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Record revealed

A recipe for six mince pies 'of an indifferent biggnesse'

Mince pies have been enjoyed at Christmas for centuries. But the recipe has changed over the years – would you try this 17th-century version that includes a leg of veal?

Why this record matters

Date
1603–1625
Catalogue reference
SP 14/189

In the early 1600s, a cook wrote down a recipe for ‘six minst pyes of an indifferent biggnesse’. The recipe contains many elements we would recognise today as parts of a mince pie – spices, raisins, currants, sugar, and a pastry case. The pastry is made of flour, butter and eggs (standard pastry ingredients) and the butter is heated up with some water before adding it to the flour and eggs.

Other elements of the recipe are a little stranger, however. As well as the sugar, spices and dried fruit, the filling calls for a loin of fat mutton and a little of a leg of veal. Beginning in the Middle Ages, mince pie recipes include meat – often lamb, as here, but sometimes beef or pork. There is a pork mince pie recipe in the Forme of Cury, a cookbook written about 1390 and associated with Richard II’s court.

This recipe also features some unusual measurements – for example, half a peck of flour. A peck could be used to measure both liquid and dry ingredients and was equivalent to 16 pints, and so the recipe requires eight pints (about 4.5 litres) of flour.

Stranger still, though, is the story of how the recipe ended up in The National Archives. On the top left of the document is a stamp that reads ‘Conway Papers’. This stamp is a clue to its provenance. The recipe formed part of the papers of the first Viscount Conway, a self-educated soldier who worked his way up the ranks to become an important figure in James I’s court. He was appointed Secretary of State in 1623.

These papers might never have arrived at The National Archives. In the mid 1700s, the writer and politician Horace Walpole visited the Conway estate and found the historic papers of the family in complete disarray, with the majority kept on the floor of the lumber room and used to light fires. His horror led to the family looking after the papers more carefully. They stayed in the Conway estate's hands until the then Lord Hertford bequeathed them to his friend and advisor, John Wilson Croker, in 1824.

Croker planned to publish the collection, but his edition never materialised. Instead, he decided to leave the Conway Papers to the nation, splitting them between the British Museum and the Public Record Office in 1856. The records are now held at the British Library and The National Archives, and include poetry by John Donne, autograph letters from great men and women of the day, and this humble mince pie recipe.

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