[Sca-cooks] Medieval questioniare
Helen Schultz
meisterin02 at yahoo.com
Sat Oct 27 18:41:13 PDT 2007
I took a chance and went further into that "Coquinaria" web site http://www.coquinaria.nl/english/, and there is a very nice section of different cook books(both Dutch and English versions) concerning Middle Ages and a little later that they recommend (or don't recomment)... one of these books led me to an on-line translation of a 16th century Dutch cookbook (well, 2/3 rds of it, the 3rd volumn doesn't appear to have been translated or at least posted to the site. Most interesting. They also have a few translated (into English) recipes from a couple of the books. So, even though someof us doubt the correct answers to their questionaire, they seem to have some really useful information there!!
~~ Katarina Helene
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Meisterin Katarina Helene von Schönborn, OL
Shire of Narrental (Peru, Indiana) http://narrental.home.comcast.net
Middle Kingdom
http://meisterin.katarina.home.comcast.net
"A room without books is like a body without a soul." -- Cicero
"The danger in life is not that we aim too high and miss.
The problem is that we aim too low and hit the mark." -- Michaelangelo
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----- Original Message ----
From: Suey <lordhunt at gmail.com>
To: sca-cooks at lists.ansteorra.org
Sent: Saturday, October 27, 2007 7:28:41 PM
Subject: [Sca-cooks] Medieval questioniare
I missed something here. I look up
http://www.coquinaria.nl/english/quiz.htm in google. Reply: not found.
So I don't know what you are talking about when you refer to cleaning
hands on tablecloth - totally unacceptable in the Middle Ages as per
commentaries on medieval manner's books in English at least.
Tisane is barley water, gruel. It has nothing to do with tea. Give me
break! OCast /tisane de ordio, ordiate, /OCat /hordi, hordiat, ordio,
/Cat /ordiat /(fr /ordi, barley/)/,/ ML. /hordea-tus, //tisana/,
/tisanam, ordiate, /Fr. /orgemonde,/ /tisane/ (14 C.), Eng. orgeat,
tisane (infusion), ptisan, barley water or gruel. Originally it was made
with barley. Anthimus (6th C) described orgeat as a drink for those ill
with fever and ble ble ble..
Suey
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