porridges-msg – 9/19/14 Period porridges and gruels. NOTE: See also the files: bread-msg, rice-msg, grains-msg, flour-msg, breakfast-msg, beer-msg, Ancent-Grains-art, polenta-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: Mon, 4 May 1998 23:32:53 -0700 From: david friedman Subject: RE: SC - s medieval food yucky? At 1:30 PM -0400 5/4/98, Tamara Crehan wrote: >I have found Irish Oatmeal, sold in tins in Stop & Shop and Shaws >supermarkets. Mc Cann's Irish Oatmeal from the tins is whole oats. >Makes a delicious porridge and amazing cookies! Works for a plausible reconstruction of the oat cakes that Froissart mentions, too. David/Cariadoc http://www.best.com/~ddfr/ Date: Sun, 13 Dec 1998 10:15:57 EST From: LrdRas at aol.com Subject: Re: SC - barley troy at asan.com writes: << nother reason might be that many country people often had little or no easy access to either commercially baked bread or to an oven, which also, BTW, requires more fuel to cook the same amount of grain, so porridge-y foods might appear to be the way to go. >> I would like to point out that the overwhelming factor in the use of gruels and porridges over baked bread, if such was the case, would also probably have been due to the fact that, at least in the villages and cities of the MA, you did not bake your bread at home. By law you, took your dough to the community oven for baking and more often than not bought the dough you took to the oven from a person who made dough. Given that cash money was scarce in the MA, it would have been wiser to cook up a dish of gruel than to pay the baker. Ras Date: Mon, 1 Feb 1999 22:19:12 EST From: Seton1355 at aol.com Subject: Re: SC - Buckwheat Groats > What are Buckwheat Groats (kashar)? (Finially a question I can answer :-) ) Kasha, or buckwheat Groats is the whole grain of buckwheat. It's pretty cheap stuff! Neither wheat bran nor cracked wheat come close to the taste of kasha, but kasha is easy to find. Look for Wolfe's (brand name) kasha in the Kosher foods section of the supermarket or go to the health food store and get kasha. It is a staple feature of Eastern European ( & Jewish) cooking. Phillipa Seton Date: Tue, 02 Feb 1999 08:17:45 -0500 From: Philip & Susan Troy Subject: Re: SC - Buckwheat Groats Seton1355 at aol.com wrote: > > What are Buckwheat Groats (kashar)? > Kasha, or buckwheat Groats is the whole grain of buckwheat. It's pretty cheap > stuff! Neither wheat bran nor cracked wheat come close to the taste of kasha, > but kasha is easy to find. Look for Wolfe's (brand name) kasha in the Kosher > foods section of the supermarket or go to the health food store and get kasha. > It is a staple feature of Eastern European ( & Jewish) cooking. > Phillipa Seton For practical purposes I'm in total agreement. I'd just like to add one or two little things: I gather, from reading the Domestroi, that "kasha" is simply a Russian term meaning "grain", but agree that in most cases today it seems to refer to buckwheat. You may also find whole buckwheat or groats in markets that sell Japanese foods, under the name "soba", which seems to refer to buckwheat in general, buckwheat flour, and buckwheat noodles. But I agree also that Wolfe's Kasha is probably as good an introduction as you can get to buckwheat (especially with mushrooms and/or egg bows!) There's a somewhat involved recipe on the box for turning the kasha into a pilaf; my recommendation is that you go ahead and follow it! Adamantius Østgardr, East Date: Wed, 03 Feb 1999 20:09:06 -0600 From: "Jennifer D. Miller" Subject: Re: SC - Buckwheat Groats >I gather, from reading the Domestroi, that "kasha" is simply a Russian >term meaning "grain", but agree that in most cases today it seems to >refer to buckwheat. More precisely, it means "dish of cooked grains or groats". This could refer to a porridge or a pilaf (is that the same as a frumenty?). Today, it can also refer to cooked rice or semolina. The Russian word for grain is "zerno", "zernishko" or "krupinka". True, here in the West it does refer to buckwheat. However, in Russia kasha is the generic term for cooked cereal. Some types of kasha (from "The Russian's World" by Gerhart) are: "mannaia kasha" -- cream of wheat "grechnevaia kasha" -- buckwheat cereal "pshennaia kasha " or "pshenka" -- a main dish of millet "iachnevaia kasha" -- fine-grind barley kasha "perlovaia kasha" -- whole-grain barley kasha "gerkulesovaia kasha" -- name-brand cereal similar to oatmeal ("Hercules's Kasha") My husband has told me that several different types of kasha were offered each morning at the Russian dormitory he lived in. They were eaten topped with oil (not butter) and as far as he saw, nothing else. Sugar was not available, no honey or preserves were in evidence. Salt was on the tables, though. Unfortunately (the kasha was included in his meal plan), he hates cooked cereal and ate bread and fruit, although he could have bought Western-type ($10 a box) cereal . Another grain dish, kut'ia, is made of steamed grain (usually wheat or rice), raisins, honey and nuts. It was, and still is in many places, a required item served at post-funeral meals. It is a period dish, but I don't have the references handy at the moment. >From the Domostroi (Pouncy:149): "They [good housewives] stuff the entrails with kasha cooked with suet and simmered (the kasha can be made from oatmeal, buckwheat, barley, or whatever is available). If these [sausages] are not eaten up in the autumn, they make a pleasant Christmas feast." The _Domostroi_ also mentions "thin kasha with ham" and "thick kasha with lard", saying, "this is what most people give their servants for dinner, although they vary the menu according to which meat is available. (Pouncy:161). Cooking directions for kasha are on page 163; "steam it well with lard, oil, or herring in a broth." Several other fish are mentioned as alternative accompaniments. Pouncy has a footnote saying that the lard (or possibly, butter) was probably for meat days and the oil for fast days. To close, here is a popular Russian saying: "Shchi da kasha--pishcha nasha" (Cabbage soup and kasha is our food) ~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~ Ilyana Barsova (Yana) ***mka Jennifer D. Miller jdmiller2 at students.wisc.edu *** http://www.sit.wisc.edu/~jdmiller2 Slavic Interest Group http://vms.www.uwplatt.edu/~goldschp/slavic.html Date: Mon, 15 Mar 1999 13:40:47 -0600 From: "Decker, Terry D." Subject: RE: SC - Frumenty - ANOTHER question! > except for the philosophical > debate that arose over whether wheat berries, cracked wheat or bulgur > would have been a closer texture match to what period diners would have > gotten/expected. > > That is, chewey whole grain kernels in sauce, or flavored mush. I've used whole berry, cracked wheat and fine flour to produce various cooked grain dishes. I would expect the cook to choose the form of the grain to produce the intended taste and texture. > We prepared 4 versions, 3 with wheat berries, and one with cracked wheat, > which may have turned out mushier than if we'd used "bulgur" -- cracked > wheat and bulgur -are- two different things, yes? We're assuming bulgur > is to cracked wheat sort of like steel-cut oats oatmeal is to rolled oats > oatmeal, and are going to check by doing a set for next meeting. Not exactly. Cracked wheat is made from wheat berries which have been dried and ground. For bulgur wheat, the berries are parboiled, dried and ground. In both cases, whole berries, including the germ, are used and the meal is sieved into 3 or 4 grades, #1-Fine, #2-Medium, #3-Coarse and #4-Extra Coarse. The chief difference is the bulgur wheat, having been pre-cooked, softens and cooks up quickly, while whole grain and cracked wheat reallny need to soak overnight and cook for a long time. #1 and #2 bulgur are commonly used in tabouleh, while #3 and #4 are used to replace rice in pilafs. > And someone raised the side issue that the common commercial wheat > berries that we used were probably a hard wheat, where most of the period > European stuff was a soft variety. Whether this is a distinction we can > expect to impose on hotel cooks (Double Tree) may make this a moot point, > but it was raised. Although in -this- town, we probably have a > reasonably good chance of their finding it if they look for it, at least. Hard and soft should have no bearing on cooked grain (except that soft may be a little sweeter). I tend to use hard red winter wheat berries for whole grain wheat, because they are inexpensive and easy to obtain. The common wheat in medieval Europe was emmer (Triticum dicoccum) which was a soft wheat. Spelt (Triticum spelta) was less common and is a hard wheat. So either may have been available, although spelt was more common in Central Europe. > So, there's another couple of questions! Who woulda thunk it! > > Thanks, & looking forward to erudition, enlightenment, etc., 8-), > Chimene & Gerek Bear Date: Sun, 12 Sep 1999 12:14:51 -0700 From: "David Dendy" Subject: SC - Early Medieval Irish Bread and Porridges Considering the discussions which have gone on about bread on the list in the recent past, I thought some people might be interested in a serendipitous find I made while checking the carts of new books at the college where I teach. Regina Sexton, "Porridges, Gruels and Breads: The Cereal Foodstuffs of Early Medieval Ireland", in EARLY MEDIEVAL MUNSTER: ARCHAEOLOGY, HISTORY AND SOCIETY, ed. Michael A. Monk and John Sheehan ( Cork: Cork University press, 1998), pp. 76-86. The article is based on information from the literature and legal documents from the early material of Ireland, and the author is able to reconstruct a surprising amount about these foods, including what was eaten with them as condiments. While there is no specific recipe given, there is enough detail available to indicate the ingredients, shaping and handling, cooking techniques, etc., so that I should think a modern experimenter could make a pretty close approximation of the beard eaten by the early Irish. The section headings give a good picture of the contents: Porridges and gruels Breads Ingredients of bread Baking utensils and methods of preparation Monastic and penitential bread The condiments and relishes associated with bread Conclusion Notes and bibliography Yours culinarily, Francesco Sirene Date: Wed, 15 Mar 2000 08:33:59 +0100 (MET) From: Par Leijonhufvud Subject: SC - viking age porridge I spoke earlier of a viking age (a 10th C. Gotland womans grave, IIRC) porridge based on archeological finds. I just rechecked with the one of the archaeologist who worked with the find, and what the analysis said was that it contained barley and pea, with milkfats most likely from sheep. I first thought that I should play with this in pease, and then propose a reconstruction based on the data. But then I decided that this group had too little traffic, and decided to see what could be done with it. Ok, what suggestions does the group have for how to reconstruct it? /UlfR - -- Par Leijonhufvud parlei at algonet.se Date: Wed, 3 Jan 2001 17:21:19 +0100 (MET) From: UlfR Subject: Re: Thanks and Breakfast question, was Re:SC - What would you do? On Tue, 2 Jan 2001, Jenne Heise wrote: > > Do you know which of the cereals you list correspond reasonably > > closely to things eaten in period? Rolled oat are, I think, a 19th > > century invention. > > Does anyone have a source for period-type oat meal to make period oat meal > porridge? There is (at least) two in Curye on Ingish. One is not what most would think of as a breakfast food (gruel forced, it has meat added to the boiled gruel), but the other would not be too far off. I can't recall the full recipie, but I think it is oatmeal, boiled with stock (this is where I'm uncertain), and with almond milk added after boiling. I'll post the recipie tonight. /UlfR - -- Par Leijonhufvud parlei at algonet.se Date: Wed, 24 Sep 2003 16:19:52 -0700 From: Edouard de Bruyerecourt Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] crockpot oatmeal To: Cooks within the SCA Phil Troy/ G. Tacitus Adamantius wrote: > Scottish and Irish porridge enthusiasts would probably suggest that > the secret of a good porridge is a certain amount of aeration; > probably the same rules for a good risotto apply, and I gather that > fine hotels in Scotland give the porridge a couple of good whips with > a balloon whisk immediately before serving. Constant stirring while cooking is a traditional method. But with a wooden _spirtle_ (wooden 'stick'), not a metal whisk. I imagine fine hotels in Scotland are resigned to feeding foreigners. They probably caved in and offer treacle and sugar for it, as well. [shudder] I buy whole groats and give them a quick spin in a grain mill to make a coarse oat meal (works great in bread, too). Or you can buy it that way, labed as Scots oatmeal or porridge, or sometimes steel cut groats. Bring water to a rolling boil, turn down to a simmer, add salt, then drizzle in the meal while stirring. Keep stiring until it's cooked and thickens up. This is the 'short-cut' method I've used at events, and it usually takes longer to bring the water to a boil (for just me, a cup or so of water) than to cook the porridge, and the porridge is a bit past 'al dente' so to speak. If I let it cool, it's thick enough to slice. I don't use, or like, rolled oats except in my muesli or cookies. I also expect that the meal cooks fast than 'old-fashioned' rolled oats because there is greater surface area per volume than the rolled oats. The consistency is from near flour to really coarse corn meal/cut groats, akin to grits and Malt-o-meal. Traditional Scots oat porridge: oat meal, salt, stirred with a spirtle, eaten standing up (nobody remembers why you stand, you just do). Those that put sugar in it deserve to have their cattle and sheep 'wander off.' :) I tend to agree that cooking them in a stock pot overnight would not do. Probably make them mushy or gluey if you had enough water. -- Edouard, Sire de Bruyerecourt Date: Thu, 23 Sep 2004 07:15:05 -0400 From: "Phil Troy / G. Tacitus Adamantius" Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] pottage? To: Cooks within the SCA Also sprach Stefan li Rous: > So, what is a good definition of a "pottage"? What are the dividing > lines between a pottage, a stew, a bruit, a porridge and a soup? Oy! Always he wants the straight, simple answers to complicated kvest... I mean questions. The short answer is there are no dividing lines between those dishes so named, or rather, the names have denoted increasingly broadened sets over time, to the point where there's been considerable blurring of the "lines" and overlapping of the categories. Mostly what we can fall back on is the original, dictionary definition of each word, as determined when the dictionary entries were written and/or back-determined, if you know what I mean. So. A pottage, depending on who you talk to, is either a dish cooked in a pot, or a dish sufficiently liquid to drink (as in potable). You eat it with a spoon. The Larousse Gastronomique defines a potee as anything cooked in an earthenware pot, and I was taught that to the French, a potage (with one "t") is a soup with a phase of thin to semi-thick liquid with solids in it, anything from, say, minestrone to New England Clam Chowder. In Middle English I'd say a pottage is anything you eat with a spoon or drink, as opposed to something you eat with a knife -- IOW, there is a clear distinction between lechemeats and pottages, but just to make sure Stefan is confused, roasts can be cut up and sauced or recooked to make pottages ;-). A stew is pretty straightforward. With a surprisingly small number of exceptions (i.e. bouillabaisse), stews are denoted by slow, gentle cooking, usually of tough meats and wintry vegetables. Similar to braising. The name appears to refer to a cooking method and, perhaps, a related piece of equipment, the use of a fire whose temperature can be kept low and burn slowly and long, later using a firebox called a stove. Estouffade and etouffee are essentially stews, both in concept and etymology. A brewet? It's brewed, I guess. I'm not sure if the medieval distinction between it and other slow-cooked liquid foods is any more clear, but maybe it's a tradition derived from saying the same thing in two different languages, which is something you run across a lot in medieval England. Hieatt and Butler aren't much help; their glossary in Curye On Inglysch says a brewet or a bruet is a broth, or something cooked in it. OTOH, since broths are made by cooking things in water, it has a dual nature as both a foundation and a by-product, which makes the definition just a bit circular. A porridge today denotes a grain-based dish, usually a moderately thin gruelly stuff, at least when hot, but the name appears to ultimately come down to leeks, from something like poree or poire in French. In simpler terms, porrey is a leek soup, and by extension, any of several soupy green vegetable dishes (I believe le Menagier identifies spinach specifically as "a kind of porrey"). I suspect that grains got added to porreys as a thickener, and over time became the dominant ingredient. Soups are dishes of liquidy stuff poured over sops of bread, usually, but not always, toasted. Mostly they were (back in the days when sops were involved) relatively thin, but as always, the exception sometimes proves the rule. So, as I said earlier in my rant on the blurred lines, all of the above are pottages (but not necessarily potages ;-) ), and some are soups, in addition to whatever else they may be. Adamantius Date: Tue, 1 Feb 2005 07:51:17 -0500 From: "Phil Troy / G. Tacitus Adamantius" Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Noty or Notye To: Cooks within the SCA Also sprach Stefan li Rous: > Doc gave a period recipe for Noty or Notye: >> On Jan 31, 2005, at 11:30 AM, Micheal wrote: >>> I once had a dish of Noty or Notye can`t remember which that was >>> creamy instead clear broth would anyone have the recipe. I now its >>> in one of the books but I can not remember which one. >>> Walnuts, Sausage meat, and cream, were some of the ingredients. >> >> Is this the one? >> >> Noteye. Take a gret porcyoun of Haselle leuys, & grynd in a morter as >> smal as thou may, whyl that they be onge; take than, & draw vppe a >> thrift Mylke of Almaundys y-blaunchyd, & temper it with Freysshe >> brothe; wryng out clene the Ius of the leuys; take Fleysshe of Porke or >> of Capoun, & grynd it smal, & temper it vppe with the mylke, & caste it >> in a potte, & he Ius ther-to, do it ouer the fyre & late it boyle; >> take flour of Rys, & a-lye it; take & caste Sugre y-now ther-to, & >> Vynegre a quantyte, & pouder Gyngere, & Safroun it wel, & Salt; take >> smal notys, & breke hem; take the kyrnellys, & make hem whyte, & fye >> hem vppe in grece; plante ther-with thin mete & serue forth. >> [Two Fifteenth-Century Cookery-Books] > Okay, but what type of dish is this? I'm afraid I'm not getting very > far in even figuring out just what sort of thing this is, even when > I can identify some of the ingredients, much less creating a > redaction of it. What are "notys"? eggs? Nuts. "'Nutty'. Take a great portion of hazel leaves, and grind them in a mortar as small as you may, while they are young [small, tender, and mild-flavored?]; then take and draw up a thrifty [multiple infusions to get the most out of the almonds?] milk of almonds, blanched, and mix it with fresh broth; wring out clean the juice of the leaves [through a cloth], take flesh of pork or of capon [probably boiled to make the broth], and grind it small, and mix it with the milk, and put it in a pot, and add the juice to it, and put it over the fire and let it boil. Take rice flour and thicken it; add enough sugar to it, and some vinegar, and powdered ginger, and plenty of saffron, and salt. Take small nuts and break them; take the kernels and blanch them, and fry them up in grease, stud your meat [dish/food] with them, and serve forth." This seems to be a thick spoon-food, with a consistency something like oatmeal porridge, made by boiling pork or capon, mixing some of the broth with a rich almond milk, adding pounded meat back to the broth to thicken and enrich it, thickening it further with rice flour [by which time it should end up being thick enough to hold up the nut kernels you're going to stick in its surface later], plus the pressed juice of crushed young hazel leaves (as in, the tree hazel nuts come from, hence the name of the dish), and adding various flavorings and a final garnish of fried nut kernels. To me, the biggest unanswered question in all of this is what effect the hazel leave puree will have: although we do have cattails locally here, I don't know if we have hazel trees, what their leaves look like, whether they're bright green like parsley, a muted green like sage, highly flavored, astringent, sour like sorrel, or what, and these unknowns are obviously going to make a big difference in the character of the final dish. I assume that, since the recipe cautions us to use young leaves, and since we have to pound and strain them, the "young" qualifier has something to do with the flavor or the content of some chemical (maybe tannins or some such) present in the leaves. Anybody have a hazel tree in the yard, and wanna go out and taste a leaf or two for scientific purposes? Adamantius Date: Thu, 24 Feb 2005 16:29:54 -0800 (PST) From: Pat Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] pease porridge? To: jenne at fiedlerfamily.net, Cooks within the SCA Jadwiga Zajaczkowa / Jenne Heise wrote: > Anybody got a good redaction of pease porridge? How about Perry of Peson from Forme of Cury? Original: Perry of Peson XX .III.XX Take peson and seep him saft and cove hem til (th)ei berst. (th)enne take up hem and cole hem thurgh a cloth. take oynons and mynce he and see(th) he in the esame sewe and oile (th)with. cast (th)to sugur, salt, and safron, and see(th) hem well (th)aft and sue hem forth. My adaptation: 1 lb. lentils 1 small onion 1 TBS. olive oil 1 tsp. sugar 1 tsp. salt pinch saffron Cover the lentils with cold water, bring to a boil, cover and reduce heat, and simmer until they begin to burst (about half an hour.) Strain them from the broth, reserving the broth. Puree them with a blender or food processor, then strain through cheesecloth. Mince the onion and boil it in the broth with the oil until tender. Add the lentils back to the broth return it to the boil, stirring constantly to avoid sticking. Serve immediately. I used lentils instead of New World peas. I suppose you could also use black eyed peas or the elusive "white" peas. At this time of year, you'd be using dried peas, so cooking time would be more. Pat Griffin Lady Anne du Bosc known as Mordonna the Cook Shire of Thorngill, Meridies Mundanely, Millbrook, AL Date: Mon, 23 Jan 2006 10:57:45 -0500 From: "Jeff Gedney" Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Re: cold cereal and milk To: Cooks within the SCA > Terry Decker wrote: >> What is the evidence for putting milk on porridge, as opposed to cooking >> the meal in milk? Was adding milk to hot cereal common practice in 1877 >> when the first cold cereal was developed or may not the practice of adding >> milk to hot cereal have grown out of the practice of adding milk >> to cold cereal? >> >> Bear >> >>> Using one of those leaps of logic we all so detest, I hypothesize >>> that putting milk on cold cereal was a natural evolutionary >>> progression from putting milk on porrige. >>> >>> Berelinde, Excuse me... But was it not unknown to make a breakfast of stale or toasted bread, crumbled in a bowl with milk or custard poured thereon? "Milk Toast" The first packaged precooked cereal for use with milk was probably invented in 1863 by James Jackson. It was essentially a prepared Milk toast, made of hardened loaves of unleavened whole grain bread, not unlike Ships biscuit, and broken into little pieces and served it for breakfast after soaking the brittle chunks overnight in warmed or fresh milk. Jackson appears to have named this mixture "granula". ( nota bene: Grape nuts are still made the same, using a twice baked barley loaf run through a grater, and toasted again ) In 1877, Dr. John Harvey Kellogg created a similar cereal called he also called granola, made from toasted rolled whole grains. This was was served the same way, though it's texture allowed one to skip the long overnight soak, for a quick breakfast. Then in 1902 Kellog invented Korn Flakes, trying to make use of cheaper more plentiful corn. As Corn toasts soaked in milk or buttermilk was already a common food in the South, it was not a stretch to try to granola-ize corn. By drying it in flakes it vastly increased shelf life, and improved texture. Shelf life, achieved by baking out all the moisture, was a major consideration in the success of this form of breakfast. Just as a note, It is likely that the first advocate of a vegetarian cold breakfast of essentially crakers and milk was Dr Sylvester Graham, who invented a Graham crakers partly as a way to return fiber to the meat and dairy heavy 19th century American diet (to which he ascribed all sorts of medical problems from cancer to sexual disfunction). I believe that Kellogg was a student/partner of Jackson's, Jackson founded the Sanitarium that Kellogg was to run at the close of the 19th century, and Jackson was very heavily influenced by Graham. Jackson was a member of the Seventh Day Adventists, who founded the Sanitarium based on Graham's principles. C.W. Post probably got the idea for his cereals, including Grape Nuts, when he was a patient at "the San". SO I think it probably all goes back to Dr. Sylvester Graham. Porridge does not seem to have entered into the milk on cereal concept. It is just as likely that the notion of putting milk into oatmeal came from habits and tastes acquired eating cold cereal, not the other way around. Many people prefer their oatmeal without milk. I know I do. A little butter and maple or cinnamon and sugar is preferable to me. Capt Elias Dragonship Haven, East (Stratford, CT, USA) Apprentice in the House of Silverwing -Renaissance Geek of the Cyber Seas Date: Tue, 16 May 2006 21:55:50 -0400 From: Patrick Levesque Subject: [Sca-cooks] Porridge, tobacco To: sca-cooks at ansteorra.org, "Cooks within the SCA " In that order, and more or less related topics, too :-) I was trying to access the archives to read up on a past discussion on porridge, more to the point, of using milk in porridge and cereals in general. I just happened to stumble across a chapter of L'Agriculture et la Maison Rustique (1572) that mentioned eating oat meal with milk and sugar, and thought this would be of interest. I'm sorry if that point was already made, as the archives are not available. Petru Date: Wed, 21 Jun 2006 18:14:35 -0400 From: Gretchen Beck Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] oatmeal/hot cereal? To: Cooks within the SCA --On Wednesday, June 21, 2006 5:01 PM -0500 Anne-Marie Rousseau wrote: > has anyone had success making oatmeal/hot cereal on the fire? I'm hoping > to find a method that involves real oats (not the rolled kind, etc) that > I can start a fire, set it burbling and ignore for a bit while I chop up > dried fruit, etc > > 1. what kind of oats/grains did you use? > 2. what were your favorite add ins? > 3. I remember vaguly a recipe for a hot cereal dish from le menagier? > maybe? anyone have access to their books who can look it up? > > bascially I'm looking for an easy breakfast dish to do during a weeklong > re- enactment event. the rest of camp may be happy living off smoked > fish, hard boiled eggs and such but me, I needs me some fiber ;) As I understand it, what you want is called brose. You use pinhead oats, and make it just like you would instant -- put the oatmeal in a bowl, cover with boiling water, cover and let it steam for about 5 minutes. The Scots Independent provides a lovely description of the process () Oatmeal brose was the true foundation of the expedition, and the correct method of making it must be put on record. A quantity of coarse oatmeal - with salt 'to taste' as they say - is placed in a bowl and boiling water poured over it. The water must be boiling hard as it pours and there should be enough of it to just cover the oatmeal. A plate is immediately placed over the bowl like a lid. You now sit by for a few minutes, gloating. This is your brose cooking in its own steam. During this pause, slip a nut of butter under the plate and into the brose. In four or five minutes whip off the lid, stir the mass violently together, splash in some milk and eat. You will never again be happy with the wersh and fushionless silky slop which passes for porridge. This was the food whose devotees staggered the legions of Rome; broke the Norsemen; held the Border for five hundred years; and are standing fast on borders till. It is a dish for men. It also happens to taste superbly. We ate it twice a day, frequently without milk, although such a simplification demands what an Ayrshire farmer once described to me as a 'guid-gaun stomach'. He is a happy traveller who has with him a bag of oatmeal and a poke of salt. He will travel fast and far.' toodles, margaret Date: Wed, 21 Jun 2006 17:43:02 -0500 From: Anne-Marie Rousseau Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] oatmeal/hot cereal? To: dailleurs at liripipe.com, 'Cooks within the SCA' , 'Kirsten Houseknecht' a bit more research suggests that if I take "scottish oats" from the local health food store and add them to the proper amount of boiling water (maybe with a pat of butter for fun) and pull the pot off the fire, clamping on the lid, the heat of the pot should keep them cooking enough to finish them (about 20 min). Stir in dried fruit, nuts, sugar, heavy cream, whatever and enjoy. that's all theoretical, of course, but it seems like it might work. I'm also very curious to compare this to the period recipes for cereal dishes I've seen... --AM On Wed Jun 21 16:22 , "Kirsten Houseknecht" sent: > you should be able to do almost any kind of oatmeal, but set it > near. not in.. the fire. > i cooked porridge once "on the fire"...... > i put barley, and rice, and lentils in water to "soak" and forgot them > overnight. > they were next to the fire pit. > they were cooked in the morning > Kirsten Houseknecht Date: Wed, 21 Jun 2006 18:50:02 -0500 From: "Terry Decker" Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] oatmeal/hot cereal? To: , "Cooks within the SCA" Almost any grain dish of this sort can be prepared by initially boiling the grain or meal, then covering it and setting it aside to finish cooking. Set the pot where it will stay warm, but not scorch. Whole grains should probably be boiled until they burst, then set aside to finish cooking. Menagier prepares millet, wheat and barley. The barley is essentially prepared to be an "instant" food for invalids. I think Menagier is using whole grains rather than meal. I prefer cracked grains for speed and convenience. Hulled, whole oats will probably take longer than you want. I assume your reference to "rolled oats" is to the partially milled oats in the big card board containers. Oats rolled into big fat flakes have a much more interesting texture. Steel cut or pinhead oats provide a chunky texture, while stone ground oat meal will make a smoother gruel. I like the steel cut oats with brown sugar and cream (however, I usually get 2% milk, sigh). Bear > has anyone had success making oatmeal/hot cereal on the fire? I'm hoping to > find a method that involves real oats (not the rolled kind, etc) that I can > start a fire, set it burbling and ignore for a bit while I chop up dried > fruit, etc > > --Anne-Marie Date: Thu, 22 Jun 2006 00:07:29 -0700 From: "Laura C. Minnick" Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] oatmeal/hot cereal? To: dailleurs at liripipe.com, Cooks within the SCA I like a five-grain or seven-grain blend (I think it's Red Mill, but not certain), which can cook while I'm puttering around with other things. (Have to stop and stir once in awhile though- don't want it scorched.) Just before I serve it, I like to stir in a beaten egg. Makes for a nice creamy texture, and a bit of added protein. Sometimes I add dried fruit (added to the water when I first put it on the boil- it plumps up nice that way), a bit of cinnamon, or a whole, grated apple. Milk and a bit of brown sugar, and I'm good to go! 'Lainie Date: Thu, 22 Jun 2006 12:20:48 -0400 From: ranvaig at columbus.rr.com Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] oatmeal/hot cereal? To: dailleurs at liripipe.com, Cooks within the SCA > has anyone had success making oatmeal/hot cereal on the fire? Like someone else said, near, not on the fire. Here is an Irish recipe that we use in our 10th c. Living history. It is a solid pudding you slice, not porridge and tastes wonderful. We've never had any leftovers, but you could probably fry slices in some butter the next morning if you did. Ranvaig Oat Pudding (Litti?) 2 c coarsely ground oats (run lightly through a food processor), 2 c milk, 1/2 tsp salt or to taste, egg yolks (optional), butter Heat milk to the simmering point without boiling, so that small bubbles form around the rim of the pot. Add oats and salt. If you wish to make it even richer, you can add the egg yolks, well beaten, to the mixture. Pour the mixture into greased bowl or fireproof dish, and set it, covered, by the fire for about 45 minutes, turning it regularly so that it cooks evenly and solidly. Or bake at 300?. As it cooks, it will pull away from the bowl a bit. It can be cut in wedges in the bowl, or turned out onto a plate, accompanied by rich cream and drizzled honey. The dish is described in books of monastic rules, and is prescribed in the Brehon law as the appropriate food with which noble hostages and foster sons are nourished by right. Date: Fri, 23 Jun 2006 05:51:00 +0200 From: UlfR Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] oatmeal/hot cereal? To: Cooks within the SCA Anne-Marie Rousseau [2006.06.22] wrote: > has anyone had success making oatmeal/hot cereal on the fire? I'm > hoping to find a method that involves real oats (not the rolled kind, > etc) that I can start a fire, set it burbling and ignore for a bit > while I chop up dried fruit, etc Sure, lots of times (as in every morning). The trick i that you can not treat a fire as an electric stove: if it is on the fire you need to keep an eye on it. My solution is to hang the pot next to the fire, not over it, which works the same as the back of the woodstove. > 1. what kind of oats/grains did you use? Rolled oats (which gets better if you add them to boiling instead of cold water), rolled rye, varieos multi-grain mixes, barley. My gang prefers the barley, boiled with some stock and with fresh soft cheese added afterwards. > 2. what were your favorite add ins? A stock-cube (or the real thing) or apple pieces. Don't forget the porridge for real men (gruel enforced) in Cury on Inglish; good stuff, and one day I will figure out how to serve it to the masses. Fresh blueberries makes for a colorful porridge, not to everyone’s liking. > basically I'm looking for an easy breakfast dish to do during a > weeklong re- enactment event. the rest of camp may be happy living off > smoked fish, hard boiled eggs and such but me, I needs me some fiber Make some sort of porridge. Mix leftover with flour and pan-fry into bread. Or just pan-fry sourdough bread over the campfire. Either thin cakes (think naan or some such), or thicker on a skillet propped up facing the flames. If you are careful you can bake in a pot next to the fire, just keep turning it to bake the bread evenly. No period documentation for the latter two techniques, but they work. UlfR -- UlfR Ketilson ulfr at hunter-gatherer.org Date: Fri, 23 Jun 2006 06:20:59 -0500 From: "Terry Decker" Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] oatmeal/hot cereal? To: "Cooks within the SCA" IIRC, this is very similar to the millet recipe in Menagier. Bear ----- Original Message ----- >> Oat Pudding (Litti?) > > of course, it may not be period, I'm told that the dish is period. The exact redaction might not be.. but there really isnt much to change.. milk and oats.. cook slowly until solid Ranvaig Date: Fri, 23 Jun 2006 08:31:53 -0600 From: "Kathleen A Roberts" Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] oatmeal/hot cereal? To: Cooks within the SCA On Fri, 23 Jun 2006 00:01:21 -0400 ranvaig at columbus.rr.com wrote: >>> Oat Pudding (Litti?) >> >> of course, it may not be period, > > I'm told that the dish is period. oops. sorry, i meant that using the stewed fruit as a topping might not be period. the littiu itself certainly is from what i have read. cailte Date: Thu, 14 Sep 2006 10:25:28 +0200 From: "Ana Valdes" Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Fwd: [CAID] In need of Sweet Recipes! To: "Cooks within the SCA" In Sweden the sweet dish eaten in Christmas from old times is a porridge made with rice and milk, sweetened with sugar or honey and with almonds on it. "You cook about a cup of rice in a cup of water, then once the rice is done and the water is absorbed, begin adding five cups of milk (I'd suggest whole milk), about a cup at a time, until all the milk is absorbed. You can add cinnamon and sugar if you like, but the traditional recipe includes no sweetener and definitely not an egg. Serve after stirring in one blanched almond and (if you want) one golden raisin. The person who gets the almond, the tradition goes, gets a gift." The traditional recipe add not sugar but many friends and myself do. Ana Date: Sun, 7 Jan 2007 10:33:15 -0500 From: ranvaig at columbus.rr.com Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] 12th Night 2007 Stories To: Cooks within the SCA On Jan 7, 2007, at 9:13 AM, ranvaig at columbus.rr.com wrote: >> On Jan 7, 2007, at 7:12 AM, Celia des Archier wrote: >>> any possibility of getting a recipe for the littiu? > > I have the recipe webbed here: > http://www.geocities.com/ranvaig/medieval/kitchen.html >> why use this obviously Celtic name? Is it just an >> Irish word for oats? Why is it not just oatmeal or porridge, or >> flummery, or what distinguishes it from them? It is the Early Irish word for porridge and this was for the Irish Living History group, therefore the Irish name. Ranvaig http://www.ceantar.org/Dicts/MB2/mb24.html lit porridge, Middle Irish lit?, Early Irish littiu, g. litten, Welsh llith, mash: *litti?n- (Stokes), *pl at .t-ti?, from pelt, polt, Greek at Gp?ltos, porridge, Latin puls, pultis, pottage. Date: Sun, 7 Jan 2007 10:05:28 -0600 From: "Terry Decker" Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] 12th Night 2007 Stories To: "Cooks within the SCA" "Littiu" is the Early Irish form of "lit" and essentially means porridge. It is related to the Welsh, "llith" which means mash. It is perfectly reasonable that an Early Irish persona would use the term for whatever recipe of porridge they chose to make. While there are a number of literary references, the one I remember most commonly mentioned is from the Tain Bo Chulainn to the effect that it is the porridge of the little boy that has made such a great warrior of the man. The Irish lived on their cattle and the common grains in Ireland were oats and barley, so oat and milk porridge would likely be common in Ancient Ireland. As oats are the highest in protein of any of the cereals, a porridge of oats and milk would be a very nutritional dish suitable for the sons of kings. I would suspect that the recipe is a derivation from various sources and that the accuracy depends on the quality of the research. Bear > This is interesting. Oats have been eaten in semi-solidified form for > thousands of years, and I gather from looking at the stuff saved in > the Florilegium that this is just oats and milk, cooked as a thick > porridge and allowed to cool somewhat, so I'm not questioning this as > a dish, per se. But if our knowledge of what this is/consists of is > sorta sketchy, why use this obviously Celtic name? Is it just an > Irish word for oats? Why is it not just oatmeal or porridge, or > flummery, or what distinguishes it from them? Is it that the name has > emerged from Irish poetry and people have felt the need to come up > with a functional "recipe" to match it, and this is what it is? > > Just trying to understand the reasoning process... > > Adamantius Date: Sun, 07 Jan 2007 11:56:33 -0700 From: "Kathleen A Roberts" Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] 12th Night 2007 Stories To: Cooks within the SCA On Sun, 7 Jan 2007 09:13:59 -0500 ranvaig at columbus.rr.com wrote [about "Littiu"]: > Its not so much a porridge as a solid pudding. You put equal amounts > of hot milk and oats in a pan in the oven or near but > not over a fire and cook slowly without stirring. and it makes a great dessert when siege cooking. 8) i admit i cheat and use wine simmered dried fruit as the 'sauce', but that's really good too. cailte Date: Sun, 07 Jan 2007 13:03:44 -0800 From: Susan Fox Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Porridge for the sons of kings (was RE: 12th Night 2007 Stories) To: Cooks within the SCA > I remember reading somewhere, I'm sure it was either a tertiary source or a > fictional account (I'm thinking it was most likely a historical novel) > rather than somewhere reliable, a short bit on the proper preparation of > porridge based on the rank of the son being fed; i.e., using cream for the > sons of kings, milk for nobles, water for anyone beneath a certain rank. I'm > wondering now if that was something that the author actually found in > research, as this sounds similar. Has anyone ever come across this in a > primary source? Is this perhaps what is meant when the Brehon Laws > were being referenced? > > Anyone know? > > Celia It's in Brehon Law, my ex has the line and verse, I'll try to get the specifics from him. In English, to spare us all a lot of confusion. Selene Date: Mon, 08 Jan 2007 13:17:17 -0500 From: Johnna Holloway Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Littiu was 12th Night 2007 Stories To: Cooks within the SCA The Littiu as described on the website http://www.geocities.com/ranvaig/medieval/kitchen.htmlas "The dish is described in books of monastic rules, and is prescribed in the Brehon law as the appropriate food with which noble hostages and foster sons are nourished by right." Are we sure that this is correct? The reason I ask is that Brid Mahon's Land of Milk and Honey repeats this passage (I think it is the same one) as ?The children of inferior grades are to be fed on porridge or stirabout made of oatmeal on buttermilk or water taken with stale butter and are to be given a bare sufficiency; the sons of chieftains are to be fed to satiety on porridge made of barley meal upon new milk, taken with fresh butter, while the sons of kings and princes are to be fed on porridge made of wheaten meal, upon new milk, taken with honey.? page 64 The source is given as Ancient Laws of Ireland, volume 2 pp 148-151. So wouldn't oats have been served to the lower class fosterings while the sons of the upper classes would have eaten either barley or wheat? Johnnae Date: Mon, 08 Jan 2007 14:09:19 -0500 From: "Phil Troy / G. Tacitus Adamantius" Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Littiu was 12th Night 2007 Stories To: Cooks within the SCA On Jan 8, 2007, at 1:17 PM, Johnna Holloway wrote: > The Littiu as described on the website > http://www.geocities.com/ranvaig/medieval/kitchen.htmlas > "The dish is described in books of monastic rules, and is prescribed in > the Brehon law as the appropriate food with which noble hostages and > foster sons are nourished by right." > > Are we sure that this is correct? > The reason I ask is that Brid Mahon's Land of Milk and Honey > repeats this passage (I think it is the same one) as > > ?The children of inferior grades are to be fed on porridge or stirabout > made of oatmeal on buttermilk or water taken with stale butter and are > to be given a bare sufficiency; the sons of chieftains are to be fed to > satiety on porridge made of barley meal upon new milk, taken with fresh > butter, while the sons of kings and princes are to be fed on porridge > made of wheaten meal, upon new milk, taken with honey.? page 64 > > The source is given as Ancient Laws of Ireland, volume 2 pp 148-151. > > So wouldn't oats have been served to the lower class fosterings while > the sons of the upper classes would have eaten either barley or wheat? > > Johnnae Well, I was asking out of curiosity, more or less, for the reasoning process, and not having any particular expectations in mind one way or the other. What I was able to dig up was this passage from P.W. Joyce's "A Social History Of Ancient Ireland" (excuse the scanner/OCR fu): "6. Corn and its preparations. It will be seen in chapter xxiii., sect. 2 (pp. 271, 272, below), that all the various kinds of grain cultivated at the present day were in use in ancient Ireland. Corn was ground and sifted into coarse and fine, i.e. into meal and flour, which were commonly kept in chests. The staple food of the great mass of the people was porridge, or as it is now called in Ireland, stirabout, made of meal (Irish min), generally oatmeal. It was eaten with honey, butter, or milk, as an annlann or condiment. So well was it under stood, even in foreign countries, that stirabout was almost the universal food in Ireland?a sort of characteristic of the country and its people?that St. Jerome takes occasion to refer to the custom in a letter directed against an Irish adversary, generally believed to be the celebrated heresi arch Celestius, the disciple of Pelagius. Jerome could use tongue and pen in hearty abuse like any ordinary poor sinner: and he speaks revilingly of Celestius, who was a corpulent man, as 'a great fool of a fellow swelled out with Irish stirabout.' The common word for stirabout was, and still is, littiu, modern leite, gen. leitenn [letth?, letthen] ; but in the Brehon Laws and elsewhere it is often called gruss. Gruel was called menadacli: it is mentioned as part of the fasting fare of the Culdees. The Senchus M?r annotator, laying down the regulations for the food of children in fosterage, mentions three kinds of leite or stirabout : ? of oatmeal, wheatmeal, and barleymeal: that made from oatmeal being the most general. Wheatmeal stirabout was con sidered the best: that of barleymeal was inferior to the others. For the rich classes, stirabout was often made on new milk: if sheep's milk, so much the better, as this was looked upon as a delicacy. Finn?leite, 'white?stirabout,' i.e. made on new milk, is designated by an epicure, in an exaggerated strain ? 'the treasure that is smoothest and sweetest of all food' : it was eaten with honey, fresh butter, or new milk. For the poorer classes stirabout was made on water or buttermilk, and eaten with sour milk or salt butter: but butter of any kind was more or less of a luxury. All young persons in fosterage were to be fed, up to a certain age, on stirabout, the quality and condi ment (as distinguished above) being regulated according to the rank of the parents." Adamantius Date: Fri, 10 Aug 2007 19:39:05 -0400 From: Johnna Holloway Subject: [Sca-cooks] Littiu Source To: Cooks within the SCA Back in January of this year, we had some discussions on the list regarding porridges and grain cereals. At the time Ranvaig posted some material on "littiu" which was served in Ireland. I have come across a really good paper on the topic and thought I should mention it. It's by Regina Sexton. It's titled "Porridges, Gruels and Breads: The Cereal Foodstuffs of Early Medieval Ireland." It appears as Chapter 9 in Early Medieval Munster. Archaeology, History and Society. Edited by Michael A. Monk and John Sheehan. Cork University Press, 1998. pages 76-86. Sexton says that Littiu is described in the legal text Cain Iarraith as porridge made variously with oaten, barley or wheaten meal combined with water, buttermilk or new milk. (CIH 1759.36-1760.2) In the comic tale Aislinge meic Conglinne the same dish is made with sheep's milk. ? The accompanying condiments for littiu include heavily salted preserved butter (gruiten), fresh butter (imb) and honey (mil). (CIH 1759.36-1760.2), page 76. CIH is the Corpus Iuris Hibernici, edited by D.A. Binchy. 6 volumes published in Dublin in 1978. Johnnae Date: Tue, 30 Dec 2008 20:33:36 -0500 From: Johnna Holloway Subject: [Sca-cooks] Workhouse Diet To: Cooks within the SCA "Was the Victorian workhouse diet sufficient for a 9-year-old boy? A group of British researchers ? two dietitians, a pediatrician and a historian ? asked just that question in a study published online Dec. 17 in The British Medical Journal." http://www.nytimes.com/2008/12/30/health/30diet.html?ref=science If you read the article in the NYT, you'll see that it mentions 17th century recipes for porridge. Well in the original BMJ article that section reads: "For our analysis we used a recipe for water gruel taken from a 17th century English cookery text.[5] Unlike the gruel described by Dickens, the gruel described in Pereira?s workhouse *diet*s is substantial, not thin (each pint contained 1.25 oz of the best Berwick oatmeal).[5] The original footnote reads: 5. Matterer JL. 17th century English recipes. How to make water-gruel. 2002. www.godecookery.com/engrec/engrec120.html. So in reality they seemed to have used the recipe off Master Huen's website. The text of the BMJ article is up at: http://tinyurl.com/8tdml3 Johnnae Date: Wed, 16 Dec 2009 14:03:28 -0600 From: "Kathleen A Roberts" To: Cooks within the SCA Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] In Search Of A Recipe On Thu, 17 Dec 2009 09:00:03 +1300 Antonia Calvo wrote: <<< Wow. I assume the Scottish dessert they're referring to is Crowdie Cream, but that's just whipped cream, toasted oats, crushed raspberries and honey. >>> reminds me of the irish stirabout, an oat porridge, which could be enriched with all kinds of things from cream to butter to fruit to nuts the higher your station. cailte Date: Tue, 06 Apr 2010 12:13:49 -0400 From: Johnna Holloway To: Cooks within the SCA Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Polenta was Pre-1600 recipes for "anchient grains" On Apr 6, 2010, at 8:54 AM, Terry Decker wrote: <<< I know of no period recipes for millet polenta, but the grain was available and the method of preparation is so simple and common that it was almost certainly done. BTW, lightly toasting grain meals in the oven before making polenta improves the flavor. Bear >>> Here are the early French instructions for the millet porridge. Courtesy of medievalcookery.com: This is an excerpt from Le Viandier de Taillevent (France, ca. 1380 - James Prescott, trans.) The original source can be found at James Prescott's website Millet. Wash it in three changes of hot water and put it in simmering cow's milk. Do not put the spoon in it until it has boiled. Then remove it from on top of the fire and add a bit of saffron. Boil it until it is done, and set it out in bowls. This is an excerpt from Le Menagier de Paris (France, 1393 - Janet Hinson, trans.) The original source can be found at David Friedman's website MILLET. Wash it in three changes of water and then put in an iron skillet to dry over the fire, and shake it well, so that it does not burn; and then put it in simmering cow's milk, and do not let the spoon touch it until it has boiled well, and then take it off the fire, and beat it with the back of the spoon until it is very thick. Johnna Date: Mon, 18 Oct 2010 03:45:59 -0700 From: Ian Kusz To: Cooks within the SCA Subject: [Sca-cooks] what's a tisana? It appears to be a soup, not a tisane. [173] ANOTHER TISANA *TISANA TARICHA *[1] THE CEREAL [2] IS SOAKED; CHICKPEAS, LENTILS AND PEAS ARE CRUSHED AND BOILED WITH IT; WHEN WELL COOKED, ADD PLENTY OF OIL. NOW CUT GREEN HERBS, LEEKS, CORIANDER, DILL, FENNEL, BEETS, MALLOWS, CABBAGE STRUNKS, ALL SOFT AND GREEN AND FINELY CUT, AND PUT IN A POT. THE CABBAGE COOK [separately. Also] CRUSH FENNEL SEED, ORIGANY, SYLPHIUM AND LOVAGE, AND WHEN CRUSHED, ADD BROTH TO TASTE, POUR THIS OVER THE PORRIDGE, STIR IT TOGETHER AND USE SOME FINELY CHOPPED CABBAGE STEMS TO SPRINKLE ON TOP [2]. From Apicius -- Ian of Oertha Date: Mon, 18 Oct 2010 17:27:05 +0100 (BST) From: Volker Bach To: Cooks within the SCA Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] what's a tisana? I think the modern tisane came by its name via barley water, which was a development from thin barley gruel. I would not be surprised if by Apicius' time (whenever that exactly was) the word still meant a porridge-like barley dish. Anthimus' tisane certainly still sounds like it's fairly substantial, if sort of liquid. Giano Date: Mon, 18 Oct 2010 12:59:54 -0500 From: "Terry Decker" To: "Cooks within the SCA" Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] what's a tisana? The Latin "tisana" derives from the Greek "ptissein" meaning "to crush." Somewhere between Old French and Middle English, it becomes "ptisane," meaning a medical infusion (of which barley water is one such infusion), and "tisane," referring to "peeled barley" or "barley water." Apicius is in Latin from no later than the 5th Century. Old French dates from the 9th Century. The Apician reference is obviously from the earlier Latin usage. Bear Date: Mon, 18 Oct 2010 21:28:58 +0100 (BST) From: emilio szabo To: sca-cooks at lists.ansteorra.org Subject: [Sca-cooks] what's a tisana? The translation you quoted is not up to date it seems to me. (Where from did you get it?) If you look at the Milham edition, the beginning says: "infundis cicer, lenticulam, pisa". What has to be soaked are chickpeas, lentils and peas ... The word "taricha" is suspect ... Look at Milham's apparatus to page 34, line 17. Flower/Rosenbaum translate: "Barley soup"; Maier translates "Getreidegr?tze", "Gerstengr?tze". E. [173] ANOTHER TISANA *TISANA TARICHA *[1] >> >> THE CEREAL [2] IS SOAKED; CHICKPEAS, LENTILS AND PEAS ARE CRUSHED AND >> BOILED >> WITH IT; WHEN WELL COOKED, ADD PLENTY OF OIL. NOW CUT GREEN HERBS, LEEKS, >> CORIANDER, DILL, FENNEL, BEETS, MALLOWS, CABBAGE STRUNKS, ALL SOFT AND >> GREEN >> AND FINELY CUT, AND PUT IN A POT. THE CABBAGE COOK [separately. Also] >> CRUSH >> FENNEL SEED, ORIGANY, SYLPHIUM AND LOVAGE, AND WHEN CRUSHED, ADD BROTH TO >> TASTE, POUR THIS OVER THE PORRIDGE, STIR IT TOGETHER AND USE SOME FINELY >> CHOPPED CABBAGE STEMS TO SPRINKLE ON TOP [2]. >> From >> Apicius Date: Mon, 18 Oct 2010 17:28:47 -0500 From: "Terry Decker" To: "Cooks within the SCA" Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] what's a tisana? <<< Okay, then the cereal being used is, what, here? If this is pre- the time period where tisana refers to barley.....? >>> If cereal is actually called for, it is likely either barley or wheat, the preferred grains of Rome. Since you are using the Vehling translation, you don't have the original text and my copy of the F&R translation has gone walkabout. Given the Latin definitions I have, I would say the name of the dish is related to the crushing rather than to the cereal used. Bear Date: Tue, 19 Oct 2010 10:13:32 -0700 From: Ian Kusz To: Cooks within the SCA Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] what's a tisana? Both the translation and the number are from off of Gutenberg. Date: Wed, 5 Jun 2013 12:34:21 -0700 (GMT-07:00) From: lilinah at earthlink.net To: SCA-Cooks Subject: [Sca-cooks] Ottoman Bread Porridge I have mentioned that quite a few Ottoman recipes are rather bland. Here's one, from among Shirvani's additions: [107 recto] Ekmek ashi - Bread Porridge The manner of making it: Put some water in a pot, drop into it a little butter, after that bring it to a boil, drop into the pot some thinly ??sliced bread with the crust left on, when it is nearly cooked add some eggs, mix with a spoon, add a little pepper, remove from heat, eat. Probably another way to use bread that isn't absolutely fresh. Ashi isn't exactly porridge, but i couldn't think of a better word. Persians cooked in SCA-period, and still cook Ash, which is a very thick soup-like dish, made with starchy things like grains, chickpeas, black-eye beans, lentils, and/or noodles. Shirvani, as his names makes clear, was from the city of Shirvan, which is now in Azerbaijan. During SCA-period, the region was captured back and forth by the Persian and the Ottoman, so it is pretty certain there is Persian influence on Shrivani's recipes. Just a side note, in the Palace there were two "formal" meals a day, one after morning prayer and one before sundown. The morning meal was the biggest and often quite substantial. The evening meal was smaller and often consisted of the same dishes over and over for weeks on end - as documented for some Sultans, or even years - as for the company of pages who had roast chicken and rice EVERY night, the only variation being seasonal soup. This porridge might have been part of the morning meal, along with rice, several dishes that included meat, and some sides dishes made with seasonal greens or vegetables. Urtatim (that's oor-tah-TEEM) From Facebook: David Friedman November 5 at 2:58pm · I'm wondering if perhaps I should stop thinking of it as an alternative to sekanjabin for a convenient period drink and start thinking of it as a period equivalent to quick oatmeal, useful for breakfast at Pennsic. More experimentation called for. David Friedman 11/6/13 at 2:42am I tried sawiq with hot water, using enough to make something like a porridge. With a little honey and cinnamon it's quite tasty. I now have a period equivalent to instant oatmeal for breakfasts at Pennsic. David Friedman 11/6/13 at 12:57pm I don't know how well it would work with other grains, including oats. I gather that sawiq was originally made from barley, later from wheat, and I plan to try a barley version sometime soon. Perhaps I should try an oat version as well. Edited by Mark S. Harris porridges-msg Page 26 of 26