Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Cooking in Europe, 1250-1650
View through CrossRef
Ever get a yen for hemp seed soup, digestive pottage, carp fritters, jasper of milk, or frog pie? Would you like to test your culinary skills whipping up some edible counterfeit snow or nun's bozolati? Perhaps you have an assignment to make a typical Renaissance dish. The cookbook presents 171 unadulterated recipes from the Middle Ages, Renaissance, and Elizabethan eras. Most are translated from French, Italian, or Spanish into English for the first time. Some English recipes from the Elizabethan era are presented only in the original if they are close enough to modern English to present an easy exercise in translation. Expert commentary helps readers to be able to replicate the food as nearly as possible in their own kitchens.
An introduction overviews cuisine and food culture in these time periods and prepares the reader to replicate period food with advice on equipment, cooking methods, finding ingredients, and reading period recipes. The recipes are grouped by period and then type of food or course. Three lists of recipes-organized by how they appear in the book and by country and by special occasions-in the frontmatter help to quickly identify the type of dish desired. Some recipes will not appeal to modern tastes or sensibilities. This cookbook does not sanitize them for the modern palate. Most everything in this book is perfectly edible and, according to the author, noted food historian Ken Albala, delicious!
Title: Cooking in Europe, 1250-1650
Description:
Ever get a yen for hemp seed soup, digestive pottage, carp fritters, jasper of milk, or frog pie? Would you like to test your culinary skills whipping up some edible counterfeit snow or nun's bozolati? Perhaps you have an assignment to make a typical Renaissance dish.
The cookbook presents 171 unadulterated recipes from the Middle Ages, Renaissance, and Elizabethan eras.
Most are translated from French, Italian, or Spanish into English for the first time.
Some English recipes from the Elizabethan era are presented only in the original if they are close enough to modern English to present an easy exercise in translation.
Expert commentary helps readers to be able to replicate the food as nearly as possible in their own kitchens.
An introduction overviews cuisine and food culture in these time periods and prepares the reader to replicate period food with advice on equipment, cooking methods, finding ingredients, and reading period recipes.
The recipes are grouped by period and then type of food or course.
Three lists of recipes-organized by how they appear in the book and by country and by special occasions-in the frontmatter help to quickly identify the type of dish desired.
Some recipes will not appeal to modern tastes or sensibilities.
This cookbook does not sanitize them for the modern palate.
Most everything in this book is perfectly edible and, according to the author, noted food historian Ken Albala, delicious!.
Related Results
Cooking Technologies
Cooking Technologies
Inferences regarding pre-colonial southwestern cooking are limited by preservation and the ambiguity of multiple-use features. Documented techniques are stone boiling, pit roasting...
Food Culture in France
Food Culture in France
French cooking has been seen as the pinnacle of gastronomy. Food Culture in France provides an accessible tour of haute cuisine but also mainly the everyday food culture that susta...
Food Culture in South America
Food Culture in South America
This volume tells the story of the South Americans and their history through a survey of their food culture. Food in the various countries differs in some ways because of cultural ...
Estate Management around Florence and Lucca 1000-1250
Estate Management around Florence and Lucca 1000-1250
Abstract
This book describes the forms of estate management, and the way they changed, around Florence and Lucca during the central Middle Ages. It is based mainly o...
The Future of Europe
The Future of Europe
The European Union is at a crossroads. Slowly recovering from a series of financial and economic crises, with trust fundamentally shaken by processes of disaggregation and increasi...
East, West, and the Return of ‘Central’: Borders Drawn and Redrawn
East, West, and the Return of ‘Central’: Borders Drawn and Redrawn
Western Europe has not only met but also married Eastern Europe, even if there are rumours that it was a marriage of convenience, consummated in ‘EU Europe’. Nevertheless, a signif...
Images of Europe, European Images: Postwar European Cinema and Television Culture
Images of Europe, European Images: Postwar European Cinema and Television Culture
The audio-visual culture of Europe right after 1945 was a culture in ashes in a Europe soon to be divided into east and west under the Cold War. It was a Europe where nation-states...
Food Cultures of the World Encyclopedia
Food Cultures of the World Encyclopedia
How much can we learn about a different culture from its food choices, in terms of local produce, preparation and eating habits? In this comprehensive four-volume reference work, K...

