Arranging the Feast: The Application of Medieval Dietary Theory to Modern Day Feasts


 This paper represents my very first competition & research paper.  Be kind with your constructive criticism, offer solutions and suggestions along with your critique.   I welcome it, I wish to improve not only research but in writing. 
Thank you!

Arranging the Feast:
The Application of Medieval Dietary Theory to Modern Day Feasts
Bronwyn Ni Mhathain
MKA: Yonnie Travis
Society for Creative Anachronism




Blog: Giveitforth.blogspot.com
Facebook: Give it Forth & Historic Cookery Group

 


Contents

Introduction.. 4
Greek Dietetics. 5
Theory of Digestion.. 7
Feeding the Humors or the Role of the Cook and Health.. 9
Introduction to Structuring the Feast. 10
Defining the Sequence. 11
Putting it all Together –or- Creating the Modern “Medieval” Menu.. 14
Conclusion.. 16
References. 18
Appendix A: Sequence of the Menu.. 20
Appendix B: John Russells -A dynere of flesche. 21
Appendix C:Maistre Chiquart: The Service of Dinner on the First Day. 22
Appendix D: Le Menagier De Paris (~1393). 24















Purpose

Many years ago, I brought a friend who is a historian to an SCA event.  They enjoyed their time at the event, marveled at the efforts to recreate a “modern” medieval tournament.  They enjoyed the fighting, clothing, classes and demonstrations of skill and prowess. However, when it came to time feast, my friend was a bit disappointed. They were expecting to see the same care and thought in the feast as they had seen all day throughout the event.  My friend enjoyed the food that was served and the hospitality and joviality of the hall, however, the food was not quite period, and the menu itself was “too modern” in design.  It was their comment “you work so hard to recreate a specific atmosphere, but you fell down at the feast” that in part led to my researching how meals were served.
It was this comment that made me ask the questions; “What dietary theories were used in period?”, “How can we apply the dietary practices of the time period we are emulating to our feasts?”, and “Is this feasible?” This paper will explain how to create a modern “Medieval” menu using the dietary theories and practices that were prevalent during the 14th and 15th Centuries specifically in England, although it will touch very lightly on other cultures (France and Italy) as well.  
To understand the structure of a medieval feast, a very basic understanding of Greek dietetics, humors and most importantly the theory of digestion is necessary.  Additionally, a glossary of terms used in France and England will be presented as a means of emulating the sequences that were used in the structure of a feast.  Lastly, how to apply this theory to a modern “Medieval” menu will be offered, along with suggestions for various dishes which would be appropriate to be served throughout the various sequences.


Introduction

How were medieval banquets served?  The modern diner has an idea on how food is to be served, starting with an appetizer and ending in dessert. This idea dates back to the Greeks and their idea of how to remain healthy through diet. Modern diners are used to a logical sequence of dishes served in a style that became popular in the mid-19th century known as service “a la Russe”.  This style of dining is characterized by carefully choreographed dishes, served in a sequential manner, to an individual according to the relevance of the dish and its function within the meal set (Flandrin, 2007).
Prior to the 19th century, the style of service for a meal was known as “a la Francaise”. It was characterized by serving a variety of dishes at the same time. Oftentimes, the guests would arrive at the table to find that the food had already been placed upon it.  The guests would pick and choose what they would eat based upon what was within easy reach. Upon completion of a specific course, the dishes were removed from the table, and the next course would be brought to it. This style of service, with its formality in the presentation of dishes focused on showing off the wealth and or power of the host. It became predominant in the 17th century (1601-1700), but its roots, are firmly grounded in the dining styles of the previous centuries (Flandrin, 2007) .
Prior to the 17th century, the service (or courses) would have been referred to as a messe (Middle English for meal ~ 1300), mets (Old French for a course or portion of food ~1300), or assiettes (French for Platter ~ 13th Century).  In medieval menus courses could be identified by number (first, second, third, or premier, seconde, tiers), or they could be identified by name (potage, rost, desserte). The terms service, course, dishes (mets), platters/trays (assiettes) are interchangeable, or at the very least equivalent to each other when referring to the different segments of a medieval meal.
Formal meals consisted of several courses each containing multiple dishes which would be served at the same time. However, the number of courses presented varied upon culture and if a meal was served for supper or lunch (dinner). French menus consisted of two, three or four courses; English two or three and Italians could have as few as two or three and as many as twelve courses.  This variance makes it difficult to see or understand a basic meal structure. 
To understand the structure of a meal prepared in the 14th or 15th century, an understanding of Greek dietetics, humors and most importantly the theory of digestion which was a prevalent part of medieval society is necessary. The cook was as much physician as cook, who understood that part of his responsibilities was the health and wellness of the household in which he served and to structure his meal accordingly.

Greek Dietetics


Early Greek philosophers intent on answering questions on the origin of all things, including man,  came to the conclusion (between the sixth and fourth centuries BC) that all things which exist contain within them varying degrees of the elements fire, water, air, and earth.  They also concluded that these four elements had specific qualities associated with them; hot, cold, dry and wet. Further it was agreed that things could not be both hot and cold, or wet and dry, but varying degrees of these qualities. Each quality had attributes associated with them; hot, cold, wet or dry.
Hippocrates writes in his Regimen 1.4-5 “Each of these elements has the following attributes.  Fire is hot and dry, water cold and wet.  By mutual exchange fire has moisture from water. (For in fire there is moisture.) Water has dryness from fire. (for there is dryness in water.) This being the case, there separate off from one another many forms of every kind, both of seeds and of living creatures, which are not all like one another either in appearance or power (Longrigg, 1998).”
Each of the four compound qualities (cold and dry, hot and moist, hot and dry, and cold and moist) was associated with a specific bodily humor in Man. Hippocrates wrote “The Human body contains blood, phlegm, yellow bile and black bile. These are the things that make up its constitution and cause its pains and health. Health is primarily that state in which these constituent substances are in the correct proportion to each other, both in strength and quantity, and are well mixed. Pain occurs when one of the substances presents either a deficiency or an excess, or is separated in the body and not mixed with others (Jones, 1931).”
Claudius Galen (129-199) believed each of the humors not only contained specific qualities, but were also associated with specific temperaments, also known as personalities; sanguine, phlegmatic, choleric and melancholic. The Sanguine temperament was associated with blood, which was both hot and moist and related to the element of air. Galen’s phlegmatic temperament was associated with water and was both cold and wet. Yellow bile was associated with the choleric temperament and the element of fire.  It was hot and dry. Lastly, black bile was associated with the qualities of being both cold and dry.  The temperament of black bile was melancholic and was associated with the element of earth.


Theory of Digestion

Each of the humors present in the bloodstream was considered byproducts of the act of digestion. The theory of digestion according to Hippocratic medicine was a process that likened the stomach to an oven. Air combined with food and created the fuel necessary for the “innate heat” of the stomach.  Galen postulated that digestion occurred in the stomach by heating up food that had been ingested and transforming it into something that the body could properly assimilate.  However, there was a right and wrong way that food could be eaten. Eating the wrong food was just as unhealthy as eating too much food or eating food out of order. This theory strongly influenced the way people ate in the late 14th early 15th centuries (Ogle, 1882). 
The Greeks believed that digestion was composed of four separate processes.  In the first process, food was passed from the mouth to the stomach where it began its transformation.   Food was then passed to the liver where the second process of digestion occurs and the humors were created. Blood was the first humor to appear, and was created from the most nutrient dense materials. It was during the third process of digestion that the remaining humors were created.  Phlegm was the second humor to appear and would be stored in the lungs as mucus.  Any remaining nutrients were then converted to yellow bile which was not as plentiful as either blood or phlegm and would be stored in the gallbladder to be used as needed. Lastly, black bile would be created from the least nutritious and coarsest materials and stored in the spleen. The ingested food was then passed into the veins for the fourth digestion.
According to Hippocrates “Either because of the quantity of things taken, or through their diversity, or because the things taken happen to be strong and difficult of digestion, residues are thereby produced, and when the things that have been taken are too many, the heat that produces digestion is overpowered by the multitude of foods and does not affect digestion.  And because digestion is hindered, residues are formed…...When however, they are coarse and hard to digest, there occurs hindrance of digestion because they are hard to assimilate, and so change to residues takes place.  From the residues rise gases, which having arisen bring on disease (Temkin, (2002).”
An individual's health was the direct result of the interactions of the humors in the body.  If the humors were imbalanced then a person became ill.  The stomach played a central role in the health of the individual.  If the digestive “fire” of the stomachs were not hot enough, or if the stomach was unable to properly digest food, illness would occur. If a person ate too much food the heat of the stomach would be unable to properly digest it. Or, if a person ate a food that was considered difficult to digest, “out of turn”, the remaining food residue would ferment and rot, leading to the creation of ill humors.  Therefore, a person needed to be careful about not only the quantity of what was eaten, but in what order.
The act of digestion started with the cook who would apply his knowledge of the nature and temperament of food to create dishes that were nourishing, sustaining and balanced the humors.  It was his responsibility to determine the structure of the meal, not through random actions or without thought but with the understanding of the dire consequence of ill health and disease that would come as a result of improper cooking and eating.


Feeding the Humors or the Role of the Cook and Health

By the late 14th early 15th centuries, the dietetics of the Greeks and the health benefits of food had become integrated in the household. Books such as the Tacuinum Sanitatis (The Handbook of Health) and the Regimen Sanitatis Salernitanum contained detailed descriptions of how to remain healthy through diet and daily habits. Physicians would use these books and work tirelessly to create diets appropriate to maintain the health of an individual or to help that individual overcome a disease.  The medieval cook’s goal then was to produce a meal, based on the physicians’ recommendations, whose overall net balance was equal to an average adult’s balanced humoral nature-- moderately moist and warm. 
Not all foods have the quality of being moist and warm.  Among the many responsibilities the medieval cook had, was to be aware of the nature of everything that entered his kitchen, from wet and cold water to the excessive heat and dryness of garlic. He also had to know how to cook food to make it safe for eating. Different cooking methods had a direct effect on the temperament of food.  Roasting not only heated food, it dried it.  Boiling also heated food, but it added moisture as well. Baking was a method of both heating and drying food, but the nature of the pie shell protected the existing moisture of its contents.  If the contents needed to have more moisture, fat such as marrow was added to it. As the cook applied various methods of cooking; boiling, roasting, grilling, baking, the qualities of the food would change. 

Introduction to Structuring the Feast

A cook was under great pressure to ensure that not only was the correct kinds of foods were eaten, but also responsible for ensuring food would be eaten in the correct order. Based on the theory of digestion, in order to achieve proper digestion, and to prevent illness from food rotting or fermenting in the stomach the diner had to eat food in the correct order.  The logical progression of the meal moved from those items closest to our temperament and easiest to digest to those items that would progressively become more difficult to digest.
In 1475 Platina advises “At the first table (the opening of the meal) are served all things laxative, light, appetizing, and not very filling (Flandrin, 2007).” Following the opening of the meal came pottages and broths (being both warm and moist) and oftentimes composed of foods that thought to be easiest to digest.  Platina then writes “Roasts are more nourishing and more difficult to cook (digest) than boiled meats….roasted and fried flesh is much more filling and harder to digest for being too dry and without humors; but if boiled it is moist and digestible, provided it is not fat, in which case, as we said, better roasted than boiled.”  At the suggestions of Platina, the proper sequence would be liquid before solid, boiled before sauced, sauced before roasted or cooked on a spit, and cooked on a spit before grilled.
Roasting and grilling both heated and dried food. These methods of cooking were appropriate for foods that were cold and moist in nature.  However, to bring the food back into balance, the cook might need to “temper” it, with a sauce. Woe to the hapless cook who deliberately spit roasted a joint of beef (dry and hot) without serving it with an appropriate sauce to bring it back into balance! Frying was another method of cooking that was both heating and moisturizing.  It was an appropriate method of cooking for foods that were already of proper temperament, like chicken.
At the conclusion of the meal, the diner then had to close the stomach, to ensure that the digestive fires remained hot enough to properly digest the food which had been consumed.  It is in this sequence that you would find not only foods appropriate to “open the stomach” but foods that were appropriate to close it; spices and sugar (Flandrin, 2007).

Defining the Sequence


There was a very logical sequence to the progression of a banquet in the 14th and 15th century. The meal centered on a roast and could be preceded by two or more courses, and finished by as many as three courses after the roast. Each of the main cultures; English, Italian and French had their own way of referring to this sequence.
Courses might be referred to as dishes (mets), platters (assiettes), service, table, or  servings.  The Online Etymological Dictionary (N.D.) states that the word “course” in the 13th century referred to a forward or onward movement; however, by the 14th century it had become associated with meals.  In medieval menus courses can be identified by number (first, second, third, or premier, seconde, tiers), or they could be identified by name (potage, rost, desserte).  Modernly a course refers to specific set dishes that are served together during a meal. 
Serving is derived from the Latin servire, to be in service or to be a servant and references the actual act of getting food from the kitchen to the diner.  Modernly, serving refers to the amount of food that is given to an individual at a meal, as well as the act of portioning and distributing food. The terms course, dishes (mets), platters (assiettes), service, table or serving are interchangeable, or at the very least equivalent.  Even the much lamented “remove”, from relevé, meaning a course which relieved or followed the entrée (derived from the old French relever meaning to remove) could be used. However the first recorded usage of the word “relever” is dated to approximately 1825 (Online Etymological Dictionary, n.d.).
Each course in a formal meal contained multiple dishes all of which would be served at the same time. The number of dishes varied between lunch and supper and also varied depending on the culture. For example, several of the suggested menus presented in Le Menagier consist of three courses with approximately six to eight dishes per course. The Harleian Manuscripts contain menus usually featuring three courses with upwards to a dozen -or more- dishes per course.
To define the forward progression of a meal it is important to understand the terminology that would have been used at the time and its modern day equivalent. Once an understanding of the progression of dishes throughout a feast sequence can be understood, putting together a menu that can emulate this progression becomes an easy task. Jean Louis Flandrin provides a workable progression in his book “Arranging the Feast”.

Entrée de table, entrance, or entrée, appetizer, aperitif

The modern diner might equate the Entrée de table (entrance) or entrée in the sequence of dishes to an aperitif, appetizers, or hors d’oeuvres. The term entrée appears around 1536 (Hyman, 1992) and is used to describe the first stage of a meal.  It is the name for dishes that were set on the table before diners entered the room.  It consists of wine and small bites of food meant to awaken the appetite.
Aperitif comes from the Medieval Latin word aperitivus, meaning “to open”.   Appetizer, the word most modern diners are familiar with was first used in the 1820’s and means “to whet the appetite”.   In French, “Hors D'oeuvres” means “outside the main” and does not come into common usage until the mid 17th century.

Pottages

Following the entrance are pottages and broths. The first usage of the word “pottage” can be traced back to 1200 and is derived from the old French potage, meaning something that could be put into a pot..

Entremet

               Many menus of the 14th and 15th century describe beautifully elaborate dishes that were for show.  The French referred to these dishes as entremet while the English would refer to them subtlety, sotelty or soteltie.  In the 12th century, entremets referred specifically to entertainments, or an elaborate dish or course featuring a spectacle dish or dishes which were served between courses. However, by the 17th century, an entremet had come to mean a dish that was served between a roast and the dessert. 

Roast

               The roast consists of foods that have been exposed to dry heat, baked, roasted or grilled. It is derived from late 13th century word rostir meaning “to cook or burn”.  At the suggestions of Platina, the medieval cook would serve a meat boiled in a sauce, or a meat which had been roasted to be served with a sauce.  Additional cooking methods that might have been used include meat that had been cooked on a spit or a grill, frying or an item that had been baked.

 Dessert

The term “dessert” comes from the French desservir meaning to clear the table, indicating to the diner that they had come to the end of their meal. The first recorded usage of the term desservir was in 1539.  At the conclusion of the meal, there would be served a series of dishes that could be either savory or sweet.  The modern diner expects a completely sweet course, and it is in this progression of the dishes a resurgence of dry and warm spices and hot and moist sugar is prevalent.

Issue de Table

 After diners had finished desert they would be invited to withdraw from the table and enter into another room, where they received the Issue de Table, an offering that could be as narrow as wafers and hypocras or as broad as a selection of light pastries, wafers, juice, or wine.  

Boute Hor’s (Send-off, bow out)

               The last part of a meal in the 14th and 15th century, was the boute hor’s, or send off.   Diners received wine and épices de chambre (chamber spices), fruit candied in sugar or honey, candied nuts and fruit pastes. Not only did these items have the benefit of serving to further close the stomach, they also freshened the breath.

Putting it all Together –or- Creating the Modern “Medieval” Menu


Fortunately recreating the general feel of these elaborate feasts is much easier for the SCA cook. Our modern diners are used to meals that consist of three to four courses of three to four dishes each. This is not to say that the modern medieval cook cannot follow the general outline for the sequence of the meal and serve five courses, starting with appetizers sitting on table and ending with small gifts of chamber spices and candied fruit for the guests to take home.  But as a general rule of thumb, a modern day SCA-feast usually consists of something on the table, a first course, second course and a dessert course.
The modern medieval diner expects to find something on the table when they are preparing to eat. The modern medieval cook can easily fulfill this expectation by placing upon the table dishes appropriate for the Entrée de table (entrance), or entrée (appetizer, aperitif). To borrow a page from Le Menagier, there could be a first platter (items upon the table at the beginning of the feast) consisting of veal or fish pies, sausages and toast rounds with a sweet wine (or grape juice).  Or, capons (chicken) served with a cumin sauce, cress and sorrel with vinegar, olives and tarts of veal.  John Russels “Boke of Nurture” suggests as a first course brawn with mustard, pottages of herbs and wine, and leche lombard.
Some additional suggestions for foods that would be appropriately fitting to serve as appetizers include sweet wines, confections made with spices such as ginger, caraway, anise, fennel or cumin, peaches, melons, cherries, strawberries, grapes, lettuce with oil and vinegar dressings, cabbages, boiled eggs, or honeyed dishes.
A modest first course could be brought to the table featuring two potages, one of meat and one of vegetables, perhaps served over sippets of toasted bread or with a loaf of bread brought to the table. Le Menagier suggests as a second service; a stew of meat, almond broth, blaunche porree, a thickened dish of leeks cooked in almond milk served with thin slices of chicken, and peas. Maistre Chiquart suggests a bruet of almayn and a bruet of Savoy, lamprey sauce with numbles of beef, platters of salted meats in seasons, green porray and any other sauce but mustard.
For the more elaborate second course highlighting the “main” dish (and the highlight of the meal), Le Menagier suggests  roast, the best you can get with appropriate sauces, rich pastries, lombardy tarts, sweet chestnuts and thin pancakes or cream fritters.   This is the course where it is the most appropriate to serve heavier meats which have been roasted, baked or in a pastry shell, served cold (froide sauge), jellied (jelly of meat or fish) or sliced.  Maistre Chiquart suggests “large roasts put themselves” including a whole piglet or kid, and after the roasts trays of fowl including goose, pheasant and partridge, and reminds the cook to pay attention to the sauces used recommending simple salt, sauce piquant, jance or cameline.
The modern cook is not limited in the items that can be served.  Other items that could be included in this course are nuts (especially with fish), aged cheeses (especially with meat), vegetables that have been roasted, baked or fried, pears, apples, quince, medlars or chestnuts. It is not uncommon to find pancakes or other fried dishes such as fritters in this course.
Lastly an elaborate third course composed of all manner of sweet or savory dishes to signal the ending of the meal.  A modern medieval cook may choose to end their meal with a variety of dishes such as a custard tart, stewed fruits, wafers with snow, fruit pastes, manus christi and spices in comfit.  Other items for consideration include sweet dishes made with honey and sugar, glazed dishes, crepes, fruit rissoles, puddings, custards, and light cakes.
At many modern feasts, the Issue de Table is not observed, but suggestions to invoke the spirit of the Issue include the addition of candied fruits, spices and nuts, along with candied ginger, fruit pastes and other sweetmeats served with spiced fruit juice or wine.

Conclusion

To answer the question, “How were medieval banquets served?”  They were served in accordance to the cook’s general knowledge of health, carefully cooked according to the nature of the item being served. An individual's health was the direct result of the interactions of the humors created through the process of digestion in the body.  If the humors were unbalanced then a person became ill. 
The act of digestion started with the cook who would apply his knowledge of the nature and temperament of food to not only create the meal but to determine the structure of it. At the suggestions of Platina, the medieval cook would serve dishes that were light, appetizing and easily digested. Each successive course would then become increasingly more difficult to digest until the meal concluded. 
The modern cook can easily simulate the feel of a medieval feast by following the structure that our medieval predecessors used; appetizers, pottages, stewed or braised foods, sauced, roasted, fried, grilled or baked dishes, and lastly desert.  A cook wishing to extend the feel of the feast should look at the details, nuts served after fish, hard cheese after meat, wine or fruit juices at the beginning and the end of the meal, and lastly, a selection of comfits, candies and sweetmeats to send their guests home.
  

References

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Appendix A: Sequence of the Menu

Course Name
SCA Course
Examples of kinds of food served according to Flandrin
Entrance (First)
Open Stomach, Excite appetite
On table
Greens with oil and vinegar, Sweet, Juicy, and Easily Perishable Fruit (cherries, melons, strawberries, peaches), spicy foods (salt, pepper, cinnamon, mace, cloves, etc.) fresh cheese, delicate easily digested non fatty meats
Pottages -foods cooked in a pot
First
Meat or vegetables cooked in a pot with broth or almond milk such as sops, bruets, porree, cive, stews, graves, or porrays
Roast-foods that have been exposed to dry heat, baked, roasted, or grilled
Second
Roasted meat dishes, meat dishes served with sauce, baked in a pastry shell, fattier meat, grain based dishes such as frumenty or eisings, jellied, and sliced dishes, vegetables that have been roasted or baked, heavier fruits such as meddlars, apples, chestnuts, or quince and fried dishes such as rissole, fritters, and pancakes.
Dessert
Third
Could consist of savory as well as sweet dishes to conclude the meal: Aged cheese (with meat), nuts (with fish), stewed fruits, puddings, custards, tarts, dishes made with sugar & honey
L’issue de table
Wine, wafers, and light pastries
Boute-Hors (Sendoff)
Candied spices, fruit in sugar or honey, candied ginger, candied nuts and fruit pastes, sugar paste


Appendix B: John Russells -A dynere of flesche.

John Russell’s Boke of Nurture (Harl. MS. 4011, Fol. 171 ~1460)
The Furst Course.

++Furst set forth{e} mustard / & brawne / of boor{e}, þe wild swyne, Suche potage / as þe cooke hath{e} made / of yerbis / spice / & wyne, Beeff, motoñ / Stewed feysaund / Swañ w{i}t{h} the Chawdwyñ, Capou{n}, pigge / vensou{n} bake, leche lombard / frutur{e} viaunt fyne;
+A Sotelte+-{ And þan a Sotelte: Maydoñ mary þat holy virgyne,  And Gabriell{e} gretyng{e} hur / w{i}t{h} an Ave. 692
The Second Course.

T{w}o potag{es}, blanger manger{e}, & Also Iely: For a standard / vensou{n} rost / kyd, favne, or cony, bustard, stork / crane / pecok in hakill{e} ryally, heiron-sew or / betowr{e}, w{i}t{h}-s{er}ue wit{h} bred, yf þat drynk be by; Partrich{e}, wodcok / plover{e} / egret /
Rabett{es} sowker{e}; Gret briddes / larkes / gentill{e} breme de mer{e}, dowcett{es}, payne puff, w{i}t{h} leche / Ioly Amber{e}, Fretour{e} powche / a sotelte folowyng{e} in fer{e},

þe course for to fullfylle, An angell{e} goodly kañ apper{e}, and syngyng{e} w{i}t{h} a mery cher{e}, Vn-to .iij. shep{er}d{es} vppoñ añ hill{e}.
The iij^d Course.

"Creme of almond{es}, & mameny, þe iij. course in coost, Curlew / brew / snyt{es} / quayles / sp{ar}ows / m{er}tenett{es} rost, P{er}che in gely / Crevise dewe dou[gh] /
pety p{er}ueis w{i}t{h} þe moost, Quynces bake / leche dugard / Frutur{e} sage /
y speke of cost,

and soteltees full{e} soleyñ: þat lady þ{a}t conseuyd by the holygost hy[-m] þ{a}t distroyed þe fend{es} boost, presentid plesauntly by þe kyng{es} of coleyñ.

Afft{ur} þis, delicat{is} mo. Blaunderell{e}, or pepyns, w{i}t{h} carawey in confite,
Waffurs to ete / ypocras to drynk w{i}t{h} delite. now þis fest is fynysched / voyd þe table quyte  Go we to þe fysch{e} fest while we haue respite, & þañ w{i}t{h} godd{es} g{ra}ce þe fest will{e} be do.


Appendix C:Maistre Chiquart: The Service of Dinner on the First Day

Du Fait de Cuisine by Maistre Chiquart (~1420)
The first service

And let us take as first service the large meats, that is beef and mutton; and those who cut up the beef should cut fair and large royal pieces, and those who cut them for the mutton should cut them the length of the sheep without leaving anything except a little waste.

And to serve these said pieces of beef and mutton let them be put on a large gold platter without putting on anything else.

And another large platter should be served beside with the salt meats according to the season which it is, that is in winter chine of pork, andouille sausages, and salt pork chops. And for the said first course green porray, and it is not necessary to serve any other sauce except mustard.

And with this, there should be served a white bruet over capons together with the meat which one has therewith.

Again, a bruet of Almayn,

...another potage, that is a bruet of Savoy

A lamprey sauce for numbles of beef

Afterward, also, well-made pastry of fattened bee

Again, for an entremet, heads of boars endored and armed and with banners and spitting fire

The second service

For the second course, all manner of roasts to serve honorably to the royal table as for kings, queens, dukes, duchesses, and such powerful, noble, and venerable lords as was said before.

And to serve more honorably there should be served large roasts put by themselves, that is: a whole kid, a whole piglet, a large loin of veal, a large loin of pork, and shoulders of mutton put on a great platter of gold.

And afterward, poultry put on a great platter of gold, that is: fat goslings, best capons, pheasants, partridges, conies, pigeons, and herons; and these are put one on another in such great abundance that the platter is well filled and heaped high. And one should pay attention to the sauce for the said roast: that is, for the goslings and the capon, jance; for the pheasants, partridges, piglets, and conies, cameline; and for the roast kid, green verjuice; for fat pork, sauce piquant; and for pigeons, crystallized salt.

Also, frumenty, venison, tarts, talmoses, cream flans, a cameline bruet, civet of hares, rosy bruet, a blancmange divided into four colors put in one serving dish; and for an entremet, a high castle wherein is in the middle the fountain of Love. 

Appendix D: Le Menagier De Paris (~1393)

VII. Another Meat Dinner.

First dish. White beet, beef kebabs, coarse meat, veal stew, marrow-bone soup.

Second dish. Roast meat, freshwater and saltwater fish, Lombardy tarts, sweet chestnuts.

Third dish. Lampreys, shad, a roast, sweetened milk with crusts in it, Pisan that is Lombardy tarts, cream fritters.

Fourth dish. Frumenty, venison, browned vegetables, bream and gurnard pies, jellied eels, fat capons a la dodine.

The end is Hippocras and wafers.--Extra drink; wine and spices.



XXIV. Another Fish Dinner.

First service. Strained peas, herring, salted eels, a stew of black oysters, almond broth, napkins, a gruel of pike and eels, cracklings, a green stew of eels, silver pies.

Second service. Saltwater fish, freshwater fish, bream and salmon pies, jellied eels, a brown arbalester, tench in a larded gruel, a fricassee, thin pancakes, lettuces, lozenges, little ears and rich pasties, stuffed salmon and loach.

Third service. Frumenty with porpoise, browned apples and Spanish peas and young lampreys, a roast of fish, jelly, lampreys, congers and turbot in green sauce, bream in verjuice, fried bread slices, meat tarts and the side-dishes: then Dessert, the Final Service and the Extras.

Harleian MS. 279 (ab 1430) - .xxxxix. Sardeyneȝ - Sugared and Spiced Nuts

xxxxix. Sardeyneȝ - Sugared and Spiced Nuts

Occasionally you run across a set of instructions that are so vague they  are difficult to interpret.  This is one such recipe.  I must admit I did attempt to locate similar recipes from peers and fellow cooking scholars, but to no avail.  I finally jumped in feet first and created my own interpretation.  If my interpretation is correct it creates something similar to a praline, a spiced and sugared caramalized nut  candy that is D E L I C I O U S!  I am unashamed to admit that I am thoroughly addicted to this interpretation.

This strikes me as unusual because this recipe is found in the "pottage" section of the Two fifteenth-century cookery-books : Harleian MS. 279 (ab 1430), & Harl. MS. 4016 (ab. 1450), with extracts from Ashmole MS. 1439, Laud MS. 553, & Douce MS. 55 by Thomas Austin, so I would expect a pudding, cereal, broth like consistency.  Something magical happens when you add a large amount of sugar to rice milk (make a gode Mylke of Flowre of Rys + a fayre parte of sugre, & boyle hem wyl) --it becomes a caramel. Since we aren't really told what to do with our almonds--I lightly crushed them and  added them to this mixture and voila! A candy I served at Collegium Feast and hid from the taste testers after initial tasting. 

.xxxxix. Sardeyneȝ.—Take Almaundys, & make a gode Mylke of Flowre of Rys, Safroun, Gyngere; Canelle, Maces, Quybibeȝ; grynd hem smal on a morter, & temper hem vppe with þe Mylke; þan take a fayre vesselle, & a fayre parte of Sugre, & boyle hem wyl, & rynsche þin dysshe alle a-bowte with-ynne with Sugre or oyle, an þan serue forth.

49. Sardeyney - Take almonds, and make a good Milk of Flour of Rice, Saffron, Ginger, Cinnamon, Mace, Cubeb; grind them small on a mortar, and temper them up with the milk; than take a fair vessel, and fair part of sugar, and boil them well, and rinse your dish all about within with sugar or oil, and then serve forth.

Interpreted Recipe

1 c. raw almonds
1 c. rice milk (or any nut milk, in a pinch I used almond milk)
Pinch of saffron
1/2 tsp. pouder douce-sugar, ginger, cinnamon, mace (I have a powder given to me as a gift I used)
1/4 tsp. cubebs finely ground
3/4 c.  sugar

A couple of points before we move forward into the actual interpretation of the recipe. Rice milk is something you can easily make at home.  To make your rice flour simply take a quantity of rice and grind it to flour in your blender.  Add liquid of your choice (just like you would for almond milk), grind some more, strain, and you have rice milk.

There are no specific instructions on how to create pouder douce.  The pouder I am currently using was a gift given to me after I cooked the Curia Brunch.  The instructions I use to make my sweet spice pouder (pouder douce) though, can be found in Le Menagier de Paris (ab 1393):

FINE POWDER of spices. Take an ounce and a drachma of white ginger, a quarter-ounce of hand-picked cinnamon, half a quarter-ounce each of grains and cloves, and a quarter-ounce of rock sugar, and grind to powder.

Interpreted into terms we can all understand becomes the following mix:

2 1/2 tbsp. ginger
1 1/2 tsp. cinnamon
3/4 tsp. each grains of paradise and cloves
1 1/2 tsp. sugar

Moving forward--we are told to take almonds, then given a set of instructions to make rice milk.  Unusual in that the more common milk used is almond milk in this particular manuscript.  We are told to season the milk with the spice mixture and then given another set of instructions which I believe allude to what we are supposed to do with the almonds, specifically "grynd hem smal on a morter, & temper hem vppe with þe Mylke", then the remainder of the recipe gives us instructions to boil them with sugar and then serve them in a bowl which has had additional sugar or oil added to it.

Here is my interpretation based on my understanding of the instructions.

Take rice milk and season it with your spices, add your sugar and crushed almonds and bring to a boil.  Cook approximately ten minutes and then turn your nut mixture onto a cookie sheet which has been coated with additional sugar.  It will harden almost immediately, break apart as you can and serve.

I made two deviations when I served these at Collegium.  The first is that I used a mix of walnuts, almonds and hazelnuts, the second is that I kept them as whole as possible when I added them to the spiced rice milk mixture. They were extremely well received and have gone on my list of sweet goodies to make at the end of a meal.

The picture above is of the almonds a bit more ground. I was without rice or rice milk so I used almond milk--equally delicious.


What to Drink? Four Drink Syrups for Recreation Feasts

When recreating an event at a site that is dry what do you drink? I prefer drink syrups which can be diluted to taste with water.  They are easy to make, easily transportable, and do not require special storage. I have two that I use regularly at events; Sekanjabin (oxmel) and Syrup of Pomegranites.  I have also recently discovered two new favorites which are destined to become regular syrups to bring with me camping or at events;  Syrup to Cool the Stomach and Allay Chollor and Apple Syrup, a syrup based off of "An Apple Drink with Sugar or Honey".  I hope you try these out and respond back with your own opinions of them.

Syrup of Simple Sekanjabin (Oxymel) - Persian Mint Drink "An Anonymous Andalusian cookbook of the 13th Century" as translated by David Friedman.

Sekanjabin refers to the "family" of drinks made with vinegar, sugar and water (Meade, 2002). I prefer to use red wine vinegar as the base of my drink. I have also used flavored vinegars and omitted the mint. I prefer a stronger drink, so I usually dilute 5:1 ratio of water to syrup.

Take a ratl of strong vinegar and mix it with two ratls of sugar, and cook all this until it takes the form of a syrup. Drink an ûqiya of this with three of hot water when fasting: it is beneficial for fevers of jaundice, and calms jaundice and cuts the thirst, since sikanjabîn syrup is beneficial in phlegmatic fevers: make it with six ûqiyas of sour vinegar for a ratl of honey and it is admirable.

...[gap: top third of this page has been cut off]...

... and a ratl of sugar; cook all this until it takes the consistency of syrup. Its benefit is to relax the bowels and cut the thirst and vomiting, and it is beneficial in bilious fevers (Friedman, 2000).

Sekanjabin Recipe (Courtesy of David Friedman)

Dissolve 4 cups sugar in 2 1/2 cups of water; when it comes to a boil add 1 cup wine vinegar. Simmer 1/2 hour. Add a handful of mint, remove from fire, let cool. Dilute the resulting syrup to taste with ice water (5 to 10 parts water to 1 part syrup). The syrup stores without refrigeration.

Syrup of Pomegranites - Spiced Pomegranate Syrup -Take a ratl of sour pomegranates and another of sweet pomegranates, and add their juice to two ratles of sugar, cook all this until it takes the consistency of syrup, and keep until needed. Its benefits: it is useful for fevers, and cuts the thirst, it benefits bilious fevers and lightens the body gently (Friedman, 2000).

Spiced Pomegranate Drink (Courtesy of David Friedman)

1 quart pomegranate juice
4 cups of sugar
1-2 cinnamon sticks*
Up to a tablespoon of cloves*

As the recipe from Al-Andulus suggests, equal parts of juice to sugar, heated until it boils and then lower the heat and cook until it becomes thick syrup. I dilute my syrup with a 4:1 ratio of water to syrup.

A syrupe to cool the stomach and to allay chollor - A Booke of diuers Medecines, Broothes, Salves, Waters, Syroppes and Oyntementes of which many or the most part have been experienced and tryed by the speciall practize of Mrs Corlyon.

Take the juyce of Oranges six spoonefulles*, the like quantity of the juyce of Lemmons and so much of the juyce of Pomegranetts (if you can goff it) putt to it so much redd Rose ayer as all those juyces doe amounte unto, and putt likewise so much faire water as will equall the foresaid juyces and Rose water. Then moasure all togoathor and to half pinte putt halfo a pound of Sugar fynelye boaton and so boil altogoathor till it commoth to a syrupe. Then putt it into a glasse and keepe it for your use. And when you will use it take some borrage water or rose water or faire running water boiled, mingle it with so much syrupe as you will take, so as you may drink it

Equal amounts of orange juice, lemon juice, pomegranate juice, distilled water
1/2 pound of sugar per 1/2 pint of juice
*Opt. Rosewater

Place juices into a pan with sugar and boil until they become a syrup (approximately ½ an hour) Dilute 1:4 syrup to water, or to taste.

Image result for Medieval Drinking

Apple Drink with Sugar, Honey - The Closet of Sir Kenelm Digby Opened ~1669

A very pleasant drink is made of Apples, thus; Boil sliced Apples in water, to make the water strong of Apples, as when you make to drink it for coolness and pleasure. Sweeten it with Sugar to your tast, such a quantity of sliced Apples, as would make so much water strong enough of Apples; and then bottle it up close for three or four months. There will come a thick mother at the top, which being taken off, all the rest will be very clear, and quick and pleasant to the taste, beyond any Cider. It will be the better to most taste, if you put a very little Rosemary into the liquor, when you boil it, and a little Limon-peel into each bottle, when you bottle it up.

Apple Drink with Sugar or Honey

1/4 cup sugar
5 cups water
1-2 sliced and peeled apples

Place peeled, cored and sliced apples into a pan and add water. Bring to boil and reduce heat, simmering until apples are mushy and water is strongly flavored. Drain the apples through a collander that has been lined with coffee filters, stir in sugar and allow to cool before drinking.

As an alternative,  you can make an apple syrup using the same instructions as the Spiced Pomegranite Drink

For more excellent ideas on non-alcoholic beverages that were enjoyed, and can be used at  recreation events (or camping) please visit HL Ronan Meads Non-Alcoholic Beverages of the Middle Ages, the inspiration for many of the syrups you see on this post, and my starting point to continue researching  appropriate drinks. 

An apple a day---Use of Apples in Cooking in the 15th and 16th Century

Apples belong to the Rosaceae family along with pears, quince, loquat, medlars and yes, roses. It is believed that there has been over 10,000 different apple cultivars that have been developed, many of which are now lost.It is generally believed that domesticated apples has their origins in Central Asia. Apples are documented as early as 6500 B.C. in Jericho and the Jordan Valley. Theophrastes records in 323 B.C the process of budding, grafting and general tree care of six different varieties of apples that were known at the time. Here I present five recipes featuring apples; A candy made of apples simmered in sugar syrup and allowed to dry, Apple Muse, and apple and rice milk sauce or pudding, Apple Moyle, a similar recipe to Apple Muse resulting in a sweet apple porridge, Applade Ryalle-three different versions of apple soup, creamy and delicious an unusal starter for any meal, and lastly A Potage of Roysons, apples and raisins are offset by spicy ginger in this simple porridge of rice.




To candy any roote, fruite or flower. - a method for preserving fruit, roots such as carrots, parsnips or beets and flowers in sugar syrup. Delicious to make for every day use.  Pictured at left are sugared plums, but apples are just as delicious.





lxxix. Apple Muse. - Apples and honey are simmered in almond milk, seasoned lightly with saffron, and colored a delicate pink with sandalwood, this early version of apple sauce is fit for a king.









Cxxxiiij - Apple Moyle. - Apple moyle, similar to apple muse creates a delicious porridge of apples, sweetened with sugar and the warmth "Good powder", a spice mix that usually contains ginger, cinnamon, mace, clove and pepper.  A warming treat on a cold day. 










.Cxxxv. Applade Ryalle. - Three versions of an apple soup, easy on the pocket but  fit for a king! For Nede, wine and honey, warmed spices and apples create a velvety soup. On Fysshe Day (Lent), almond milk and sugar, cinnamon, ginger, pepper, grains of paradise and apples create a creamy delight. On a Flesshe Day, beef broth and apples marry together in a soup that will leave you wanting more.










.Cxxxvj. A potage of Roysons. - Rice Porridge with Apples and Raisins - a comforting dish made of rice flour and almond milk, apples, raisins sweetened with honey. Another medieval comfort food that would serve well as a camp or event breakfast treat, or the sweet ending of a feast.

Winged Hills Collegium & South Oaken A&S Feast

Winged Hills Collegium 
And
South Oaken Arts and Sciences Faire

March 10 A.S. LII (2018)
Abiding Christ Lutheran Church
326 E Dayton Yellow Springs Rd.
Fairborn, OH 45324

On table

Brawn with Mustard, pickled grapes, red and yellow wine jellies, red beets and jagged oranges
A Grand Sallet - Lettuce, Olives, Capers, Pickled Mushrooms, Raisins (or currents), Almonds, Figs, Peas, Aparagus and Artichoke Hearts drizzled with a dressing of olive oil & vinegar


First Course

A Hash of Beef, Otherways
A Savory Oatmeal Pudding
A made dish of chicken, sausages, cabbages, turnips, cauliflower and chestnuts.


Second Course

A Made dish of Curds
To make a Peasecod Dish in puff Paste, two ways.
Gingerbread, White Gingerbread
Comfits and other sweetmeats - Manus Christi, Rock Candy, Anise, Caraway and Fennel in comfit, Candied Ginger, Orange and Lemon Peels

VegetarianAlternatives

On Table

Salmon Marinated to be eaten cold, garnished with lemons and beets

First Course

Onion Pottage

A made dish of fish and shrimp served with cauliflower, turnips and chestnuts


Beverages

Sekanjabin - A Syrup made with vinegar and mint - Fihrist of al-Nadim c10th c.
A Syrupe to cool the stomach - A Syrup of Orange, Lemon and Pomegranate juices - A Booke of Diuers Medecines, Broothes, Salves, Waters, Syroppes and Oyntements, 1606
An Apple Drink with Sugar & Honey - The Closet of Sir Kenelm Digby Opened 1669 


Brawn with Mustard

To souce a Pig.

Take a pig being scalded, cut off the head, and part it down the back, draw it and bone it, then the sides being well cleansed from the blood, and soaked in several clean waters, take the pig and dry the sides, season them with nutmeg, ginger, and salt, roul them and bind them up in clean clouts as the pig brawn aforesaid, then have as much water as will cover it in a boiling pan two inches over and two bottles of white-wine over and above; first let the water boil, then put in the collars with salt, mace, slic’t ginger, parsley-roots and fennil-roots scraped and picked; being half boiled put in two quarts of white-wine, and when it is boil’d quite, put in slices of lemon to it, and the whole peel of a lemon.

To garnish Brawn or Pig Brawn.

Leach your brawn, and dish it on a plate in a fair clean dish, then put a rosemary branch on the top being first dipped in the white of an egg well beaten to froth, or wet in water and sprinkled with flour, or a sprig of rosemary gilt with gold; the brawn spotted also with gold and silver leaves, or let your sprig be of a streight sprig of yew tree, or a streight furz bush, and put about the brawn stuck round with bay-leaves three ranks round, and spotted with red and yellow jelly about the dish sides, also the same jelly and some of the brawn leached, jagged, or cut with tin moulds, and carved lemons, oranges and barberries, bay-leaves gilt, red beets, pickled barberries, pickled gooseberries, or pickled grapes.

Brawn With Mustard
1 ½ to 2 pounds pork (loin, or shoulder)
2 cups dry white wine
2 ½ cups water or broth
1 small piece ginger chopped
2 tsp. nutmeg
1 ½ tsp. salt

*opt. 1 parsley root (sub parsnips) and 1 fennel root (sup 1 tsp. fennel), ginger, white wine and 1 whole lemon cut in slices

Brine Mixture: 1 Tbsp. Salt to 1 cup of water

Remove extra fat from the meat, season with nutmeg, ginger and salt, and roll tightly.  If you need to, wrap in cheesecloth or tie. 

Bring wine, water and to a boil, add the meat, making sure that it is completely covered and cook on low until tender.  If necessary, add additional broth, water or wine.

Create your brine, and place the meat into it. Meat should marinate at least 12 hours, but can be kept in the brine for several days depending on weight.  Add optional seasonings (parsley root, fennel, ginger, mace).  Additional wine and lemon slices can also be added.

To serve, slice thinly and garnish with red and yellow wine jellies, jagged lemons or oranges, red beets, pickled grapes, fresh grapes, bay leaves, etc.


To Pickle Grapes
The whole Body of Cookery Dissected, William Rabisha

Let not your grapes be fully ripe; their pickle is white wine and sugar
Pickled Grapes
2 pounds seedless grapes
1 1/f cups water
2 cups white wine
½ tsp salt
1 cup sugar (or to taste)

Make syrup by combining sugar and water together and simmering until dissolved. Let cool.
Wash and dry the grapes, cutting into small bundles of grapes and removing bad grapes.  Place grapes into sterilized jars filling them about ¾ full.

Add wine to syrup and fill each jar with liquid.  Additional spices can be added at this point.  Leave to steep, shaking jars once or twice a week. 



To Make Mustard of Dijon 
The Accomplisht Cook, Robert May

The seed being cleansed, stamp it in a mortar, with vinegar and honey, then take eight ounces of seed, two ounces of cinnamon, two of hone, and vinegar as much will serve, good mustard not too think, and keep it close covered in little oyster barrels.

To Make Mustard

1 cup mustard seeds
1 ½ cups mustard powder
¼ cup cinnamon
¼ cup honey
½ cup vinegar
1 ½ cups water

Grind the mustard seeds for a few seconds in a spice or coffee grinder, or by hand if you wish using a mortar and pestle just enough to crack.  Pour the seeds, mustard powder, honey and cinnamon into a bowl and then add cold vinegar and water.  Wait at least 12 hours before using. 

Seeds can be a mix of brown, black, or white.  Black seeds offer the most heat.

Note: I purchase whole grain and stone ground mustards and mix together, adding cinnamon and honey.



To Make a Crystal Jelly
The Accomplisht Cook, Robert May

Take three pair of calves feet, and scald off the hair very clean, knock off the claws, and take out the great bones & fat, & cast them into fair water, shift them three or four times in a day and a night, then boil them next morning in a glazed pipkin or clean pot, with six quarts of fair spring water, boil it and scum it clean, boil away three quarts or more; then strain it into a clean earthen pan or bason, & let it be cold: then prepare the dross from the bottom, and take the fat of the top clean, put it in a large pipkin of six quarts, and put into it two quarts of old clear white-wine, the juyce of four lemons, three blades of mace, and two races of ginger slic’t; then melt or dissolve it again into broth, and let it cool. Then have four pound of hard sugar fine beaten, and mix it with twelve whites of eggs in a great dish with your rouling pin, and put it into your pipkin to your jelly, stir it together with a grain of musk and ambergriese, put it in a fine linnen clout bound up, and a quarter of a pint of damask rose-water, set it a stewing on a soft charcoal fire, before it boils put in a little ising glass, and being boil’d up, take it, and let it cool a little, and run it.

 Other Jelly for Service of Several Colors
The Accomplisht Cook, Robert May

Take four pair of calves feet, a knuckle of veal, a good fleshie capon, and prepare these things as is said in the crystal jelly: boil them in three gallons of fair water, till six quarts be wasted, then strain it in an earthen pan, let it cool, and being cold pare the bottom, and take off the fat on the top also; then dissolve it again into broth, and divide it into 4 equal parts, put it into four several pipkins, as will contain five pints a piece each pipkin, put a little saffron into one of them, into another 203 cutchenele beaten with allum, into another turnsole, and the other his own natural white; also to every pipkin a quart of white-wine, and the juyce of two lemons. Then also to the white jelly one race of ginger pare’d and slic’t & three blades of large mace, to the red jelly 2 nutmegs, as much in quantity of cinamon as nutmegs, also as much ginger; to the turnsole put also the same quantity, with a few whole cloves; then to the amber or yellow color, the same spices and quantity.

Then have eighteen whites of eggs, & beat them with six pound of double refined sugar, beaten small and stirred together in a great tray or bason with a rouling pin divide it into four parts in the four pipkins & stir it to your jelly broth, spice, & wine, being well mixed together with a little musk & ambergriese. Then have new bags, wash them first in warm water, and then in cold, wring them dry, and being ready strung with packthread on sticks, hang them on a spit by the fire from any dust, and set new earthen pans under them being well seasoned with boiling liquor.

Then again set on your jelly on a fine charcoal fire, and let it stew softly the space of almost an hour, then make it boil up a little, and take it off, being somewhat cold run it through the bag twice or thrice, or but once if it be very clear; and into the bags of colors put in a sprig of rosemary, keep it for your use in those pans, dish it as you see good, or cast it into what mould you please; as for example these.


To Make Clear Jelly  

2 c. clear stock
1 cup white wine
1 cup water
Juice of ½ a lemon
½ tsp. ground mace
1-2 slices of fresh ginger
1 cup granulated sugar
1 tsp. rose water
4 packets unflavored gelatin
To Make Yellow Jelly
Add a pinch of saffron to the above
To Make Red Jelly

Substitute red wine for white
Add 2 tsp. ground nutmegs and 1 tsp. ground cinnamon or 1 cinnamon sticks to the above

Note: 2 packets unflavored gelatin + 2 cups liquid will make about 20 1 ounce servings


Bloom the gelatin in the water. Heat the stock, wine, lemon juice, spices and sugar until boiling and pour into a bowl, add the gelatin and stir until completely dissolved.  Add the rosewater.Put into your mold or pan and allow setting.

Note: You may need to strain the gelatin into your pan to remove undissolved gelatin and spices.


To Make a Grand Sallet
The Accomplisht Cook, Robert May

....Lettice shred small (as the tongue), olives, capers, mushrooms, pickled samphire, broom-buds, lemon or oranges, raisins, almonds, blew figs, Virginia potato, caparones, or crucifix pease, currans, pickled oysters, taragon.

How to Dish it up
The Accomplisht Cook, Robert May

Any of these being thin sliced (chicken or tongue), as is shown above said, with a little minced taragon and onion amongst it; then have lettice minced as small as the meat by it self, olives by themselves, capers by themselves, samphire by it self, broom-buds by it self, pickled mushrooms by themselves, or any of the materials abovesaid.

Garnish the dish with oranges and lemons in quarters or slices, oyl and vinegar beaten together, and poured over all, &c.

A Grand Sallet

2 heads loose leaf lettuce shred small
2 tbsp. Olives
1 tsp. capers
1 tbsp. pickled mushrooms
2 tbsp. raisins
2 tbsp. almonds
2 black figs, cut in half
2 tbps. Peas boiled tender
4 tbsp. pickled asparagus (for samphire) – Note for feast it was fresh boiled asparagus
4 tbs. artichoke hearts cut in half
Arrange the lettuce down the center of the plate.  Place the remaining ingredients around the outside of the lettuce in a pleasing pattern.  Garnish with oranges and lemons. Before serving dress with salad dressing.

Dressing

¾ c. oil - Olive
2 tbsp. vinegar – Italian white wine vinegar with grape must
Salt and pepper to taste

Mix together and pour over the salad prior to serving.


To Pickle Mushrooms
The whole Body of Cookery Dissected, William Rabisha

Take a bushel of mushrooms, blanch them over the crown, barm them beneath; if they are new, they look read as a Cherry; if old, black; this being done, throw them into a pan oif boyling water, then take them forth and let them drain; when they are cold, put them up into your Pot or Glass, put thereto Cloves, Mace, Ginger, Nutmeggs, whole Pepper; Then take white wine, a little Vinegar, with a little quantity of salt, so pour the Liquor into your Mushrooms, and stop them close for your use all the year.

To Pickle Mushrooms

1 pound small mushrooms
½ cup water
1 ½ to 2 tsp. salt
1 tsp. peppercorns
5 whole cloves
½ tsp. mace & nutmeg
1 ½ cups white wine
2 tbsp. vinegar

Note: Asparagus can be pickled in the same way

Clean the mushrooms and slice or quarter as you desire. Place mushrooms in a pan and cover with the water. Add salt. Bring mushrooms to a boil; boil for approximately two minutes and then drain. Place the mushrooms in your jar, add remainder of spices, wine and vinegar. If you find that you do not have enough liquid to cover the mushrooms, add more wine. Once a day invert the jar.

A Hash of Beef, Otherways
The Accomplisht Cook, Robert May

Stew it in Beef gobbets, and cut some fat and lean together as big as a good pullets egg, and put them into a pot or pipkin with some Carrots cut in pieces as big as a walnut, some whole onions, some parsnips, large mace, faggot of sweet herbs, salt, pepper, cloves, and as much water and wine as will cover them, and stew it the space of three hours.

A Hash of Beef, Otherways

1 ½ to 2 pounds beef for stew cut into large chunks
1 onion, sliced (or you can use small onions while)
1 -2 carrots and parsnips chopped
½ tsp. each thyme, marjoram and savory
1 tbsp. parsley
1 cup red one
1 cup water or beef stock –or- additional cup red wine
¼  tsp. mace
Salt and pepper to taste

If you wish brown the beef in the pan with a little bit of butter, otherwise, place all ingredients together into a pot and cook until tender. 

An Oatmeal Pudding, Otherways
The Accomplisht Cook, Robert May

Take good store of parsley, tyme, savory, four or five onions, and sweet marjoram, chop them with some whole oatmeal, then add to them pepper, and salt, and boil them in a napkin, being boil’d tender, butter it, and serve it on sippets.

An Oatmeal Pudding

1 c. whole milk (or heavy cream, or a mix)
2 c. steel cut oats
¼ c. butter
1 onion chopped
1 tbsp. parsley
¾ tsp. each thyme, marjoram and savory
1 tsp. salt
¾ tsp. pepper
4 eggs

Note: While simple to prepare, boiled puddings take a lot of time.  Good news, they can be made ahead of time.  Better news—they taste better the next day.

Day 1: Heat milk and butter together until warmed.  Add oats and let soak overnight.

Day 2: Bring a large pot of water to boil and put into it a large square of cloth to be your pudding bag.  I use white pillowcases that have been cut in half and are only used for cooking purposes in my house.

Meanwhile, add remaining ingredients to your oats which have soaked overnight.  The consistency should be very thick. 

Remove the cloth from the boiling water and wring till almost dry.  BE CAREFUL!!

Make flour by grinding oatmeal in a blender and dust your cloth with this flour.  Place your dough into the center of the cloth and fold the cloth around it; I use rubber bands to tie the cloth in place. You want to be as close to the pudding as you can.

Place your pudding into the pot, lower the heat to medium and cook pudding for four hours.  You will want to make sure that it is fully submerged (they float) and that they do not touch the bottom of the sides of the pot (it dries that area out and it’s unappetizing). 

After four hours, carefully remove the pudding from the boiling water and allow draining and cooling before untying. 

Puddings can be served warm or cool.  Slice and serve

Bonus Recipe:  A sweet version of this pudding can be made using dates, currants, pepper, clove, mace and sugar.  It is delicious for breakfast and lasts up to a week if kept refrigerated.  Just grab and go!

Eisands of Oatmeal Groats. 
A Book of Cookrye, A.W.

Take a pint of cream and heat it, and when it is hot, put thereto a pint of oatmeal groats, and let them soak in it all night, and put thereto eight yolks of eggs, and a little pepper, cloves, mace, and saffron, and a good deal of suet of beef, and small raisins and dates, and a little sugar
For A Gusset that may be another Pottage

A Proper Newe Booke of Cookerye, Anonymous
Take the broathe of the Capons and put in a fayre chafer, then take a dosen or syxtene egges and stere them all together whyte and all, then grate a farthynge whyte loafe as smale as ye canne, and mynce it wyth the egges all togeather, and putte thereto salte and a good quantite of safiron, and or ye putte in youre egges, putte into youre brothe, tyme, sauerye, margeron and parseley small choppd, and when ye are redye to your dynner, sette the chafer upon the fyre wyth the brothe, and lette it boyle a lyttle and putte in your egges and stere it up well for quaylinge the less. The less boylynge it hathe the more tender it wyll be, and then serve it forthe two or three slyces upon a dysshe.

Gusset Pottage

4 C clear chicken broth
1 tbsp. Minced parsley
1 tsp. Salt
Pinch of saffron
⅛ tsp. each marjoram, thyme, savory
2 eggs
2 tsp. bread crumbs
3 slices hot buttered toast

Add parsley, salt, saffron, marjoram, thyme, and savory to chicken broth and simmer for 15 minutes.  Beat the eggs with the bread crumbs and stir them into the broth.  Turn off the heat and let the broth simmer for a minute or two, stirring constantly.  Divide the toast among individual soup bowls and pour the hot broth over it immediately.

Note: Bone in, skin on, chicken thighs and breasts were boiled in the gusset prior to adding eggs (I forgot the bread crumbs for feast)  allowed to cool, cleaned and sliced/shredded prior to feast.

Sausages, Otherways
The Accomplisht Cook, Robert May

Mince pork with beef-suet, and mince some sage, and put to it some pepper, salt, cloves, and mace; make it into balls, and keep it for your use, or roll them into little sausages some four or five inches long as big as your finger; fry six or seven of them, and serve them in a dish with vinegar or juyce of orange.

Sausages

2 pounds ground pork for sausage
½ tsp. ground pepper mix
½ tsp. each sage, clove and mace
1 tsp. salt

Mix the meat with the spices, adding water if needed until well blended.  Cover and refrigerate several hours or overnight. Form the sausage into small rolls, about four inches long and 1 inch wide and pan fry over medium heat, turning until sausages are browned on all sides.

Note: 1 tbsp. makes a good sized meatball

To Make a Dish of Turneps
A Proper Newe Booke of Cookerye, Anonymous

Pare your turnips as you would pare a pippin, then cut them into square pieces an inch and a half long and as thick as a Butcher’s prick or skewet.  Put them into a pipkin with a pound of butter and three or foure spoonefuls of stron broath, and a quarter of a pint of vineger seasoned with a little pepper, ginger, salt and sugar, and let them stue very easily upon a soft fire, for the space of two hours or more, now and then turning them with a spoone, as occasion shall serve but by all meanes take heede you break them not, then dish them upon sippets and serve them to the table hot.

To Make a Dish of Turneps

1 ½ pounds  turnips
4 tbsp. butter
1 ½ cups broth
¼ cup white vinegar
¼ tsp. ginger
¼ tsp. salt
1 tbsp. sugar
1/8 tsp. salt

Peel your turnips and slice them crosswise ¼” thick.  Bring the butter, broth, vinegar, and seasonings to a boil in a saucepan and add your turnips.  Lower the heat and simmer until the turnips are almost tender, stirring them every 15 minutes. 

Note: Turnips are also used as garnish over stewed meats or poultry.

Note: For feast, turnips were prepared as for the cauliflower and the cabbage below

Buttered Colliflowers
The Accomplisht Cook, Robert May

Have a skillet of fair water, and when it boils put in the whole tops of the colliflowers, the root being cut away, put some salt to it; and being fine and tender boiled dish it whole in a dish, with carved sippets round about it, and serve it with beaten butter and water, or juyce of orange and lemon.
Buttered Cauliflower

The Accomplisht Cook, Robert May

1 head of cauliflower cut into florets
2 tsp. salt
2 tbsp. unsalted butter

Bring a pot of water to a boil and season with salt.  Add cauliflower and lower heat to a simmer. Simmer until cauliflower is tender.  Drain the cauliflower and serve with butter. 

Buttered Wortes (Cabbage)
Two Fifteenth Century Cookery Books, Thomas  Austin

Take al manor of good herbes that thou may gete, and do bi ham as is forsaid; putte hem on þe fire with faire water; put þer-to clarefied buttur a grete quantite. Whan thei ben boyled ynough, salt hem; late none otemele come ther-in. Dise brede small in disshes, and powre on þe wortes, and serue hem forth.

 head of cabbage
2 tsp. salt
2 tbsp. unsalted butter
Bring a pot of water to a boil and season with salt.  Add cabbage and parboil five minutes, drain, and then bring another pot of water to boil, add cabbage and lower heat to a simmer. Simmer until cabbage is tender.  Drain the cauliflower and serve with butter. 

To Make a Made Dish of Curds
The Accomplisht Cook, Robert May

Take some tender curds, wring the whey from them very well, then put to them two raw eggs, currans, sweet butter, rose-water, cinamon, sugar, and mingle all together, then make a fine paste with flour, yolks of egs, rose-water, & other water, sugar, saffron, and butter, wrought up cold, bake it either in this paste or in puff-paste, being baked ice it with rose-water, sugar, and butter.

To Make a Made Dish of Curds

1 cup cream
1 ½ cups cottage cheese or fresh made cheese
2 eggs
½ cup sugar
1 tbsp. rosewater
1 tbsp. lemon juice
¼ tsp. cinnamon
½ tsp. salt
2 tbsp. currants

Beat eggs, sugar, rosewater, lemon juice, spices, salt and cream together in a bowl.  Add cheese and currants and pour into your puff pastry shell.  Bake 350 degrees until cooked through, and serve.

Note: The cheese served at feast was made that day.

To Make a Peasecod Dish in Puff Paste, Two Ways
The Accomplisht Cook, Robert May

Take a pound of almonds, and a quarter of a pound of sugar, beat the almonds finely to a paste with some rose-water, then beat the sugar amongst them, mingle some sweet butter with it, and make this stuff up in puff paste like peasecods, bake them upon papers, and being baked, ice it with rose-water, butter, and fine sugar.

In this fashion you may make peasecod stuff of preserved quinces, pippins, pears, or preserved plums in puff paste.

For the Almond Filling
The Accomplisht Cook, Robert May

1 1/2 cups almond flour
1 1/2 cups powdered sugar
1 tsp. rosewater
1/4 cup butter

Mix together all the ingredients, cover and set aside until needed.  When ready to cook, place filling into puff paste, shape like a peas cod and bake until browned.

For the Icing:

2 cups powdered sugar
2  tbsp.  rosewater (or to taste)
1 tbsp. butter
Water

Mix together butter and sugar, add rosewater.  Add additional water until you get the desired consistency.  Drizzle over peascods or serve on the side.

To Make a Slice’t Tart of Quinces, Wardens, Pears, Pippins in slices raw of Diverse Compounds
The Accomplisht Cook, Robert May

To make a slic’t Tart of Quinces, Wardens, Pears, Pippins, in slices raw of divers Compounds.The foresaid fruits being finely pared, and slic’t in very thine slices; season them with beaten cinamon, and candied citron minced, candied orange, or both, or raw orange peel, raw lemon peel, fennil-seed, or caraway-seed or without any of these compounds or spices, but the fruits alone one amongst the other; put to ten pippins six quinces, six wardens, eight pears, and two pound of sugar; close it up, bake it; and ice it as the former tarts.

Thus you may also bake it in patty-pan, or dish, with cold butter paste.

For the Fruit Filling

4 apples
3 quinces
3 cooking pears (wardens)
4 pears
2 cups  of sugar
2 tsp. cinnamon
Opt. Candied citron or orange peel

Peel, core and slice your fruit thinly, mix it with the sugar and spices (note you may want to add a tablespoonful of  flour to the mixture to thicken it as it cooks). Arrange the fruit in the pastry and close it.  Bake at 375 degrees until fruit is tender and crust is browned. Let cool before serving.

Puff Paste, the Third Way
The Accomplisht Cook, Robert May

Break two eggs into three pints of flour, make it with cold water and roul it out pretty thick and square, then take so much butter as paste, lay it in ranks, and divide your butter in five pieces, that you may lay it on at five several times, roul your paste very broad, and stick one part of the butter in little pieces all over your paste, then throw a handful of flour slightly on, fold up your paste and beat it with a rowling-pin, so roul it out again, thus do five times, and make it up.

Puff Paste

6 cups flour
2 eggs
1 pound of butter, frozen
1 tsp.
Ice Water

Put your flour  and salt into a bowl, and add eggs, add water until it becomes a dough.  Roll your pastry dough out till it is about ¼” thick.

Grate 1 stick of butter and strew it over your dough.  Fold the dough into thirds and roll it out again. You will need to work quickly so the dough does not get too warm.  Continue to do this until all of the butter has been incorporated into the dough.  Being sure to fold it and role it up at least five times.  Refrigerate overnight.

Vegetarian Options

To Marinate Salmon to Be Eaten Cold
The Accomplisht Cook, Robert May

Take a Salmon, cut it into joles and rands, & fry them in good sweet sallet oyl or clarified butter, then set them by in a charger, and have some white or claret-wine, & wine vinegar as much as will cover it, put the wine & vinegar into a pipkin with all manner of sweet herbs bound up in a bundle as rosemary, thyme, sweet marjoram, parsly winter-savory, bay-leaves, sorrel, and sage, as much of one as the other, large mace, slic’t ginger, gross pepper, slic’t nutmeg, whole cloves, and salt; being well boil’d together, pour it on the fish, spices and all, being cold, then lay on slic’t lemons, and lemon-peel, and cover it up close; so keep it for present spending, and serve it hot or cold with the same liquor it is soust in, with the spices, herbs, and lemons on it.

If to keep long, pack it up in a vessel that will but just hold it, put to it no lemons nor herbs, only bay-leaves; if it be well packed, it will keep as long as sturgeon, but then it must not be splatted, but cut round ways through chine and all.

To Marinate Salmon to be Eaten Cold

1 ½ -2 pounds salmon
4 tbsp. butter or oil
¼ c minced parsley
1 tsp. fresh grated ginger
1 tsp. salt
½ tsp. peppercorns
4 cloves
1 bay leaf
½ nutme g broken up
1 large piece whole mace
¼ tsp . each thyme, rosemary, marjoram, savory and sage
6 tbsp. wine vinegar
1 ¼ cup wine
1 lemon sliced thin and seeded

 Rinse the salmon under cold water and pat dry with a towel. Cut into squares.  Melt the butter in a pan, or heat the oil and saute the fish until it is cooked.

Heat the herbs, spices, vinegar and wine in a pot until it boils.  Lower  heat and cook for ten minutes.
Layer the salmon in a deep bowl and pour the hot marinade over the salmon.  Arrange the lemon slices over the top, pushing a few down at the sides of the bowl.  Cover and set aside until the marinade has cooled.

Refridgerate until needed.  Serve cold with some of the marinade poured over it.

An Onion Pottage
The Accomplisht Cook, Robert May

Fry good store of slic’t onions, then have a pipkin of boiling liquor over the fire, when the liquor bils put in the fryed onions, butter and all, with pepper and salt: being well stewed together, serve in on sops of French bread.

3 tbsp. olive oil
½ pound of onions peeled and sliced 1/4 “thick
4 cups vegetable stock
1 tsp. salt
1/8 tsp. pepper

Melt butter in a large skillet, add sliced onions and sauté for about 10 minutes or until golden brown stirring occasionally. Bring broth to boil, add onions and cook over medium heat for ten minutes. Season with salt and pepper. Put toasted bread in individual bowls, pour broth over the onions and serve immediately.

To Broil Bace
The Accomplisht Cook, Robert May

Take a bace, draw it and wash it clean, broil it with the scales on, or without the scales, and lay it in a dish with some good sallet oyl, wine-vinegar, salt, some sprigs of rosemary, tyme, and parsley, then heat the gridiron and lay on the fish, broil it on a soft fire on the embers, and baste it with the sauce it was steeped in, being broild serve it in a clean warm dish with the sauce it was steeped in, and the herbs on it, and about the dish, cast on salt, and so serve it with slices of orange, lemon , or barberries.
Or broil it in butter and venegar with herbs as above-said and make sauce with beaten butter and vinegar.

To Broil Bass
2 pound fresh water bass
½ cup white wine vinegar
1 tsp. salt
½ tsp thyme and rosemary
¼ c minced parsley
4 tbsp butter melted
½ lemon sliced thin

Make a marinade of the vinegar, salt, thyme, rosemary and parsley.  Place the fish in a shallow baking dish  and pour the marinade over it.  Marinate for at least half an hour.  Sprinkle half the butter over the fish and bake at 350 degrees until cooked.  Garnish and serve.

To Stew Shrimp being Taken from their shells
The Accomplisht Cook, Robert May

Wash them well with vinegar, broil or broth them before you take them out of the shells, then put them in a dish with a little claret, vinegar, a handful of capers, mace, pepper, a little grated bread, minced tyme, salt, and the yolks of two or three hard eggs minced, stew all together till you think them enough; then put in a good piece of butter, shake them well together, heat the dish, rub it with a clove of garlick, and put two or three toasts of white bread in the bottom, laying the meat on them. Craw-fish, prawns, or shrimps, are excellent good the same way being taken out of their shells, and make variety of garnish with the shells.

Stewed Shrimp

2 pounds of shrimp
¼ cup white wine
1 tbsp. wine vinegar
1-2 sprigs of fresh thyme
3 tbsp. bread crumbs
2-3 egg yolks
¼ cup butter
1 tbsp. capers
¼ tsp. mace
1-2 cloves garlic minced

Place all ingredients into a pot and stew until shrimps are cooked.

Drinks

A syrupe to cool the stomach and to allay chollor
A Booke of diuers Medecines, Broothes, Salves, Waters, Syroppes and Oyntementes of which many or the most part have been experienced and tryed by the speciall practize of Mrs Corlyon.

Take the juyce of Oranges six spoonefulles*, the like quantity of the juyce of Lemmons and so much of the juyce of Pomegranetts (if you can goff it) putt to it so much redd Rose ayer as all those juyces doe amounte unto, and putt likewise so much faire water as will equall the foresaid juyces and Rose water. Then moasure all togoathor and to half pinte putt halfo a pound of Sugar fynelye boaton and so boil altogoathor till it commoth to a syrupe. Then putt it into a glasse and keepe it for your use. And when you will use it take some borrage water or rose water or faire running water boiled, mingle it with so much syrupe as you will take, so as you may drink it

Equal amounts of orange juice, lemon juice, pomegranate juice, distilled water
1/2 pound of sugar per 1/2 pint of juice
*Opt.  Rosewater

Place juices into a pan with sugar and boil until they become a syrup (approximately ½ an hour) Dilute 1:4 syrup to water, or to taste.

Syrup of Simple Sikanjabn
Fihrist of al-Nadim c10th c.

Take a ratl of strong vinegar and mix it with two ratls of sugar, and cook all this until it takes the form of a syrup. Drink an qiya of this with three of hot water when fasting: it is beneficial for fevers of jaundice, and calms jaundice and cuts the thirst, since sikanjabn syrup is beneficial in phlegmatic fevers: make it with six qiyas of sour vinegar for a ratl of honey and it is admirable.

Syrup of Simple Sikanjabn

4 cups sugar
2 ½ cups water
1 cup wine vinegar
Handful of mint

Dissolve 4 cups sugar in 2 1/2 cups of water; when it comes to a boil add 1 cup wine vinegar. Simmer 1/2 hour. Add a handful of mint, remove from fire, let cool. Dilute the resulting syrup to taste with ice water (5 to 10 parts water to 1 part syrup). The syrup stores without refrigeration.

Apple Drink with Sugar, Honey
The Closet of Sir Kenelm Digby Opened

A VERY pleasant drink is made of Apples, thus; Boil sliced Apples in water, to make the water strong of Apples, as when you make to drink it for coolness and pleasure. Sweeten it with Sugar to your tast, such a quantity of sliced Apples, as would make so much water strong enough of Apples; and then bottle it up close for three or four months. There will come a thick mother at the top, which being taken off, all the rest will be very clear, and quick and pleasant to the taste, beyond any Cider. It will be the better to most taste, if you put a very little Rosemary into the liquor, when you boil it, and a little Limon-peel into each bottle, when you bottle it up.

Makes 5 servings

1/4 cup sugar
5 cups water
1-2 sliced and peeled apples
Place peeled, cored and sliced apples into a pan and add water.  Bring to boil and reduce heat, simmering until apples are mushy and water is strongly flavored.  Drain the apples through a collander that has been lined with coffee filters, stir in sugar and allow to cool before drinking.


Five Sweet, Savory and Fried Custards found in Harleian MS 279 (~1430)

Some of my earliest adventures in attempting to interpret recipes from "Two fifteenth-century cookery-books. Harleian ms. 279 (ab. 1430), & Harl. ms. 4016 (ab. 1450), with extracts from Ashmole ms. 1429, Laud ms. 553, & Douce ms. 55" by Thomas Austin were one of my favorite childhood treats, custards. Today I present to you a selection of my favorite interpretations.  I hope you enjoy them as much as I do.


xxix Milke Rostys- Roasted Milk -- Hard custards are a thing of the past, but this recipe has returned them to my life. Custard is set like cheese, sliced and fried in grease (roste it on a Greddelle). This was my very first interpreted recipe, and is a favorite, served cold, room temperature or hot off the griddle. 







.xxix. Lyode Soppes- an early bread pudding  literally a sop of bread floating in a pool of beautifully thick and sweet custard, this dish is one of the earliest recipes for "bread pudding." It lacks many of the characteristics that now define a bread pudding, additional fruit, spices, and being baked in the oven.  I was unsure how this dish would be received by my bevy of taste testers, and they received it much better than I expected they would. There were a few surprised looks as they tested this dish. The general consensus amongst the tasters is "it was good but not something they would want to try again"--and they have.







lxxiiij - Arbolettys - Cheese Soup - A luxuriously velvety cheese soup worthy to be served to any king! Simple ingredients of milk, butter, cheese and eggs flavored with sage, parsley, ginger and galingale. Delicious! Caveat: My interpretation is very different from many of my contemporaries who interpret this dish as a scrambled egg dish. Being in the center of a series of dishes that should be cooked in pots, and not being instructions to let the eggs curd let to my unusual interpretation.






xx. Papyns.- When noble women of this period would choose not to breastfeed, or were unable to, and a wet nurse was not available, a mixture of broth, water, milk, grain, flour or bread, sweetened with honey or diluted wine would be fed to infants through a small horn with a hole drilled into it, or via a rag soaked in the liquid. This same pap was also fed to the elderly who were unable to chew any longer. When given to older children, or in addition to breast milk, papyns provided additional nutrition. This particular recipe adds eggs to the milk and flour as an additional thickener.






.xiij. Creme Boylede. I was delighted to interpret this recipe for an unusual custard that starts by soaking bread in cream or milk. It is a very thrifty dish for the medieval cook, because it most likely made use of bread that had gone stale and it was a way to preserve milk that would otherwise have gone bad, or may have been put to other use. This blog post includes a bonus recipe--Constance Hieatt's boiled cream custard, from a similar interpretation that can be made in the microwave and is my "go to" feast custard when I cater.