Barges & Bread: Canals & Grain to Bread and Baking

£16.00

ISBN -13 978-1-909248-51-9
Publication date: August 10th 2017
240pp, paperback with flaps
Size: 216 x 138mm
Price: £15.00
Black & white illustrations and prints

Description

Di Murrell

Di Murrell knows the waterways of Britain back to front, and she has first hand experience of how grain was moved by barge to the mills along the banks of the Thames. She worked on her barge for many years, bringing up her two sons on the water with her husband. The book is a history of watermen, lightermen and dockers, and a recipe book for bread. From parched grain and flatbreads to Ezekiel bread, and the bread we eat today, this is a book for the boating enthusiast, and the home baker.

Winner of the Sophie Coe Prize for food history, Di Murrell writes for French travel magazines, and Petits Propos Culinaires. Di and Tam Murrell spent many years afloat on barges, bringing up their sons.They worked a pair of canal boats, loading up with barrels of lime pulp which they transported from the London docks to the wharf in Hemel Hempstead belonging to Rose & Sons, for Rose’s Lime Cordial. They made many trips with heavy loads like sand, grain, coal or lime, and Di learnt the value of slow cooking. For several years, they carried grain from Tilbury Docks on the river Thames to Coxes mill on the river Wey.

Now they live in France and London, although they have just sold their motor barge and find the views from the windows of their houses are nothing like those from the deck of a boat.

A pod cast interview by Jeremy Cherfas can be listened to if you download and open up your I Tunes – easy to do:

https://www.eatthispodcast.com/barges-and-bread/

Let them eat bread  PAUL LEVY  Times Literary Supplement 19th December 2017

‘The overarching slang trope of money as “bread” is easy to explain (“dough” is a bit more puzzling). As Di Murrell comments in her surprisingly wide-ranging Barges and Bread: Canals and grain to bread and baking, as early as 1266 in England the creation of the Assize of Bread and Ale used grains of wheat as the underlying measure from which all weights and measures were derived, and in 1303 it decreed that “an English penny shall weigh 32 grains of wheat dry”.’

‘I just wondered if I could ask you to pass on to Di Murrell my great appreciation for her book Barges & Bread, which I finished recently. As well as being one of the best and most readable histories of London I’ve ever read, it has also inspired me to bake my first loaf of bread (page 219), which is so fantastic that I doubt I will ever want to buy bread again! Thanks very much indeed for an excellent book.

Graham Ellison, reader who emailed us in the Corona lockdown, April 2020.