Friday, September 2, 2011

Tips & tricks for medieval cooking

One of the things I tell people regularly is that while medieval food can be amazing and delicious, sometimes it's hard to find the original ingredients. What we have available in the modern day is so much more than what was available in medieval years, but many of their ingredients are now costly or hard to locate. Here are a few substitutions you can use when cooking medieval recipes that will help you live in a modern world.

Don't have verjuice or access to crabapples to make it yourself? Use pickle juice in place of verjuice with meats. It tenderizes the meat, so it's great to use on cheaper cuts, and it adds a flavor that cannot be beat. Another sub for verjuice is red wine vinegar. You don't want to use as much as you would with the pickle juice, but I almost always add a good 1/4 c. of red wine vinegar to the beef roast in the crock pot. It's always fall-apart tender!

If you're trying to make a meal more medieval, use chick peas instead of other types of beans or peas. There were no green beans in the medieval period, but chick peas were readily available. They are delicious and nutritious, and in my experience, even picky kids will eat them!

Can you eat pasta with a medieval meal? YES! The Arabs brought dried pasta to the Mediterranean back in the 8th century. One starch you cannot use is potatoes! Those didn't make it to Europe until the New World explorers brought it back. Green beans came from the Caribbean, and tomatoes are from South America! Be cautious about adding ingredients that hadn't even been discovered in the medieval period!

If you need the color of saffron threads but can't afford them, turmeric is a wonderful substitute. It won't give you the flavor of saffron, but  at around $150 per ounce on average, most people can't afford to use a lot of saffron, especially when it's just needed for the golden color. The flavor isn't exactly like saffron, but no one will likely know the difference! You can also find turmeric called manjal or haldi if you're in India or the surrounding countries.

The key to good cooking from any era is flexibility and creativity. If you can't find ingredients locally, search Google's shopping section for what you could order online. Call specialty markets that you might not usually go to shop at; sometimes they have things from other parts of the world that no one else has! Take the time to  grow the ingredients that you can. Herbs and veggies are easy to find seeds for through catalogs and online sources, and small gardens can be created even in apartment settings using buckets, planters and small community plots.  Get in on a garden with friends, and create a medieval feast with the bounty!

Food should be tasty and fun to prepare as well. Enjoy the range of options that the modern world offers while trying to stick to at least the overall idea and feel of the food. You'll be glad that you took the extra time to make these meals, and the easy shortcuts won't even be noticeable to the eaters! They'll just know it tastes good!





Thursday, September 1, 2011

Easy and quick foyles!

I know it's been a while since I posted a recipe...I apologize! Moving took quite a toll on me...being chronically ill is something that I fight daily, but some days my illnesses fight back more, so the trip and all the settling in just wore me clean out. On top of that, I've been busy working on the formation of a new diocese in Byzantium Novum!
One thing I've learned is that moving across the country means less time in the kitchen, and that I really need easy dishes to serve when time seems to not exist! I want to share a recipe for foyles, similar to what we would call pancakes. Everyone loves pancakes, and these stacked, spiced cakes are good any time. Serve with a bit of cream or honey for a really decadent dessert or special breakfast! To serve with a more savory meal, garnish with crushed parsley. Served like a slice of cake, these stacked foyles are divine.

Foyles- Spiced Pancakes

1/2 t. salt
1c. flour
1c. whole milk or almond milk
3 eggs, beaten till frothy
2/3c. brown sugar (use molasses sugar if you can get it)
1/4c. slivered almonds, candied ginger, candied anise (use any mix of these, but only 1/4c. total!)
a bit of butter for frying

Sift the salt and flour, and add in the milk and brown sugar. Make a smooth batter without beating it too much.*
Fold in the frothy eggs.
In a separate bowl, mix the brown sugar and the 1/4c. of extras together and set it  aside.

Be sure to use a hot skillet or griddle, but give it a good coat of butter before cooking these. For an open fire, use a stone that is indirectly heated, and be sure to add a good layer of oil or butter so they don't stick.

Cook just as you would modern pancakes. Drop a bit of the batter and be sure it's thin, so spread it a bit if needed. These are not super fluffy like modern pancakes, but also not as thin as crepes. Flip them when the edges start to bubble a bit and firm up. When done, stack them and keep them warm. Between each pancake, sprinkle just a bit of the brown sugar mix on top. When you get a good stack, cut it into slices, like a cake. You'll never want modern flapjacks again!

*Overbeating will make the gluten in the flour very sticky and you won't get a good texture.