[Sca-cooks] Taro was Posting Menu- Trimaris Spring Coronation
Terry Decker
t.d.decker at att.net
Thu Feb 25 19:45:32 PST 2010
> Bear-
>
> I fully realize that frying the taro in olive oil was not the traditional
> Roman way of preparing them, at least not as reflected in this
> manuscript.
>
> My "inspiration" for this dish is Recipe #322 in the Vehling translation
> (1936 edition)
>
> In Colocasio
>
> "For the colocasium use pepper, cumin, rue, honey, or broth, and a little
> oil, when done bind with roux Colocasium is the root of the Egyptian Bean
> which is used exclusively."
>
> I chose to separate this recipe into two components: the taro root itself
> and the sauce, which I'm serving on the side for dipping.
>
> What's the best way to get people to try a vegetable they've never heard
> of before? Either cook it with bacon or deep-fry it. I chose to deep fry
> it. This feast is already pushing the boundaries of "weird" for a Crown
> that is not very adventurous, and if deep-frying a vegetable instead of
> steaming it is going to get people to step outside of their comfort zones
> and something new with the flavors of the authentic dish? I'll choose the
> less authentic manner of preparation. Would I enter it in ArtSci? Nope.
>
> Madhavi
I thought that was the case. I hope you thought to warn your testers that
your "period french fries" are a personal modification of the Apician recipe
and should not be confused with a truly accurate recreation of a historic
recipe.
Vehling 74 (F&R 68) is probably a more accurate method of preparation.
However, Davidson connects taro to the Arabic "qulqas" (with a dash above
the a). It might be interesting to see if we can find a recipe similar to
yours in the Arabic texts.
You have me interested in a little experimentation. Here's hoping I get the
time.
Bear
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