Funges – Medieval Mushroom & Leek Pottage (The Forme of Cury, c. 1390)
Originally published 2017 — updated September 2025
π₯ Dietary Notes: Vegan • Vegetarian • Gluten-Free

Funges is a warming dish of mushrooms and leeks simmered in broth, brightened with saffron and finished with Powder Fort. It’s fast, fragrant, and feast-friendly—perfect for Curia brunch as a gentle starter. If you love leek dishes, see also Canabenys with Lekys.
Original Recipe
Funges (The Forme of Cury, c. 1390)
Take Funges and pare hem clere and dyce hem. take leke and shred him smal and do him to seeΓΎ in gode broth color yt wΘt safron and do ΓΎer inne pouder fort and serve hit forth.
Modern Recipe
Adapted by Felice Debbage
- 1 lb mushrooms, sliced
- 1 leek, finely sliced
- 1 cup vegetable (or chicken) broth
- 1 tsp Powder Fort
- 1 pinch saffron
- Salt to taste (optional)
- Warm broth and saffron over low heat until the liquid turns golden.
- Add mushrooms and leeks; simmer until tender, ~8–12 minutes.
- Stir in Powder Fort; taste and season. Serve hot with bread or trenchers.
πΏ Bring Medieval Flavors to Your Kitchen
- Saffron – prized in medieval cooking for its color and warming qualities. Available today through specialty spice merchants.
- Powder Forte – a historic spice blend (ginger, pepper, cinnamon, etc.) often used in pies and sauces. A convenient way to taste medieval flavor.
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Notes & Substitutions π₯
- Vegan: Use vegetable broth. Already dairy-free.
- Gluten-free: Naturally GF; pair with GF bread if desired.
- Camping: Use dehydrated mushrooms/leeks + bouillon; simmer 12–15 min.
- No Powder Fort? Mix 3 parts black pepper, 2 parts ginger, tiny pinch clove.
- Texture: For a thicker pottage, simmer uncovered a few extra minutes.
- Mushrooms (modern swaps): Cremini or button ≈ medieval field mushrooms; chanterelle or oyster add a more “wild” historic feel; portobello is tasty but denser than period types.
- Historical caution: Medieval cooks foraged local fungi and period texts warn of poisonous kinds. Some sources mention “testing” mushrooms by boiling with bread/garlic/parsley—symbolic, not scientific. Modern advice: use cultivated mushrooms or those from an expert forager only.
Mushrooms: Then & Now (Quick Context)
- Medieval England: Predominantly wild, seasonal mushrooms—field mushrooms (Agaricus campestris), hedgehog, chanterelle, oyster—gathered locally.
- Cultivation: The familiar white button/cremini/portobello cultivars rise later; they’re fine modern stand-ins but slightly different in texture.
- Best matches today: Cremini/button for everyday accuracy; chanterelle/oyster for “woodland” character.
Cooking Technique Spotlight: Broth First
Medieval cooks often simmered vegetables in broth for flavor and nutrition, then adjusted color and “virtue” with spices. Funges is a textbook example—simple ingredients, refined with careful seasoning.
Related Recipes
- Canabenys with Lekys – another leek-forward dish
- A Potage of Roysons – apple & raisin rice pottage
- Powder Fort – the spice blend used here
Sources
- The Forme of Cury, c. 1390 — full text (pbm.com)
- Hieatt & Butler, Curye on Inglysch (EETS, 1985)
π½️ More from the Curia Lunch
- Curia Regis Brunch Hub
- Egges yn Brewte
- Savoury Tostyde
- Gammon of Bacon
- Eisands with Oatmeale Groats
- Funges
- Chawatteys (Harleian MS 279 (Austin), c. 1430)
- To Stew Shrimps (being taken out of their shells)
- A Fryed Meate (Pancakes) in Haste for the Second Course
- Compost
- To Dry Peaches
- Orange Marmalade
- Rose Conserve
- Comfits of Anise, Caraway & Fennel
- Quidinia of Quinces (Quince Paste)
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