[Sca-cooks] Whale meat
edoard at medievalcookery.com
edoard at medievalcookery.com
Tue Jan 19 08:21:50 PST 2010
> -------- Original Message --------
> From: "Vandy J. Simpson"
>
> Greetings.
> So tell me, does anyone have any favoured recipes for whale? I'm primarily interested in early period/Norse food,
> but realize that in that case I could probably just throw bits in kettle over the fire. I think I'd like to optimize
> this one time experience!
>
> I understand there are probably some 'traditional' Norwegian recipes, but thus far I'm only finding vague hints.
>
> Has anyone tried this already? Suggestions, clues, caveats?
No favorite recipes or the like, but I am rather envious.
A quick medieval cookbook search turned up only two references to whale:
On a fish day, when the peas are cooked, you should have onions which
have been cooked as long as the peas in a pot and like the bacon cooked
separately in another pot, and as with the bacon water you may nourish
and serve the peas, in the same way; on fish days, when you have put
your peas on the fire in a pot, you must put aside your minced onions in
another pot, and with onion water serve and nourish the peas; and when
all is cooked fry the onions and put half of them in the peas, and the
other half in the liquid from the peas of which I spoke above, and then
add salt, And if on this fish day or in Lent there is salted whale-meat,
you must do with the whale-meat as with the bacon on a meat day.
[Le Menagier de Paris]
GRASPOIS This is salted whale, and should be sliced raw and cooked in
water like bacon; and serve with peas.
[Le Menagier de Paris]
Maybe if you have enough you can salt some of it. ;-)
- Doc
More information about the Sca-cooks
mailing list