Rural Jersey Winter 2021

Page 24

FOOD & DRINK

Sharp cider making? Out of the bitter came forth ‘nothing more delicate, more clear and bright, more agreeable to taste.’ Vincent Obbard recounts how two Normandy cider experts were overawed by Jersey’s superior cider in the mid-19th Century

I

n September 1856, by order of the Société Centrale d’Agriculture de la Seine Inférieure, two gentlemen arrived in Jersey from France to stay at the Pomme d’Or Hotel. One of them, Monsieur J Girardin, was the president of the same agricultural association. His colleague, Monsieur J Morière, was a professor of agriculture of the Département of Calvados. Their purpose was to investigate the methods used in Jersey for making cider, which at that time were considered superior to those used in Normandy, where the cider-making methods were in their infancy. They were greeted with open arms by officials in Jersey, notably Colonel John Le Couteur (Aide de Camp of Queen Victoria), Colonel Mourant and Mr M Marett, Secretary of the Royal Jersey Agricultural Society.

They also visited Mr Gibaut at his property, Mainland, in St Lawrence. Mr Gibaut clearly was skilled in making good cider - Monsieur Girardin describes the cider he tasted there: ‘Rien de plus délicat, de plus limpide, de plus agréable au gout, d’une plus belle couleur blonde, que le cidre de Coccagee, que nous a servi ce ‘gentleman farmer’; jamais nous n’avons bu de boisson aussi délicieuse en Normandie.’ [‘Nothing more delicate, more clear and bright, more agreeable to taste, of a more beautiful blond colour, than the Coccagee cider which this gentleman farmer served us. We have never drunk such a delicious drink in Normandy.’]Apparently, the word ‘Coccagee’ comes from the Irish ‘ca a’ gheidh’ meaning ‘dung of the goose’.

The making of cider from the single apple variety of Coccagee is interesting. This variety has, sadly, completely died out. Dr Robert Hogg in his ‘Fruit Manual’ first published in 1884, describes it as one of the oldest and best cider apples. ‘Although it is perhaps the most harsh and austere apple known, and generally considered only fit for cider, still it is one of the best for culinary purposes, especially for baking, as it possesses a particularly rich flavour when baked.’ In his book, The Apple and Pear as Vintage Fruits (published 1886), Dr Henry Graves Bull describes the Coccagee as ‘so extremely rough and tart, that it would be almost impossible to eat one raw’. Many of the Jersey apple varieties which have been saved from the fate of the Coccagee by the sterling work of Brian Phillipps and the late Rosemary Bett in Jersey, are sharp tasting, like the Côtard, the Gras Binet and the Rouget, although by the previous account, they do not pass the inedibility test! Nevertheless, they are not preferred by cider makers today, who favour a sweeter apple. I have an orchard of Jersey varieties, for which there is little demand. What a shame it is that we have lost the art of making a superior drink from sharp apples. I’m sure that the resulting product would not have the characteristics of the modern processed cider to which we have become more accustomed. However, to have earned the respect of two knowledgeable experts from Normandy, the drink must have been good.

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Articles inside

Carers, caring and christmas

3min
pages 76-77

Home is where the heart is

9min
pages 78-81

Stepping back in time

3min
pages 74-75

Community junk

4min
pages 62-63

Hospitality and the rural sector

8min
pages 70-73

Meet the Constable

4min
pages 68-69

Art, inspired by nature

0
pages 60-61

Just haven't met you yet

4min
pages 58-59

Memoirs of a Jersey Girl

3min
page 57

Secret gardens of Jersey

3min
pages 54-56

Regenerative construction

8min
pages 46-49

Winners, losers and misguided invites

3min
pages 44-45

How to rewild your patch

4min
pages 50-53

Of bats and biodiversity

4min
pages 42-43

Laying the table

5min
pages 35-39

In the kitchen

6min
pages 32-34

Wildwines and

3min
pages 30-31

A rare breed

5min
pages 12-15

Everything for horses and their riders

5min
pages 20-21

Changing lives in Africa

4min
pages 22-23

Sharp cider making

4min
pages 24-25

Cider country

3min
pages 26-27

Root and branch

2min
pages 28-29

Over the wall

3min
page 7

The Chaplain's dog

5min
pages 16-19
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