[Sca-cooks] Table Condiments
JIMCHEVAL at aol.com
JIMCHEVAL at aol.com
Sun Nov 13 07:21:44 PST 2016
Unfortunately these tend to be very schematic, even emblematic; I doubt
most show incidentals which would have been included. Also, some of these
might simply have been in bowls, so it's hard to know if a particular bowl is
for food or, say, mustard.
We're largely left with suggestive hints. A Frankish meal found in a tomb
in Cologne included black mustard seed. Items still imported into France
under the Franks included garum (which was also made on Charlemagne's
estates). There's an Arab account of Crusaders mainly eating beef with a "sharp
sauce" (probably mustard). Supplies for elite travelers typically included
salt, vinegar and honey (which had been used as a condiment, often mixed with
other liquids, by the Romans and probably still was in the early medieval
period).
The Menagier lists among preparations for a wedding feast a quart of
cameline (probably used in a dish) and two quarts of mustard (use uncertain, but
it's not referenced in the names of any of the dishes served, so it was
likely to have been a table condiment.)
_http://books.google.com/books?id=DRFRAAAAcAAJ&dq=intitle%3Amenagier&pg=PA1
22#v=onepage&q&f=false_
(http://books.google.com/books?id=DRFRAAAAcAAJ&dq=intitle:menagier&pg=PA122#v=onepage&q&f=false)
Note too that the mustard came from a saucer, so probably was already
mixed with vinegar and not just seed.
At Philip de Valois' coronation in 1328, the saucers had supplies of
mustard seed and vinegar to make the mustard, "other sauces" and verjuice, as
well as earthenware "buires" (a kind of pitcher) to put them in.
I have to wonder too if, in large banquets, the condiments were all left on
the table or if servants brought over the mustard for instance when needed
(as was later the custom with wine).
Accounts for a series of public feasts in 14th century Paris list mustard
and verjuice, along with spices. Verjuice might have been a condiment, since
the meals themselves were not complex ones (mainly beef and pork); it
might have been drunk as well, though that is unlikely given the supplies of
wine in the same menus.
In a fourteenth century dietetic for a monastery, vinegar, fat and oil are
all indicated as seasonings. Cameline sauce is mentioned quite a bit in
different documents as well. It was of course used in dishes, but might have
been a condiment as well.
jC
Jim Chevallier
_www.chezjim.com_ (http://www.chezjim.com/)
FRENCH BREAD HISTORY: Seventeenth century bread
http://leslefts.blogspot.com/2016/02/french-food-history-seventeenth-century
.html
In a message dated 11/13/2016 4:47:13 A.M. Pacific Standard Time,
alyskatharine at gmail.com writes:
one can look at paintings/drawings to see if anything was there.
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