sca-cooks Farmgirls Version

Aonghas MacLeoid (B.G. Morris) hylndr at ionline.net
Sun Apr 13 08:53:18 PDT 1997


Hi thank you for all the infor, I was aware of the lard and pastry
perseration because this was also widely done in pre 12th cantury, the
sagas mention perserving in fat and way (sp?)

Aibhilin


On Sun, 13 Apr 1997, Philip W. Troy wrote:

> Leslie Watson wrote:
> > 
> > On Sat, 12 Apr 1997, Terry Nutter wrote:
> > 
> > > Hi, Katerine here.  Lord Ras responded to someone whose name I don't recall:
> > >
> > > ><< in fact
> > > > my grandmother (born in 1890) taught me how
> > > > to store goose without refrigeration, first you
> > > > bake it (actually several), then, store it in a barrel
> > > > with the goose grease poured over it to the top of the barrel. >>
> > > >
> > > >This is absolutely true! My gram born in 1868, used to boil and pack pork in
> > > >lard in barrels the same way. Even after sitting in the cellar for a couple
> > > >of months, it was soooooooooooo good! Thanks for the memories. :-)
> > >
> > > For what it's worth: there's a medieval recipe for keeping venison that
> > > seals it in a container immersed in honey after cooking.  The principle is
> > > presumably similar: the cooking kills bad stuff in the meat, and the honey
> > > both keeps out air and provides too rich a medium for new bad stuff to
> > > grow.
> > >
> > > Cheers,
> > >
> > > -- Katerine/Terry
> > >
> > I would be interested in where this can be found.  I am not a familair
> > with late period sources as I am with early stuff would it be all right to
> > let me know where to look for this thanks
> > 
> > Aibhilin
> 
> The method of preserving meats under a layer of fat is called potting in
> English, and confit in French. It is still used today. In period,
> similar applications include a reference to rillons (pork cubes
> preserved in a pot of cooled lard) in Le Viandier de Taillevent, and the
> practice of pouring the meat juices off from inside pies, replacing them
> with melted butter to keep. This last is a late-period thing from
> sources like, if I remember correctly, Markham and Plat.
> 
> Just a reminder, probably unnecessary: don't forget the simple pie when
> considering the various preservation methods for meats. The crust keeps
> off air and insects. It sure isn't like canning it, but it's a whole lot
> better than ptomaine.
> 
> Adamantius
> 



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