York ham
York ham is a characteristic type of ham that originated in Yorkshire, England. Like prosciutto or Westphalian ham, it is made by a dry curing process, but unlike them it is eaten cooked. At its best it is widely considered one of the finest hams. However, it has never enjoyed protected designation of origin status, and has been imitated in many places. Various productions, some of doubtful nature, have been sold as York hams. Contrary to common assumptions, York hams did not originate in the City of York.
Gastronomic reputation
In his classic Le guide culinaire, Auguste Escoffier said it was difficult to decide what was the best ham in the world, but the preference should go to the Prague ham for serving hot and the York ham for serving cold, although the latter was excellent hot too.Charles Elmé Francatelli, formerly chief cook to Queen Victoria, wrote :
Tom Stobart's Cook's Encyclopedia says York ham is "at its best, regarded everywhere as the finest type of cooked ham".
Leto and Bode's The Larder Chef, a professional cookbook, says that "York ham is considered to be one or the finest hams and is well known and appreciated as a delicacy on the Continent and elsewhere".
Gastronomiac, a French-language online encyclopaedia says "Le jambon d'York, d'origine anglaise, est aujourd'hui un fleuron de la gastronomie française".
Early history
Before refrigeration was developed country people preserved meat over the scarce months of winter by curing hams and other parts of the family pig. Regions developed their own cures. According to historian William Stubbs, from public records of 1166 it is evident that — for whatever reason — Henry II of England got his hams from Yorkshire.The British Agricultural Revolution signified larger food surpluses, sent to an increasingly national market. By mid 18th century Yorkshire had a London reputation for its hams. In 1740 Thomas Dyche said "this county of late years is become particularly famous for making and curing legs of pork into what are commonly called hams". Ten years later William Ellis wrote: According to Malachy Postlethwayt there was sent to London "a kind of well prepared ham from Yorkshire". In The Art of Cookery Made Plain and Easy Hannah Glasse wrote Madam Johnson's Present had already said that 25 years before.
From about 1760 there are advertisements in the provincial and colonial newspapers for 'Yorkshire hams', or, less frequently at first, 'York hams'. By 1830 the usage 'York ham' was the more common of the two and thereafter predominated. The expressions were interchangeable.
York was described as famous for hams in a cookbook in 1845. The phrase "the famous York hams" appears explicitly in comparative advertising in 1848, and "the celebrated York hams" in 1857. By 1861 Jambon d'York was in a book of menus for aspiring French housewives and an item that guests might hope to see served at balls in Paris.
The first mention of York ham in an haute cuisine context is on 2 April 1851, when it appears on the menu — as jambon d'York — for a banquet given for Lord Stanley at the Merchant Taylors' Hall, London. It was one of 123 dishes served to the diners, all of whom were male; ladies watched from a gallery.
Substitution, and generic use of name
As, increasingly, reputable products were sold in distant markets — where the consumer did not know the producer — it became easier for suppliers to substitute spurious versions. As Richard Wilk put it:An author of a late Georgian book on domestic economy said Although Ireland made excellent bacon, it also exported large numbers of hogs "hastily and improperly fattened" for the Liverpool and Bristol markets, where they were slaughtered while still unwell from the journey and cured in unhygenic conditions. Most of the hams sold in London as from York were said to be tainted hams from these imported Irish hogs. An 1843 travel book agreed that London shopkeepers passed off Irish hams as and for York hams. The Practical Cook, English and Foreign — its senior author claimed to have been cook to Princes Razumovsky and Esterházy — warned its readers: which was missed in the first edition of Mrs. Beeton's Book of Household Management but picked up in the third. One curer in Ireland sent almost his entire make of York hams to the cities of Hull and York.
In Yorkshire, hams were farmhouse products; there was no ham or bacon factory in the county until the end of the Victorian era. Hence
They also came from America. An unsigned article in The Boston Journal of Chemistry noted:
This was noticed in France. Urbain Dubois — who is credited with establishing the modern custom of serving dishes in sequential courses, instead of all at once — wrote that although York hams were reputed the best, the merchants of England sold many mediocre versions, which they got "from everywhere".
Thus, "York" or "Yorkshire" did not guarantee high quality ham without a trustworthy supplier: one who put his personal reputation on the packaging that secured the goods. This concept was the origin of modern branding.
Definition
York ham does not have protected designation of origin status and there is no universally agreed definition of what it is.At various times it has been claimed that a York ham should have one or more of the following attributes: a rear thigh of a pig of the Large White breed, bred, reared and killed in Yorkshire, dry-cured and aged on the bone according to a traditional procedure, in the City of York; banjo-shaped, with very white fat, a characteristic, mild savour and meat of a light colour.
Those claims are considered and referenced in the remainder of this section, but in summary, few hams today fulfil every single one of those criteria, if they ever did. "York ham" is a style of ham.
Terminology
A ham is a cured rear leg — specifically, the thigh — of a pig. Ham is meat from a ham, or should be. Bacon is cured meat from another part of the animal.Breed of pig
Several authors say York ham traditionally came from a pig of the Large White breed, known in America as the Yorkshire Pig, although York ham was being advertised before the breed was developed.Origin of breed
The breed originated in 19th century Yorkshire, where industrial workers around Leeds, Keighley and Skipton had a strong tradition of keenly competitive, spare-time pig-breeding. According to a Victorian academic, the Large White became famous and was taken up after a Keighley weaver, Joseph Tulley, entered one in the Royal Agricultural Society's 1851 Windsor exhibition. Tulley Tulley sold specimens to professional breeders at high prices and they spread round the world.The first herdbook for the Large White was published in 1884. In 1954 it represented 76% of the total male pig population of the UK.
The breed today
In recent years the Large White has seen a dramatic decline. Today it is considered a breed at risk. Of about 50 members of the British Pig Association, only three have sizeable Large White herds, and in 2022 there were only 355 registered Large Whites left.Geographical origin
As foreshadowed, the connection with Yorkshire was gradually lost with the passage of time.Fell v. Army & Navy Co-Operative Society was a dispute between traders about what was York ham. The Army & Navy Stores of London had ordered 500 York hams from a Sheffield supplier, but sent them back, saying they were not proper York hams, only hams from Scotch pigs fattened for the Yorkshire market. The supplier said they were proper York hams and sued for the financial loss. The case was tried by Lord Chief Justice Coleridge and a Yorkshire jury. The supplier proved the pigs had been fed, killed and cured in Yorkshire, but not that the pigs were bred in the county, nor did he claim the hams were cured in York. The jury found in his favour and the judge strongly agreed. A meat inspector testified he could tell they were Yorkshire killed and cured by the characteristic odour. He said that if all York hams were bred in York that ancient city would be "one vast piggery".
In 1897 a Bethnal Green trader was fined for supplying a Canadian ham, cured in America, invoiced as a York ham. The evidence was that a genuine Yorkshire ham sold for at least 50% more. The magistrate asked an inspector for the trade association if all York hams were made in Yorkshire, who replied that in adjacent counties the practice was to imitate, but it was done with English meat. The Westminster Gazette commented:
In early 20th century American consumer protection law, American hams were not allowed to be sold in America as York hams, but had to be called "York style" or "York cut". Since Yorkshire was a breed of pig, though, they could be called Yorkshire hams.
In 1966 The Guardian reported that tourists to York, asking where York ham was actually made, could get no satisfactory answer. The Birmingham Post said that a factory in Brierley Hill, near Birmingham, had been making the product since the 1860s, and now made four out of every five York hams. It did follow the traditional process, however, and was owned by Marsh & Baxter, the royal warrant holders.
A 1966 article in The Times about traditional British food names said that "The three famous hams — Bradenham, York and Seager come from all over the place. Birmingham produces 80 per cent of the York hams". In 2002 a maker of Carmarthen ham in West Wales told the same newspaper it sold its rejects as York hams. Yet again according to that newspaper, a prominent maker of York ham — it was the current Royal Warrant holder — obtained most of its hams from pigs farmed outside Yorkshire; they were slaughtered in Shropshire.
Jane Grigson's British Cookery said "Today, York ham has become a generalised term, meaning no more than a mild cured ham"; her opinion is cited in the current Oxford English Dictionary.
The Oxford Companion to Food defines "York ham" as the name of a curing method, saying