Plum jerkum

Plum jerkum is an alcoholic drink produced from plums. It has been variously described as brewed in the same way as cider[1] and as a fruit wine,[2] although the terminology implies slightly different methods.

The drink is native to the north Cotswolds[3] and particularly to the county of Worcestershire, where plum cultivation was once centred on Pershore and the Vale of Evesham; it was also found around Chipping Campden in Gloucestershire.[4][5] Jerkum was known as a traditional product of Worcester along with potted lamperns and curd cheesecakes.[6]

A 19th century reference, again from Worcester, suggests that it was often taken mixed with cider to reduce its strength: "plum jerkum is [...] the fermented juice of plums, and is a very heady liquor. In the country they often mix it with cider, and thus moderate its effect [...] A man who was brought before the Pershore magistrates on a charge of drunkenness confessed he had a drop too much of it. Perhaps he took it neat".[7]

The jerkum made around Chipping Campden was made, for preference, from a dark bullace-like plum found in the area's villages: however it ranged in colour from "a deep purple to a claret red", and in flavour "from a sticky sweetness to a sparkling tartness" depending on the type of plum used.[8]

The Worcestershire author and farmer Fred Archer mentions jerkum several times in his stories of rural life,[9] as does John Moore in his books set around a fictionalised Bredon Hill.

References

  1. Hart-Davis, D. Country Matters, 1988, p.165
  2. Archer, F. Farmers, craftsmen and music makers: life in a Worcestershire village between the wars, Sutton, 1994, p.20
  3. Greensted, M. The arts and crafts movement in the Cotswolds, Sutton, 1996, p.97
  4. Brill, Edith (1973). Life and tradition on the Cotswolds. Dent.
  5. Hart-Davis, Duff (1988). Country Matters. Weidenfeld and Nicolson. ISBN 978-0-297-79460-8.
  6. Edwards, T. Worcestershire, Paul Elek, 1949, p.12
  7. "Crowquill's Jottings, Berrow's Worcester Journal, October 17, 1891, p.5
  8. Brill, 1973, pp.52-3
  9. e.g. Archer, F. Hay days: memories of country life in the 1920s, Sutton, 2001, p.126


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