A very amusing illustrated article with the title “Horseflesh Meals for Londoners” appeared in the Daily Mirror on 21st January, 1904. It described the unsuccessful attempts of a reporter to obtain a horse meat steak in an upmarket restaurant or raw horseflesh from a back street horse meat dealer.
Having first failed to find a restaurant able or willing to serve him a steak Arc-de-Triomphe, he consulted a London trade directory and found a lengthy list of Horse Meat Salesmen therein:
“Once more there was an “embarrass de richesses,” for there are a column and a half of dealers in horse meat in London.
Dealers in horse meat do not carry on business in the main West End thoroughfares, and our reporter, now faint and starving, set out to find one in a back street.
He found one, but although almost overcome, he made a fresh start and tottered on to the next address for the dealer in horse flesh proved to be nothing more than a ‘cat’s meat man’.
Luckily it was not far, but there also there were no succulent looking joints, no clean butcher’s counter, but only another ‘cat’s meat shop’ with a crowd of anxious cats sniffing round the door.
It was too late to go farther, and our reporter went in and learned that A DEALER IN HORSEMEAT AND A ‘CAT’S MEAT MAN’ are one and the same thing.
“Never heard tell of anyone eating ‘oss. No not in thirty years,” said the proud owner, who was slicing up a large chunk of brown meat and fixing it on little wooden skewers.
“I reckon it’s not good for anything but cats and dogs. You see, an ‘oss ain’t got no gall, and gall’s what keeps the blood good.”
“Beside’s an ‘oss ain’t got no brain.”
“Tuppence ‘apenny a pound we sells it at and all ready cooked too. That’s cheap enough.
Our reporter’s only excuse was that he was really very hungry!
But what becomes of the eighty tons of horseflesh which is sold every week in London? Surely it is not all eaten by cats and dogs.”
Comment