[Sca-cooks] table fountains
Stefan li Rous
StefanliRous at austin.rr.com
Thu Oct 26 21:22:47 PDT 2006
I am currently reading "Feast - A History of Grand Eating" by Roy
Strong.
On page 99-100 in the medieval section he says:
"Ironically it [the nef] was not the salt that was destined to be the
greatest of all the display pieces but the table fountain. These
were not only ches d'oeuvre of the goldsmith's craft but were items
of extreme ingenuity, involving the movement of liquids, wine or
perfumed waters, which spurted or spouted and whose pressure caused
figures to move or bells to jingle. We know that they already existed
in the thirteenth century, and they begin turning up in inventories
in the fourteenth century." Various examples of these fountains. "The
surviving example in the museum at Cleveland (ohio), despite its
missing basin and foot, gives some impression of the magnificence of
these pieces, whose sole purpose was to amaze."
So, anyone near Cleveland seen this?
Has anyone created such a fountain for a feast?
While it is probably more appropriate for a headtable, it still might
be intriguing for a regular table. My first idea would be to use a
pump from one of the miniature table fountains that have become
popular in the last few years, or maybe even use the correct style of
fountain itself as a starting point. I'm not quite sure how to get
the auxiliary items to do their movements, but I can see using
additional motors or the flowing liquid itself.
Does anyone have any ideas on how they would have done one of these
fountains in period, since the modern cheat of using small battery
driven pumps wasn't available? I can see using a storage resevoir at
a higher position, but without recirculating the liquid i imagine the
amount of liquid squirting out of the fountain would have to be a
tiny stream. Unless they were removed after one course.
I can also imagine some problems if the fountain malfunctions and
starts squirting red wine about.
Stefan
--------
THLord Stefan li Rous Barony of Bryn Gwlad Kingdom of Ansteorra
Mark S. Harris Austin, Texas
StefanliRous at austin.rr.com
**** See Stefan's Florilegium files at: http://www.florilegium.org ****
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