[Sca-cooks] [Fwd: Nutmeg in stale ale]
S CLEMENGER
sclemenger at msn.com
Sat Aug 2 10:27:20 PDT 2008
Can you quote the original (pertinent) passage from Chaucer, for context's
sake?
--Maire
----- Original Message -----
From: "Laura C. Minnick" <lcm at jeffnet.org>
To: "SCA-Cooks" <sca-cooks at ansteorra.org>
Sent: Saturday, August 02, 2008 3:45 AM
Subject: [Sca-cooks] [Fwd: Nutmeg in stale ale]
> So, what do you all think? Why is the nutmeg in 'stale ale'?
>
> 'Lainie
>
> -------- Original Message --------
> Subject: Nutmeg in stale ale
> Date: Sat, 2 Aug 2008 11:22:26 +0200
> From: Brian S Lee <brianlee at XSINET.CO.ZA>
> Reply-To: Chaucer Discussion Group <CHAUCER at LISTSERV.UIC.EDU>
> To: CHAUCER at LISTSERV.UIC.EDU
> References: <4888934E.60409 at amherst.edu>
>
>
>
> Fresh from a reading of John Keay's history of _The Spice Route_ (2005),
> I can better appreciate the absurdity of Thopas's adventuring into the
> forest of exotic spices incredibly located in Flanders. Chaucer selects
> the rarest and so most valuable of spices, cetewale (zedoary) from Java,
> cloves from Ternate, and nutmeg from Banda, each further east than the
> last, but their origins in the mysterious regions beyond India totally
> unknown in medieval Europe. Pepper, the commonest spice, he
> significantly doesn't mention. Thopas's world is one of precious
> luxury, marred by the sudden injection of reality, that stale ale which
> was doubtless all too common in the experience of readers (hearers) of
> tail-rhyme romances.
>
> Nutmeg, apparently, is a prestigious thing to keep in the kitchen
> cupboard ("in cofre"). You wouldn't waste your most valuable spice
> (would you?) in stale ale. Would it help to improve or disguise the
> flavour if you did? Never having tried it, I await the comments of the
> culinary experts on this list. The Host wanted a drink of moist and
> corny ale to help him recover from the Physician's Tale: does moist
> simply mean fresh? Isn't all ale moist? Is stale the opposite of
> moist, the result of neglect or poor brewing perhaps, or are these
> technical terms for different kinds of ale? Why put nutmeg in both
> kinds, or is "stale" simply Chaucer's hint at the thoughtless use
> of cliches for rhyme in the romances he's burlesquing?
>
> Brian
>
> "With that long knife inside her, much I fear
> She'll go pale, ailing, into her small bier"
>
> Leicester Silk Buckingham (1859) parodying Knowles's play of
> Virginia.
> ================================================================
>
> --
> "It is our choices Harry, that show what we truly are, far more than our
> abilities." -Albus Dumbledore
>
> ~~~Follow my Queenly perambulations at: http://slugcrossings.blogspot.com/
>
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