“Searching for a taste of home....” Kūčios in London then and now.
When
I was a child growing up in London in the 60’s, my parents were friendly with a
fair number of Lithuanian families in the city. Actually, my parents were
probably acquainted with every Lithuanian family living in the capital, because
in those days there were just 1,000 of us living in London- and only 4,000 altogether
in the UK. Most, like my dad, were Displaced Persons who arrived after World
War II, with a few “old Lithuanians,”- people whose parents had come between
the wars. We grew used to explaining- “no
not the Balkan- the Baltic States,” “no we’re not Polish,” and “no, my dad is
not a Russian spy”- this last comment to the girl at school who asked me that
very question! We clustered around the Lithuanian Church in Hackney. Dad would
pop into the club in Victoria Park to hear the news, any news about what was happening
in Lithuania, to borrow books, papers, records from friends who had obtained
them somehow and to hear the gossip. Someone who had heard from his sister in
Chicago that a cousin in Vilnius had heard that in Gaiziunai......You get the
picture. They soldiered on. They had their church, the choir, there was a
Saturday school, the Scouts, the dance group, Sodyba in Hampshire, and of course
the weekly newspaper printed in West London. However, it was hard, especially
for the older people, to retain what they had remembered, or thought they
remembered, about the country they had left so long ago.
However,
since Independence and Lithuania’s accession to the European Union in 2004, times
have changed! London now has the largest population of ethnic Lithuanians outside
the Republic of Lithuania – with approximately 100,000 Lithuanian residents,
the majority residing in the eastern boroughs of Newham, Redbridge and Barking
and Dagenham where I grew up and where I still live today. With that wave of
migration came a new form of Lithuanian culture, one that differed from the one
my dad and his friends remembered, but one with some traditions that were familiar
all the same.
Take Kūčios. Years ago, when no one had ever heard of Lithuania, my parents would struggle to find things for Christmas Eve. Firstly, there was the problem of whether my sister and I would even eat anything. The texture of salted herring proved very difficult to sell as did the acidity of beets and gherkins- and then there was the much greater problem of actually finding the necessary items in the shops.
Some
years there would be a quick trip to Baltic Stores on Hackney Road run by Mr.
Juras. Given the fact that his suppliers were mostly behind the Iron Curtain,
the availability of products and their practicality for a small family were
always unpredictable.
“Juras has salted herrings,” my dad would announce excitedly, after attending Mass at St Casimir’s, “but they come in a big catering tin and need soaking.” Often it was judged too inconvenient to go off and buy such items. How many herrings would the four of us consume when my sister and I would only eat them reluctantly? And we also lived in an area rich in Jewish delis. You could get almost anything at the deli, and our lovely 2nd-generation Litvak neighbours would recommend where to go and even offer recipes. Then it transpired that the fishmonger next to the deli did special orders on Christmas Eve for Polish customers, and just before Christmas he would go off to Billingsgate with a pocket full of orders from those in the know.
Later in the Eighties we attended an authentic Kūčios at Headley Park and discovered that our version of Kūčios had been but a pale imitation of the real thing; the drive for authenticity became even more competitive. I remember one year at Headley, someone had even gone as far as to snare a fearsome pike from a local lake, hunter-gatherer style. Fishmongers were strictly for softies. We attempted to make poppy seed milk with an old-fashioned pestle and mortar like our grandmothers had done, and poured this over the little biscuits we baked using recipes from the one or two Lithuanian cookery books we possessed- recipes which began “Take twenty-four large eggs.....” We sought out strange grains in health-food shops to eat with honey, and just like our grandmothers who spent hours slaving in their kitchens getting it right in the inter-war years when most farms had neither electricity nor running water, so did we in the West spend the weeks before Christmas Eve running ourselves ragged, tracking down suitable items for the table in a bid to make it all as authentic, as traditional, as possible. Ironic, really…. our cousins on the other side of the Curtain spent their lives carrying their string bags in the hope of suddenly finding something in short supply and bemoaning the fact that there was nothing to buy in the shops, and here we were, scouring East London shops in a bid keep it all alive.
But
that is all in the past.
Now
in East London you can get everything, and not just in tiny corner shops but in
large ethnic supermarkets like Lituanica* in Beckton. I discovered this culinary palace a few years
ago, and this year the management was kind enough to allow me to take some
photos to show the variety we now have here in London after all those years of
making do. The Lituanica company started in Ireland 20 years ago and has been
trading in the UK for the last 15 years. With a number of branches in the
London’s East End, the traditional area for Lithuanian settlement, there are
also stores further afield in places like Birmingham and Bedford. Lituanica is
now the UK’s oldest importer of Eastern European food and its leading
wholesaler. The complex in Beckton which I visited also boasts a cosy
restaurant, selling authentic ethnic food and delicious coffee & cake, a
hairdresser’s, a beauty salon and a wonderfully eclectic bookshop. Sadly, my
parents are no longer here to see it but if they were, surely, they would be
quite overwhelmed. My Dutch mum used to talk about the early days of her marriage,
spent in a bed-sit in Notting Hill Gate, a stone’s throw from Lithuanian House.
In those days, she used to say, you couldn’t get salami or even coffee easily
in England.
When
I visited this year it was too early for my Kūčios shopping, but later
this month I will be returning for some herring salad in beetroot and Kedainiai
cucumbers which really are the best in the world- well I would say that as that’s
where my ancestral roots are- and I shall also buy some of their excellent rye
bread to serve with my homemade mushroom soup. However, I shall still go down the road to the
Kosher deli for the salted herrings- the oily ones are not to my taste and those
salty Bismarck ones remind me of Christmases past and the special trips we had to
make to source them.
Christmas biscuits |
And
therein lies the nub of the matter. Everyone wants to recreate that Christmas
magic that is so special to their own individual family, but how much have
tastes and customs changed since my dad left his farmhouse in the forest nearly
75 years ago? Was he striving to recreate that special Kūčios moment for
me all those years ago, the same one his mother created for him? Things have
moved on everywhere. How much did tastes
and expectations change in Lithuania during the years of Soviet rule? Indeed,
how well did our parents remember how and what our grandparents cooked for Kūčios?
And haven’t our palates also changed even
in the last twenty or so years in the West? Lituanica is a taste of home for modern Lithuanians
but for those of us who have been longer in the UK, it is best viewed as a
holiday to rediscover our roots, rather than a place to find old favourites
from the past. Most of those Lithuanian brands are probably thirty or so years
old- and modern. Instant Kisielius and ready-made poppy seed milk. Would
my močiutė have approved? But then why not, if it makes life a whole lot
easier? And I also wonder about the older generation back in the Baltics,
today’s grandparents, who grew up under Soviet rule. Do they too hanker after
the taste of home? If you’ve ever seen
the film “Goodbye Lenin” and remember the saga of the Spreewaldgurken –
where the main character hunts for old East German versions of his mother’s
favourite food before they all disappear - you will understand my point.
However,
whether you want to celebrate Kūčios as they do today in Lithuania, or
if you want to re-create that do-it-yourself version that you experienced as a
child, Lituanica is really a top find and like the other new Baltic stores in
my area is beautifully clean and reasonably priced with helpful and polite
staff. Interestingly it is on a site next door to an Asian supermarket and
opposite a Chinese one. Do many customers visit all three just to browse? Lithuanians are the new kids on the block in
our area. Being so close to the Thames there has long been a significant
Chinese community in the area and for the last fifty years our suburbs have
become a favourite spot for first- and second-generation families with roots in
the Indian sub-continent.…….. East London is, and always has been a melting pot,
and on a Friday or a Saturday night residents of all ethnicities will “go out
for an Indian” or “go out for a Chinese.” So maybe Baltic cuisine will be the
next big thing. Cepelinai anyone?
*
Special thanks to the staff at Lituanica in Beckton who were so hospitable. You
can find out more about them at https://lituanica.co.uk/
Ačiū,
Margaret! It is definitely easier to find Latvian foodstuffs and similar
products here in the US as well, if not in a shop, then online. However, I
still wish for a store like Lituanica, where I could buy authentic rye bread,
yeast cakes (instead of active dry) for baking, pelēkie
zirņi (grey peas), not to mention things like pīrāgi and piparkūkas!
It is exactly as you pointed out – I could make everything from scratch, but
the time required (not to mention things don’t usually turn out exactly as I
remember they should), makes it impractical in today’s world.
Margaret
Drummond grew up in a Dutch/Lithuanian home in London. She is a translator and
retired teacher and is interested in how cultures merge and change. You can
read last year’s contribution to this blog here: “On the pitfalls of buying a carp for Christmas.” You can also sometimes find her on CafeLit
and on the Central and Eastern European Review blog.
Coming
up tomorrow, on Day 18 of a Baltic Christmas… Rīga in the winter!
I am first generation born in the US (my parents and grandparents immigrated after WWII) and can completely identify with yours and other families trying to keep old traditions and family customs alive. Now, older, with children and grandchildren of our own, we find it both easier and more difficult to keep the customs alive.
ReplyDeleteUrrā for all those still taking time to search out, or make, traditional foods, tree and home decorations, and sing the songs in our ancient languages!