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  2. Tudor food and drink - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tudor_food_and_drink

    Tudor food is the food consumed during the Tudor period of English history, from 1485 through to 1603. A common source of food during the Tudor period was bread, which was sourced from a mixture of rye and wheat. Meat was eaten from Sundays to Thursdays, and fish was eaten on Fridays and Saturdays and during Lent. [1]

  3. Mortis (food) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mortis_(food)

    A mortis, also spelt mortrose, mortress, mortrews, or mortruys, [1] [2] was a sweet pâté of a meat such as chicken or fish, mixed with ground almonds, made in Medieval, Tudor and Elizabethan era England. It is known from one of England's earliest cookery books, The Forme of Cury (1390), and other manuscripts.

  4. Medieval cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medieval_Cuisine

    A restored medieval kitchen inside Verrucole Castle, Tuscany. The kitchen staff of huge noble or royal courts occasionally numbered in the hundreds: pantlers, bakers, waferers, sauciers, larderers, butchers, carvers, page boys, milkmaids, butlers, and numerous scullions. While an average peasant household often made do with firewood collected ...

  5. The Good Huswifes Jewell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Good_Huswifes_Jewell

    The Good Huswifes Jewell gives recipes for making fruit tarts using fruits as varied as apple, peach, cherry, damson, pear, and mulberry.For stuffing for meat and poultry, or as Dawson says "to farse all things", he recommends using the herbs thyme, hyssop, and parsley, mixed with egg yolk, white bread, raisins or barberries, and spices including cloves, mace, cinnamon and ginger, all in the ...

  6. Thomas Dawson (cook) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Dawson_(cook)

    Dawson's Good Huswifes Jewell gives recipes for making fruit tarts using fruits as varied as apple, peach, cherry, damson, pear, and mulberry. For stuffing for meat and poultry, or as he says "to farse all things", he recommends using the herbs thyme, hyssop, and parsley, mixed with egg yolk, white bread, raisins or barberries, and spices including cloves, mace, cinnamon and ginger, all in the ...

  7. The Forme of Cury - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Forme_of_Cury

    The Forme of Cury (The Method of Cooking, cury from Old French queuerie, 'cookery') [2] is an extensive 14th-century collection of medieval English recipes.Although the original manuscript is lost, the text appears in nine manuscripts, the most famous in the form of a scroll with a headnote citing it as the work of "the chief Master Cooks of King Richard II".

  8. Food and the Scottish royal household - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Food_and_the_Scottish...

    Some of the remaining and ruined Scottish royal palaces have kitchens, and the halls or chambers where food was served, and rooms where food and tableware were stored. . There is an extensive archival record of the 16th-century royal kitchen in the series of households accounts in the National Records of Scotland, known as the Liber Emptorum, the Liber Domicilii and the Despences de la Maison ...

  9. Cockentrice - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cockentrice

    The cockentrice was basted with a mixture of egg yolk and saffron during the roasting or covered with gold foil; it was also filled with a similar mixture to have a gilded inside. The dish originates from the Middle Ages [2] and at least one source attributes the Tudor dynasty of the Kingdom of England as its originator. [4]