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Harleian MS. 279 (ab 1430) - .Cxlix. A Potage. - A Pottage

A Potage – Harleian MS. 279 (c. 1430)

Sometimes a recipe resists easy interpretation, and this one has long puzzled cooks. “A Potage” from Harleian MS. 279 begins with an unusual step: cooking eggs in red wine before straining them with almond milk. At first glance, it might resemble wine clarification, but comparisons to similar recipes in Le Ménagier de Paris and other sections of Harleian MS. 279 suggest the intent was closer to a custard technique — lightly curdled eggs beaten into wine, strained, and then enriched with almond milk. The result is a sweet-savory almond custard-pottage, thickened with rice flour, colored red with sandalwood, and optionally garnished with chopped veal on flesh days. This dish sits somewhere between rice pudding, mincemeat, and almond custard, showcasing the medieval love of spice, fruit, and color in festive pottages.

Modern redaction of a 15th-century almond milk pottage, enriched with dried fruits, pine nuts, honey, and sweet spices.

The Original Recipe

Cxlix. A Potage.
Take an sethe a fewe eyron̛ in red Wyne; þan take & draw hem þorw a straynoure with a gode mylke of Almaundys; þen caste þer-to Roysonys of Coraunce, Dates y-taylid, grete Roysonys, Pynes, pouder Pepir, Sawndrys, Clouys, Maces, Hony y-now, a lytil doucete, & Salt; þan bynde hym vppe flat with a lytyl flowre of Rys, & let hem ben Red with Saunderys, & serue hym in flatte; & ȝif þou wolt, in fleyssℏ tyme caste vele y-choppid þer-on, not to smale.

Cxlix. A Potage.
Take and seethe a few eggs in red wine; then take and draw them through a strainer with a good almond milk. Then cast thereto currants, chopped dates, large raisins, pine nuts, powdered pepper, sandalwood, cloves, mace, honey enough, a little doucete, and salt. Then bind it up flat with a little rice flour, and let it be red with sandalwood, and serve it in flat. And if you will, in flesh time cast veal chopped thereon, not too small.

A Dynere of Flesche — John Russell’s Medieval Feast and the Logic of Digestion

A Dynere of Flesche — John Russell’s Medieval Feast and the Logic of Digestion

Medieval banquet scene with a roasted peacock re-dressed in its feathers presented at table.
Roasted peacock served “re-plumed,” a classic showpiece in late-medieval banquets. Source: Wikimedia Commons.

Introduction

In the mid-fifteenth century, court official John Russell compiled the Boke of Nurture (Harley MS 4011), a manual of etiquette, service, and feasting. Among its most intriguing passages is “A Dynere of Flesche”—a model feast for a flesh day. At first glance it reads like excess: swan, peacock, venison, custards, jellies, fritters, sotelties. But beneath the display lies clear order, guided by humoral theory and the theory of digestion.

  • Humoral theory:
    • Foods are classified hot/cold, moist/dry.
    • The goal was balance — so heavy/dry meats might be paired with moist/sweet sauces, or cooling jellies follow heating roasts.
  • Theory of Digestion (stomach as a fireplace model):

    • Light, quick-digesting foods first (whet the appetite, “open the stomach”).

    • Heavy meats mid-meal (need the appetite at full flame).

    • Cooling or binding foods at the end (to “close the stomach” and aid digestion).

    • Spices and hippocras (spiced wine) seal the stomach and prevent putrefaction.

Feasting, Status, and Seasonality

Russell’s menu was a model feast—aspirational and didactic. It reflected both status and medical order:

  • Luxury foods: swan, peacock, crane, bustard, sea bream inland, imported sugar, almonds, and rice.
  • Sotelties: allegorical sugar or pastry sculptures, more about piety and performance than eating.
  • Hierarchy: the high table saw the full spread; lower tables ate simpler portions.
  • Seasonality: autumn/winter hunting game + preserved foods (brawn, baked quinces, hippocras). Likely a winter festival setting—Christmas or Twelfth Night.

The Logic of the Courses

First Course: Awakening the Appetite

The feast begins with brawn of boar with mustard. Preserved brawn (salted/pressed) was hot/dry, paired with mustard (also hot/dry) to stimulate appetite. Then came pottages of herbs, spice, and wine (warm, moist, aromatic), followed by staples—beef and mutton, heavy and dry but softened by sauces. Showpieces—pheasant and swan with chawdron sauce, capons, pig, venison bake—balanced humors by variety. The course lifted with leches and fritters, hot/oily appetite stimulants, and paused with a sotelty of the Annunciation.

Second Course: Heaviest Roasts & Entremets

The second course starts gently with blancmanger (chicken and almond, moist and white) and jellies (cooling, clarifying). Then came the heaviest fare: venison, kid, fawn, coney, bustard, stork, crane, peacock, heron. These were dry/hot meats, demanding the stomach’s “strongest fire.”

Between them: entremets—custards, pastries, sweet leches—moist refreshers, palate cleansers, and spectacles. A fritter revived appetite, and an angelic sotelty provided allegory and pause.

Third Course: Stepping Down

Cream of almonds and mawmany were restorative and nourishing. Smaller roasts—curlews, snipes, quails, sparrows—replaced great birds. Moist/cooling dishes returned: perch in jelly, crayfish. Quinces baked (astringent) helped close digestion, alongside sage fritters and spiced leches. A Magi sotelty provided solemn close.

Finale: Issue & Sendoff

The issue de table included pippins (apples) with caraway comfits, custard (blaunderelle), wafers, and hippocras. Apples (cold/dry) restrained excess; caraway (hot/dry) dispelled wind; hippocras (spiced wine) “sealed” the stomach.

Overall Temperament by Course

Hot Cold Moist Dry Astringent
Course / Stage Overall Temperament Why this net effect?
First Course Hot Dry (+Moist from pottages) Opens with mustard & preserved brawn (hot/dry stimulants), then warm/moist pottages; heavy meats appear early but are sauced. Net effect = warming/activating with a slight dry edge to “open the stomach.”
Second Course Hot Dry (+ moderated by Moist entremets) Heaviest roasts (venison, crane, peacock) are hot/dry at peak digestion; custards/jellies (entremets) punctuate to moisten/refresh. Net effect = the feast’s hottest/driest point, tempered between platters.
Third Course Moist Cool (+ Astringent close) Steps down with smaller birds and moist/cooling fish in jelly; baked quinces add astringency to begin closure; sage fritters give brief warmth without flipping the net trend.
Finale (Issue & Boute-hors) Cool Dry → sealed by HotDry (hippocras) Raw apples + caraway comfits = cool/dry & wind-dispelling; wafers are light/dry. Final seal with hippocras (hot/dry) “closes the stomach” and guards against putrefaction.


Show SCA stages with temperament
SCA StageTemperamentNotes
On Table / EntranceHotDryMustard & brawn stimulate and announce status.
Pottages & Gentle DishesMoistWarmOpens and soothes the stomach.
Great RoastsHotDryPeak heat/dryness; serve when digestion is strongest.
EntremetsMoistCoolPalate/digestion refreshers between roasts.
Lighter Birds & FishMoistCoolStep-down phase toward closure.
Dessert / FruitAstringentBegins the “binding” close (quinces, etc.).
IssueCoolDryRaw apples + comfits; wafers light and crisp.
Boute-horsHotDryHippocras seals the stomach.

Feast Planning with Russell’s Menu

For SCA feast planners, Russell’s feast maps neatly into modern service frameworks:

Downloadable Resources:

StageDishes from Russell’s MenuDigestive Role
On Table / EntranceMustard & brawnStimulates appetite, prestige
PottagesPottage, blancmanger, jelliesGentle starters, open stomach
Great RoastsBeef, mutton, venison, swan, peacock, bustard, crane, etc.Heaviest, driest meats; mid-digestion
EntremetsCustards, pastries, fritters, soteltiesPalate refreshers, visual allegories
Lighter Birds & FishCurlew, quail, perch in jelly, crayfishMoist/cooling, easier to digest
Dessert / FruitQuinces baked, sage frittersAstringent closure, sharpen digestion
IssueApples with caraway, wafersRefresh and bind, dispel wind
Boute-horsHippocrasSpiced wine to seal digestion

Mythbusting Russell’s Feast

  • “Feasts were chaotic.” ❌ They followed medical choreography.
  • “Everyone ate the same food.” ❌ Hierarchy dictated portions.
  • “Peacock and swan were delicacies.” ❌ They were tough; value lay in spectacle.
  • “Sugar was common.” ❌ It was a costly luxury spice.
  • “Fritters were desserts only.” ❌ They appear in every course as stimulants.
  • “Fruit was always cooked.” ❌ The pippins at issue were raw, paired with comfits.

✅ Dos & ❌ Don’ts by Course

  • First Course
    ✅ Pair heavy meats with moist dishes (pottage, sauce)
    ❌ Don’t open with multiple cold/moist foods — they dull appetite
  • Second Course
    ✅ Interleave entremets between heavy roasts
    ❌ Don’t serve only hot/dry roasts back-to-back — digestion overload
  • Third Course
    ✅ Use cooling/moist dishes (fish, almond cream) to “calm the stomach”
    ❌ Don’t drop in new hot/dry meats here — it reverses the descent
  • Finale
    ✅ Always end with an astringent fruit + spiced closer
    ❌ Don’t pile sweets without balance — needs closure to “seal digestion”

Conclusion

Russell’s Dynere of Flesche shows that medieval dining was deliberate: humoral balance, digestive order, spectacle, and hierarchy all interlaced. What seems like excess was careful choreography. For modern readers—and especially SCA feast stewards—it offers both inspiration and a reminder: a medieval feast was an art of health and performance.

Why this matters today: Russell’s feast reminds us that medieval banquets were not chaotic indulgence, but carefully balanced systems of health, status, and art. It’s a reminder that food has always been about more than eating—it shapes identity, power, and performance at the table.

Glossary: a few terms
  • Chawdron: rich sauce of entrails/offal.
  • Entremets: “between-dishes” (light/spectacular interludes).
  • Sotelty: edible allegory/sculpture, more for the eyes than the stomach.
  • Issue de table: light closing bites after courses.
  • Boute-hors: sendoff drink(s), e.g., hippocras.

Source: John Russell, Boke of Nurture, Harleian MS 4011, fol. 171 (c. 1460).

Further reading
  • Flandrin & Montanari (eds.), Food: A Culinary History — feast structure.
  • Hieatt & Butler (eds.), Curye on Inglysch — Middle English recipes.
  • Adamson, Food in Medieval Times — ingredients, trade, status.


From Sauce to Aspic: The 500-Year Journey of Galentyne → Galantine

From Sauce to Aspic – The 500-Year Journey of Galentyne → Galantine


From hot medieval sauce to elegant cold aspic — the shifting identity of galentyne/galantine.

What’s in a name? Few dishes illustrate the transformations of European cuisine as vividly as galentyne. In the 14th century, it meant a spiced, bread-thickened sauce for meats or fish. By the 19th century, galantine had become a boned, stuffed, aspic-set cold dish — a centerpiece of French haute cuisine. Here we trace that remarkable journey across 500 years, with original recipes and modern adaptations.


Medieval Origins (14th–15th c.)

Harleian MS. 279 (England, c.1430): Fyletes in Galentyne is one of the best known. Pork is roasted, cut up, and stewed with onions, pepper, ginger, bread, and vinegar, finished with blood or sanders for color.

“Take fayre porke of the fore quarter, and rost hit tyl hit be almost ynogh; … and colour hit with blode, or elles with sandres, and then lat hit boyle up wel, and serve it forth.”

See the full recipe in our updated Fyletes in Galentyne post.

Entremets — The Forgotten Medieval Course

Entremets — The Forgotten Medieval Course Between Pottage and Roast
Paolo Veronese, The Feast in the House of Levi (1573), Gallerie dell'Accademia, Venice. Public domain via Wikimedia Commons.

Updated: 2025-09-11 · Labels: Entremet · Feast Planning · Historical Cooking · Medieval · Renaissance

Modern feast menus often jump from a pottage or soup straight to roasts. Historically, diners expected something between. The entremet (Old French: “between-dish”) served as a bridge between heavy services, offering refreshment, surprise, and sometimes outright spectacle. This post explains the term’s origins, how it functioned, where it went, and practical ways to revive it in today’s feasts.

Etymology & Early References

Entremet derives from Old French (entre + mettre/mettre “to place/send in between”), literally a dish interposed between services. The concept appears prominently in 14th‑century French sources such as Le Viandier and later in Le Ménagier de Paris; in English material (e.g., Harleian MS. 279, c.1430) you find dishes that likely filled the same role, even when not labeled “entremet.”

Function of the Entremet

  • Pacing & Palate Reset: a light interlude after dense pottages or fish and before the roasts.
  • Spectacle & Surprise: color shifts, unusual textures, disguised forms, molded shapes.
  • Status & Seasonality: ingredients like saffron, sugar, almonds signal wealth and trade access; colors and motifs reflect seasonal/religious themes.

Entremet vs. Soteltie (Subtlety)

AspectEntremetSoteltie / Subtlety
Purpose Culinary surprise between services; light refreshment Edible (or semi‑edible) display; allegory, heraldry, pageant
Form Real dishes: rice, fritters, jellies, fruit, delicate pottages Sculpted pastry/sugar/marzipan; sometimes inedible components
Placement Between major courses (e.g., after fish/pottage, before roasts) Also between courses, but primarily ceremonial/representational
Examples Blawnche Perrye; colored rice; almond jelly; small fritters Heraldic beasts; castles; motto banners; sugar tableaux

Historical Examples

  • Blawnche Perrye — a light, pale pottage; visually striking early in a feast.
  • Colored rice — saffron‑gold, parsley‑green, or spiced rice for contrast.
  • Fritters — rice or fruit fritters served in small bites.
  • Jellies — molded almond or wine jellies; multicolored effects.
  • Disguised dishes — meats/fish presented in altered forms for surprise.

Regional Variations of the Entremet

While the entremet began in French courtly dining, the idea of a “between dish” spread widely. Each region adapted the form to local tastes, ingredients, and cultural priorities.

France

In sources such as Le Viandier and Le Ménagier de Paris (14th c.), entremets often took spectacular form — multicolored jellies, stuffed or disguised animals, and occasional allegorical displays.

England

English manuscripts like Harleian MS. 279 (~1430) present plainer entremets: light pottages (e.g., Blawnche Perrye), spiced rice, or oyster dishes — emphasizing humoral balance over pageantry.

Italy

Italian masters (Maestro Martino, Scappi) blurred entremets with refined lighter courses: almond milk dishes, sugared rice, small pasta or vegetable preparations with elegant presentation.

Spain & Catalonia

Texts such as Llibre de Coch (1520) show sweet‑leaning entremets — almond pastes, candied fruits, spiced rice — foreshadowing dessert traditions.

Germany

German Speisebücher and later works (e.g., Anna Wecker, 1598) feature Zwischenspeisen (“between‑dishes”): saffron or parsley‑colored rice, Sülze (bright fish/meat jellies), and fritters like Krapfen or Strauben — practical, colorful, and texturally contrasting.

Comparison at a Glance

RegionStyleTypical Entremets
FranceSpectacle & allegoryMulticolored jellies; disguised animals; displays
EnglandPlain & balancingLight pottages; Blawnche Perrye; spiced rice; oysters
ItalyRefined & sweet‑leaningAlmond milk dishes; sugared rice; elegant vegetables/pasta
SpainSweet & aromaticCandied fruit; almond pastes; sweet rice
GermanyPractical & colorfulSaffron/parsley rice; Sülze; fritters (Krapfen, Strauben)

Cultural Implications of the Entremet

  • Status & Wealth: saffron, sugar, and almonds advertised trade connections and prosperity.
  • Hospitality & Generosity: an “extra” dish beyond necessity signaled refined care for guests.
  • Symbolism & Allegory: colors, shapes, and motifs could project heraldry, virtues, or politics.
  • Religious Context: on fast days, almond/fish/rice entremets expressed piety while keeping celebration.
  • Urban vs. Rural: princely or guild feasts layered multiple entremets; smaller households scaled with fruit or fritters.

Techniques & Ingredients for Recreating Historical Entremets Today

Coloring & Flavoring

  • Saffron for gold; spinach/parsley juice for green; beet/red wine for red‑purple.
  • Pouder douce/forte-inspired spice mixes (cinnamon, ginger, grains of paradise/pepper, clove) for warming balance.

Texture & Setting

  • Gelatin sheets as a modern stand‑in for isinglass; almond milk (unsweetened) for dairy‑free jellies/pottages; rice flour for smooth thickening.
  • Use silicone molds or small ramekins for easy unmolding and portion control.

Service & Plating

  • Keep portions amuse‑bouche to tasting‑spoon size.
  • Serve on trenchers or small plates for visual “in‑between” cues.
  • Contrast color/temperature with adjacent courses (e.g., warm saffron rice after a cool fish pottage).

How Preparation & Serving Evolved Across Cultures

  • France: 14th‑c. courtly showpieces; by 17th‑c. service à la française, “entremets” shifts toward plated side dishes (vegetables/sweets).
  • England: lighter, balancing dishes early on; later, subtleties dominate the between‑course spectacle while “entremet” as a named category fades.
  • Italy: refined palate‑cleansers in Martino/Scappi; drift toward sweet course traditions.
  • Germany: practical Zwischenspeisen (colored rice, Sülze, fritters) persist as pacing devices; concept echoes into modern zwischenmahlzeiten (snacks).
  • Spain/Catalonia: sweet, aromatic dishes bridge to the rise of post‑meal desserts.

Social & Political Implications of Elaborate Entremets

  • Political messaging: allegorical colors/figures could reinforce heraldry, dynastic claims, or alliances.
  • Diplomatic theatre: multiple entremets broadcast wealth and organizational prowess to envoys/guests.
  • Religious signalling: fast‑day almond/rice/fish displays piety + generosity.
  • Guild identity: urban companies used entremets to rival noble display and celebrate craft prosperity.
  • Class contrast: layering “extras” underlined hierarchy where common tables had few courses.

Modern Feast Planning: Reviving the Entremet

  • Pick one small, high‑impact dish (colored rice, fritter, molded jelly).
  • Plate for contrast (color/temperature/texture) and keep portions small.
  • Mind humoral balance: pair cold‑moist (oysters, almond milk) with warming spices (ginger, pepper).
  • Leverage dietary wins: many entremets are naturally GF/DF; offer a vegan variant where sensible.

🍽️ Entremet Examples on Give it Forth

FAQ: Does a Modern Galantine Count as an Entremet?

Sometimes. If served as a small, decorative “between” dish (rather than as part of the roast service), a galantine can function as an entremet. Keep portions modest and presentation striking; otherwise it reads as a main meat course.

Sources & Further Reading