SC - Trois Creme
Jeanne Stapleton
jstaplet at adm.law.du.edu
Fri Jun 27 08:27:11 PDT 1997
> On Wed, June 25, Countess Berengaria de Montfort de Carcassonne
> declared:
>
> >Will you still love me if I say that "Trois Creme" is one of my
> >favorite recipes, medieval or modern, and I love making it,
> >especially at Pennsic where I can get mascarpone and other neat
> >fresh rich cheeses at a nearby Italian grocery store?
>
> Ok, you love making it, but do you like *eating* it??? :-)
>
Yup, I *love* the stuff. But then Ilike strong flavors and savory
flavors.
I have the same intolerant response to too many bland foods that
bland eaters claim they have to spicy foods--I just can't eat more
than about three mouthfuls.
> Stefan li Rous
>
> Hmm. Does anyone have medieval foods that they like making but that
> they don't like to eat?
>
Yeah--I'm the one with the nut allergy and the cabbage allergy, and I
have made dishes that incorporated one or the other, because they
were popular and people expected them or would eat them. I have to
get someone else to do the tasting, of course.
Likewise, see foregoing allusion to dislike of bland foods: I find
that I end up making things that people rave to me about that I
didn't think were that good because of the absence of any discernible
flavor.
I note Anne-Marie is now on the list: an example that springs to
mind, not from feasts, but from an Indian restaurant we all used to
go to sometimes with the Madrone Culinary Guild was this chicken dish
that she and Lady Eden were nuts about with the fabulous sauce--which
I think tastes like undiluted Campbell's Tomato Soup. :-) On the
other hand, I had to get my own personal dish of Chicken Vindaloo.
Countess Berengaria de Montfort de Carcassonne, OP
Barony of Caerthe
Kingdom of the Outlands
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