I am really surprised to hear that brass and copper were so common. Everything sticks to them. They're too thin to be used without a lot of care. They slowly leach off metal into the food, my Grandmothers 'jeely pan' is so thin now that the bottom boings when pressed, and it was only ever really used in jam making season. Not as an everyday pot above a fire.
Iron takes on a patina, gets a proofed coating that stops food sticking, that brass doesn't.
We used it for jam making, but not even for boiling the dumplings ...and mind that our 'clootie dumplings' and haggis are just kinds of the boiled foods that were once so common place. If it could be packed in a cloth or a bladder and boiled to cook, it made not only good tasty food, but the base for broth and stew with the boiling water too. Commonplace cooking from the earliest days of humanity....the brass pans though leach out copper into the mix. Fine in a quick boil up of jam when a miniscule amount of copper acts as a fungicide and does no harm to us, don't think I'd be so keen on it from an hours long boiling though.
M
Iron takes on a patina, gets a proofed coating that stops food sticking, that brass doesn't.
We used it for jam making, but not even for boiling the dumplings ...and mind that our 'clootie dumplings' and haggis are just kinds of the boiled foods that were once so common place. If it could be packed in a cloth or a bladder and boiled to cook, it made not only good tasty food, but the base for broth and stew with the boiling water too. Commonplace cooking from the earliest days of humanity....the brass pans though leach out copper into the mix. Fine in a quick boil up of jam when a miniscule amount of copper acts as a fungicide and does no harm to us, don't think I'd be so keen on it from an hours long boiling though.
M