By Caroline Clemmons
I hope you will find this article as fascinating as I have. Although I also write contemporary, most of my books are historical set in the nineteenth century. I love history, and enjoy information like that presented in the article below. With all the rushing to and fro and planning we do, at least we have modern ranges and ovens, refrigerators, and large supermarkets for buying groceries. Even those with modest income are able to prepare a more eleborate meal occasionally for special days.
I don't believe I'd have done very well cooking elaborate dishes in a fireplace. Euwww! to serving peacock with the feathers re-applied. The following article is used with permission.
May you each have a wonderful Christmas filled with love!
By Iona McCleery, University of Leeds, England
With Christmas almost upon us, there will be plenty of frenzied present shopping and meal planning. Haven’t made that Christmas cake yet? Fear not. If you were preparing the festive meal 600 years ago you’d have far more on your plate.The picture below is a calendar page from a Book of Hours, a type of prayer book popular among pious rich people in the Middle Ages. Apart from the costumes they are wearing, the people at the bottom of the page seem much like us – keeping warm and enjoying their food and drink.
It may surprise you to learn that this particular calendar month is January. The feast day celebrated by the couple is Epiphany on January 6, picked out in red (Epyphania). Our Christmases, hectic though they may be, are actually a doddle compared to the traditions of old. Medieval people celebrated all 12 days of Christmas, from December 25 through to Epiphany – the day the three kings turned up with gifts for the newborn Jesus – although they did not usually feast every day. Some households had their big feast on Christmas Day. For others it was the first of January or the 6th, depending on local custom.
Wealthy or poor
We do know that preparations for winter would have begun in the late autumn. Humans and animals both ate the same basic foodstuff: grain. Poorer people did not have enough grain for animals over winter so most pigs and cattle were fattened up on acorns and slaughtered. Calendars commemorate this strategic act for the months of November and December as in the images below, paired with the relevant signs of the zodiac (Sagittarius and Capricorn).
Of course, the wealthy could continue to keep their animals alive, so they had fresh meat all winter. It’s not true that they used spices to liven up rotten meat: cloves, nutmeg, cinnamon and pepper were imported from India or Indonesia, so if you could afford them you could afford good meat. The rich could also afford sugar – candied fruit, sugared almonds and sweets have always been popular Christmas treats.
The poor would have eaten sausage and bacon instead, salted fish if they could get it, stored or dried apples, peas and beans, perhaps a bit of honey, and would only have had the added flavours of onion, leeks and garlic. Even salt was expensive. The hungriest time was actually not the months that we associate with winter cold, but the months of April and May. It was then that stores had run out and there would be little growing yet in the garden. Nor was there much dairy as hens naturally lay less in winter and cows don’t produce milk until after they have their spring calves.
Yuletide feasting
But it was nigh on impossible to prepare the main dishes that the rich had at their feasts. Turkey originally came from the Americas so was not found on English tables until the late 16th century. It probably replaced a showier but much less tasty bird: the peacock. The price of these birds meant that most people had to be content with another large expensive bird, the goose, which was a traditional Christmas main course until relatively recently. Also closely associated with Christmas was the wild boar – a boar’s head was often brought into the hall to accompanying carols. But it wasn’t always intended for eating.
And then elaborate displays of prepared meat, sugar or wax in the form of fantasy animals, angels and castles were often part of the entertainment, sometimes even moving mechanically or exploding.
So count yourself lucky as somebody who won’t go hungry this winter. You may have left the pudding quite late but you can leave the peacock and pommesmoile for next year.
Iona McCleery, Lecturer in Medieval History, University of Leeds
This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.
We had peafowl when I was a kid. The peacocks are showy, of course, but all make a horrid screaming noise. Dad got rid of them in short order and no, we didn't eat them. I'll stick with a Butterball turkey. LOL.
ReplyDeleteMe, too, Jacquie. When we lived in a rural area, a neighbor tried keeping peacocks. One was captured by a coyote in our back yard one night and the sounds were blood curdling!
DeleteThank goodness we live in modern times! Fascinating info about medieval times! Interesting to read about how we have evolved.
ReplyDeleteBut I'm glad we live now days. I imagine a few hundred years from now people will think we were eating odd things.
DeleteGee, I wouldn't have had a problem staying slender back in those days! Great post, Caroline.
ReplyDeleteMe, either, Joan. None of those dishes sounded appealing.
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