UPB

Shrove Tuesday aka Pancake Day in London

If you are looking for a quintessentially British event in February, then you must witness Pancake Day racing.  The old religious festival of Shrove Tuesday is when Christians ate a rich meal using butter and sugar before beginning the fast of Lent.  This day always falls 47 days before Easter Sunday, so the date varies yearly and falls between February 3 and March 9.  This year, Shrove Tuesday will take place on Tuesday, 13th February.

As part of Shrove Tuesday festivities, there are usually pancake races, which are thought to have begun in 1445.  The story goes that a woman in Olney, Buckinghamshire, lost track of time while cooking on Shrove Tuesday, and when she heard the church bells ringing, she ran out of her house to the church carrying the frying pan.  Whether this story is true or just folklore passed down from one generation to the next, pancake races are firmly a part of Shrove Tuesday throughout England.

Pancake Day: City Workers

City workers during the 2009 Pancake Day Race in Guildhard Yard. Photo: ©Martin Deutsch.

The object of a pancake race is to run while holding your frying pan and flipping the pancake in the air as you go and there are many held throughout the city of London.  Below are some of the more popular ones to watch.

  • Better Bankside Pancake Day Race– from 12.00 to 2:00 pm at Marlborough Sports Garden, teams will compete in pancake races while raising money for The Manna Society, a local charity that runs a day centre providing food, showers, clothing, and medical care.
  • Greenwich Market Pancake Day Racefrom 11 am to 4.30 pm, the public, alongside Greenwich Market traders, will compete in races while flipping pancakes in frying pans.  Funds are being raised for the Greenwich and Bexley Community Hospice.
  • Inter-Livery Pancake Day Raceat 12:00, teams wearing either fancy dress or full regalia will race around the Guildhall Yard tossing their pancakes, and the victors receive, fittingly, frying pans as well as a trophy.  This event is organized by the Worshipful Company of Poulters.
  • Leadenhall Market Pancake Race– at 12:30 pm at Lamb Tavern, teams of four will compete for glory during a 20m flipping relay on the Victorian covered Market’s ancient cobblestones.

Pancake Day race

Lord Mawson, Journalist Nick Robinson & Jason McCartney MP during the 2014 Pancake Day Race near House of Parliament. Photo: ©Martin Deutsch.

UPB

Ursula Petula Barzey is a Digital Marketing Consultant who enjoys all that London has to offer to its residents as well as visitors from all across the globe.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You may also like

New Uses for Red Telephone Boxes in London

Most London Blue Badge Tourist Guides have had clients who want to get a snap of themselves by a red London phone box, often with Big Ben in the background. It is almost a rite of passage for a visitor to London and so the red boxes at the end of Whitehall often have long queues of people waiting outside for the chance to take a picture of themselves. The phone booths are rarely put to their original use – namely, to make phone calls. Now, of course, the mobile phone reigns supreme and most people have a smartphone in their pocket.

Read more

70th Anniversary Of The Festival Of Britain in London

Let me take you back to the Britain of 1951. The Second World War had ended just six years earlier. London, like many other British cities, had been bombed relentlessly and still bore the scars of the Blitz. Surviving buildings were covered in layers of dark sooty dust and rationing was still the order of the day and, for fresh meat, remained in place until 1954.

Read more