[Sca-cooks] medieval scandinavian sources

'bella ldybella at earthlink.net
Fri May 10 07:56:22 PDT 2002


or...
1. he has the financial means to import a cook from france or
elsewhere
or
2.  He liked to cook himself and pestered teh cooks in the places
he visited to teach him
how they cooked his favoritre dishes and he came home to denmark
to cook for himself
or teach his own cook what he had learned..


----- Original Message -----
From: "Nanna Rognvaldardottir" <nanna at idunn.is>
To: <sca-cooks at ansteorra.org>
Sent: Friday, May 10, 2002 5:09 AM
Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] medieval scandinavian sources



Bear wrote:


> IIRC, the original owner is believed to have been a gentleman
who served
as
> an ambassador and developed a taste for haute cuisine.

Harpestræng was actually not an ambassador, although connected
with the
Danish court (he was the King's physician), but he had studied
medicine in
the South of France. I did put forward some highly imaginative
speculation
on how the collection had ended up in Northern Europe:

"How did the collection travel north? Of course we don't know but
it is easy
to imagine a scenario. Let's say that in the 1180s, the young
Dane Henrik
Harpestræng is studying medicine in Orleans, or somewhere further
south; he
probably studied at the medical school of Salerno in Italy as
well and he
may have been at the famed medical school at Montpelier. Other
young men
from Northern Europe studied at these schools as well and they
probably
enjoyed the climate, the culture and the exotic cooking. Later
Harpestræng
goes home to Denmark but he misses the fine French dishes he had
become
accustomed to; even when he becomes the King's own physician, the
royal
feasts, made up of simple Scandinavian dishes, do not compare. So
when he
visits one of his German colleagues who studied with him in
France a long
time ago, he is excited to discover that this splendid fellow had
been wise
enough to pester the cooks for some of his favorite recipes and
translate
them into German. So of course Harpestræng sits down and quickly
translates
his friend's collection into Danish . It may have happened like
that, or it
may have happened in a completely different way. We have no way
of knowing
exactly how these recipes came to Scandinavia, but it is very
likely that
the medical profession was involved. As Grewe and Hieatt say:
,, . the only way in which recipes were generally disseminated in
the early
Middle Ages was through medical texts.""


> As for Icelandic chicken, Nana pointed out that it couldn't be
an
Icelandic
> dish, as there were no chickens in Iceland at the time.

Not quite, although they were rare, but other ingredients might
have been
harder to get. This is (more or less) what I said:

"Now there are good reasons why this recipe is so popular, and I
even see
that British chef Jamie Oliver has a variation on it in his
newest book,
"Happy Days with the Naked Chef". But in Iceland in the Middle
Ages, chicken
were rare and fresh sage leaves were unavailable. Besides, there
were few if
any ovens to bake the chicken in, as I explained in my paper on
Early
Icelandic Cooking."

I did also point out that there were other recipes in the
collection that
could definitely not have been cooked in Iceland at the time,
notably the
recipe for a pasty of deer marrow (no deer or any large game at
all was to
be found there, and no way to obtain the deer bones called for).

Nanna

_______________________________________________
Sca-cooks mailing list
Sca-cooks at ansteorra.org
http://www.ansteorra.org/mailman/listinfo/sca-cooks




More information about the Sca-cooks mailing list