BEHIND THE CRAFT
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The Merchants Mark

Soon after its creation, the company began to use a ‘balemark,’ which identified The Company’s products as they arrived in busy ports or were sold on the trading floor.

Initially a simple mark, this evolved by the 1700s into a heart shaped figure [denoting ‘good luck’] surmounted by a figure four (symbolising Agnus Dei – ‘Lamb of God’] and containing the initials of the company.

This symbol became known as “the chop” a word derived from the Hindi छाप ćhāp – which means stamp.

The chop was not only an easily identifiable mark of The East India Company ownership, for example on tea crates, it also became a symbol of the quality.

The Merchant’s Mark is still used today on all our products, now as then, the distinctive mark of The Company and of quality.

FGCN10135

Rhubarb & Ginger Extra Jam

Classic English rhubarb is tempered with ginger to make a remarkable gourmet jam. Combining the warmth of ginger and the sharpness of rhubarb, this chunky preserve is an exciting blend of flavours to savouring.

The East India Company - Lifestyle

Food and Beverages

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£8.00
Another of our popular preserves, our Rhubarb and Ginger Extra Jam creates more Remarkable Connections.

The classic sweetened tartness of the rhubarb is combined with the unique sweet warmth of ginger, creating a lovely alternative to a 'regular' jam or marmalade on your morning toast.

The East India Company and jam have a long-standing relationship. On long ocean voyages, preservation techniques saved lives. Jam or “giam” as described by Hannah Galsse in 1747, was simply made as today by boiling fruits in sugar, thus preserving the fruit.
The jam was sealed in pottery or glass for the long voyages undertaken by the Company pioneers. Back in the day, it was an expensive luxury, reserved for the captain and officers.

We like to connect today's ranges to stories from the past and create authentic, interesting and unique combinations of those Critical Ingredients used by The East India Company pioneers.

Ingredients

Sugar, Rhubarb (42%), Ginger (3%), Gelling Agent: Pectin (Pectin E440, Dextrose), Citric Acid.


Allergens

See ingredients in bold. Made in factory that handles egg, mustard, sesame and soya. May contain traces of these allergens.

Nutrition

Typical values 100g – Energy 887kj/208kcal | Fat 0.015g, of which saturates 0.001g | Carbohydrate 65g, of which sugars 63g | Protein 0.4g | Sodium 0g


Storage

Store cool and dry, once opened refrigerate and consume within 1 month.

Suitable for vegetarians.

Stories

Trade and Spice

Spices and the spice trade have been an enormous influence in global political, social, and economic developments for over 1000 years.

They were considered by those without as rare and valuable, prized for their preservative, medicinal and aromatic qualities. The East India Company realized the opportunity, but it arrived late to the game.

The Arabs in the Near-East dominated the spice trade and then the Portuguese trading in India, the Far-East and the Spice Islands [the modern-day Moluccas of Indonesia).

Of course, not all spices came from the Far-East - the Portuguese had brought chilli peppers from South America to their Indian colonies in the 16th century, which became a part of Indian cuisine and their richly spiced foods.

Captured Portuguese ships full of spice from the Spice Islands whet the appetite for the British, but it was the Dutch that made the first move, sending well-funded fleets to the Spice Islands in the 1590s, using navigational maps stolen from the Portuguese. By quickly establishing trade and being well organised and armed, the Dutch cut off the English, in the form of the East India Company, to the spice trade, who were forced to trade in the surrounding islands.
There was one nutmeg of consolation for the British. Polo Run, which was the only nutmeg-producing portion of the Spice Islands, fell into the Company’s hands from the Dutch in 1616.

The British stumbled upon the opportunity to trade in pepper in Bantam [Java], setting up a ‘factory’ [a fortified warehouse], and there was enough for all to avoid fisticuffs. The East India Company would continue to trade in pepper up to the 19th century.

When the Company arrived in India and started trading, its botanists were exposed to other spices, such as cinnamon from the cassia tree. It then benefitted from its network of Botanical Gardens to propagate seeds and it planted these in new countries within its trading routes. This is why pepper, cloves, nutmeg, and cinnamon can be found in the West Indies today, now part of the distinctive Cajun cuisine. An enabler to this new trade were spice-grinding operations set up in the docks of London, as it was realised that ground spices were cheaper and easier to ship around the world.

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