(A version of this story previously appeared in the Longmont Times-Call in 2010)
Many a harried soul races through this season without appreciation for the traditions behind our holiday trappings. Alcohol is as much abused in content as are its traditional contexts this time of year. An example of this lost appreciation lies in the art of wassail (rhymes with “fossil”) a mulled alcoholic apple concoction with ties to the Roman rite of homage to Pomona, goddess of fruit.
Romanian and Viking apple-harvest rites precede the evolution of English wassail, but in this country we are most familiar with the wassail traditions of Victorian England. Wassail is one of many English mulled drinks, including Bishop (mulled brandy) and Posset (mulled sherry). Mulling involves heating a liquid without boiling. The word “wassail” itself is derived from the Old English greeting “waes hael,” “be hale” (essentially “good health”), to which the response was “drinc hael,” (essentially “drink to health”).
This discourse was largely one-sided though in the ancient Devonshire rite of blessing fruit trees with prayer and hard cider, along with a little shouting to scare off bad spirits-- “apple howling.” Apples, mulled and spiced, were cooked into a beverage used to salute the trees. After chanting a blessing for the next season and placing a drink-soaked piece of bread in the tree's crook, half the warm spiced drink went in the farmer and the other half went on the tree.
“Lambs wool” entered the picture through Anglicizing the name of the Gaelic “La Mas Ubhal” celebration, where a thick alcoholic apple sauce was consumed. Pieces of coarse spiced apple in English wassail, seasoned with a “gruit” of spices, became known as “lambs wool” after this mispronunciation of the Irish feast, as well as the resemblance of mulled apple pulp to wool.
And therein lies the heart of wassail: it is nothing without apples, often “crabbs" in England. Therein too lies the traditional context for wassail-- when the orchard awaits rebirth. Cornish tradition has it that wassail is consumed on Twelfth Night (January 5) or Epiphany (January 6), and at the height of its popularity, it was also common on Christmas Eve as the lord of the manor took a meal with staff. Wassail traditions tend to vary by region, country, and era.
By the time Thoreau and Washington Irving wrote about wassail it had evolved from a farmer’s rite to the urban affair of “luck visits” adopted by waits-- traveling singers. Wassailing involved traveling from house to house, singing songs of good health to the residents and offering a “toast” of wassail-- the piece of toasted wassail-soaked bread.
Wassail as commonly found today is not necessarily wassail of olde. Many commercial brewers today purport to brew “wassail” but rather make yule beer or winter warmer-- spiced, high alcohol beer. Mulled ale (strong ale seasoned with sugar and fruit) approaches wassail but differs in consistency. English wassail is traditionally part mulled ale, part spiced “lambs wool” and has referred to both a beverage in which beer-- nut brown ale or porter work well-- is heated with apples and spices, and a beverage where ale is added to hot, spiced apple mash at the time of serving. Generally, one does not “brew” wassail so much as one cooks it with beer, but it is so much more than just the beer.
Now with light cast once more upon wassail’s steeped tradition, 'tis time to make your own: In a small pan, mull 6 inches of cinnamon stick(s), 6 whole cloves, 3/4 tsp allspice, 1 tsp coriander, and three whole cardamom pods for 20 minutes in 12 oz. of brown ale or dark lager and 2 cups of chopped apples. After 20 minutes, add up to 22 oz. more beer, and decant into earthen mugs. Wandering into the orchard and shouting amid the trees is optional, as are adding ingredients like honey, sugar, ginger, lemon, butter, eggs, milk and curds; let your tastes dictate your folly.
And may your health be good in the new year.