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A ploughman's lunch is an English cold meal based around
bread Bread is a staple food prepared from a dough of flour (usually wheat) and water, usually by baking. Throughout recorded history and around the world, it has been an important part of many cultures' diet. It is one of the oldest human-made f ...
,
cheese Cheese is a dairy product produced in wide ranges of flavors, textures, and forms by coagulation of the milk protein casein. It comprises proteins and fat from milk, usually the milk of cows, buffalo, goats, or sheep. During production, ...
, and fresh or pickled onions.Hessayon, ''The new vegetable and herb expert'', 2014, p. 73 Additional items can be added such as ham, green salad, hard boiled eggs, and apple, and usual accompaniments are butter and "pickle", which in Britain denotes a chutney-like condiment.Petrini and Watson (eds) (2001) ''Slow Food: Collected Thoughts on Taste, Tradition and the Honest Pleasures of Food'', Chelsea Green, p.164 As its name suggests, it is most commonly eaten at lunchtime. It is particularly associated with pubs, and often served with beer. Beer, bread, and cheese have been combined in the English diet since antiquity, and have been served together in inns for centuries. However, the specific term "
ploughman A plough or plow ( US; both ) is a farm tool for loosening or turning the soil before sowing seed or planting. Ploughs were traditionally drawn by oxen and horses, but in modern farms are drawn by tractors. A plough may have a wooden, iron or ...
's lunch" is believed to date from the 1950s, when the Cheese Bureau, a marketing body, began promoting it in pubs as a way to increase the sales of cheese, which had recently ceased to be rationed. Its popularity increased as the
Milk Marketing Board The Milk Marketing Board was a producer-run product marketing board, established by the Agricultural Marketing Act 1933, to control milk production and distribution in the United Kingdom. It functioned as buyer of last resort in the milk market in ...
promoted the meal nationally throughout the 1960s.


History

''
Pierce the Ploughman's Crede ''Pierce the Ploughman's Crede'' is a medieval alliterative poem of 855 lines, lampooning the four orders of friars. Textual history Surviving in two complete 14th-century manuscripts and two early printed editions, the ''Crede'' can be dated o ...
'' (c. 1394) mentions the traditional
ploughman A plough or plow ( US; both ) is a farm tool for loosening or turning the soil before sowing seed or planting. Ploughs were traditionally drawn by oxen and horses, but in modern farms are drawn by tractors. A plough may have a wooden, iron or ...
's meal of bread, cheese, and beer. Bread and cheese formed the basis of the diet of English rural labourers for centuries: skimmed-milk cheese, supplemented with a little lard and butter, was their main source of fats and protein.Thirsk and Clay (eds.) ''Chapters from the Agrarian History of England and Wales: Volume 2,'' CUP, 1990, p. 216 In the absence of access to expensive seasonings, onions were the "favoured condiment", as well as providing a valuable source of vitamin C. The reliance on cheese rather than meat protein was especially strong in the south of the country. As late as the 1870s, farmworkers in Devon were said to eat "bread and hard cheese at 2 d. a pound, with cider very washy and sour" for their midday meal.Royle 2012, p. 193. While this diet was associated with
rural poverty Rural poverty refers to poverty in rural areas, including factors of rural society, rural economy, and political systems that give rise to the poverty found there.Janvry, A. de, E. Sadoulet, and R. Murgai. 2002“Rural Development and Rural Pol ...
, it also gained associations with more idealised images of rural life.
Anthony Trollope Anthony Trollope (; 24 April 1815 – 6 December 1882) was an English novelist and civil servant of the Victorian era. Among his best-known works is a series of novels collectively known as the '' Chronicles of Barsetshire'', which revolves ar ...
in '' The Duke's Children'' has a character comment that "A rural labourer who sits on the ditch-side with his bread and cheese and an onion has more enjoyment out of it than any Lucullus".Trollope, ''The Duke's Children'', 1902, p. 253 While farm labourers usually carried their food with them to eat in the fields, similar food was for a long time served in public houses as a simple, inexpensive meal. In 1815, William Cobbett recalled how farmers going to market in
Farnham Farnham ( /ˈfɑːnəm/) is a market town and civil parish in Surrey, England, around southwest of London. It is in the Borough of Waverley, close to the county border with Hampshire. The town is on the north branch of the River Wey, a trib ...
, forty years earlier, would often add "2d. worth of bread and cheese" to the pint of beer they drank at the inn stabling their horses.Cobbett, "To the Chancellor of the Exchequer", ''Weekly Political Register'', 15 December 1815, 329 In the 19th century the English fondness for serving cheese and bread with beer was noted, as "the very dryness and saltness heighten thirst, and therefore the relish of the beer".McMichael, George (1883)
Notes on the Way through Ayrshire - Parish of Dunlop
accessed 01-04-22
In the early 20th century, bread and cheese was still the only food available in many rural pubs: in 1932 Martin Armstrong described stopping at village inns for a lunch of bread, cheese and beer, noting that "On these occasions in country inns when bread, cheese and beer seem so extraordinarily good, the alternative is generally nothing; and compared with nothing bread, cheese, and beer are beyond compare".Armstrong, "Comparatively speaking", in ''The Weekend Review'' v.6 (1932), 128 While '' Oxford English Dictionary'' states the first recorded use of the phrase "ploughman's luncheon" occurred in 1837, from the '' Memoirs of the Life of Sir Walter Scott'' by John G. Lockhart, this stray early use may have meant merely the sum of its parts, "a lunch for a ploughman". The ''OED''s next reference is from the July 1956 ''Monthly Bulletin'' of the
Brewers' Society The British Beer and Pub Association is the drinks and hospitality industry's largest and most influential trade association representing some 90% of UK brewing (by volume) and the ownership of around 20,000 of the nation's pubs. History The As ...
, which describes the activities of the Cheese Bureau, a marketing body affiliated with the
J. Walter Thompson J. Walter Thompson (JWT) was an advertisement holding company incorporated in 1896 by American advertising pioneer James Walter Thompson. The company was acquired in 1987 by multinational holding company WPP plc, and in November 2018, WPP merge ...
advertising agency. It describes how the Bureau By the 1950s, the traditional combination of bread, cheese, beer and onions was certainly being referred to by forms of the name later used to promote it. In 1956, author Adrian Bell reported: "There's a pub quite close to where I live where ... all you need say is, 'Ploughboy's Lunch, Harry, please'. And in a matter of minutes a tray is handed across the counter to you on which is a good square hunk of bread, a lump of butter and a wedge of cheese, and pickled onions, along with your pint of beer". Only a year later, in June 1957, another edition of the ''Monthly Bulletin'' of the Brewers' Society referred to a ploughman's lunch using that name, and said that it consisted of " cottage bread, cheese, lettuce, hard-boiled eggs, cold sausages and, of course, beer". The Glasgow newspaper ''The Bulletin'' from 15 April 1958 and '' The Times'' from 29 April 1958 refer to a ploughman's lunch consisting of bread, cheese and pickled onions. The meal rose rapidly in popularity during the 1970s. This has been argued to be at least partially based on a British cultural "revulsion from technology and modernity and a renewed love-affair with an idealised national past", although it appears the main reasons the ploughman's lunch was favoured by caterers were that it was simple and quick to prepare even for less skilled staff, required no cooking, and involved no meat, giving a potential for high profit margins.Lippert, "The choice is cheese", ''Hotelier and Caterer'', v.22 (1989), 71 The film '' The Ploughman's Lunch'' (1983), from a screenplay by Ian McEwan, has a subtext that is "the way countries and people re-write their own history to suit the needs of the present". The title alludes to the debatable claim that the supposedly "traditional" meal was the result of a marketing campaign of the 1960s devised to encourage people to eat meals in pubs.Cornell ''Strange Tales of Ale'', pp. 17–25


See also

*
Branston (food) Branston is an English food brand best known for the original Branston Pickle, a jarred pickled chutney first made in 1922 in the village of Branston near Burton upon Trent, Staffordshire by Crosse & Blackwell. The Branston factory proved to b ...
* English cheese *
Cheese and pickle sandwich A cheese and pickle sandwich (sometimes known as a cheese and chutney sandwich or a ploughman's sandwich from its resemblance to a ploughman's lunch) is a British sandwich. As its name suggests, it consists of sliced or grated cheese (typically Ch ...
, sometimes referred to by retailers as a "ploughman's sandwich"


References


Further reading

* {{English cuisine Cheese dishes Food combinations English cuisine English phrases Meals Dairy marketing