With Easter on the horizon, thoughts turn to chocolate naturally, but why do we give eggs? The custom celebrates new life and like any excuse to indulge, we have taken to it with gusto. But eggs are not just for eating it seems.
Pace Eggs are hard boiled eggs with patterned shells, they are traditional in northern parts of England at Easter, with local variants in the name, such as Paste Eggs. The name is derived from Pesach (Passover). Decorating and colouring eggs for Easter was a common custom in England in the middle ages. Eggs were brightly coloured to mimic the new, fresh colours of spring. The practice of decorating eggs was made even more famous by King Edward I of England who ordered 450 eggs to be gold-leafed and coloured for Easter gifts in 1290.
Egg rolling is very popular in England and is an Easter Monday sport. Hard-boiled eggs are rolled down a hill. Customs differ from place to place. The winner's egg may be the one that rolls the farthest, survives the most rolls, or is rolled between two pegs.
Another activity that takes place on Easter Day is the playing of a game with the eggs known as "jarping", It's a bit like playing conkers, with players tapping their opponents' eggs until one breaks. The winner goes through to the next round, and so on until there is only one egg left unbroken. copyright of projectbritain.com A good hit by a jarper is called a "dunch". The game is popular in County Durham, where it is played on Easter Sunday.
Canterbury and Faversham like many UK towns are holding Easter Egg hunts over the holiday. The perfect excursion from our Gourmet Tour which begins and ends in Canterbury. Chocs away!
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