[MR] period sweets (Fwd: Aoife-Links Digest, Vol 14, Issue 1)
SNSpies at aol.com
SNSpies at aol.com
Fri Dec 2 11:48:26 PST 2005
In a message dated 12/2/2005 12:03:24 PM Eastern Standard Time,
aoife-links-request at scatoday.net writes:
Today's Topics:
1. Sweet! Medieval Candy, Cookies, and Cakes (Aoife)
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Message: 1
Date: Thu, 1 Dec 2005 21:06:47 -0500
From: "Aoife" <aoife at scatoday.net>
Subject: [Aoife-Links] Sweet! Medieval Candy, Cookies, and Cakes
To: <aoife-links at scatoday.net>
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Greetings, my Faithful Readers!
It's that time of year when some of us begin furiously baking to meet the
holiday needs. Between office parties, social club gatherings, caroling,
open houses and historical gatherings, it's a wonder we have time breathe.
And what should you bring to those gatherings? How can you reconcile your
Boss's Open house with your shire's 12th night party? Never fear, Aoife is
here to show you how--medievally!
There are a certain set of dishes that have been around for
centuries--sweets, especially cookies and candy. There is never a situation
where, when required to bring a gift or a dish to pass, when attractive,
unusual, and decorative medieval cookies or candies won't be welcome. Who
wouldn't want a beautiful basket of springerle cookies? And why wouldn't
your hostess want to hang a few of these beautiful cookies on the tree,
especially if you have painted with edible colors or gilded them? Or how
about a few to much, complete with a history card and recipe (in the
original language, of course :). And imagine that Christmas buffet with your
molded gingerbread or marzipan centerpiece! Or your festive dish of "snow"
and it's accompanying wafers! Or if fussing with intricate icings and shapes
isn't you idea of a good time, how about a robust (but quick to make) batch
of medieval gingerbread, certain to spice things up a bit?
Read on to find cookie, sweet dish, and candy recipes sure to make you the
hero of the party hour, especially in this modern day of
cookie-dough-in-a-tube. Here's your excuse to spend a day in the kitchen
with the family, baking and decorating delicious cookies and sweets to enjoy
or to share, in a fashion that declares your dedication to the history of
holiday food.
Cheers!
Aoife
Dame Aoife Finn of Ynos Mon
m/k/a Lisbeth Herr-Gelatt
Riverouge
Endless Hills
Aethelemarc
Gode Cookery: Medieval Gingerbread
http://www.godecookery.com/ginger/ginger.htm
(Site Excerpt) The gingerbread being discussed in this article comes from
recipes originally used in the 14th & 15th centuries, and isn't anything at
all like our modern cake-like variety. It is in fact more like a candy or a
confection; however, it's very good and quite a treat, and I can recommend
it to anyone with a bit of a sweet tooth. (Note: Many other good recipes on
Gode Cookery, including a link to Master Huen's Gode Cookies)
Medieval Cookery--Pynade
http://www.medievalcookery.com/recipes/pynadecandy.html
(Site Excerpt) Put honey, spices, and pine nuts into a saucepan and bring to
a boil. Keep boiling the mixture until it reaches 300°F (what's called "hard
crack stage" in candy making). Pour onto a baking sheet or piece of aluminum
foil. Allow to cool and then break it into pieces and serve.
SEE ALSO:
Sugared Almonds
http://www.medievalcookery.com/recipes/almonds.html
Food Timeline History Notes: Candy
http://www.foodtimeline.org/foodcandy.html
(Site Excerpt) "All of the peoples of antiquity made sweetmeats of honey
before they had sugar: the Chinese, the Indians, the people of the Middle
East, the Egyptians and then the Greeks and Romas used it coat fruits,
flowers, and the seeds or stems of plants, to preserve them for use as an
ingredient in the kind of confectionery still made in those countries
today."
Stefan's Florilegium: Sweet or Decorated Foods
http://www.florilegium.org/
(Click "Sweet or Decorated Foods on the left hand menu, then browse the
right hand menu. MANY collected messages and papers to choose from)
Confections and the Banquet
By Elise Fleming
http://www.geocities.com/brendoken/BanquetItemsReferencesSources.html
(Site Excerpt) Gervase Markham (The English Huswife, 1615) wrote ... "...I
will now proceed to the ordering or setting forth of a banquet; wherein you
shall observe that the marchpanes have the first place, the middle place,
and the last place; your preserved fruits shall be dished up first, your
pastes next, your wet suckets after them, then your dried suckets, then your
marmalades and goodinyakes, then your comfits of all kinds...
Sweets and Treats of the 14thC by Lady Hauviette D'Anjou
http://home.comcast.net/~iasmin/mkcc/MKCCfiles/SweetTreats.html
(Site Excerpt) Le Menagier makes mention of candied spices numerous times.
These treats are discussed as "chamber spices" including candied orange
peel, candied citron, red anise, rose sugar and white sugared almonds (red
sugared almonds are also mentioned frequently). Le Menagier describes menus
that include spices served along with "Tartlets and other things, hippocras
and wafers, wine and spices".
Kateryne Develyn: Third Course (See Payne Ragoun and Cryfpes recipes)
http://www.kateryndedevelyn.org/eng1men3.htm
(Site Excerpt) Take hony and sugur cipre and clarifie it togydre, and boile
it withesy fyre, and kepe it wel fro brennyng. And wha it hath yboiled a
while, take up a drope perof wip py fyngur and do in a litel water, and loke
it if hong togydre; and take it fro the fyre and do perto pynes the
thriddendele & powdour gyngever, and stere it togyder til it bygynne to
thik, and cast it on a wete table; lesh it and serve forth with fryed mete,
on flessh dayes or on fyssshe dayes.
Cariadoc and Elizabeth's Miscellany:
Desserts, Appetisers, Etc.
http://www.pbm.com/~lindahl/cariadoc/desserts.html#34
(Site Excerpt) Hais: "Take fine dry bread, or biscuit, and grind up well.
Take a ratl of this, and three quarters of a ratl of fresh or preserved
dates with the stones removed, together with three uqiya of ground almonds
and pistachios. Knead all together very well with the hands. Refine two
uqiya of sesame-oil, and pour over, working with the hand until it is mixed
in. Make into cabobs, and dust with fine-ground sugar. If desired, instead
of sesame-oil use butter. This is excellent for travellers."
Mistress Kiriel's "A Basket of Biskets"
http://www.kiriel.net/cooking/laurelprize.html
(Site Excerpt) To make Iombils a hundred: Take twenty Egges and put them
into a pot both the yolks & the white, beat them wel, then take a pound of
beaten suger and put to them, and stirre them wel together, then put to it a
quarter of a peck of flower, and make a hard paste thereof, and then with
Anniseeds moulde it well, and make it in little rowles beeing long, and tye
them in knots, and wet the ends in Rosewater, then put them in a pan of
seething water...
Medieval/Renaissance Cookies and small sweets (A past Links List on the
subject)
http://lists.gallowglass.org/pipermail/artssciences/2003-December/000261.html
19 links on the subject
Medieval wafers with "snow" (whipped cream)
http://www.coquinaria.nl/english/recipes/05.4histrecept.htm
(Site Excerpt) Wafres aren't baked in an oven, but in a waffle iron. This
kitchen aid was "invented" in the thirteenth century. Those early wafers
weren't always of the sweet variety, there are also many recipes for cheese
wafers. (Aoife's Note: I like Wafers with whipped cream and chilled spiced
strawberries in port-wine in the summer :)
Delights from the Garden of Eden:
A cookbook and a History of Iraqi cuisine (Cookies section)
http://www.iraqicookbook.com/contents/cookies2.html
(Site Excerpt) In the tenth-century Baghdadi cookbook, in measuring flour
for making cookies al-Warraq used a dry measure called keilacha, a variant
on keil, which was approximately 4 pounds (36). The keil or keilacha were
also the names of the articles themselves used to measure. As to how this is
connected to the naming of the cookies, here is my argument: The kleicha
cookies were not made year round as we do today in our well-equipped modern
kitchens. Up until the sixties or so, they were made twice a year to
celebrate the two religious holidays, at the end of Ramadhan and the
performance of the hajj.
House on the Hill
Recipes of old-fashioned cookies
http://www.houseonthehill.net/recipes.php
(Site Excerpt) Perfection Springerle: These whisked-egg holiday cookies date
back to at least the 1600's and are made in Bavaria, Switzerland and the
Alsace area of France. For eating quality, ease and quality of prints this
recipe is just perfection! (Note: See the rest of their site for replicas of
histric cookie molds--many that date to the Medieval and Renaissance time
period).
Enjoy.
Ingvild
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