonly associated with ‘exotic’ dishes from distant climes. Given its lavish reputation (saffron is the most expensive spice in the world) it is no wonder that most people do not have it in their spice cupboard. Sam Bilton will show you how a few saffron fronds can make your repast a thing of great beauty and wonder to your dinner guests.

‘Food writer Sam Bilton is researching historic saffron recipes and has found cream-and-egg custards, crispy pastry-based pea tartlets, and venison stew topped with herby saffron dumplings.’  Sue Bailey, The Lady 

‘(A book one wishes to refer to)…when next I dabble with saffron. Which I soon do, because the recipes that illustrate are so appealing and I want to cook them all. Bright and colourful, with an arresting cover, which is a bit of a Prospect Books hallmark, along with a crisp clean layout and an index easy to read even on the dullest day, plus lots of attractive pictures inside; I set a lot of store by such things. This is a book that one wants to immediately pick up and thumb through…(on)…the story of saffron’s presence in Britain. Sam Bilton is a food historian so she knows where to look and she succeeds well in setting out a quantifiable history of the crocus plant (Crocus sativus) and its prized saffron spice. I was pleased to discover that she did not reject completely the theory that Romans occupying Britain cultivated saffron in Croydon, of all places. The modern name is derived from Crogedene, identified in the Domesday Book as Croindene which is thought to mean ‘valley where the wild saffron grows’.  Di Murrell, Petits Propos Culinaires 124

Listen to Sam Bilton and Rox Madeira in the Sage’s Cabin interview here:

https://trossachswildapothecary.podbean.com/e/36-sam-bilton-british-saffron/

Sam Bilton is a food historian, who gives talks and cookery demonstrations  with a historical theme. She is also a food and drink writer, with articles appearing in magazines and online, with English Heritage, and she works on historical recipes, recreating them for the modern day, including an eighteenth-century recipe for a Bride Cake. Sam was the Awards Secretary of the Guild of Food Writers Committee, and on several panels.   She regularly broadcasts on BBC radio, and gives talks at RHS Horticultural Shows, in Hampton Court, London, and Tatton Park, near Liverpool.