[Sca-cooks] Cook's Prayer, was RE: 9/11 SCA cooks
Susan Fox
selene at earthlink.net
Wed Sep 13 07:59:03 PDT 2006
Ana Valdes wrote:
> Thank you! And by the way, science-fiction and phantasy books refer
> seldom to food but in Eddings, Zelazny and other similar, the
> characters and the societies seems to me frozen in a Middle Age diet,
> wild boars, eelk, reindeer, mead, honey and beer.
> Do someone know if it's some written these about that? Food in phantasy worlds?
> Ana
>
A lot of fantasy authors have also been SCA members and frequently
mention food details. Katherine Kurtz, Poul Anderson, etc.
Karen Anderson aka Baroness Karina of the Far West is a gourmet cook in
any era and her work reflects this.
I've nitpicked with Katherine Kurtz, aka Countess Bevin Frasier of
Sterling, about how some of the dishes she cited for stories set in the
1200's were not right; she replied that it was an alternate universe
and some foods, like some weapons, were invented earlier. OK, good answer.
Marion Zimmer Bradley, one of the SCA founders, thought through the
foods available on Darkover pretty thoroughly, using her knowlege of the
Medieval period and northern regional foodways to concoct a cuisine for
this snowy planet. She even edited a Darkover Cookbook, a fanzine no
longer available but of course I have keyed it in on my computer.
Lois McMaster Bujold goes into some food detail in the Vorkosigan
novels, where Miles hires his guard's mother as his new head cook and
she turns out to be a wonder.
Anne McCaffrey edited two cookbooks full of contributions from fellow
genre writers. COOKING OUT OF THIS WORLD and SERVE IT FORTH. Many
parts are edible.
THE INCOMPLEAT ENCHANTER by L. Sprague deCamp and Fletcher Pratt had our
hero visiting the world of Norse Saga, where the all-meaty diet gave him
the pip. He asked for vegetable to eat and was mocked roundly with the
monicker "Turnip Harold." So it seems like these writers agreed with
you about the standard Fantasy Fiction Diet, yes?
J.R.R. Tolkien and C.S. Lewis used meals to enhance the good places and
the bad places in Middle-Earth and Narnia respectively. Supper with
Hobbits or Beavers is far preferable than dining with Orcs. Don't ask
me where they got tomatoes and potatoes without a voyage over the sea,
however.
Potatoes are a favorite in Terry Pratchett's Discworld. Rincewind
dreams of them when shipwrecked far from home, and a hyper-violent
gangster keeps a potato around his neck as a ticket to heaven. The
wizards' banquets at Unseen University bespeak a groaning board of
stupendous proportions, and even the Witches of Lancre set a nice table
up in their mountains.
That should get you started. Bon Appetit -- in any world!
Selene
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