Ginger Pig
Ginger Pig is a butchery which used to raise livestock in the Vale of Pickering and North York Moors and retail the meat in its shops in London and supplies restaurants and other specialist butchers. It was founded by Tim Wilson in 2003.[1] A series of Ginger Pig cookbooks based upon their produce was released in 2013.[2]
History
Tim Wilson came from a farming background but initially dealt in antiques and property development.[4] He acquired an old farm in Nottinghamshire and kept three saddleback pigs there to make good use of the pigsty.[4] When they were grown and slaughtered, he bought three gilt Tamworth sows, Milli, Molly and Mandy and a Tamworth boar named Dai Bando.[5] These bred quickly and so he soon had an abundance of pork.[4] He learnt how to make sausages and, in 1998, his friend Anne Wilson started a stall at the Borough Market selling his sausages.[4] The stall was successful and became a permanent outlet.[4] Chef Paul Hughes then joined the business, bringing expertise in charcuterie and, together, they opened a butcher's shop in the Marylebone district of London.[4] The business continued to prosper and in 2012 had grown to three farms, five shops and a series of cookery books.[6]
See also
Bibliography
- Ginger Pig Meat Book - Fran Warde and Tim Wilson (Mitchell Beazley, 2011) ISBN 9781845335588
- Ginger Pig Farmhouse Cookbook - Fran Warde and Tim Wilson (Mitchell Beazley, 2013) ISBN 9781845337247
References
- ^ Rural growth: The success of North York Moors based 'Ginger Pig', DEFRA, 25 September 2013
- ^ Hugh Montgomery (26 May 2013), "Cooking the books: Ginger Pig Farmhouse Cookbook", The Independent
- ^ Chris Benfield (11 July 2011), "Farm of the Week: Yorkshire farmer who's enjoying capital gains", Yorkshire Post
- ^ a b c d e f Jay Rayner (13 February 2005), "He's behind you", The Observer
- ^ Tim Wilson, Fran Warde (2012), Ginger Pig Cookbook, p. 16, ISBN 1845338081
- ^ Silvana de Soissons (19 January 2012), "Food writer Fran Warde and the story of The Ginger Pig", The Foodie Bugle
External links
- The Ginger Pig — official website