fd-Anglo-Saxn-msg – 7/19/10 Food of Anglo-Saxon England. References. NOTE: See also the files: cookbooks-msg, books-food-msg, fd-Arthur-msg, fd-Norse-msg, fd-France-msg, Anglo-Saxons-msg, AS-jewelry-art, England-msg, London-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: Fri, 11 Sep 1998 20:45:58 +1030 From: miche at merlin.net.au (Michelle) Subject: SC - Re: Anglo-Saxon Food Drink >From: kat >Subject: SC - Anglo-Saxon food/drink??? > >I don't know if any of you are following the "1000 Years in 500 Days" >history being put together by the British newspaper "The Guardian," (but >here's the web site if you're not; it's fascinating): > >http://www.guardian.co.uk/millennium/archive.html > >Anyway, on their Day 6 story, they linked an interesting writeup on >Anglo-Saxon food and drink; I thought y'all might like to check it out: > >http://www.ftech.net/~regia/food.htm > >Thoughts, from anyone else who's read this? I don't know where their >source material comes from (though they refer a couple of times to items >found at excavations) but I'd love to hear another opinion... The info on the feast pages was put up by Sue Peacock. I know that the pictures she used can also be found in a book called 'Cooking and eating history' by K Stewart, call no. 641.3009 S849...lots of nice piccies and a bit of background info on the pre-1066 Britain environment (as well as other cultures, but I skipped those bits as they are not my field of interest) - but the recipies therein seemed dodgy even to my introductory forages into this field. Sue said she was currently doing work for a group called Angelcynne, and to look out for the web site - but I tried to find it with no luck - if someone else finds it, can you send me the addy? For pre-1066 stuff she thoroughly recommended Ann Hagan's 'A Handbook of Anglo-Saxon food' and ' A 2nd handbook of anglo-saxon food and drink' which I know can be ordered through the net, but apparently neither really contain recipes, just background info...depends on what information you need I guess. Michelle Date: Sat, 9 Jan 1999 05:14:42 -0500 From: Melanie Wilson To: "INTERNET:sca-arts at raven.cc.ukans.edu" Subject: Millenium Menu Suggestions-long Here are a few of my Anglo Saxon recipes and details of meat veg etc, these are based on 5th C stuff but are still avaliable later Anglo-Saxon Food Ingredients List and Recipes Meat - Presented in order of availability: Beef Pork Lamb-fairly sparse Venison-rare luxury Wildfowl Fish Poultry-fowl and goose Vegetables - Peas Carrots Nettle Elder Leeks Turnips Cabbage Onions Celery Radish Garlic Shallots Lettuce Marigold Poppy Corn Campion Fruit - Apples Pears Peach Mulberry Quince Fig Plum Cherries Blackberries Whortleberries Rashberrys Nuts - Hazel Almond Walnut Herbs - Used excessively Sage Pepper Salt Mint Mustard Parsley Dill Chervil Coriander Poppy Dairy Products - Milk Butter Cheese Whey Buttermilk -from sheep goats etc as well as cows. Others Cereals Pulses Honey Vinegar Pork in honey and Vinegar Ingredients per 6 people 500g of pork cubes 250g Honey 250ml wine vinegar 3 Garlic bulbs 6 Onions 6 Parsnips 12 Carrots 500g Peas Brown meat in fat eg butter or oil, add vinegar, honey and peeled and cloved garlic, add vegetables, and herbs in season along with pepper and salt to taste. Simmer until very tender eg 3-4 hours. Briw Ingredients per 6 people 1 Litre of Milk 500g pearl Barley 500g Butter Vegetables or fruit as available Melt butter in the milk, boil for a long time until solidy at some point add vegetable or fruit and/or salt as desired. If any left overs this can be cut and fried for a later meal. Throw it in stew Ingredients per 6 people Either of the following: 2 pigs trotters 1 Chicken or 1kg rib of beef 1kg shin of beef 1 knuckle bone or marrow bone 2 Onions 500g Haricot beans(white) 500g Carrots Celery 500g Leeks 2 Turnips Cut onions in half, with skin on. Trim vegetables, cook trimmings with the meat covered in water with a bay leaf some peppercorns and some salt for 3 hours. Remove trimmings and allow to cook. Take off fat layer and save for frying(eg excess Briw) Add cubed vegetables and re heat when required. Potted Goose or Duck Ingredients per 8 people 2 Plump geese or large ducks White pork dripping salt coarse 6 cloves 5 cloves or garlic 1 tsp peppercorns= small bunch thyme Quarter birds and remove all internal fat. Put golden fat to render slowly in iron pot. Remove nuggets to salt and eat later. Rub joints with rough salt. Leave to cure for at least 24 hours. Brush off excess salt and pat dry. Warm goose fat add dripping as required add thyme, cloves and peppercorns and when hot but not smoking add goose joints. Cook for 1 hour. Put pieces in earthenware crock and cover with fat. Make sure all is submerged. Next day cover with another layer of dripping. This will last all winter, pieces can be removed cooked and eaten as required . Ensure remaining pieces are covered in fat at all times. Vegetable parcels 25x carrots 25x leeks 25x onion 10x garlic 10 cabbages Take the vedge wrap in cabbage leaves tie, place in earth oven. Mel Date: Fri, 3 Dec 1999 12:51:36 -0000 From: Christina Nevin Subject: SC - Anglo Saxon Appetites For all those who are interested in Anglo-Saxon food, the latest offering from my Oxbow book news: "Anglo Saxon Appetites Magennis, Hugh Old English poetry is rich in references to feasting. However, most such references concentrate on drinking rather than on food. This book seeks out allusions to eating in A-S literature, detecting A-S attitudes to food, and its place in early medieval Christian teachings. the significance of drinking in poetry is also considered. Discusses Germanic feasts, images of eating in Beowulf, Grendel's eating habits, drunkenness and gluttony in Christian teaching, and metaphorical consumption of 'bitter drinks', good food and evil food, the spiritual food of the Eucharist and of divine teaching. 195pp Four Courts Press 1999 ISBN: 1851823824 L40/$65" but about $46 on www.bookfinder.com Amazon.com also lists the table of contents. Lucretzia ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Lady Lucrezia-Isabella di Freccia | mka Tina Nevin Thamesreach Shire, The Isles, Drachenwald | London, UK thorngrove at geocities.com | http://www.geocities.com/~thorngrove From: "Hrolf Douglasson" To: Date: Sun, 6 May 2001 21:31:56 +0100 Subject: [Sca-cooks] NUTS Almonds were known. Trees were in the monastery garden at St. Gall during at my at (she means Anglo-Saxon England -ed) period so they were certainly known during yours. as were Chestnuts and walnuts mulberry's and quince were also known. I have the Saxon books by my computer key board should anyone require the refrences. Sugar was amongst the 'mentioned goods of Henry 2nd...the first mention anywhere in English paperwork. However if you leave good honey for long enough and keep the warriors and children off it you can get a very raw crystal after a year or so. Vara Date: Thu, 23 Aug 2001 22:01:19 -0400 From: johnna holloway To: sca-cooks at ansteorra.org Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] just an introduction While you are interlibrary loaning, also check out Hugh Magennis Anglo-Saxon Appetites. Food and Drink and Their Consumption in Old English and Related Literature. isbn: 1-85182-382-4. It's another book that goes along with the two volumes by Hagen. Johnnae llyn Lewis Johnna Holloway Date: Fri, 03 May 2002 10:36:25 -0400 From: johnna holloway To: sca-cooks at ansteorra.org Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Anglo Saxon Cusine Besides the two Hagen books on Anglo-Saxon foods that were mentioned by Rob Downie and Stefan and the material in the Florilegium, you should consider this publication: Magennis, Hugh. Anglo-Saxon Appetites. Food and Drink and Their Consumption in Old English and Related Literature. Dublin, Ireland: Four Courts Press, 1999. ISBN: 1-85182-382-4. It is footnoted and has a substantial bibliography on pp. 171-188. By the way, Devra carries the Hagen volumes at http://www.poisonpenpress.com/cookery.html. Magennis can be hard to find and expensive. Try interlibrary loan for that one. Johnnae llyn Lewis Johnna Holloway Date: Fri, 24 May 2002 12:01:32 -0400 From: johnna holloway To: "sca-cooks at ansteorra.org" Subject: [Sca-cooks] Anglo-Saxon Here's a site on Anglo-Saxon cooking that I just came across... some nice photo's http://www.regia.org/feasting.htm Johnna Holloway Date: Wed, 19 Jun 2002 14:31:08 -0400 To: sca-cooks at ansteorra.org From: "Cindy M. Renfrow" Subject: [Sca-cooks] FWD: New Book information - TASTES OF ANGLO-SAXON ENGLAND Thought some of you might be interested... FWD from David Brown Book Co.: >I'm pleased to let you know about a new book that we are distributing: > >TASTES OF ANGLO-SAXON ENGLAND >by Mary Savelli > >This book is a carefully researched compendium of recipes from Early >Medieval Britain, each complemented with historical and source information. > >The first chapter provides an introduction to Anglo-Saxon cookery and >supplies background information about households, drinks, and cooking >techniques. Following are forty-six recipes enabling the reader to enjoy a >mix of ingredients and flavors that were widely known in Anglo-Saxon >England but are rarely experienced today. > >The recipes were recreated using written sources from the period, >supplemented by modern works of research and later medieval recipes. Each >recipe is introduced with information on its source and the book includes a >chart documenting all the ingredients used. > >Mary Savelli is an independent scholar from Dayton, OH. She has studied >Anglo-Saxon and Roman-British history at Wright State University and the >University of London. > >BINDING AND SIZE: 80 pages, Paperback available >PRICE: $7.95 >ISBN: 1-898281-28-9 >PUBLICATION DATE: July 2002 >READER INTEREST: Early Medieval England/Cooking >PUBLISHER: Anglo-Saxon Books >Ian Stevens >Vice-President >The David Brown Book Co >PO Box 511 >Oakville CT 06779 From: "Wanda Pease" To: Date: Sat, 24 Aug 2002 17:55:29 -0700 Subject: [Sca-cooks] TASTES OF ANGLO-SAXON ENGLAND We were talking about this book back in July. I went out of town for work and finally got and looked at my copy. If anyone is still thinking about purchasing a copy I don't recommend it. The author gives no original sources. She mentions that the Anglo Saxons left no cookbooks but it easy (!) to determine what they ate in general terms. She then goes on to combine those known foodstuffs into recipes in a manner we would all recognize as "well, they had the ingredients, so they could have put them together this way" cooking. I've used that approach in years past, and I'm sure other members of the list have too (and sometimes still do!). Still, it's disappointing. By the way, honeybutter is declared "Period" and a recipe given. Regina Romsey From: "Christine Seelye-King" To: Subject: RE: [Sca-cooks] TASTES OF ANGLO-SAXON ENGLAND Date: Sat, 24 Aug 2002 22:26:03 -0400 I haven't spent any time looking at the recipes yet, but I did spend some time reading it in the airport on the way home from Pennsic. Her bibiography is pretty good, and the text is heavily footnoted for references. Just from scanning through the list of books in her biblio, she does cover most of the sources that I was aware of, and several I wasn't. So, aside from taking the leap and preparing recipes from conjecture, I don't have much problem with her research at this point, but then, I haven't read through the whole thing yet, either. Christianna From: "Ro" To: Date: Sun, 25 Aug 2002 11:42:10 -0400 Subject: [Sca-cooks] Re: Tastes of Anglo-Sadon Engkand I would have to disagree with Regina on this one. The author lists a bibliography, makes available several pages of notes, and a list of both ingredients, with the modern name, the name in old English , the source for the name and what she used if the indicated ingredient was unavailable/toxic. She states in her intro that one of her goals was to produce recipes that an average cook could produce and a modern diner could enjoy She did so within the confines of archeological finds indicating available foodstuffs. In my opinion, she achieved her goals. Is this a cookbook I would base a feast on and bill it period? Not in the slightest. It is, IMHO, interesting, well done, the food produced is definitely peri-oid and more than worth the modest price tag. And it beats the stuffing (OFC) out of Fabulous Feasts.... Ro de Laci Bright Hills Cooks Guild From: "Rosine" To: Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] TASTES OF ANGLO-SAXON ENGLAND Date: Sun, 25 Aug 2002 15:33:47 -0400 > We were talking about this book back in July. > I went out of town for work and finally got and > looked at my copy. If anyone is still thinking about > purchasing a copy I don't recommend it. I agree - I bought a copy at Pennsic without really looking at the contents. She makes her recipes up, as she says, by combining what she knows from Roman and from post-1500 recipes with a heavy reliance on medical texts. When I saw her recommending "Delicious" apples for one dish, I was finished. > By the way, honeybutter is declared "Period" and a recipe given. Yes, as in "Honey butter was a staple table dish through the medieval period" or somesuch. I could go get my copy, but it doesn't deesrve the effort. Rosine Date: Thu, 24 Apr 2003 03:08:43 -0700 To: sca-cooks at ansteorra.org From: "Laura C. Minnick" Subject: [Sca-cooks] Anglo/Saxon source motherlode... Just found this- and yes, there's some jiffy keen food and food-related stuff. BIG bibliography. http://bubl.ac.uk/docs/bibliog/biggam/ http://www2.arts.gla.ac.uk/SESLL/EngLang/ihsl/projects/ASPNS/ bib.htm#Title 'Lainie Date: Mon, 23 Feb 2004 20:49:45 -0500 From: Johnna Holloway Subject: [Sca-cooks] New Anglo-Saxon Foods Book To: Cooks within the SCA , "mk-cooks at midrealm.org" I came across this new title and thought I would pass it on: Food in Anglo-Saxon England by Debby Banham. ISBN: 075242904 paperback 16.95 pounds Published by Tempus in the UK in February 2004. 176 75 b&w illustrations and 25 colour Description: Food in Anglo-Saxon England tells the story of what people ate and drank in England before the chages that have made our diet so sophisticated, varied and, paradoxically, homogeneous. Only very high-value goods such as spices and wine were imported into England at this time, so people were dependent upon native foods. This extensively illutrated book paints a vivid picture of the Anglo-Saxon diet, and includes recipes and a reconstruction of a typical Anglo-Saxon meal. Debby Banham is a higher education teacher and researcher,and specialises in medicine, diet and agriculture in Anglo-Saxon England. She lives in Cambridge. I did some searching and turned up that Dr. Banham helps with projects such as this work done with the Institute for the Historical Study of Language Anglo-Saxon Plant-Name Survey. --- ASPNS Bbliography 6: Agriculture & Food History http://www2.arts.gla.ac.uk/SESLL/EngLang/ihsl/projects/ASPNS/bib6.htm She also teaches some courses at Cambridge University. Amazon UK lists the book as being available in 4-6 weeks which indicates that they may have missed their publication target. http://www.tempus-publishing.com/home.asp is the UK site. Tempus in the US may be found at: http://www.arcadiapublishing.com/ They don't have a US date listed yet, but the UK stuff does come over evetually. Thought you all might find it interesting. Johnnae llyn Lewis Date: Wed, 12 Jan 2005 22:24:32 -0500 From: Robin Carroll-Mann Subject: [Sca-cooks] Leechdoms (was Mudthaw menu) To: Cooks within the SCA Ruth Tannahill wrote: > It's going to be an Anglo-Saxon feast. Not a lot of primary sources to draw > on, which is a bit of a bummer. I'd hoped to be able to access the Leechdoms > in the Old English Corpus, but I didn't get around to writing to Oxford in > time. There is a 3-volume book, "Leechdoms, wortcunning, and starcraft of early England: being a collection of documents... illustrating the history of science in this country before the Norman conquest", collected and edited by the Rev. Oswald Cockayn, 1864. All three volumes are online (and downloadable in PDF format) at the Biblioteque National de France. http://gallica.bnf.fr/ Click on "recherche", and type "leechdoms" in the "Mots de titre" window. It seems to have quite a few excerpts from original sources, including some which seem to be written in Old English. Don't know if it will help, but... -- Lady Brighid ni Chiarain Barony of Settmour Swamp, East Kingdom Date: Fri, 15 Jul 2005 17:29:06 -0400 From: Johnna Holloway Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Danelaw feast To: Cooks within the SCA Other works to look at-- Stephen Pollington's Leechcraft. Early English Charms Plantlore and Healing. 2000, 2003. Stephen Pollington's The Mead Hall. Feasting in Anglo-Saxon England.2003 Hugh Magennis' Anglo-Saxon Appetites. 1999. These ought to be able to be interlibrary loaned without much difficulty as they are all in print and sold in this country. You might want to try and see a copy of this UK publication-- AY8/4: Aspects of Anglo-Scandinavian York by R.A. Hall et al. A series of thematic essays by specialists on key aspects of evidence for Viking-Age York, including an historical introduction, documentary evidence, coinage, inscriptions, street names, art, craft activity, topography, animal bones, and plant and insect remains. 256pp; 68 illustrations ISBN 1 902771 42 7 That would answer the question of what's in the digs. Online publications of the York Archaeological Trust can be found at: http://www.yorkarchaeology.co.uk/ayw.htm You might also find this article interesting: http://www.sca.org.au/st_florians/university/library/articles-howtos/9 -12C_Norse_Food_AR070604.htm Johnnae > SNIPPED--This is predominately a > 9th Century Anglo-Saxon feast, though I believe it would be recognized > and enjoyed by all living within the area. I have pulled heavily upon > the work of Mary Savelli, who in turn pulled heavily upon the work of > Ann Hagen and Maggie Black. Period sources include: > Anthimus, De obseruatione ciborum, translated by Mark Grant > Ælfric, Colloquy, edited by Garmonsway > Bald's Leechbook, edited by Cockayne > Lacnunga, edited by Grattan and Singer > Medicina de quadrupedibus, edited by Vriend > Peri Didaxeon, edited by Löweneck > Recipes, edited by Cockayne > Comments? This is my first early period feast. I do not offend easily, > so please comment freely (like that is a problem on this list ;) ). > Aoghann Date: Sat, 16 Jul 2005 07:55:14 -0400 From: "a5foil" Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Danelaw feast To: , "Cooks within the SCA" Hagen says "The spices Bede left to his brethren are said to have included ... cardamom ('grains of paradise' so called because they were believed to float down the Nile from the earthly paradise) ..." This presents three problems. One is that Bede's list isn't necessarily a true picture of the availability of spices even in his own time. As a high-ranking churchman he might have received a gift of exotic spices that would not have been available through general trade. (And yes, a King could have received a similar gift, but I can bet you he would have reserved it for a high-table delicacy!) The second that the translator may or may not have got the word in the original text matched to the correct spice as we know it today, even discounting the confusion between cardamom and grains. And the third is that Bede, in 735, may have had access to spices that were no longer available in 975. When I cook early-period feasts, I try to stick to seasonings that would be locally grown and therefore in common use -- a variety of herbs plus coriander and cumin seed. I do use pepper, which seems to have been available through trade, but I don't use much -- a couple of teaspoons is more than enough for a feast for 80. Rosewater is one of those things for which there would be no archaeological evidence. Hagen mentions roses as possibly used "in composite dishes" and (in the section on beverages) "traditionally ... used to make teas and flower waters." If I were going to use roses in an early-period English dish, I would use the petals as a garnish. Cynara Date: Sat, 16 Jul 2005 12:20:52 -0400 From: Barbara Benson Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Danelaw feast To: Cooks within the SCA >> -- a variety of herbs plus coriander and cumin seed. > > Would you expand upon "a variety of herbs"? My modern pantry seems to > be far more Mediterranean and Asian than I had known. :) Firstly, the feast plan looks lovely - I cannot wait to help out and learn all of your tricks. (rubs hands). I have a couple of tidbits of information that I believe would be relevant, but I am unfamiliar with the specifics of early Anglo-Saxon. I will let you evaluate and decide. Both are decidedly earlier by a couple of centuries, but Charlemagne's Capitulare de villis was written to instruct the nobles of his kingdom what should be planted. I would expect that most of the items on his list would still be available a couple of centuries later, and in common gardens. At the same time period the idealized Plan of St. Gall monastery has similar, if reduced planting suggestions. I have complied lists of gardening plants listed in period references. It is an ongoing project, but both of the items I just mentioned have been added. For just Charlemagne's list go here: http://www.serenadariva.com/SCAGardeningPages/PlantLists/ CharlemagneLatin.xls and for a comparison which included St. Gall (and goes up into Renaissance) go here: http://www.serenadariva.com/SCAGardeningPages/PlantLists/Plantlists.xls Glad Tidings, --Serena da Riva Date: Sat, 16 Jul 2005 15:41:01 -0500 From: "Terry Decker" Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Danelaw feast To: "Cooks within the SCA" The problem I see with this is "grains of paradise" appears to be the author's comment rather than a statement of the inventory of the estate of the Venerable Bede. Also, there is argment as to whether the term "grains of paradise" was ever applied to cardamom. You might check the Florilegium for tha last big argument over this. After the fall of the Western Empire, exotic spices continued to be available in Europe as an import vi Byzantium, but they would have been expensive, difficult to obtain and it is likely they were used more as medicine than spice. It also occurs to me that Bede could have actually had Afromomum melegueata. Bede was a cleric just after the Celtic Church as absorbed by Rome. The Celtic Church had established missions into Africa and these were only just being overrun by Islam in Bede's day. While there is no evidence to support Bede having melegueta pepper, it is possible that some had made it to the British Isles by 735, but wouldn't be available in 975 due to the Islamic expansion. Bear Date: Sat, 16 Jul 2005 13:53:02 -0500 From: "otsisto" Subject: RE: [Sca-cooks] Danelaw feast To: "Cooks within the SCA" This is just a bit of trivia. I'm not sure if the will add to your knowledge on AS food. http://www.regia.org/flora.htm Lyse Date: Sat, 16 Jul 2005 22:44:56 -0700 (PDT) From: Kathleen Madsen Subject: [Sca-cooks] Cooking fats in period England To: sca-cooks at ansteorra.org They used a lot of clarified butter (ghee) as their cooking fat. It was typical to have a pot of it above or near the cooking area so that it could be quickly added to the pot if needed. This is referenced in Ann Hagen's books on foods in Anglo-Saxon England, if I remember right - I don't actually own a copy. I've seen it in another spot and am wracking my brain to remember where. If I recall, I'll post it. Also, I've never seen reference in period manuscripts to bread served with butter spread upon it. It seems more like a modern convention that is a society-wide practice. My thoughts, Eibhlin Date: Sat, 16 Jul 2005 23:52:23 -0700 From: Susan Fox Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Cooking fats in period England To: Cooks within the SCA On 7/16/05 10:44 PM, "Kathleen Madsen" wrote: > They used a lot of clarified butter (ghee) as their > cooking fat. It was typical to have a pot of it above > or near the cooking area so that it could be quickly > added to the pot if needed. Well, they did not call it by the Hindi word "ghee" and actually, ghee proper is also cooked beyond mere melting and clarification to impart a slightly nutty flavor. This does not stop me from keeping a jar of pre-packaged ghee by my stove, for use as you describe. Ancient Anglo-Saxons unfortunately had very few South Asian mini-marts in their neighborhoods. Selene Colfox Date: Thu, 23 Mar 2006 10:12:16 EST From: Devra at aol.com Subject: [Sca-cooks] Re: books again available - Hagen To: sca-cooks at ansteorra.org Speaking of reissues, David Brown now has copies of the Hagen Anglo-saxon food books, done up as one volume hardcover, costing $49.95. I don't think the separate volume paperbacks can be got[ten] any more. Devra Devra Langsam www.poisonpenpress.com Date: Tue, 09 Dec 2008 11:37:59 -0500 From: Johnna Holloway Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Request for resource help To: Cooks within the SCA Anglo-saxon Food & Drink by Ann Hagen combines her earlier titles: A Handbook of Anglo-Saxon Food and A Second Handbook of Anglo-Saxon Food & Drink. I also like Debby Banham's Food in Anglo-Saxon England. There's also: Anglo-Saxon Appetites: Food and Drink and Their Consumption in Old English and Related Literature by Hugh Magennis and Feasting the Dead by Christina Lee. You might want to check out the Regia Anglorum sites and links as they recreate this era. http://www.regia.org/ Johnnae Edited by Mark S. Harris fd-Anglo-Saxn-msg Page 14 of 15