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'''Gibraltar rock,''' ''Gibraltars'', or ''Gibralters'' are an old-fashioned candy associated with [[Salem, Massachusetts]].
'''Gibraltar rock,''' ''Gibraltars'', or ''Gibralters'' are an old-fashioned candy associated with [[Salem, Massachusetts]].


An 1893 book about Salem<ref>{{cite book|title=Old Salem|author=Eleanor Putnam, ed. Arlo Bates|year=1893|publisher=Houghton Mifflin}}, [http://books.google.com/books?output=text&id=0zStMk3YtQoC&jtp=63 p. 63]</ref> calls Gibraltars, together with molasses "black-jacks," "two Salem institutions" and says {{cquote|The Gibraltar... is a white and delicate candy, flavored with lemon or peppermint, soft as cream at one stage of its existence, but capable of hardening into a consistency so stony and so unutterably flinty-hearted that it is almost a libel upon the rock whose name it bears. The Gibraltar is the aristocrat of Salem confectionery. It gazes upon chocolate and sherbet and says:—"Before you were, I was. After you are not, I shall be."}} She says the lemon flavor is preferred by youth, and the peppermint by the elderly, and quotes a "charming old Salem dame" as saying "I know I must be growing old, because a peppermint Gibraltar is so comforting to me."
An 1893 book about Salem<ref>{{cite book|title=Old Salem|author=Eleanor Putnam, ed. Arlo Bates|year=1893|publisher=Houghton Mifflin}}, [http://books.google.com/books?output=text&id=0zStMk3YtQoC&jtp=63 p. 63]</ref> calls Gibraltars, together with molasses "black-jacks," "two Salem institutions" and says {{cquote|The Gibraltar... is a white and delicate candy, flavored with lemon or peppermint, soft as cream at one stage of its existence, but capable of hardening into a consistency so stony and so unutterably flinty-hearted that it is almost a libel upon the rock whose name it bears. The Gibraltar is the aristocrat of Salem confectionery. It gazes upon chocolate and sherbet and says:—"Before you were, I was. After you are not, I shall be."}}
She says the lemon flavor is preferred by youth, and the peppermint by the elderly, and quotes a "charming old Salem dame" as saying "I know I must be growing old, because a peppermint Gibraltar is so comforting to me."


In [[Nathaniel Hawthorne|Hawthorne's]] [[The House of the Seven Gables]], written in 1851 and set at about that time, Hepzibah Pyncheon's little "cent-shop" contained<ref>{{cite book|title=The House of the Seven Gables|author=Nathaniel Hawthorne|year=1851}}, [http://books.google.com/books?jtp=52&id=JcVaAAAAMAAJ Chapter II, "The Little Shop-Window"]</ref>
In [[Nathaniel Hawthorne|Hawthorne's]] [[The House of the Seven Gables]], written in 1851 and set at about that time, Hepzibah Pyncheon's little "cent-shop" contained<ref>{{cite book|title=The House of the Seven Gables|author=Nathaniel Hawthorne|year=1851}}, [http://books.google.com/books?jtp=52&id=JcVaAAAAMAAJ Chapter II, "The Little Shop-Window"]</ref>
{{cquote|a glass pickle-jar, filled with fragments of Gibraltar rock; not, indeed, splinters of the veritable stone foundation of the famous fortress, but bits of delectable candy, neatly done up in white paper.}} His story "The Old Apple-Dealer," in [[Mosses from an Old Manse]], similarly mentions "that delectable condiment, known by children as Gibraltar rock."
{{cquote|a glass pickle-jar, filled with fragments of Gibraltar rock; not, indeed, splinters of the veritable stone foundation of the famous fortress, but bits of delectable candy, neatly done up in white paper.}}
His story "The Old Apple-Dealer," in [[Mosses from an Old Manse]], similarly mentions "that delectable condiment, known by children as Gibraltar rock."


According to a 1947 cookbook,<ref>{{cite book|title=Secrets of New England Cooking|author=Ella Shannon Bowles and Dorothy S. Towle|year=1947|publisher=Barrows}}, reprinted 2000 by Dover Publications, [http://books.google.com/books?id=MJX3C0q1w74C&q=gibraltar p. 288]</ref> Hawthorne wrote in his notebook of their having {{cquote|been made by an Englishman named Spencer around 1822 and were sold by his mother, who drove a wagon from street to street. Their retail price was a silver penny apiece or four pence, half penny for seven.}}
According to a 1947 cookbook,<ref>{{cite book|title=Secrets of New England Cooking|author=Ella Shannon Bowles and Dorothy S. Towle|year=1947|publisher=Barrows}}, reprinted 2000 by Dover Publications, [http://books.google.com/books?id=MJX3C0q1w74C&q=gibraltar p. 288]</ref> Hawthorne wrote in his notebook of their having {{cquote|been made by an Englishman named Spencer around 1822 and were sold by his mother, who drove a wagon from street to street. Their retail price was a silver penny apiece or four pence, half penny for seven.}}

Revision as of 15:52, 15 April 2012

Gibraltar rock, Gibraltars, or Gibralters are an old-fashioned candy associated with Salem, Massachusetts.

An 1893 book about Salem[1] calls Gibraltars, together with molasses "black-jacks," "two Salem institutions" and says

The Gibraltar... is a white and delicate candy, flavored with lemon or peppermint, soft as cream at one stage of its existence, but capable of hardening into a consistency so stony and so unutterably flinty-hearted that it is almost a libel upon the rock whose name it bears. The Gibraltar is the aristocrat of Salem confectionery. It gazes upon chocolate and sherbet and says:—"Before you were, I was. After you are not, I shall be."

She says the lemon flavor is preferred by youth, and the peppermint by the elderly, and quotes a "charming old Salem dame" as saying "I know I must be growing old, because a peppermint Gibraltar is so comforting to me."

In Hawthorne's The House of the Seven Gables, written in 1851 and set at about that time, Hepzibah Pyncheon's little "cent-shop" contained[2]

a glass pickle-jar, filled with fragments of Gibraltar rock; not, indeed, splinters of the veritable stone foundation of the famous fortress, but bits of delectable candy, neatly done up in white paper.

His story "The Old Apple-Dealer," in Mosses from an Old Manse, similarly mentions "that delectable condiment, known by children as Gibraltar rock."

According to a 1947 cookbook,[3] Hawthorne wrote in his notebook of their having

been made by an Englishman named Spencer around 1822 and were sold by his mother, who drove a wagon from street to street. Their retail price was a silver penny apiece or four pence, half penny for seven.

The cookbook gives a recipe using sugar, water, vinegar, and either vanilla, peppermint or cloves for flavoring; it is boiled until hard then pulled like taffy, and becomes "soft and creamy" in several days.

A modern candy company offers "Gibralters"[sic] and lists sugar, water, cream of tartar, cornstarch, and oil of lemon as ingredients. They are cut into the shape of a rhombus about 1½ inches on a side.[4]

References

  1. ^ Eleanor Putnam, ed. Arlo Bates (1893). Old Salem. Houghton Mifflin., p. 63
  2. ^ Nathaniel Hawthorne (1851). The House of the Seven Gables., Chapter II, "The Little Shop-Window"
  3. ^ Ella Shannon Bowles and Dorothy S. Towle (1947). Secrets of New England Cooking. Barrows., reprinted 2000 by Dover Publications, p. 288
  4. ^ Gibralters[sic], Ye Olde Pepper Companie Ltd.

See also