[Sca-cooks] Beets (was Eggplant)

ekoogler1 at comcast.net ekoogler1 at comcast.net
Thu Jan 29 12:15:04 PST 2004


Yup...sounds like the  same recipe...I did omit a few ingredients, sorry about that.  I always used canned beets as well...for much the same reason.  Also, I don't have to peel and shred them!  The original recipe reads pretty much the same as what you cite.  Madge Lorwin's redaction calls for fresh young beets, grated.  She also says to use mild cheddar, which I what I do.  This pie is, IMHO, even good cold.  We frequently take a couple with us to Pennsic to snack on at lunch.  

Kiri
> I don't have the Shakespeare book, but I've got a copy of Lumbardy Tarts 
> in my copy of _To The Queen's Taste_.  The source is given as "The Good 
> Huswives Handmaid for Cookerie," and is dated to 1588.
> The original follows:
> "How to make Lumbardy Tarts.  Take beets, chop them small, and to them 
> put grated bread and cheese, and mingle them wel in the chopping.  Take 
> a few corrans, and a dishe of sweet butter, and melt it.  Ther stir al 
> these in the butter, together with three yolkes of egges, sinamon, 
> ginger, and sugar, and make your tart as large as you will, and fill it 
> with the stuffe, bake it, and serve it in."
> 
> The redaction recommends using a mild cheese such as emmenthaler or 
> monterey jack (perhaps for the melting qualities?), but outside of 
> telling you to grate the cheese (if you take the adjective "grated" to 
> refer to both the bread and the cheese, and not just the bread), there's 
> really nothing in the recipe that specifies cheese type.  Might be 
> interesting to experiment with....
> It also doesn't say anything about pre-cooking the beets, although I 
> think the one time (many years ago) that I did this recipe, I used 
> canned, diced beets that I drained of their liquid (cost of fresh ones 
> being prohibitive with that particular feast budget).
> 
> Oh, and on the same pages (68 and 69), there's a bit from Gerard on 
> beets.  In part he says, "The red Beet, boyled and eaten with oyle, 
> vinegre and pepper, is a most excellent and delicat sallad...."
> 
> Mmmmm....now I'm hungry!
> 
> --maire
> 
> ranvaig at columbus.rr.com wrote:
> 
> >> Have you tried the recipe from Dining with William Shakespeare for 
> >> Lumdardy Tarts...they are wonderful, and friends who won't eat beets 
> >> in any other form adore these.  Beets, cheddar cheese, currants, brown 
> >> sugar, eggs...put in a pie shell...bake.  Ummmmmmmmm.
> > 
> > 
> > Do you know which source this is from?
> > Ranvaig
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