top of page

The Plot Thickens

Hi, I’m Karen Meadows. Thank you for visiting The Plot Thickens.

I’m lucky enough to be the tenant of one of fifty large allotment gardens in the middle of the small and beautiful stone town of Stamford in England’s East Midlands. The gardens were first created by Brownlow Cecil, 4th Marquess of Exeter in the mid 1800s and their layout has remained virtually unchanged. Between the plots we have some 200 old apple trees, many of them rare varieties, and in 2017 Natural England awarded the gardens heritage orchard status.

Over the centuries at least 500 people have worked these plots. Follow our quest to discover who they were, what they grew, and what shenanigans they got up to. Be prepared for numerous diversions and musings along the way about gardening life here in our quiet (and occasionally not so quiet) little corner of Stamford.

If you haven’t discovered our website yet, do head over to Waterfurlong Orchard Gardens, where you will find a wealth of information about our gardens and gardeners, past and present.

And now for the small print...

The Plot Thickens is a non-commercial blog. All recommendations are based on personal preference and my own or our other gardeners’ own experience. Payments or free goods are not accepted in return for reviews of products and services. If an exception is made this will be clearly stated.

All words and images, unless otherwise credited, are my own. If you would like to copy text or images, I’d kindly ask that The Plot Thickens gets a positive mention and a link back to this blog.

Recent Posts
Archive
Categories

The Humble Broad Bean's Surprisingly Dark Past


It's time to sow early broad beans if you haven't yet got round to it. This year mine are coming on nicely (fingers crossed) in the potting shed, in stark contrast to last when mice feasted on every seed I lovingly planted outdoors in the December snow!

I knew broad beans were a staple of the medieval English diet but recently stumbled across a curious account of their ominous associations in ancient Egyptian, Greek and Roman cultures.

Vicia faba, the broad or fava bean, is a staple whose origins stretch back for millennia. Easy to grow and a rich source of protein, it at first seems strange that it was feared and shunned by many in the classical world.

In ancient Egypt broad beans were considered so unclean priests would not look at them, far less eat them, although the crop was cultivated as cheap foodstuff for slaves. Diogenes Laertius reported that Roman priests of Jupiter were forbidden even to mention the plant's name, so strong was its association with death and decay. Early Roman Christians cooked biscuits from broad bean flour mixed with sage and almond to mark the Day of the Dead on 2 November - a custom that continues to this day in Italy and might be the origin of the word 'beanfeast'.

The Greek mathematician and philosopher Pythagoras condemned the eating of any type of legume. According to Pliny (who admittedly treated the idea with scorn), Pythagoreans believed broad bean plants contained the souls of the dead, the black-spotted flowers and hollow stems providing ladders between earth and Hades.

Odd as this all seems, there was some method in the madness, for Mediterranean peoples are susceptible to the otherwise rare hereditary blood disorder, favism

(haemolytic anaemia) and sufferers can die as a result of eating broad beans or merely of inhaling pollen from the plant's flowers. Even today, favism proves fatal in one in twelve of those affected.

This susceptibility is almost unknown among Northern Europeans and by the 17th century the humble broad bean was considered a bringer of good luck in England - finding the dried bean in your slice of Twelfth Night cake conferred temporary kingship for the evening!

Today the broad bean is not only one of the first delicacies of the British summer, but in its dried form is widespread throughout the cuisines of the Middle East and North Africa. In Egypt ful madames (literally 'buried beans') is the national dish and ta'amia is a delectable broad bean falafel considered superior to the chickpea version favoured further north. Ground into a flour known as shiro, the fava also plays a central role in Ethiopian cooking.

Love them or hate them, there's rarely been a vegetable as contentious as our humble and deceptively innocuous broad bean.

Copyright © Karen Meadows 2018


bottom of page