Before Refrigerators: How Victorian Families Kept Food Fresh and Survived
I have recently been trying to find out a little about
everyday life in Victorian Britain. It made me start ti wonder how families
managed to keep their food fresh before refrigerators. Today we take for
granted that we can easily open a fridge without really thinking about it, but
for Victorian families preserving food must have been a constant concern. I was
often a matter of health, money, and even
survival.
During the early Victorian period, beginning in 1837, most
households had no mechanical refrigeration at all. Food would have spoiled very
quickly, especially in warmer weather. Families would have had to plan
carefully. For poorer households, wages were often limited and food could not
be wasted.
One of the oldest and most common methods of preservation
was salting. Meat and fish were packed with a large amount of salt. The salt
drew out the moisture and slowed down decay. Salted pork, beef, and herrings
became familiar foods in many homes. The taste could often be quite strong and
the texture was often tough, but it allowed families to store food for weeks or
even months.
Smoking was another method. Meat and fish were hung above
smoke from slow fires, which helped to dry and preserve them. In coastal
communities and rural areas this remained particularly important. Smokehouses
and kitchen chimneys often carried the distinctive smell of food being prepared
for future use. If you go in to one even today, the smell is still there, even
when it is no longer in use as a smoker. There was preparation involved, they
knew that the work today might well prevent hardship later.
Pickling was also extremely popular, vegetables, eggs, and
sometimes fish were preserved in vinegar and spices. Jars were filled with
onions, cabbage, beetroot, and gherkins and carefully sealed. A well-stocked
pantry could provide a feeling of security.
As sugar became cheaper later in the nineteenth century preserving
fruit by jam-making grew increasingly common. Housewives would boil fruit with
sugar to create jams and preserves that would last through the colder months.
By the later Victorian period, wealthier households
sometimes used iceboxes. Ice was imported from cold countries like Norway,
where workers would cut huge blocks from frozen lakes during the winter. It was
packed in sawdust to slow down the melting, the ice was then shipped to Britain
and stored in ice houses or iceboxes to keep food cool. It helped to keep dairy, meat, and other foods
cooler for longer. But these remained beyond the reach of many ordinary
families.
I find it remarkable how much planning, labour, and
knowledge preserving food would have required. Regular Victorian families lived
with the constant awareness that food could not be taken for granted, and
perhaps that made every meal feel more valuable.
Do you think that modern convenience has made us appreciate
food less than many Victorian families may well have done?