Since I’m reading a medieval mystery, I thought I’d supplement that reading with a medieval cookbook I spotted while browsing the library. Yeah, I’m one of those weird people who read cookbooks for fun without any intention of trying the recipes (though I do love cooking and use recipes from my home collection of cookbooks quite often). I loved the chapters for this cookbook, with sections such as Chaucer’s Company, Of Manners and Meals, and Courtly and Christmas Feasting. In each, the author shares some food-based medieval thoughts and facts before launching into the recipes.
Each recipes is drawn from medieval manuscripts and then adapted by the author for modern cooks. It was interesting, and I really enjoyed reading the original medieval instructions that preceded each recipe to see if I could figure out what it was trying to convey. For example, this text precedes the Golden Leeks and Onions recipes: “To make blaunche porre. Tak whyte lekys & perboyle hem & hewe hem smale with oynouns. Cast it in good broth & sethe it up with smale brydds. Coloure it with safferoun; powdur yt with powder douce.” It’s just amazing to see how this language has evolved since then. I also liked how the author noted in some cases why the modern interpretation of a recipe differed from the medieval version. For example, in the Braised Spring Greens, he notes that tests using only oil as called for in the original text yielded a greasy dish, so he included some broth or water to produce a more palatable dish.
Many of these recipes call for saffron, which I found really surprising. I never considered it to be such a staple, especially during medieval times. I was also surprised to find that the medieval recipe text for Chicken with Rice and Almonds called for a sort of almond milk (soaking the almonds in water and then “tak the melk & do it to the rys & boyle hem togedere”). I always think of almond milk as such a modern and trendy ingredient, never considering that a variation of it may have been used so long ago. While there aren’t visual depictions of finished dishes, the cookbook does include many interesting illustrations of things such as nutmeg pods and clove plants or illustrations from medieval food-based texts or sources such as the Bayeux Tapestry, fish floor tiles at Westminster Abbey, and others.
Verdict
All in all, this is interesting just to read and imagine what dishes may have looked like. The dishes might be fun to make if you’re so inclined but I found some of them to include a few ingredients that aren’t easy to find or I just wouldn’t be that willing to buy: saffron, a whole hare, lard, a hog's liver, etc.
So, who would enjoy this book?
Anyone who loves history and tidbits about historical meals! This will surely sate your curiosity! I can’t comment on whether it is successful as an actual cookbook though having not tried the recipes.