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food-msg - 12/14/93

 

History and descript. of various foods.

 

NOTE: See also the files: food2-msg, fruits-msg, vegetables-msg, fish-msg, seafood-msg, bread-msg, cookbooks-msg, books-food-msg, eggs-msg.

 

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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

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From: FSRAD1%ALASKA.BITNET at MITVMA.MIT.EDU (The Barbarian Wench)

Date: 1 Sep 94 05:19:49 GMT

Organization: Society for Creative Anachronism

 

Greetings unto the Rialto,

I find it interesting that with all the mention of corn and potatoes,

no-one has explained the mention of corn during medeival times. There was

indeed "corn" in Europe and the British Isles, but not the corn we think

of today. Corn was the term used for whatever grain was the primary crop

in a given place. Threfore, corn in one area, might be barley, while in

another area it might be wheat. When white settlers came to the Americas,

the primary grain was maize, which they, of course, called corn. Maize

and it's descendant, sweet corn are most certainly not period, unless

someone wants to stretch the point and say that the Norsemen who landed

on North America were aquainted with it and therefore it might have been

brought back to the old world. To the best of my knowledge, this never

happened.

 

I remain your humble servant,

Amber the Restless

 

 

From: bloch at mandrill.ucsd.edu (Steve Bloch)

Date: 2 Jul 90 18:21:18 GMT

ewright at convex.com (Edward V. Wright) quoteth me:

>>sprinkle it back

>>into the cavity in alternating layers with melted butter, honey,

>>sugar, and a sprinkle of rosewater.

and doth complain:

>I am new to the SCA and, being violently allergic

>to roses, I think such foods are probably something best avoided.

I've never actually MADE the dish with rosewater, since I had no

access to it at the time.  I have a bottle of commercial rosewater in my cupboard now, but haven't tried it in anything.

 

I suspect this is generally true: there are numerous period recipes

that call for rosewater, but people don't always USE it.  Rosewater

may also appear not in the food but in finger-bowls or on scented

towels. But if you have strange allergies (like a friend of mine

from Atlantia who seemed to be allergic to every herb and spice known

to the sages), be sure to talk to the chef in advance to find out

what dishes have what in them.  Some other ingredients that appear

in SCA cookery but seldom in the cookery of 20th-century America:

 

hyssop (a kind of mint)

galyngale (a root, vaguely similar to ginger)

saffron (not unknown in these lands, but expensive enough that few

   actually use it)

cubeb (which I've seen described as a cross between pepper and allspice)

chervil (looks like oregano, has a "springlike" or "fresh" scent)

sandalwood (there are at least two varieties -- red and brown -- of

   which the former is used for coloring, the latter for scent)

murri (it's a long story, but any murri you find in SCA cookery

   probably contains anise or fennel, chopped nuts, carob, and I

   forget what else)

 

There are of course many more -- our forebears were more knowledgeable

about herbs and their uses than we in these benighted times -- but I

have with me neither my spice cabinet (which has all the above) nor my

shopping lists.

 

Oh, and watch out for whole cloves.  Our uses of them may not be what

you're accustomed to :-)

 

While we're talking about allergies, let's consider fabrics.  Most SCA

garb is of natural fibers, with occasional polyester to get a silk or

linen look without mortgaging the house.  In particular, wool is

common (increasing with latitude).  There is also a small, but

significant, amount of fabric dyed at home with woad, indigo, madder,

and various other natural vegetable dyes; I don't know how often these

cause allergic reactions.  Any dyers out there?  Allergenists?

--

Stephen Bloch

Joshua ibn-Eleazar ha-Shalib

>sca>Caid>Calafia>St.Artemas

bloch at cs.ucsd.edu

 

 

From: haslock at rust.zso.dec.com (Nigel Haslock)

Date: 14 Mar 91 20:13:38 GMT

Organization: DECwest, Digital Equipment Corp., Bellevue WA

 

Well, I looked it up.

 

       Sugar was 12 pence a pound for the lowest grade and the Baronesses

       household bought about 56 pounds in a 7 month period.

 

       I assume that this was loaf sugar and that fine powdered white

       sugar was more expensive.

 

       Almonds were 12 pence for 5 pounds and the household used 280 pounds

       over a 7 month period. Raisins were the same price.

 

       12 pence would buy 48 (1 pound) loaves of bread, or between 24 and

       36 gallons of beer, or roughly 200 pounds of barley, or roughly

       100 pounds of wheat. Milling the grain would cost you more.

 

       The commentary notes that molasses was being imported to England

       towards the end of the century.

 

               Fiacha

               Aquaterra, AnTir

 

 

From: ddfr at quads.uchicago.edu (david director friedman)

Date: 16 Mar 91 04:01:48 GMT

Organization: University of Chicago

 

"The commentary notes that molasses was being imported to England

towards the end of the century."  (Fiacha)

 

Molasses (British "treacle") is a byproduct of sugar refining.

According to C. Anne Wilson (Food and Drink in England) they were

originally used for medicinal purposes. At some point after sugar

started to be refined in England (which I think happened in the

sixteenth century), the supply of molasses outgrew the medicinal

demand and they started to be used in cooking. So the culinary use of

molasses in England would date from late sixteenth or early

seventeenth century. They might have been used earlier elsewhere, but

I do not think I have seen any period recipes that mention them.

 

       Flash: Old World Gourds Discovered (maybe)

 

As those of you interested in period cooking may know, "gourds"

present something of a puzzle. All of the

gourd/zucchini/squash/pumpkin kinds of things that you find in the

grocery store are New World plants--mostly varieties of Cucurbita

Pepo. But gourds are mentioned in period recipes from before 1492,

both European and Islamic, and there are even pictures of them in

"The Four Seasons of the House of Cerruti." One possible set of

candidates are the Lagenaria genus of gourds, which are apparently

both old and new world. Someone on the Rialto suggested to me the

Italian Edible gourds, which are apparently a Lagenaria and can be

found in some seed catalogs, but we have not yet tried to grow them.

 

Recently I discovered a new book on food in Chinese history which has

a very careful and scholarly discussion of gourds. Apparently the

Cucurbitae came into China from the New World, probably in the

sixteenth century. There are, however, several other gourds which

were used before then and are still used in Chinese cooking. One of

them, the Bottle Gourd, is a Lagenaria.

 

Having discovered this, Betty and I checked both of the Chicago

Chinatowns, carrying with us the book, with pictures of the various

gourds. We found a gourd that looks very much like the pictured

Bottle Gourd. Unfortunately, we do not know its Chinese name. Of the

clerks in the store, one thought that what they had was what our

picture showed and one thought that our picture showed something

similar that they sell in the summer.

 

Cariadoc

 

 

From: dmb at inls1.ucsd.edu (Doug Brownell)

Date: 20 Mar 91 22:23:17 GMT

Organization: Institute for Nonlinear Science

Newsgroups: rec.org.sca

 

Greetings unto the Rialto, and especially unto Renmhir de

Capsicum Inscendens, from Thomas Brownwell.

 

Joshua ibn Eleazar wrote:

>> I DO have primary-source

>> documentation for live (i.e. biological, rather than acid-base)

>> leavenings at least to the 13th century.

 

To which Renmhir replied:

What is the distinction between live sourdough and acid-base?  All of

the sourdough I've seen is "live" (you keep a little of the sponge from

each batch you make, keeping the yeasty liquid in a well-capped crock

or something...)

 

About a year ago Iulstan Sigwealding asked the net for

references to plants which produce natural leavenings, in

particular ammonium-something-or-other, since references to

the plant can be found in period.  The idea is that they

*did* have access to chemicals very similar to our baking

sodas, but didn't start using them as leavening agents until

probably the late 17th century (if memory serves me.  The

ammonium compound was used medicinally, but not in general

purpose baking).  I may be wrong, but I assumed these were

the 'acid based leavenings' Joshua was referring to.

 

Good day to all, and may your bread rise quickly.

 

Douglas M. Brownell                     |  Thomas Brownwell

Institute for Nonlinear Science, R-002  |  Anachronist (noun):

University of California, San Diego     |

La Jolla, CA 92093                      |  Out of time;

                                       |

Internet: dmb at inls1.ucsd.edu            |  Gotta go!

         dbrownell at ucsd.edu            |

 

 

From: sbloch at euclid.ucsd.edu (Steve Bloch)

Date: 24 Mar 91 06:43:10 GMT

Newsgroups: rec.org.sca

 

jprod at sagepub.com (Sister Kate) writeth:

> I like to serve honey with my bread, but it occurred to me recently that

> there may be a better way of doing it than surreptitiously handing out

> dollops from the jar. In what kind of dish would honey have been served?

> Does anyone know? Would it always have been served in the comb? Would it

> always have been clarified and poured?

 

My reading on the subject is largely from the cookbooks of al-Andalus.

I do not recall seeing mention of anything served with honey on the

side, but this is perhaps the sort of practice not worthy of mention

in such a scholarly cookbook.  There are, however, copious references

to "honey cleaned of its foam" ("miel limpia de su espuma" in the

Spanish, one translation closer to the original), both as an ingre-

dient in cooking and as a topping to be applied just before serving.

I presume this means the honey is to be not only pressed from the

comb, but clarified by boiling and skimming, before use.

 

Incidentally, said cookbooks not infrequently call for mixing honey

with melted butter and pouring this mixture over some sort of pastry.

(Yum!)

 

Stephen Bloch

Joshua ibn-Eleazar ha-Shalib

>sca>Caid>Calafia>St.Artemas

sbloch at math.ucsd.edu

 

 

From: ELDREDGE at ucf1vm.cc.ucf.EDU (Catherine Elizabeth)

Date: 4 Jun 91 14:31:49 GMT

Organization: The Internet

 

A period solution to the potato question is (ta-da) the PUDDING.  Although

we tend to think of Jello Instant when someone mentions pudding, the recipes

I have read (and tried a Christmas one) are not very sweet.  The Christmas

pudding was made festive by adding dates, and other dried fruits to the basic

bread or batter mixture. Bag puddings are cooked in a cloth bag suspended in

a pot of simmering "fair" (read clean) water.  Other puddings are cooked in

a "pudding basin" in the oven with a pan of water (like a modern custard).

If anyone is interested, I will post a few (no more than 4) period pudding

recipes from a source that I like to use for at least one dish in my feasts.

 

Catherine Elizabeth                        mka:  Mrs Cynthia Eldredge

Barony of Darkwater                              University of Central Florida

Kingdom of Trimaris                              Orlando, Florida

 

 

From: bnostrand at lynx.northeastern.EDU

Date: 4 Jun 91 22:51:15 GMT

Organization: The Internet

 

Unfortunately for Norsemen and women who wish to nosh on potatoes at their

feasts, the potatoe is indiginous to South America and was a staple of the

Incan Empire.  It was not to the best of my knowledge grown in the corn (maize)

growing region which extended from Central America to what is now central

Canada. However, their are plenty of other tubers to consider.  For example

Yams are indiginous to Africa and "yam" is derived from a Bantu word. There

are also varieties of beats, squash and radishes which are also alternatives.

There should be books available on what the norsemen actually ate.

 

                               Solveig Throndardottir

 

 

From: ddfr at quads.uchicago.edu (david director friedman)

Date: 6 Jun 91 00:52:08 GMT

Organization: University of Chicago

 

"However, their are plenty of other tubers to consider.  For example

Yams are indiginous to Africa and "yam" is derived from a Bantu word.

There are also varieties of beats, squash and radishes which are

also alternatives." (Solveig Throndardottir)

 

Squash (mostly varieties of Cucurbita Pepo) are New World. There are

edible gourds, however, mentioned in period cookbooks and even

pictured in The Four Seasons of the House of Cerruti. They may

possibly have been Lagenaria species. The Bottle gourd (Lagenaria

siceraria) is still used in Chinese cooking, and may be available

from your local chinese grocery store. I have also been told that the

Italian Edible Gourd, seeds for which are available from some seed

stores, is a Lagenaria.

 

Yams are a different situation. The Oxford English Dictionary gives

the origin of the word as uncertain, so your Bantu derivation may be

just a conjecture. The earliest uses (in English) are from the end of

the sixteenth century, in the context of travelers descriptions of

foreign foods.

 

The fact that yams were known in Africa in the late sixteenth century

does not answer the question of where they originated; by that time

several New World plants, introduced by the Portuguese into East

Africa early in the century, had become widely cultivated. According

to Food in China by Frederick J. Simoons, however, yams are old

world, and were being cultivated in South-east Asia at a very early

date--possibly before 8000 B.C.

 

The relevant question for Society cooks is not whether yams are new

world but whether they would have been served at the sort of feast we

are doing. For a normal Society feast (European pre-1600) I think the

answer is probably no--judging at least by the English quotes in the

OED, they were an exotic that a few people had heard of and almost

nobody had actually eaten. For a period Chinese feast, on the other

hand, if anyone ever does one, they would be entirely appropriate.

 

Cariadoc

 

 

From: martin at adpplz.UUCP (Martin Golding)

Date: 7 Jun 91 18:25:50 GMT

Organization: ADP Dealer Services R&D, Portland, OR

 

ddfr at quads.uchicago.edu (david director friedman) writes:

>The fact that yams were known in Africa in the late sixteenth century

>does not answer the question of where they originated; by that time

>several New World plants, introduced by the Portuguese into East

>Africa early in the century, had become widely cultivated. According

>to Food in China by Frederick J. Simoons, however, yams are old

>world, and were being cultivated in South-east Asia at a very early

>date--possibly before 8000 B.C.

 

This one I know about (I'm a food snob :-0 ):

 

The question of whether yams might have made it from Africa to Europe

before the 1600's is completely irrelevant. The thing sold in the

stores as yams is sweet potato. Period. Very occasionally, in some

obscure ethnic store, for way too much money, it is possible to get

real yams. They are substantially different from sweet potatoes, sticky,

starchy, and generally not particularly popular with anybody I've

inflicted them on. So even if "yams" are period, "yams" aren't what

people really mean when they say "yams".

 

For an alternative starch, is boiled grain (not just rice) period? I'm

reasonably sure it was popular in the middle east by then, but I have

no idea about western Europe. If so, you would all be quite pleased by

the flavor of rye cooked like rice.

 

Martin Golding  |  cross            cheerful

Dod #236        | CHILDREN          CHILDREN

               |   walk              ride

They tell me I'm {mcspdx,pdxgate}!adpplz!martin or martin at adpplz.uucp

 

 

From: trifid at agora.rain.com (Roadster Racewerks)

Date: 9 Jun 91 01:18:32 GMT

Organization: Open Communications Forum

 

Ah yes....frumenty!

 

Not quite what we would consider a direct substitute for potatoes.

 

"frumenty - hulled wheat boiled in milk, seasoned with sugar;" (Elizabethan

Renaissance; the life of the society). Rather more like what *we* think of as

breakfast food, although they ate it at supper.

 

(Sounds rather good, actually... :)

 

By the way, I don't know when this changed, but throughout much of period

*butter* was considered to be a worthless by-product only fit for peasantry!

 

From a later passage about excesses..."No doubt this was not true of the lowest

class that lived chiefly on 'white meats, i.e. milk, butter, and cheese,' "etc.

 

The writer goes on to say the usual lower-class diet also contained fowl, fish,

and other things, and was probably pretty healthy, and it sounds a lot better

than what the upper classes were doing! (Burp!)

 

I think I'll have frumenty for breakfast tomorrow...

 

NicMaoilan

trifid at agora.rain.com

 

 

From: ddfr at quads.uchicago.edu (david director friedman)

Date: 8 Jun 91 05:15:53 GMT

Organization: University of Chicago

 

"For an alternative starch, is boiled grain (not just rice) period?

I'm

reasonably sure it was popular in the middle east by then, but I have

no idea about western Europe." (Martin Golding)

 

1. You are correct about the Middle East. Harisa, which (in period)

is boiled wheat with meat and other stuff in it, appears in at least

three surviving period Islamic cookbooks.

 

2. Frumenty is a common dish in 14th-15th century western European

cookbooks, and is basically a wheat gruel.

 

Cariadoc

 

 

From: trifid at agora.rain.com (Roadster Racewerks)

Date: 10 Jun 91 02:07:24 GMT

Organization: Open Communications Forum

 

My copy of "The Medieval Machine" by Gimpel also mentions butter as being only

fit for the lower classes. It was, according to him, a substitute for refined

lard...the difference being that to get lard to refine, you *killed* the beast,

whereas the poor, who couldn't afford to slaughter so much, used butter (a

"renewable resource") more often. This doesn't mean the upper classes *never*

used butter, especially in cooking, but I often wonder if at least *some* of

our translations of recipes haven't been corrupted by some more modern cook's

sensibilities along the way.

 

(I appologize for not giving an exact quotation from "Machine". I seem to have

lent it out again...)

 

Anyway, this isn't the only place I've run across this remark about butter.

 

I'll try to post more references as I run across them...

 

NicMaoilan

trifid at agora.rain.com

 

 

From: sbloch at euler.ucsd.edu (Steve Bloch)

Date: 9 Jun 91 18:19:26 GMT

Organization: Mathematics  at  UCSD

 

trifid at agora.rain.com (Roadster Racewerks) writes:

>"frumenty - hulled wheat boiled in milk, seasoned with sugar;" (Elizabethan

>Renaissance; the life of the society). Rather more like what *we* think of as

>breakfast food, although they ate it at supper.

>(Sounds rather good, actually... :)

 

Yes, it is; I make frumenty perhaps every other day at Wars, usually

as a breakfast cereal, and not infrequently at home (the only problem

is, it takes longer to cook than Quaker Oats).  I usually use bulgur

wheat as the grain, and for sheer convenience at War I often cheat and

use dry milk powder.  (The fact that this is skim is no problem; at

least one period recipe for frumenty specifically tells you to skim

the milk.)

 

>By the way, I don't know when this changed, but throughout much of period

>*butter* was considered to be a worthless by-product only fit for peasantry!

 

In the Manuscrito Anonimo, a 13th-century Andalusian cookbook, it is

explained that butter is not used in "high cuisine", but is suitable

for various kinds of cakes, as well as "women's foods" (which I take

to mean ordinary, everyday stuff, not what a professional cook would

prepare for a feast).  (I anxiously await the direct Arabic trans-

lation Charles Perry's working on, which should clarify this.)

--

Stephen Bloch

mar-Joshua ibn-Eleazar ha-Shalib

>sca>Caid>Calafia>St.Artemas

sbloch at math.ucsd.edu

 

 

From: ddfr at quads.uchicago.edu (david director friedman)

Date: 10 Jun 91 15:39:22 GMT

Organization: University of Chicago

 

"This doesn't mean the upper classes *never* used butter, especially

in cooking, but I often wonder if at least *some* of our translations

of recipes haven't been corrupted by some more modern cook's

sensibilities along the way." (NicMaoilan, defending her claim that

butter was looked down on as food of the lower classes against my

point that it appears frequently in period upper class cookbooks.)

 

I cannot guarantee that no translations have ever been corrupted, but

two of the sources I checked for my posting were originals, not

translations. They were written in English, so unless you want to

argue that the words "butter" (Proper Newe Booke) and "buttur" (Form

of Cury) really mean "refined lard," I am afraid your explanation

does not solve the problem.

 

If you really want, I can check what the words are in Latin (Platina)

and French (Menagier), but I doubt it is worth it. Published worked

out recipes (secondary sources) are frequently unreliable in the way

you suggest, but in the case of a straight translation of a period

source it takes a pretty incompetent translator to routinely change

"lard" into "butter." And since butter appears in lots of different

period sources, English and translated, it takes lots of incompetent

translators plus incompetent editors of the English manuscripts,

which does not sound very likely.

 

"Anyway, this isn't the only place I've run across this remark about

butter." (NicMaoilan)

 

So far the evidence you have offered is what you remember reading in

secondary sources. Given a conflict between a conclusion in a

secondary source and the actual evidence of a primary source (period

cookbooks), I think the latter is to be preferred. If you could find

the evidence on which the secondary source's conclusion is based,

preferably in the form of quotations from primary sources, that would

be another matter--we could then evaluate the evidence on both sides.

In my experience, there are a number of statements about the Middle

Ages that are routinely repeated and provably false. The best example

is the claim that forks were not used in the Middle Ages, or were not

used until late in our period, or ... (many variants). You can find

it lots of places, but it is provably false. I have a pamphlet from

the V&A which discusses the history of forks in some detail,

including a copy of the earliest known picture of people eating with

them. As I recall it is about twelfth century.

 

Another example, discussed earlier on the Rialto, is the claim that

knights in full plate were essentially immobile, had to be hoisted

onto their horses, etc. Another which I suspect to be false is the

claim that medieval food was routinely overspiced to hide the flavor

of rotten meat. Whether your statement about butter is one of these I

don't know--it is possible that was true of some period cultures at

some times but not of others at other times. Assertions without

evidence are better than nothing, but not much better.

 

Cariadoc

 

 

From: atterlep at vela.acs.oakland.edu (Somebody Else)

Date: 10 Jun 91 20:17:23 GMT

Organization: Oakland University, Rochester MI.

 

ddfr at quads.uchicago.edu (david director friedman) writes:

>Another [commonly repeated statement] which I suspect to be false is the

>claim that medieval food was routinely overspiced to hide the flavor

>of rotten meat. Whether your statement about butter is one of these I

>don't know--it is possible that was true of some period cultures at

>some times but not of others at other times. Assertions without

>evidence are better than nothing, but not much better.

 

In the second edition of "Food in History," Reay Tannahill suggests that

medieval food was heavily spiced not to mask a rotten taste, but to mask the

taste of the preservatives (salt and smoke) that were used to keep the food

from being rotten.  She cites as evidence not only the heavy use of spices but

the instructions for soaking meat to get out the taste of salt.

Another theory she mentions is that medieval people used many spices because

they were unusual and expensive (and therefore a sign of wealth when used in

quantity.)

 

                       Lord Alan Fairfax Aluricson

                       Canton of the Riding of Hawkland Moor

                       Barony of Northwoods, Midrealm

                       atterlep at vela.acs.oakland.edu

 

 

From: ddfr at quads.uchicago.edu (david director friedman)

Date: 11 Jun 91 02:28:31 GMT

Organization: University of Chicago

 

" In the second edition of "Food in History," Reay Tannahill

suggests that medieval food was heavily spiced not to mask a rotten

taste, but to mask the taste of the preservatives (salt and smoke)

that were used to keep the food from being rotten.  She cites as

evidence not only the heavy use of spices but the instructions for

soaking meat to get out the taste of salt." (Lord Alan Fairfax

Aluricson)

 

The first question is whether the food was heavily spiced. Period

recipes usually do not give quantities, so it requires a good deal of

effort to figure out how much of the spices they used. I do not know

of anyone who has put together enough of such information to justify

a solid conclusion. I did some estimates based on Du Fait de Cuisine

(15th c. French), which starts with a shopping list including

quantities; that makes it possible to estimate ratios of spice to

meat for the whole feast, although not for individual dishes. The

result was about one unit of spice (all spices combined) to a hundred

of meat (by weight) for the whole feast. That is similar to the ratio

in our worked out period recipes, which were done basically to our

taste (since the originals did not have quantities).

 

My impression is that most of the talk about overspiced food is by

people who have read a few recipes, have not cooked them, and are

simply going by the list of what spices were used (often combinations

that are not standard in modern cooking). Certainly salted meat and

fish were used, but if that were the reason for the spicing you would

expect to see a difference between spicing in recipes that used those

and spicing in recipes that used fresh meat, and so far as I know

there is none. Does Tannahill offer any evidence, or merely a

conjecture?

 

Cariadoc

 

 

From: trifid at agora.rain.com (Roadster Racewerks)

Date: 13 Jun 91 09:03:04 GMT

Organization: Open Communications Forum

 

Butter is/isn't period. As your source noted, butter is for women. And peasants.

It probably made high table during Elizabeth's reign, but probably not at her

father's feasts (except as an ingredient of baked goods, <probably baked by

*mere* women> ;-) There are several references that state butter was for peasantfolk, but I've yet to see one that pinpoints *when* this view began to change,

and butter became "respectable" again. Elizabeth's reign would be a *likely*

time, but so far, no real evidence... Meanwhile, I'm not spreading *my* bread

with lard! ;-)

 

NicMaoilan, (this space for rent)

trifid at agora.rain.com

 

 

From: perkins at msupa.pa.msu.EDU ("corpusculorum velocium perexiguorum

Date: 12 Jun 91 16:05:15 GMT

Organization: The Internet

 

> My copy of "The Medieval Machine" by Gimpel also mentions butter as being only

> fit for the lower classes. It was, according to him, a substitute for refined

> lard...the difference being that to get lard to refine, you *killed* the beast

> whereas the poor, who couldn't afford to slaughter so much, used butter (a

> "renewable resource") more often. [...]

> (I appologize for not giving an exact quotation from "Machine". I seem to have

> lent it out again...)

 

Since, from her post, NicMaoilan doesn't have her copy nearby (and I do),

here is the information:

 

Jean Gimpel, _The_Medieval_Machine:_The_Industrial_Revolution_of_the_

Middle_Ages_, 1976.  First published in French under the title _La_Revo-

lution_Industrielle_du_Moyen_Age_. USA Publication:  Holt, Rinehart and

Winston, New York 1976 and (the paperback copy I have) Penguin Books 1977,

which has ISBN 0 14 00.4514 7 ; Lib of Cong Card Cat Num HC41.G5 1977 ; and

is categorized under the Dewey Decimal System as 330.902.

 

I have been looking through it and find no mention of butter vs refined

lard in the manner of NicMaoilan's comment above;  I've read through the

sections on agriculture, food & diet and skimmed the rest of the book,

to no avail... Perhaps she is remembering a quotation from another book;

or perhaps (though I doubt it) Gimpel makes this particular point in some

other section of the book  (Mining, Engineering, Environment & Pollution,

Labor Conditions, Clocks, Experimental Science, etc.).

 

---------------------------------------------------------------------

Jeremy de Merstone       George J Perkins    perkins at msupa.pa.msu.edu

North Woods, MidRealm    East Lansing, MI    perkins at msupa (Bitnet)

-------------------------------------------------------------

 

 

From: trifid at agora.rain.com (Roadster Racewerks)

Date: 11 Jun 91 04:41:01 GMT

Organization: Open Communications Forum

 

Please forgive me, Milord Cariadoc. I suppose it is my clumsy way with quotation

marks. The quotation from "The Elizabethan Renaissance:[etc]" was a quote within

a quote. The actual words are the words of William Harrison, a gentleman of

her Majesty's court, not the author of the book. The reference is from said

worthy's own papers.

 

As another gentle posted, this did not preclude it from appearing in the cooking

of mere women of any class...

 

NicMaoilan

trifid at agora.rain.com

 

 

From: sbloch at euler.ucsd.edu (Steve Bloch)

Date: 13 Jun 91 16:25:26 GMT

 

cctimar at athena.cas.vanderbilt.edu (Charles de Mar) writes:

>although in some part of Spain in the reign

>of Their Majesties Ferdinand and Isabel the Catholic the food of nobles

>may with lard have been cooked, woe betide that cook that dared to use

>lard in the dishes he served to the Moslem Emirs of Spain in three hundred

>years before!  (Mayhap, in those days the oil of olives was preferred.)

 

Olive oil and sesame oil were in fact commonly used in al-Andalus.

So is butter (my earlier post that "butter was not used in haute

cuisine" is a bit of an interpretation, based on a fuzzy transla-

tion, so don't take it as Gospel).  There are also numerous references

to "fat" or "grease", presumably either from the animal you're cooking

anyway, or from "tail", extracted from fat-tailed sheep.  I suspect

one could make a close equivalent of pork-lard from cattle or sheep.

--

Stephen Bloch

mar-Joshua ibn-Eleazar ha-Shalib

>sca>Caid>Calafia>St.Artemas

sbloch at math.ucsd.edu

 

 

From: ddfr at quads.uchicago.edu (david director friedman)

Date: 13 Jun 91 23:10:54 GMT

Organization: University of Chicago

 

"I regret not being better researched, but I did notice in the

controversy over whether butter was used in upper class cooking that

NicMaolin was using southern/Spanish sources while Cariodoc seemed to

be using northern/English source"  (Lyelf the Lame)

 

As NicMaolin has already pointed out, the evidence she cited

concerned England, not southern Europe. Of the four cookbooks I

cited, one was southern (Platina). Since most of the cookbooks I am

familiar with are English, French, or Islamic, and I was not looking

in the Islamic ones, on the theory that they were irrelevant to the

argument, that provides no evidence for a North/South difference.

Since my previous posting, I have also found butter in a fifteenth

century Portuguese cookbook.

 

"Butter is/isn't period. As your source noted, butter is for women.

And peasants   It probably made high table during Elizabeth's reign,

but probably not at her father's feasts (except as an ingredient of

baked goods, <probably baked by *mere* women> ;-) There are several

references that state butter was for peasan,  and butter became

"respectable" again." (NicMaoilan)

 

1. What makes you think that baking was done primarily by women?

 

2. So far, the only evidence you have offered for your thesis is an

Elizabethan quote that seems to be saying that lower income people

ate butter, cheese, etc. instead of meat, not that upper income

people did not eat butter. I think I have demonstrated that butter

was used in upper class cooking (i.e. it is in lots of recipes in

period cookbooks).

 

In your original posting, you seemed to be saying that butter was not

used in upper class cooking--at least, you suggested translation

errors as an explanation for my examples of its use. Is what you are

now saying that, as several other people have suggested, butter was

used in upper class cooking but was not used as a spread?

 

If so, I think you are still overstating the case somewhat. I offer

the following evidence:

 

Menagier de Paris (late fourteenth C.) describes a number of feasts

in some detail. The only relevant comment I could find, in a

description of a wedding feast, was:

 

"Platter: butter, none, because it is a meat day."

 

That seems to suggest that butter would be on the table on days when

meat was forbidden but milk was not.

 

C. Anne Wilson, "Food and Drink in Britain," says:

 

"A cold pie was a means of preserving fish, so such pies were filled

up with clarified butter which set and excluded the air. Medieval

rents were sometimes paid in eel pies; and twenty-four herring pies

made of the first fresh herrings of the season ... were rendered

annually to the king by the city of Norwich." That seems to imply

that the king of England was accustomed to have butter on his table,

although not necessarily on his bread.

 

It is a bit beside the point, but she quotes Pliny as saying that

among the barbarians (probably the Celts) "they considered butter

their choicest food, 'the one that distinguishes the wealthy from the

lower orders'..."

 

"Children were given 'bread smeared with butter in the Flemish

fashion', as a Venetian visitor to England noted shortly before 1500."

 

That suggests that buttered bread was common in Flanders, exotic in

Venice, and restricted to children in England.

 

"The poor ate much butter with bread and also with herbs. The

well-to-do viewed it more cautiously, ... . Proverbially, butter was

gold in the morning, silver at noon and lead at night, so that

breakfast was the most suitable meal at which to eat it.

 

It was however taken as an aperitif before dinner along with ... .

And despite the warnings of the physicians it was eaten extensively

upon fish days."

 

Talking about "the pattern of butter consumption among the

well-to-do," she writes:

 

"On ordinary fast days the fish could be fried in clarified butter,

while sweet butter supplied a sauce for salt fish, stockfish, .. .

Alternatively bread and one or more dishes of butter were laid upon

the table to be eaten with the fasting day fish."

 

and finally

 

"Nevertheless butter appeared in a relatively small proportion of the

dishes in medieval recipe books, which were written mainly for and by

the cooks of the nobility. It was only in Tudor times that an

emerging middle class, which did not despise butter as the food of

the por, began to use it liberally in every possible sphere of

cookery, setting a trend that ... "

 

All of these quotations are from C. Anne Wilson. Assuming, as I do,

that she is a reliable source (I have never caught her in a mistake,

and she gives her sources), the conclusions seems to be:

 

1. Butter was used in cooking by upper class people, but not nearly

as much as it came to be used by the middle class starting in the

sixteenth century.

 

2. Physicians thought that butter was bad for you, especially eaten

late in the day, but...

 

3. Upper class people in fact ate it, not only in baked dishes and

the like but also in fish pies, as a sauce, and on bread on fast days

(of which there were a lot).

 

All of this applies only to England. The suggestion that butter was

not served because it was a meat day in the Menagier quote I gave

earlier suggests a similar pattern for France. The comment about

Flanders suggests that buttered bread was common there c.

1500--assuming the Venetian in question knew what he was talking

about.

 

Someone asked what you did with bread if you did not put butter on

it. Le Menagier mentions fried bread slices and bread crusts in milk

with sugar.

 

"I would like to know if melons and/or gourds were cultivated

anywhere in Medieval Europe and if so what kinds." (Morwenna of

Western Sea)

 

1. All of the squashes, pumpkins, and gourds now commonly used belong

to three species native to the New World (see Whitaker, below, for a

discussion).   However, we know that there was some kind of gourd

used in Europe before Columbus, both from pictures and from recipes.

One possible candidate is the white-flowered gourd, Lagenaria

siceraria, which is native to the Old World and has been cultivated

for food.  We have been told that the Italian Edible Gourd is a

species of Lagenaria and is available from, among others, J. L.

Hudson, Seedman (P. O. Box 1058, Redwood City, CA 94064 (we have not

yet gotten any).  Also, we recently found that the Chinese bottle

gourd is Lagenaria siceraria (Simoons, p. 152) and that gourds which

look very much like the pictures in the book are available in a

Chinatown grocery storeQand taste good in 15th century Italian

recipes for gourd.  (We are not entirely sure we have the right sort

of gourd, given that the Chinese grocery used only Chinese names.)All

of the squashes, pumpkins, and gourds now commonly used belong to

three species native to the New World (see Whitaker, below, for a

discussion).   However, we know that there was some kind of gourd

used in Europe before Columbus, both from pictures and from recipes.

One possible candidate is the white-flowered gourd, Lagenaria

siceraria, which is native to the Old World and has been cultivated

for food.  We have been told that the Italian Edible Gourd is a

species of Lagenaria and is available from, among others, J. L.

Hudson, Seedman (P. O. Box 1058, Redwood City, CA 94064 (we have not

yet gotten any).  Also, we recently found that the Chinese bottle

gourd is Lagenaria siceraria (Simoons, p. 152) and that gourds which

look very much like the pictures in the book are available in a

Chinatown grocery storeQand taste good in 15th century Italian

recipes for gourd.  (We are not entirely sure we have the right sort

of gourd, given that the Chinese grocery used only Chinese names.)

(by Elizabeth, excerpted from a forthcoming article).

 

2. A variety of melons were grown in al-Islam, I think including

water melon. I am not sure, but would guess they would have been

grown in suitable climates in Europe.

 

3. "The Four Seasons of the House of Cerruti" is a reprint of a

period treatise on footstuffs and other things, including pictures of

some of the period gourds and melons.

 

Cariadoc

 

 

From: justin at inmet.inmet.COM (Justin du Coeur MKA Mark Waks)

Date: 14 Jun 91 16:55:35 GMT

Organization: The Internet

 

Margaret asks:

>or do we view and consume bread in the society in a totally modern

>fashion? Perhaps we should use bread more as trenchers and sops rather

>that as something you eat by itself with a spread on it.

 

One alternative that Cariadoc didn't mention in his wonderfully

encyclopaedic article on bread & butter (for which I greatly thank him)

is rastyns. This was a somewhat sweetened bread, which one baked, then

cut off the top, tore out the insides, mixed them with some butter, and

replaced in the bread, then rebaked a little. (Assuming I'm remembering

Cury on Inglish correctly.)

 

We've done this at a number of Carolingian feasts in the past five years,

and it's always been a hit. We've usually cheated and used commercial bread

dough -- one of these days, I'm going to make a batch from scratch, and see

what it tastes like properly sweetened...

 

(Question for those who've done some real period baking: what sort of

flour would be most appropriate for a period bread? Is there a commercial

type of flour that is reasonably similar to period flours? I'm more a

main-dish person than a baker, so I don't know much about this issue...)

 

                               -- Justin du Coeur

 

 

From: sbloch at euler.ucsd.edu (Steve Bloch)

Date: 15 Jun 91 15:05:07 GMT

 

ddfr at quads.uchicago.edu (david director friedman (Cariadoc)) quotes

NicMaoilan:

>"Butter is/isn't period. As your source noted, butter is for women.

>And peasants   It probably made high table during Elizabeth's reign,

>but probably not at her father's feasts (except as an ingredient of

>baked goods, <probably baked by *mere* women> ;-) (NicMaoilan)

 

and questions:

>1. What makes you think that baking was done primarily by women?

 

(David has omitted discussions of Islamic sources as not pertinent to

the original question.  I shall not, since I've spent more time with

them than with English or French sources and am thus more familiar

with them.)

 

In the anonymous Andalusian cookbook, the majority of references to

specific cooks are to men, but several women are mentioned (not

usually by name, but e.g. "the wife of so-and-so invented this dish")

I have also read of (male) Caliphs and Amirs who cooked for themselves;

this is unusual, by the context, but what's unusual seems to be that

such an eminent person doesn't depend entirely on servants, rather

than that a respectable male cooks.  Charles Perry, translating said

cookbook from the Arabic, basically accepts my translation that

 

"butter is not employed in kitchen dishes because it is only used in

the various kinds of _rafis_ and in some cakes, and in similar foods

of [made by?] women.  It is needed for its oil, over which it quickly

forms a dry crust, and for spicy or vinegary things so that it may cut

their sharpness and make them soft and smooth, and do them great

benefit,"

 

but deletes my comment "[made by?]" and reassures "certain dishes

were considered to be for women."  He also says the "butter" in this

paragraph is specifically "clarified butter".  (Anyone who's made ghee

will recognize the description of a "dry crust" forming over the "oil"

of butter.)

From the same source...

 

"Many people eat butter, and add it to bread, while others cannot

bear to smell it, much less to eat it...."

 

It's not clear whether "add it to bread" means spreading it, or just

putting butter into the dough.  I have seen no unambiguous references

to spreading butter, but many to making dough with butter.  One

example, which is called "A Pie made with Butter", calls for three

pounds of flour and one of butter.  It also calls for leaving the

dough to "ferment", presumably "rise", but (a) it doesn't specifically

mention adding yeast, and (b) a dough with that much butter doesn't

rise much.

--

Stephen Bloch

mar-Joshua ibn-Eleazar ha-Shalib

>sca>Caid>Calafia>St.Artemas

sbloch at math.ucsd.edu

 

 

From: sbloch at euler.ucsd.edu (Steve Bloch)

Date: 15 Jun 91 14:16:38 GMT

 

grm+ at andrew.cmu.edu (Gretchen Miller) writes:

>"we know it was used in cooking, but aren't too sure

>about its use as a spread"

>So, (to get to the question part), what spreads WERE used?  Cream

>cheese? Jelly? Meat paste?

>or do we view and consume bread in the society in a totally modern

>fashion? Perhaps we should use bread more as trenchers and sops rather

>that as something you eat by itself with a spread on it.

 

I haven't specifically researched this, but I don't recall EVER seeing

a period reference to spreading something on bread.  In fact, I

believe the slicing of bread (other than for trenchers) was a late-

period development; I think there are some English laws pertaining to

it.

At feasts, I don't slice bread, nor spread things on it; I either eat

it out of hand with a chunk of cheese, or use it for sops and trenchers.

--

Stephen Bloch

mar-Joshua ibn-Eleazar ha-Shalib

>sca>Caid>Calafia>St.Artemas

sbloch at math.ucsd.edu

 

 

From: cctimar at athena.cas.vanderbilt.edu (Cary Timar)

Date: 14 Jun 91 22:30:11 GMT

Organization: Vanderbilt U. Student of Numerology

 

To all the fishers upon the Rialto doth Charles de Mar send greetings.

 

Justin du Coeur hath written thus:

> (Question for those who've done some real period baking: what sort of

> flour would be most appropriate for a period bread? Is there a commercial

> type of flour that is reasonably similar to period flours? I'm more a

 

Disclaimer: I have been making an approximation of period bread, but I

cannot claim to be an authority.  Any fact below may be a misguess on my

part, or a misremembering.  The information given is based on a book,

English Bread and Yeast Cookery, (whose author I shall look up when I get

home) which mentions period techniques, but mostly begins with the

Elizabethan era.  I do not have the book with me, so I may not be

representing it fairly.

 

Of commercially available flours, I believe that unbleached white flour

(not self-rising or cake flour) is most appropriate for the bread of the

upper classes (manchet, I believe).  For more humble bread, mix this with

whole wheat flour and, optionally, a little rye flour, barley flour, oat

meal, mashed turnips, or anything else that would help to make your flour

last a little longer.

 

In fact, the difference between the different grades of flour was really

that the nobility had their flour ground finer, but you can't accomplish

this unless you are very good friends with a miller.

 

For greater authenticity, you might try importing flour from Europe.

There are significant differences in "hardness" between wheat from

Britain, France, and America, and this affects the final product.

 

Also, a note on yeast: bakers' yeast (what you can get today) was

introduced into most of Europe from Hungary (I think) in the 19th century.

Beer yeast had been in use as a leaven in many beer-drinking countries

from the middle of period, but yeast was not used in France until roughly

1600. The French relied on the flour, when wet, to ferment by itself (it

takes 3-6 days in warm weather, and sometimes stinks).

 

       -- Charles de Mar, student of numerology, that baketh his own bread

 

 

From: kinsey at worf.nas.nasa.gov (Cassandra L. Kinsey)

Date: 16 Oct 91 23:02:37 GMT

Organization: Numerical Aerodynamic Simulation Facility NASA

 

Greetings dear gentles

 

donita at iWarp.intel.com (Donita Thompson) writes:

|> Okay, I'll bite.  Why is it that you can't serve potatoes and tomato sauce

|> at a feast?  

|>

|> Time to jump into the water.  Hi.  I'm a newbie.

 

Glad to see you like the water. I still consider myself a newbie after 2 years.

 

In answer to your question (I learned this at West's Arts & Sciences last July)

the potato and tomatoe are both members of the deadly nightshade family.

People

in period new this fact.  Most poisonous plants are poisonous on all parts of

the plants, but there are a few exception such as the potato and tomatoe.  Only

the ripe root of the potato plant is not poisonous and only the fruit ofthe

tomatoe plant is not poisonous.  You can get very sick eating the greens of

either of these plants, in fact never feed a potato with any green spots on it

to a toddler or an infant they may die from it, the green part contains a neuro-

toxin. Hence, since people in period new they were poisonous plants why

on earth would they ever want to eat them :)

 

|> Most Sincerely,

|> Donita Thompson                                      donita at iwarp.intel.com

 

Euriol of Lothian

Province of Southern Shores

 

 

From: ddfr at quads.uchicago.edu (david director friedman)

Date: 17 Oct 91 05:38:09 GMT

Organization: University of Chicago

 

Donita Thompson asks "Why is it that you can't serve potatoes and

tomato sauce at a feast?"

 

Euriol of Lothian answers "In answer to your question (I learned this

at West's Arts & Sciences last July) the potato and tomatoe are both

members of the deadly nightshade family. ...  Hence, since people in

period new they were poisonous plants why on earth would they ever

want to eat them"

 

This is wrong twice over. The reason that tomatoes and potatoes are

inappropriate in a medieval feast is that both come from the new

world, and were therefore unavailable in Europe until after Columbus.

While some people at some point may have believed they were poisonous

(or aphrodisiac--I have seen both claims), tomatoes were being eaten

in Italy by the mid sixteenth century and potatoes in England by

about the end of the century. They do not seem to have gone into use

any more slowly than other new world foods, such as corn, squash and

peanuts, which are not members of the nightshade family.

 

It is unclear, at least to me, whether either potatoes or tomatoes

(or corn, or peanuts, or chili peppers, or ...) are appropriate at an

SCA feast. All were probably being eaten by someone somewhere in

Europe before 1600. On the other hand, they would presumably have

been rare exotics at first, and I do not know how soon they became

sufficiently common so that they might plausibly have been served at

feasts.

 

A further problem is the lack of recipes. Off hand, I cannot think of

any period recipes for any of the New World foodstuffs I have listed,

although there are seventeenth century recipes for some of them. A

further consideration is that these are foods you can eat plenty of

in the 20th century. It is more interesting, if one is going to do

period cooking, to concentrate on the things that were different,

instead of looking for excuses to include modern foods that were just

coming into use at the end of our period.

 

The botanical question seems to be somewhat complicated. According to

my Webster's (Second edition) there are three different groups of

plants called nightshade: Solanum, Henbane, and Belladonna. The

Solanum genus includes potatoes and eggplants. Belladonna (Atropa

Belladonna) is the deadly nightshade.

 

According to my (11th edition) Britannica, Belladonna is in the same

order as Solanum, so that does give us some connection between potato

and deadly nightshade, although a rather distant one. Also, according

to the Britannica, there is a common Solanum species whose berries

are at least somewhat poisonous, which gives us an old world

poisonous plant closely related to the potato. On the other hand,

eggplants are an old world food plant eaten long before potatoes

arrived, which makes the idea that people thought anything in the

Solanum genus was poisonous seem somewhat implausible.

 

Can anyone better informed on matters botanical correct or expand on

my very superficial researches?

 

Cariadoc

 

 

From: ddfr at quads.uchicago.edu (david director friedman)

Date: 18 Oct 91 23:41:57 GMT

Organization: University of Chicago

 

"I am not sure of the exact time when they did start eating them but

it probably wasn't until a firm trade route began between the old and

new world, so probably in the late 17th to early 18th century."

(Euriol of Lothian on Potatoes and Tomatoes)

 

The earliest reference I know of to eating tomatoes is mid-sixteenth

century, in Italy, fried. Potatoes start showing up in English

cookbooks and literary references about 1600; I do not know if they

were eaten substantially earlier elsewhere. References available on

request. As I commented earlier, tomatoes and potatoes do not seem to

have gone into common use any more slowly than other New World foods.

 

Cariadoc

 

 

From: klier at iscsvax.uni.edu

Date: 19 Oct 91 02:49:18 GMT

Organization: University of Northern Iowa

 

kinsey at worf.nas.nasa.gov (Cassandra L. Kinsey) writes:

> I am not sure of the exact time when they did start eating them but it probably

> wasn't until a firm trade route began between the old and new world, so

> probably

> in the late 17th to early 18th century.  The Mistress who was teaching

> the class

> (I have forgotten her name) said that there was I believe a Baron in Poland who

> actually held his peasants at gunpoint to plant potato fields, placed

> armed guards

> around the fields to prevent the peasants from burning the crop and then held

> them at gunpoint to eat the potatos after they had been cooked.  After the

> peasants had eaten them and realized they weren't going to get sick there was

> no problems afterwards growing the crop.

Pizarro and his merry band of hooligans undoubtedly encountered potatoes in

the 1530's in Peru.  Apparently the Spanish took some back to Spain as

boat rations, and started growing them there.  They were independently

introduced into England (some say by Sir Walter Raleigh, some by Sir Francis

Drake), and spread from there to the rest of Europe.  The Scots refused to

eat potatoes because they weren't mentioned in the bible; leprosy,

tuberculosis, and rickets were all attributed to eating potatoes.   Gerard

(of Gerard's Herball fame) mentions that they were planted at Jamestown in

1597. This attribution is apparently in error -- they probably grew

sweet potato (Ipomoea, of the Convolvulaceae, an entirely different family

of plants).

 

Tomatoes are probably native to the northern Andes, but had spread to

Mexico by the time of the Conquistadores.  Apparent routes in Europe

were to Spain, Italy and other Mediteranean areas: it was first grown as

an ornamental.  The French grew it in the 1600's, called it "Pomme d'amour",

and thought it was poisonous.

 

Kay Klier  Biology Dept  UNI

 

 

From: ciaran at aldhfn.UUCP (Skip Watson)

Date: 20 Oct 91 05:08:27 GMT

Organization: Auldhaefen Associates

 

Unto the gentles of the Rialto doth Lord Ciaran Fionn MacCuillean send

greetings!

 

Another good source for period plants and foods is The Herbal or General

Historie of Plants by John Gerard. A facsimilie reprint of the 1633

edition is available from Dover Publications. The 1633 edition has a list

of all the plants that were added to the 1597 editon. This makes it easy

to tell which were and which weren't period.

 

According to Gerard both tomatoes and potatoes were being eaten at the end

of the period.

 

Red tomatoes were known as Apples of Love and yellow tomatoes were known

as Golden Apples.

"Apples of Love grow in Spaine, Italie, and such hot countries, from

whence my selfe have recieved feeds for my garden, where they do increase

and prosper."

"In Spaine and those hot Regions they use to eat the Apples prepared and

boiled with pepper, salt, and oile: but they yield very little nourishment

to the bodie, and the same nought and corrupt."

"Likewise they doe eat the Apples with oile, vinegar, and pepper mixed

together for sauce to their meat, even as we in these cold Countries doe

Mustard."

 

They had both types of potatoes, sweet potatoes (yams) and white potatoes.

"This plant (which is called of some Sisarum Peruvuvianum, or Skyrrets of

Peru) is generally of us called Potatus, or Potatoes."

"The Potato roots are among the Spaniards, Italians, Indians, and many

other nations common and ordinarie meate; which no doubt are of mighty and

nourishing parts, and do strengthen and comfort nature, whose nutriment is

as it were a meane betweene flesh and fruit, but somewhat windie, but

being tossed in the embers they lose much of their windinesse, especially

being eaten sopped in wine."

 

White potaoes were called Virginia Potatoes.

"Because it hath not onely the shape and proportion of Potatoes, but also

the pleasant taste and vertues of the same, we may call it in English,

Potatoes of America or Virginia."

"The temperature and virtues be referred unto the common potatoes, being

likewise a food, as also a meate for pleasure, equall in goodnesse and

wholesomenesse unto the same, being either roasted in the embers, or

boyled and eaten with oyle, vinegar, and pepper, or dressed any otherway

by the hand of some cunning in cookerie."

"Bauhine saith, That he heard that the use of these roots was forbidden in

Bourgondy (where they call them Indian Artichokes) for that they were

persuaded the too frequent use of them caused leprosie."

 

So... Are tomatoes and potatoes period? It all depends on where and when

you are from. They are certainly late period for Spain, Italy, other hot

places and, it would appear, certain parts of England (at least in

Gerard's garden) :-).

 

Ciaran

 

 

Chaz Butler

Dani Zweig

Re: Potatos and Tomatoes

24 Oct 91 12:35:26

 

I remember at some point David Friedman publishing an article on "period foods".  I have no idea of the reference or where, but at least the following should be addressed as "late period" when preparing a feast.

 

Hot Mexican Peppers    (Spanish conquistador)

Potatos                (Sir Walter Raleigh)

Tomatoes               (Spanish)

Blackberries           (New England)

Loganberries           (hybrid)

Brazil Nuts            (Spanish/Portuguese)

Pecans                 (New England)

Raspberries            (Jamestown)

Scuppernongs           (Virginia)

Muscadines             (Virginia)

Squashes               (New England)

Melons                 (unsure?)

Popcorn                (New England)

Maize                  (all varieties, originally Mexican)

Vidalia Onions         (hybrid)

 

Using a 12th century recipe with tomato sauce (unless you are going to call on St. Brendan the Navigator to bless it) would be a no-no.

 

 

From: PORTERG at ruby.vcu.EDU (Greg Porter)

Date: 22 Oct 91 19:38:00 GMT

Organization: The Internet

 

       Greetings to the Rialto:

 

       Don't have any sources in front of me, but I believe that the taboo

concerning the eating of horse flesh dates back to the 'Christianity vs

the Norse gods' period.  The horse played an important part in the Norse

religion (see 'Njal's Saga', among other works).  As part of the struggle

for supremacy those supporting Christianity forbid those trappings of the

older faith that they could not absorb.  Forbidding the eating of horse flesh

would hopefully cut down the number of horse sacrifices performed.

 

       Fare well,

 

       Morgan Wolfsinger (Catherine DeMott) by my lord's net access

 

From: storm at hlafdig.stonemarche.ORG (Arastorm the Golden)

Date: 23 Oct 91 16:01:04 GMT

Organization: The Internet

 

       We planted a "period apple tree" several years ago in a flush

of agrarian authenticity. It is producing now. In my opinion the

Gilliflour (which can be traced back to 1600, and was brought to

this country by T. Jefferson) is no where near as good as...

        We live in apple country. A local farm grows 52 variety of

apples and I have tasted more than half of them. My favorite apples

(depending on use) include Cortlands, Northern Spys, McCoons,

Granny Smiths and Red Delicious. It does not include Gillyflours.

The flavor is mild, too sweet, and the pulp is mushy.

       Sometimes paintings show period fruits. Oranges used to be

half white membrane. According to National Geographic, beets were

solely a leaf crop until the last century. Carrots were also small

enough so that we should really not serve anything but "baby carrots"

at events.

       Remember, the reason that venison was prized was because the

herds were protected, and beef cattle were worked. Food ain't what it once

was, and for this we should be intensley grateful for the hard work

and dilligence of our ancestors.

       By the Way- has anyone got a source for the appropriate pine bark

to grind up and put in one's pease bread?   Arastorm

 

 

From: timsmith at oasys.dt.navy.mil (Timothy Smith)

Date: 24 Oct 91 13:52:33 GMT

Organization: David Taylor Research Center, Bethesda, MD

 

Poklon k Rialto ot Timofeya Ivanovichya!

 

Cariadoc asked of the Rialto:

 

>William de Corbie asks about the Swedish prejudice against eating

>horse meat. I believe the same prejudice shows up in the Norse Sagas.

>If I remember correctly, there is passage in one of them where

>someone insults someone else by accusing him of eating mare's meat.

>Does anyone remember where?

 

This was in chapter 120 of _Njal's Saga_, where Skarp-Hedin Njalsson

makes a hash of his brothers' attempt to find allies at the Althing

by insulting each prospective ally.  From the translation by Magnus

Magnusson and Hermann Palsson, published by Penguin Books (p. 249 in

the 1983 edition I have):

 

   Thorkel went on, "Who is that big, baleful man, fifth in the line,

   the one with the pale, sharp, ill-starred, evil look?"

 

   "I am called Skarp-Hedin," he replied, "and you have no cause to

   pick on me, an innocent man, with your insults.  I at least have

   never threatened my own father's life, as you once did, no ever

   fought with him, as you once did.  You have rarely attended the

   Althing or taken part in lawsuits, and you must feel more at home

   milking the cows at Oxarriver with your scanty household.  You would

   be better emplyed picking out of your teeth the bits of mare's arse

   you ate before you came here--your sheperd saw you at it, and was

   amazed at such disgusting behaviour."

 

Now, I have a related question for those of the Rialto more learned

about the Norsemen than myself.  In _Njal's Saga_, repeated mention

is made of "booths", which are inhabited by landowners and their supporters

during the Althing, and were evidently set up in some way referred to

as "tenting".  What were these?  My impression is of a stone or wood-

walled structure, possibly dug into the earth, with a fabric roof (rather

like Arastorm & Aelfwyn's "longhouse" this last Pennsic.  How close

am I?

 

Do svedanya,

 

Timofei Ivanovitch

--

--- Tim Smith ---  timsmith at oasys.dt.navy.mil ---- (301)227-1611 ---

--- Code 1522, David Taylor Research Center, Bethesda, MD  20084 ---

 

 

From: djheydt at garnet.berkeley.edu

Date: 1 Nov 91 03:08:36 GMT

Organization: University of California, Berkeley

 

sbloch at euler.ucsd.edu (Steve Bloch) writes:

>>Carrots were also small

>And, according to what I've heard, either white or purple.

 

So I've heard too--and yet the Menagier de Paris in 1393 or thereabouts

says, "Carrots are the red roots that they sell by the handful at the

market Les Halles, a half-sou a handful."

 

Dorothea of Caer-Myrddin

 

 

From: cat at fgssu1.sinet.slb.COM (CoreDumps`R'Us)

Date: 7 Nov 91 23:05:36 GMT

Organization: The Internet

 

Thorfinn Halfblind mentioned in his posting on [Tact and Authenticity]

that he had a soapstone pot which was of "a slightly different sort

of soapstone than is found in Iceland."

 

He then asks if it is safe to eat anything cooked in it.

 

It's enough to make my hair fall out.  Well, before I run off at the

mouth, please let me qualify myself and point out to people that before

I found my wonderful glorious sit-down-at-a-desk ALL DAY job, I was

gainfully employed as an enviromental geologist.  I did this for 4

years until I got tired of wearing uncomfortable safety gear, logging

rocks and sediments behind a drill rig for long hours.  [I love my

current job - I get to sit down at a desk ALL DAY...]

Anyway, I want to impress upon people that I might know what I'm talking

about concerning the environmental hazards of certain earth materials.

 

So, climbing up on the soapbox, which I KNOW doesn't belong to me,

let me tell you about "soapstone."

 

Soapstone in the "art" sense refers  to those members of the serpentine

or chlorite suites of metamorphics (commonly called "greenstone" by

field geologists) which are soft enough to carve.  The stuff that gets

quarried and sold in art stores is a rock containing more than one

serpentinized/chlorotized minerals, like talc, actinolite, serpentine

itself, etc.  It is easy and fun to carve on the stuff.

 

In the world of risk assessment (a term of which toxicologists are very

fond, and yes, I have had academic enviromental toxicology), sepentinized

rocks are potentially dangerous to your health, especially in long term

exposures. This isn't to say that a short term exposure won't "get" you,

its just that the odds on the risk are much lower.

 

The common forms of dying from exposure to these rocks are as follows:

 

actinolite, chrysotile, serpentine: asbestosis (a lung cancer)

serpentine, chlorite, other phyllosilicates (like the mica suite):

silicosis (another form of lung cancer)

talc (formerly used as a de-humidifying agent in chinese and japanese

rice shipped to the US): stomach cancer

 

So anyway, is it safe to eat from the soapstone pot?  Hell, if I know

but you wouldn't see me doing it...

 

[By the way, the Rollin Lake site which the West uses for various crown

events is in the middle of the Melones Fault Zone, and is bisected by

one of the zone's greenstone belts.  Little pieces of greenstone are for

the taking, just lying around on the ground.  I have spent many happy

at events ar Rollins Lake carving little figurines out of the soft little

stones I picked up along the side of the glade there.]

 

References: NIOSH Materials Pocket Guide (Red Cover, 1989 ed.)

           Haburt and Klein, Guide to Minerology, 19th Ed., 1980)

           Personal Class Notes from UC Davis

 

Tux

 

 

From: ag1v+ at andrew.cmu.edu (Andrea B. Gansley-Ortiz)

Date: 21 Nov 91 20:38:27 GMT

Organization: Engineering Design Research Center, Carnegie Mellon, Pittsburgh, PA

 

Gentle readers, I recommend me to you.

 

Ferdinand and Isabella had supplies of cane sugar coming into their

kingdoms. It was not refined as it is nowadays.  However, I do believe

that both molasses, and rum came back to their kingdoms as well as a coarse

cane sugar.

 

In a chronicle I read, it seems that Isabel and her children were very

fond of cane sugar and ate it seemingly at every meal.  Again, if anyone's

interested I'll find the name of the book in which I read this.  It wasn't

an ordinary history.  It was much more interested in the daily lives of

Don~a Isabel and Don Fernando.

 

Su segura servidora,

       Esmeralda la Sabia

 

 

From: habura at vccsouth19.its.rpi.edu (Andrea Marie Habura)

Date: 22 Nov 91 13:51:49 GMT

Organization: Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy NY

 

I did more research on  availability of sugar in period. All citations

are from the OED.

The word "sugar" first appears in English in 1299. It is referred to only

in inventories (e.g., "7 loaves of sugar") until 1425. There is a recipe

for a cinnamon-sugar dish (probably a dessert) from that date.

Sugar was first referred to as "white" in 1430, so purification techniques

were in use by then. (There's your molasses, Esmeralda.)

In general, sugars were referred to as being "of" a particular place: Cyprus,

Alexandria, Babylon, Barbary, Crete, and Morocco. The OED says that sugarcane

originated in China, but will grow in any tropical climate; I assume that

early sugar came from China, and was perhaps grown in warmer areas nearer

Europe later on.

The first literary reference to sugar is in Chaucer's Squire's Tale, and

is mentioned in conjunction with honey, bread and milk. (In other words,

the Good Stuff.)

Period foods using sugar: Sugarcakes (1587, made from sugar, butter, and

cream), gingerbread (also 1587), sugared almonds (Marlowe mentioned them in 1594), sugar meats (a confection of some sort, 1587) sugar pellets (1591),

which seem to have been sugar paste; they were served in bowls at feasts,

probably like our after-dinner mints, and sugar water (1450).

 

The first mention of sugarcane in English is 1568.

 

Alison MacDermot

*Ex Ungue Leonem*

 

 

From: Marion.Kee at a.nl.cs.cmu.EDU

Date: 22 Nov 91 20:04:00 GMT

Organization: The Internet

 

Greeting to the Rialto from Marian Greenleaf!

 

Herewith another chunk of my period food summary, this time the section

on sugarcane.  I would like to find out more about the fate of the

by-products of the refining process in our period, such as molasses.

Anyone who's got a line on some good sources for this, could you please

send me private email?

 

While the summary below does not deal with the question of rum, I have

found references that seem to suggest that it showed up regularly in

Spain during our period.  I don't read medieval Spanish.  Does anyone

know of a source in English regarding medieval/Renaissance Spanish foods?

(Sources in modern Romance languages, or medieval French, I can deal

with, with effort.)

---------------------------

 

Some Notes on Sugarcane

 

by Marian Greenleaf, C.M., O.P.

m.k.a Marion Kee, 5615 Hobart St., Pittsburgh, PA  15217 <kee at cs.cmu.edu>

Text copyright 1988, 1990, 1991 by Marion Kee

 

----------------------------

The sources the following material was largely drawn from are:

 

Dawson, Thomas; The Good Hus-wives Jewell, E. Allde, London, 1596

(transcribed by Susan J. Evans, Falconwood Press, 1988.)

 

Dawson, Thomas; The Second Part of the Good Hus-wives Jewell, E.

Allde, London, 1597 (transcribed by Master John the Artificer.)

 

Encyclopedia Brittanica, Fifteenth Edition, Chicago/London, 1977.

 

Hieatt, Constance B. and Butler, Sharon: Pleyn Delit, University of

Toronto Press, Toronto, 1976.

 

Hieatt, Constance B.: An Ordinance of Pottage, Prospect Books,

London, 1988.

 

Murrell, John; A New Booke of Cookerie, John Brown, London, 1615

(transcribed by Susan J. Evans, Falconwood Press, 1988.)

 

Root, Waverly; Food, Simon and Schuster, New York, 1980.  

 

Root, Waverly (ed.); Herbs and Spices, Alfred van der Marck Editions,

New York, 1985.  

 

--------------------------

(Revision of January, 1991)

 

[Name:] SUGAR CANE

 

[Origins:] Near the Bay of Bengal, in India.

 

[In Antiquity:]  Imported by the Persians from India

as a very expensive condiment, fifth century B.C.;

known to the Greeks and Romans as a medicine,  but not cultivated

or imported by them.  Mentioned in the Old Testament (cf. Jeremiah 6:20).

 

[In Period (where/when/as):]

 

China / probably throughout period / grown as condiment

 

Spain / Moorish Conquest (eighth century) / grown as condiment

 

England / 735 / imported as condiment

 

Italy / ca. 1200 / regularly imported and widely used as condiment, medicine

 

France, England, Portugal / fourteenth century / regularly imported and

widely used as condiment, medicine

 

New World / sixteenth century / grown and exported to Europe by the

Spanish in the Caribbean and Mexico; the Portuguese in Brazil; the Dutch

in the Caribbean and on the South American mainland.

 

[Comments:] Imported from India as a rare spice during

the Dark Ages; grown in the Near East by the Arabs,

as early as the eighth century; imported to Europe

from Egypt during the Middle Ages;  Marco Polo remarked on its abundance

in China; Venice acquired a near-monopoly

during the Italian Renaissance, even importing the raw materials and

refining it in Italy; Columbus took sugarcane to America and established it

as a crop there (on his second voyage, 1494)

 

 

From: sbloch at euler.ucsd.edu (Steve Bloch)

Date: 22 Nov 91 17:21:00 GMT

 

jschmidt at gambrinus.tymnet.com (John Schmidt) writes:

>We have honey, we have butter, why not combine them?

 

There is documentation from 13th-century Arabic cookbooks for mixing

honey and butter, but the mix is not spread on bread but rather poured

(molten) over a particular dish to soak into its bready base.

 

>(Actually, there is only one point here, because in the two

>references I was able to remember, sugar is very much known.

 

Period English cookbooks call for both "sugre blake" and "sugre

blanche", but not terribly often; white sugar seems to have been used

primarily medicinally in Christian lands.  The Arabic cookbooks often

call for white sugar, as well as specifying the use of raw "sweet

cane". In fact, the latter seems to have been common enough that one

could make a subtlety that LOOKED like sweet cane but wasn't, and have

it recognized.  Sweet cane is also recommended for stirring things,

presumably to give them just a hint of sweetness.  (BTW, my encyclo-

pedia says sugarcane is native to Asia, but doesn't specify where.)

 

--

Stephen Bloch

Joshua ibn-Eleazar ha-Shalib

>sca>Caid>Calafia>St.Artemas

sbloch at math.ucsd.edu

 

 

From: sbloch at euler.ucsd.edu (Steve Bloch)

Date: 27 Nov 91 17:17:26 GMT

 

DICKSNR at qucdn.queensu.ca (Heather Fraser (Sarra Graeham)) writes:

>Get one or more of the following books (I will rank them in order of their

>usefulness to us in the past):

>     Hieatt and Butler, _Pleyn Delit_, U. of Toronto Press, 1976.

>     L. J. Sass, _To the King's Taste_, Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1975.

>     David Friedman, _Miscellany_, private publication.

>     Katrine de Baille du Chat, _To Cook Forsoothly_, Raymond's Quiet

>        Press, 1979...

 

Gee, all of these are on my bookshelf.  I must be doing something right...

 

>Constance Hieatt has another book out, the name escapes me, but it is put

>together the same way as Pleyn Delit, and I am told it is as good.

 

_An Ordinance of Pottage_, Prospect Books 1988.  It's not QUITE the

same format as Pleyn Delit, but a sort of cross between that and

"scholarly edition": it's a complete, annotated edition of a 15th-

century English cookbook, followed by redactions in modern English

with modern quantities of SOME of the recipes.  A good way to make the

leap from working from other people's redactions to doing your own.

 

I also recommend Bridget Ann Henisch's _Fast and Feast: Food in

Medieval Society_.  This is not a cookbook per se, but a well-written

book ABOUT food, eating practices, table-setting, etc.  Not all books

on this subject are equally good: _Consuming Passions_, for example, I

felt was rather poorly written.

--

Stephen Bloch

Joshua ibn-Eleazar ha-Shalib

>sca>Caid>Calafia>St.Artemas

sbloch at math.ucsd.edu

 

 

Subj: cooking from EETS

Date: 24 Feb 92

From: cozzlab at garnet.berkeley.edu

Newsgroups: rec.org.sca

Organization: University of California, Berkeley

 

|I have tried a few recipies from Pleyn Delit, but, now I want to move

|on to the "real", unadulterated, 99 and 44/100ths% pure medieval

|english recipies found in Curye on Inglyssch [EETS SS #8] and in Two

|Fifteenth Century Cookery Books [EETS OS #91], both of which are in my

|personal library.

|        Does anyone have any experiences they wish to share about

|figuring out porportions from a recipe that says: Take this and this

|and this and do this to it. Then take this and do this to it. throw

|everything together in a big pot and do this to it, then serve it

|forth.

|

|Layamon le Vavasour.

 

Yeah. The problem with medieval cookbooks is that they were shorthand

notes, written by expert cooks, intended for expert cooks.  Think of

your mother saying to your aunt, "Well, it's just a plain poundcake, you

know, butter/sugar/eggs/flour, only you jazz it up with rosewater..."

and your aunt saying back, "Oh, I know that one, and sometimes we do

brandy instead of rosewater, and then we call it 'Joe's Brandy Cake.'"

Expert cooks cook things till they're done, and they know when they're

done because they look or feel or smell done.  Or they're tender when

you poke 'em with a fork, or the broomstraw comes out clean.

 

It follows that one big help in interpreting medieval recipes is to

know how to cook already (courtesy of Irma Rombauer, Betty Crocker, or

whoever).

 

Then you can try looking at other people's adaptations--if you're tired

of -Pleyn Delit,- try -Fabulous Feasts- and -To the {King,Queen}'s Taste.-

Eventually you get a feel for what works, how it works, and how much of

it works.  

 

Never try out a new recipe on guests.

 

Good luck.

 

Dorothea of Caer-Myrddin

 

 

Date:_14 May 92

From: ddfr at quads.uchicago.edu (david director friedman)

Newsgroups: rec.org.sca

Organization: University of Chicago Computing Organizations

 

        Vegetables

 

"Anybody want to talk about the contents of medieval gardens and the

appearance of period vegetables? (Elizabeth Braidwood)

 

"The Four Seasons of the House of Cerruti" has lots of reproductions

of color pictures of vegetables, I think 14th century.

 

Cariadoc/David

 

 

Date: 23 May 92

From: ddfr at quads.uchicago.edu (david director friedman)

Newsgroups: rec.org.sca

Organization: University of Chicago Computing Organizations

 

          History of Rice

 

Bertram, I think, asked about the history of rice. According to "On

Food and Cooking" by Harold McGee, which seems to be a very careful

and scholarly work:

 

"Rice ... is a native of the Indian subcontinent (a minor species

that bears red grain is native to Africa) ...  .   It is said that

Alexander the Great introduced rice to Europe around 300 B.C., though

it was not until the 8th century that the Moors first grew large

quantities in Spain."

 

He also discusses the milling of rice, which is relevant to the

question of whether what was served at a feast would be brown rice or

white rice:

 

"First the hull is removed, leaving what we call brown rice, or the

intact kernel covered with the bran layers. Next, an abrasive process

removes the bran and most of the germ ... and the result is milled,

unpolished rice. Polishing in a wire-brush machine removes the

aleurone layer which, with its high fat content, would otherwise

limit the storage life of the grain."

 

It sounds from his discussion of the history as though, prior to

about the 19th century, when mechanical milling and polishing

techniques were developed, white rice "was valued because it was

difficult to produce by hand, was scarce, and kept well ... ." This

suggests that in places like England, where rice was expensive

because it had to be transported a long way, they might well have

used white rice, both because the long shelf life would be especially

important and because the additional labor cost would be less

important with something that was already expensive and used in small

quantities. In the islamic world, on the other hand, where rice was

presumably cheaper and much more widely used, one would expect brown

rice to be the norm and white rice to be used only by wealthy people.

 

Does anyone have any direct evidence on this?

 

Cariadoc/David

 

<the end>



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