- Humble pie
To eat humble pie, in common usage, is to apologise and face humiliation for a serious error. Humble pie, or umble pie, is also a term for a variety of pastries, originally based on
medieval meat tripe pies.Etymology
The expression derives from umble pie, which was a
pie filled withliver ,heart and otheroffal , especially ofcow but oftendeer orboar . Umble evolved from numble, (after the French nomble) meaning 'deer's innards'. [http://www.epicurious.com/tools/fooddictionary/entry?id=2995] [http://www.gourmetbritain.com/encyclo_entry.php?item=5582] Umbles were considered inferior food, inmedieval times the pie was often served to lower-class people.Although "umbles" and the modern word "humble" are etymologically unrelated, each word has appeared both with and without the initial "h" after the Middle Ages until the 19th century. Since the sound "h" is often dropped in many dialects, and "umble" was a humble meal anyway, the phrase was rebracketed as "humble pie". While "umble" is now gone from the language, the phrase remains, carrying the fossilized word as an
idiom .Umble pie
Umble pie in its literal sense is a filled
pastry similar to many respects to a Cornishpasty . The popularity of the dish umble pie among 15th and 16th century commoners in Britain gave rise to the expression "eating humble pie". [ [http://www.bartleby.com/81/16937.html Brewer, E. Cobham. Dictionary of Phrase & Fable. Umble-pie ] ]Although the original umble pies contained mostly
tripe they later evolved to a form which might contain fruit and sweetening, often without meat. Recent "humble pie" recipes often have only sweet fillings. [http://www.familycookbookproject.com/view_recipesite.asp?rid=802262&uid=9361&sid=20143] [http://www.recipezaar.com/191988] Modern humble meat pie recipe often included pricier cuts of meat such as chopped steak. [http://www.pippahunnechurch.com/humble_pie_recipe.php]See also
*
Offal
*Peasant foods
*Sweetbread
*Tripe
*To eat boiled crow
*Venison External links
* [http://www.pippahunnechurch.com/humble_pie_recipe.php James Huston's Humble Pie Recipe]
* [http://www.westonaprice.org/traditional_diets/merrie_olde_england.html Traditional English Diets]
* [http://tripesite.com/lore.html Tripe: Fact and Lore]References
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