A while back I helped cater a renaissance feast for 138 people. I
have realised that I have neglected to share with you my recipes! How
terrible am I?
People often ask me, when I tell them that I
cook medieval and renaissance food "what did people eat apart from big
joints of roasted meat?". Well, here is a wickedly lavish salad that
proves that there was SO much more to the renaissance palate than lumps
of flesh!
Compound Sallet [The English Hous-wife, 1615]:
To
compound an excellet Sallet, and which indeed is usuall at great
Feasts, and upon Princes Tables, take a good quantity of blancht
Almonds, and with your shredding knife cut them grossly. Then take as
many Raisins of the Sun clean washt, and the stones pickt out, as many
Figs shred like the Almonds, as many Capers, twice so many Olives,and as
many Currants as of all the rest, clean washt, a good handfull of the
small tender leaves of red Sage and Spinage: mixe all these well
together with good store of Sugar, and lay them in the bottom of a great
dish. Then put unto them Vineger and Oyl, and scrape more Suger over
all: then take Oranges and Lemmons, and paring away the outward pilles
cut them into thinne slices.Then with those slices cover the Sallet all
over. Then over those Red leaves lay other course of old Olives, and the
slices of well pickled Cucumbers, together with the very inward heart
of Cabbage lettice cut into slices. Then adorn the sides of the dish,
and the top of the Sallet with more slices of Lemons and Oranges, and so
serve it up.
An actual recipe with
quantities isn't really necessary with this dish; as you can see, it is
basically a great mixture of different ingredients.
- Almonds
- Sultanas (raisins)
- Figs
- Capers
- Olives
- Red Sage
- Currants
- Baby Spinach leaves
- Pickled cucumbers
- Sugar
- Vinegar
- Oil
- Cabbage
- Lemon and Orange slices (for my salad I actually used pickled lemon slices)
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