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[[File:Duck confit crepes with Cumberland sauce.jpg|thumb|Duck confit crepes with Cumberland sauce]] |
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'''Cumberland sauce''' is a fruit-based [[sauce]], usually used on non-white meats such as [[venison]], [[ham]], and [[Lamb and mutton|lamb]]. |
'''Cumberland sauce''' is a fruit-based [[sauce]], usually used on non-white meats such as [[venison]], [[ham]], and [[Lamb and mutton|lamb]]. Coming out of the long-standing [[Medieval cuisine|medieval tradition]] of piquant spicy fruit sauces rendered sharply sour with [[verjuice]] or vinegar and served with meat, but created sometime in the 19th century,<ref>''[[OED]]'' found no reference under this name before 1878; food historian Janet Clarkson, online as [http://www.theoldfoodie.com/2009/09/cumberland-sauce.html "Old Foodie", found an American reference of 1858], and quotes a port or claret and mutton gravy flavoured and coloured with a teaspoon of red current jelly in Kitchiner, ''Cook’s Oracle'', 1817.</ref> the sauce appears in various editions of [[Mrs Beeton's Book of Household Management]]. It was named for the [[Ernst August of Hanover, 3rd Duke of Cumberland|Duke of Cumberland]], who had ties to [[Hanover, Germany]], where the sauce was invented, according to [[Alexis Soyer]]'s recipe in ''The Gastronomic Regenerator '' (1846) foraport-wine based sauce accompaying boar’s head, which Janet Clarkson notes "contains what we thinkofas the required citrus note in the form of [[Seville orange]] rind (along with mustard)."<ref>[http://www.theoldfoodie.com/2009/09/cumberland-sauce.html Clarkson 2009</ref> |
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It is a more complex version of a simple [[redcurrant sauce]] |
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Despite its German origin, today the sauce is ubiquitous in the [[Cumbria]] region of [[England]] and is thought of as a thoroughly [[Great Britain|British]] condiment. |
Despite its German origin, today the sauce is ubiquitous in the [[Cumbria]] region of [[England]] and is thought of as a thoroughly [[Great Britain|British]] condiment. |
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Although variations exist, common ingredients include [[Ribes|red currants]] or [[Vaccinium vitis-idaea|cowberries]], [[port wine|port]] or [[ |
Although variations exist, common ingredients include [[Ribes|red currants]] or [[Vaccinium vitis-idaea|cowberries]], [[port wine|port]] or [[claret]], [[Mustard (condiment)|mustard]], [[black pepper|pepper]], [[orange (fruit)|orange]], [[ginger]], and [[vinegar]]. |
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==Notes== |
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{{Reflist}} |
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==External links== |
==External links== |
Cumberland sauce is a fruit-based sauce, usually used on non-white meats such as venison, ham, and lamb. Coming out of the long-standing medieval tradition of piquant spicy fruit sauces rendered sharply sour with verjuice or vinegar and served with meat, but created sometime in the 19th century,[1] the sauce appears in various editions of Mrs Beeton's Book of Household Management. It was named for the Duke of Cumberland, who had ties to Hanover, Germany, where the sauce was invented, according to Alexis Soyer's recipe in The Gastronomic Regenerator (1846) for a port-wine based sauce accompaying boar’s head, which Janet Clarkson notes "contains what we think of as the required citrus note in the form of Seville orange rind (along with mustard)."[2] It is a more complex version of a simple redcurrant sauce
Despite its German origin, today the sauce is ubiquitous in the Cumbria region of England and is thought of as a thoroughly British condiment.
Although variations exist, common ingredients include red currantsorcowberries, portorclaret, mustard, pepper, orange, ginger, and vinegar.
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