caudles-art - 11/21/97 A medieval drink of warm, seasoned wine or beer thickened with eggs. NOTE: See also the files: eggs-msg, beer-msg, wine-msg, caudls-posets-msg, small-beer-msg, spiced-wine-msg. ************************************************************************ NOTICE - This file is a collection of various messages having a common theme that I have collected from my reading of the various computer networks. Some messages date back to 1989, some may be as recent as yesterday. This file is part of a collection of files called Stefan's Florilegium. These files are available on the Internet at: http://www.florilegium.org I have done a limited amount of editing. Messages having to do with separate topics were sometimes split into different files and sometimes extraneous information was removed. For instance, the message IDs were removed to save space and remove clutter. The comments made in these messages are not necessarily my viewpoints. I make no claims as to the accuracy of the information given by the individual authors. Please respect the time and efforts of those who have written these messages. The copyright status of these messages is unclear at this time. If information is published from these messages, please give credit to the originator(s). Thank you, Mark S. Harris AKA: THLord Stefan li Rous Stefan at florilegium.org ************************************************************************ From: Mark Schuldenfrei Subject: sca-cooks Re: Hot Drinks To: sca-cooks at eden.com Date: Thu, 10 Apr 1997 11:05:48 -0400 (EDT) A basic caudle would be something like this: I have a lovely caudle that I redacted a year or so ago.... let me post it here. A note: I commented that I disagreed with Ms. Renfrow in her published caudle recipe. She and I corresponded with each other, and cited contradictory sources... and while I still disagree with her, I am no longer prepared to say she was in error: just that we have come to different conclusions. Tibor Caudles are warm seasoned wine or beer, thickened with eggs. Of course, during the Lenten season (from Ash Wednesday until Easter), dairy, eggs and meat animals were forbidden from consumption. Frequently, many conventional receipts from the period have Lenten substitutions using almond milk. The Harleian Manuscripts have two beer caudle recipes that use almonds. While some of the other caudle receipts that use almonds state they are for Lenten use, these two beer caudles do not. I still believe it is a safe assumption. I chose to redact those, since I cannot consume whole eggs. Caudles were popular and receipts for caudles appear in the Harleian Manuscripts (my source), manuscripts in the possession of the Royal Society, Liber Cure Curcorum, Le Viandier, A Noble Boke of Cookery, and The Good Husvvifes Iewell. There may be other sources. Hot alcoholic beverages such as syllabubs and possets, as well as sack, toddies and others were also common. I used a hopped beer for this receipt. Those of you that are not also brewers might not be aware that hopped beer was a relatively late period invention. However, with a bit of effort it can be documented to the time and place of the original receipt. For example, the German Beer Purity law, the Rhineheitsgebot (which lists the four ingredients of beer: water, malt, hops and yeast) was drafted in the early 14th century. I think that hopped beer would be acceptable, although an unhopped ale (much harder to find) would probably be better. In the period, ale was unhopped malt brew, and beer was hopped malt brew. In the modern era, the terms mean something else altogether, describing whether yeast settles to the bottom, or floats to the top, and just about all of them are hopped. The original of this recipe call for ale. Caudle seems to have been a recipe for comforting: a caudle receipt in "The Good Husvvifes Iewell" (Thomas Dawson, 1596) is one called "To Make a Caudle to Comfort the Stomacke, Good For An Old Man" (of ale, Muscadine wine, eggs and mace). My dictionary (and a footnote in Renfrow, 1991, vol 2, page 320) imply that the term coddle (pamper) could be derived from the word caudle. I would note that Renfrow's book "A Sip Through Time" has a redaction for caudle: I believe she skipped a step. The original calls for tempering the almonds with the ale, and then straining them out. I took this to mean mixing the almonds with warm ale, and letting it sit for a while (or even a light heating, which I did not do.) She immediately has the almonds strained out. I suspect that gives you wet almonds, and no almond flavor in the resulting caudle. I had a bit too much of my home-brewed beer on hand, and so I made some caudle for the Wassail at the Canton of the Towers meeting this AS XXX. Although "warm beer" was not well received, those who drank the "caudle" liked it quite a bit. It was universally considered to be a bit oversweetened, so I will include both the actual redaction used, and my suggestion for a reduction. I added almonds according to the usual ratio I use for almond milk. The caudle was very well received: I intend to bring a large amount to the next event here locally, and try it out on more people. It has a nice almond flavor, and not much of a beer taste. People who generally dislike beer found it pleasant, and of course my fellow beer drinkers liked it too. I would urge you to try it. ORIGINALS: Harleian MS 279 - Potage Dyvers (circa 1420) lj. Cawdelle de Almaunde. Take Raw Almaundys, & grynde hem, an temper hem up with gode ale, and a lytil Water, and a lytil Water, and draw it (th)row a straynoure in-to a fayre potte, and late it boyle a whyle: & caste (th)er-to Safroun, Sugre, and Salt, & then serue it forth al hotte in maner of potage. Harleian MS 4016 (circa 1450) 129 Caudell de Almondes. Take rawe almondes, and grined hem, And temper hem with goode ale and a litul water; and drawe hem thorgh a streynour into a faire potte, and let hit boyle awhile; And cast there-to saffroun, Sugur and salt, and serue hit forth hote. REDACTION: Ingredients: 2 quarts of Nut Brown Ale. (Any darker beer or ale would do). 2 cups of water. 4 cups ground almonds. 2 cups sugar (I'd reduce to 1.5 cups next time). pinch of saffron, and salt to grind it in. Equipment: Food processor. Cheesecloth Wooden spoon Strainer Ladle Inert pot (stainless steel or enamel) Glass or plastic container. Mortar and pestle (saucer & back of a spoon.) I ground the almonds coarsely in a food processor. Leave them large enough that they can be strained out. I poured the warm beer into a container, added the almonds, and let it sit for several hours. The container must be inert: plastic or glass, and not aluminum. I used a Tupperware-style container. I used a strainer and cheesecloth to remove the almonds from the liquid. I added the liquid to a large (inert) pot, and let it heat slowly, adding the sugar and spices. When it produced a good head of foam, it was ready to serve. (If you use a heavy pot, note that it retains heat: keep an eye on it, since the foam rises FAST.) Judging from it's affect on people, I feel confident that most of the alcohol was removed in the preparation. Nevertheless, please use caution when offering caudle to people: alcoholics and teetotalers may not be aware of it's ingredients. Brewers note: Alcoholic beverages can react with aluminum containers. I urge you use wood, plastic, glass or stainless steel. SOURCES: Possets, Caudles, Syllabubs and other drinks of the Medieval and Renaissance Period: Edited by Marian Walke, 1985. Boston MA, Private printing. A Sip Through Time: Cindy Renfrow, 1995, Private Printing. Take A Thousand Eggs or More: Cindy Renfrow, 1991, Private Printing. Edited by Mark S. Harris caudles-art 3