Broccoli-fst-art - 3/24/05 Feast Report for The Feast of St. Dorinda of the Broccoli. Put on by Edouard Halidai (Doc) and the Barony of Flaming Gryphon on January 8, 2005. NOTE: See also the files: feasts-msg, fst-disasters-msg, feast-menus-msg, dayboards-msg, feast-ideas-msg, headcooks-msg, Medievl-Feasts-art, p-feasts-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 ************************************************************************ Date: Tue, 11 Jan 2005 19:45:02 -0500 From: Johnna Holloway Subject: [Sca-cooks] Feast Report The Feast of St. Dorinda of the Broccoli To: Cooks within the SCA I just have to share this feast report from last weekend. It's Doc's latest feast. I calculated that 75 people at $5 per person ended up with 35 pounds of pork, 40 pounds of chicken 25 pounds of venison plus the various vegies, cheeses, etc. I thought that it reads and sounds like an old fashioned Middle Kingdom feast from twenty five years ago. Picture of the entremet is at http://www.medievalcookery.com/images/chou.jpg menu etc at http://www.medievalcookery.com/menus/12thnight.html Johnnae llyn Lewis ---------------- Feast Report - Flaming Gryphon Baronial Twelfth Night January 8, 2005 Hoo boy! Where to begin? I had been given an estimate of 80 to 100 people at $5 per person, and a proposed theme of "The Feast of St. Dorinda of the Broccoli". The good people of Havenholde then said, "We trust you. Do whatever you want." Silly people! The final head count was around 75. The first idea was the centerpieces. I suggested to my able assistant (Eoin Drake) to spray-paint broccoli gold, put it on a spike/nail like a candle, and garnish it with something cheap and christmassy from a post-holiday sale. He came through on this with spectacular results - they really looked cool. The second thought was that I'd save some money by baking the bread for the feast. This worked out well enough (baking ahead of time and freezing) except that I ran short of freezer space (just picked up half a cow a couple of weeks before which took up almost all of the big freezer). I might start baking now for the next event, whenever it may be. There were a couple of minor mishaps in the kitchen that had an effect on what was served, but on the whole it all worked out well enough. I had one full-time assistant in the kitchen (Eoin), another for much of the day (my mistress, Nonna), and a few people stopped in to help chop from time to time. Eoin and Nonna worked their butts off and I'm much indebted to them both. On the table to start was bread, strawberry preserves, brie, and boursin. I also donated some rose petal jelly for the head table. I'd only planned on the brie but lucked into a sale on the boursin - Jungle Jim's had bought too much and it had reached its sale date, so 12 little wheels of boursin cost me $5. Woohoo! There *is* some benefit to shopping at the last minute. ;-) The first course consisted of Cormary (roast pork w/wine sauce), Cole Flowers (cauliflower and broccoli with butter, currants, and a dash of vinegar), and vermicelli (with butter, saffron, and parmesan). This all went pretty much as planned. I used 35 pounds of pork, 8 heads of cauliflower, 8 heads of broccoli, and 10 pounds of vermicelli. It was just as we were plating the first course that we discovered that what we thought was a refrigerator was actually a *very* efficient freezer ("What do you mean the fridge is at -4 degrees?!?"). The apple juice (along with some of the other foods) had frozen, and a glass bottle of grape juice exploded. This kind of threw things into a tizzy. The second course was chicken, cold sage sauce, and honeyed carrots. The only real trick with this course is that the sauce is not cooked and is served at room temperature. This means that in order to keep it safe it really needs to be made at the last minute. Not difficult, but it's stressful to be grinding, mixing, and seasoning just before it goes out. 40 pounds of chicken, 6 bunches of parsley, 10 bags of carrots. The Entrement - Le Chou Eclatant - was a large paper mache cabbage made by my very talented lady wife. The mechanism that worked so well in testing (a balloon inside a 4" diameter tube, with a balloon pump) failed on the first go round, so I had the crew carry it back into the kitchen, reset the silly thing, and we brought it out again. I was told that the failure and repetition actually made it all somewhat funnier. The second time it worked - sort of. Instead of shooting out broccoli pieces in a 4 foot radius, one lone floret popped out, which I then presented to St. Dorinda. The third course was venison (with wine sauce) and frumenty. Unfortunately between the freezer thing and the preparation of a recalcitrant cabbage, the frumenty was neglected at a crucial moment and took on an unpleasant smoky aspect (read: burned). Rather than scramble and set other things behind, I chose to scrap it (I figured no one would really mind that much - a starch filler at the end of a meat-heavy feast). Here I used 25 pounds of venison. The dessert course was two kinds of candied nuts, pottage of rice, and "dragues vertes" (a.k.a. candied broccoli). The nuts were done before lunchtime and were perfect. I didn't have the chance to make the sauteed almond garnish I would have liked for the pottage (but it's good without), and the candied broccoli idea was scrapped at the same time the frumenty charred (since I figured [and hoped] that no one would eat candied broccoli, I thought it wasn't too much of a loss). Lessons Learned (in no particular order): 1. Bottles are fantastic for serving beverages. They don't take up much space on the table, they look period, and they're actually cheaper than decent pitchers ($10 for a case of 12). Just be sure to buy twice as many as you think you'll need so they can be refilled more easily. 2. Have a designated person to handle beverages - mixing, refilling, etc... - and have them do *nothing* else during feast. 3. Have sufficient kitchen crew lined up ahead of time, and work out a division of labor ahead of time. I only realized just how many more people I could have used after the fact. 4. A supportive spouse is of incalculable value (my lady took our 5 year old to the hospital mid feast so he could have his chin stitched up. 5. Have a designated person in charge of the feast hall - to count tables and wrangle servers. They can also help to plate the food, but shouldn't do much else. 6. Take time to get familiar with the kitchen equipment - so you don't confuse a freezer for a fridge. 7. Bring lots of towels and dishrags (I meant to this time, but forgot). 8. Schedule things out (e.g. cooking times and oven space) ahead of time. This is something I'm getting a *lot* better at, but still need to work on. 9. Division of labor is a really good thing. Don't try to do everything yourself. I'm sure there's more, but I'm still not fully recovered yet. Many thanks to those who helped: Eoin Drake, Mistress Nonna, the other Ian (who can crawl with amazing speed), Elspeth, Theo, and several others who helped chop veggies, mix beverages, serve, and wash up (I'm very very sorry that I don't remember all the names, but you know who you are). - Doc -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- Edouard Halidai (Daniel Myers) Pasciunt, mugiunt, confidiunt. -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- From: Daniel Myers Menu On Table: Manchet Bread Fruit preserves Soft cheeses First Course: Cormarye (marinated, roast pork) A Dysshe of Cole Flowers Vermicelli Second Course: Chicken w/ Sage Sauce Honey Glazed Root Vegetables Entrement Chou Éclatant (exploding cabbage) Third Course: Venison Frumenty Dessert: Potage of Rys Sugared Nutmeats Beverages: Non-alcoholic wine (a.k.a grape juice) Apple juice Lemonade Edited by Mark S. Harris Broccoli-fst-art 5 of 5