[Sca-cooks] Mustard - Can you cut it?
Suey
lordhunt at gmail.com
Mon Nov 26 11:16:59 PST 2007
Jenne Heise wrote:
> J.O. Swahn in his _Lore of Spices
explains Mrs. Clement's invention of bolting and sifting mustard seed.
Yes the citation would be helpful but there are several references not
making it vital.
No matter what we write about Stefen seems to have always said something
on the topic before hand but he or colleagues did not mention Mrs.
Clements in Zajaczkowa's _Mustard-Marking-art--12/7/06_.
http://www.florilegium.org/files/FOOD-CONDIMENTS/Mustard-Making-art.html
as he is talking about coarse grinding.
For garbage minds I came across a few more facts: Hippoctrates
mentions mustard in 460 BC and the Bible says 'heaven is like a grain of
mustard seed which man took, and sowed in his field.' (Mathew 13:31) (I
don't get it.) The monks on Farne Islands used "quern stones" for
grinding the seeds in 1487. Whooh thought I had a big intellectual find
there but Wikipedia burst my bubble as it only means the stone on the
bottom, the stationary stone - in our case the mortar while the stone
used to crush whatever is the handstone, in our case the pestle.
Suey
> Today's Topics:
>
> 1. Re: Mustard seeds merrily laughing (jenne at fiedlerfamily.net)
> 2. Re: Mustard - Can you cut it? (jenne at fiedlerfamily.net)
> 3. Re: Killing the yeast in Mead before bottling (Saint Phlip)
> 4. Re: Killing the Yeast in Mead (Elaine Koogler)
> 5. Re: Killing the Yeast in Mead (Nick Sasso)
> 6. Re: Thanksgiving menu (Nick Sasso)
> 7. student-grade knives? (Stefan li Rous)
> 8. Re: barley water (Terry Decker)
> 9. Re: Possible bargain on knife set for anyone interested...
> (Stefan li Rous)
>
>
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Message: 1
> Date: Sun, 25 Nov 2007 19:19:57 -0600 (CST)
> From: jenne at fiedlerfamily.net
> Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Mustard seeds merrily laughing
> To: "Cooks within the SCA" <sca-cooks at lists.ansteorra.org>
> Message-ID:
> <1111.65.78.94.139.1196039997.squirrel at webmail.fiedlerfamily.net>
> Content-Type: text/plain;charset=US-ASCII
>
>
>
>> Maggie MacD wrote:
>>
>>
>>> I've tried a blender, and a stick blender. The mustard just bounced
>>> around merrily laughing at me.
>>>
>> Love that 'merrily laughing at you'! I have been a bit shy of this
>> blender stuff. Glad it doesn't work cause our case is making medieval
>> mustard by crushing it in a mortar.
>>
>
> I use either a mortar and pestle (if you have kids around, you can get a
> lot of grinding done for free) or an electric coffee/spice grinder. I find
> that the consistency is close enough to the mortar and pestle method for
> my purposes.
>
>
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