The End

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Yesterday’s meal was epic.  The pie was amazing with all the different flavors and the lovely flaky buttery crust.  The venison was good.  The wine was spicy and good.  These items were so filling though that I couldn’t eat the candy and Lombard slices.  When I tried them at the end of the episode they were gross.

But this morning I has the Lombard slices for breakfast, and they are good.  The candy is good too when I tried it this morning.  So all and all a successful but too filling of a meal.  An appropriate end to my medieval cooking.

I am hoping not to spoil it too much but the ending was not as dramatic as I expected.  For the last 2 years GOT fans have been writing about how our favorite characters were going to die horrible death, and we were all going to be heartbroken.  That did not happen.  The ending was a good and satisfying one.  So I am happy.  Now I have to live my life without GOT, but that is OK.  But it has been a wonderful journey.

The Last

of medieval cooking and Game of Thrones. It is a bittersweet day but we are going out with a bang.

The meal is based on medieval royal holiday cooking. It is hard to imagine, but the royal entourage was huge and had to move from place to place to find adequate sustenance. The cooking staff had to move their kitchen gear from place to place, and holiday meals had to be planned months in advance. And it was not one feast but many days of feasting. So the work I am putting into this meal pales in comparison.

They often had a dramatic main course, like roasted boar’s head or peacock. My cookbook did not have these recipes though, for which our peacock is likely thankful. So for the menu tonight is Broiled venison, A grete pye, Hypocras, Pine nut candy, and Lombard slices.

Because I do not have much time today and three of the dishes can be prepared ahead of time, so I started making this meal on Friday.

I started with the candy. I have destroyed many a kitchen thermometer. So we lack a candy thermometer, and the best one we have only goes to 220 degrees. So I boiled the sugar, honey and water and guessed when we were at 230. I then added the chopped pine nuts, breadcrumbs and ginger. Here it is cooking on a wetted tin.

It is still a little sticky. I suspect it was supposed to get a little hotter and harder. But it still should taste good.

Next came the Lombard slices. The interesting thing about this recipe is that I needed to sieve 12 hard boiled egg yolks. I had to google that up. Here I am sieving:

And here are 13 sieved yolks ( one egg was double yoked):

This is where I thought I was overworked but then thought of the original chefs. I boiled honey and then slowly mixed the yolks in. Then breadcrumbs and pepper was added. I shaped it into a loaf to cool.

The breadcrumbs probably could be more crumbly. Later I will make a wine-honey-ginger sauce for it.

Last on Friday was the hypocras . My cookbook actually has a piment recipe, substituting that as “long pepper and grains of paradise are virtually unobtainable”. But I have them in my cupboard as well as galangal from last season’s cooking ( thanks Amazon). So I found a translation of the Curye on Inglysch recipe she cites at http://www.oldcook.com/en/medieval-hippocras. I winged it with the amounts of the spices and added them to 2 liters of red wine and sugar. I figured if it was too spicy I could dilute it. Here are some of the spices on it,

here are some of the spices about to be ground,

And here is the concoction simmering for 20 minutes.

I then let it cool and bottled it. You can see how dark it is in the clear bottle.

It is interesting that they serve it cold. I am used to warmed spiced wine at Christmas when most of these feasts were served. I took my last dragon egg bath after this cooking and then we rewatched the last episode.

So today I started with getting the venison ready. We got this from Tom’s son who is an amazing hunter. I cut it into 1cm fillets and then scored the meat.

Then I placed it in a basting sauce of wine, oil, ginger, salt and pepper. This will soak all day until Tom grills it.

Next I made the pye. I made a shortcrust pastry using my British Baking Show cookbook. I cut up a chicken then parboiled the meat in salt water. I minced beef with suet (actually fat since I could not find suet). I mixed it with poudre dulce and egg yolks. I mixed dates, currants and prunes with the very last of my poudre dulce. Here are all the fillings ready to go.

On top of the pie crust went 1/2 of the minced beef mix, then the sliced chicken, then the fruits, then the last of the minced beef mix. This was covered with a simmered rice flour and beef stock mixture. The top crust went on and was decorated. Here it is going into the oven.

And here it is coming out.

I got the candy ready.

Then I made the pepper sauce for the venison. It was bread fried in butter then blended with vinegar, pepper and some salt. It was then simmered and more pepper added.

I got the Lombard slices ready,

And the made a reduced wine and honey sauce.

Tom grilled the venison.

And here is the meal all ready.

I can hardly wait for the food and the show!

Richard II and Episode 5 Review

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For the dinner, the pheasants was really good.  It was tender and flavorful.  It did need to cook 10 minutes more than the recipe stated to get to temperature but in plenty of time for the episode.  We used to raise and eat our peasants though so nothing too exotic for us.  The mustard sauce was quite strong.  There was no specific amounts as to how much mustard powder and sugar to the vinegar so I did half and half.  Maybe too much.  It was really good but you did not need much.

The rose pudding was good.  I couldn’t really taste the rose, mostly the cream and the spices.  Not sure I would make it again, but it was fun to have once in my life.

The barley bread and leeks we had eaten before.  Nothing too exciting but definitely seems medieval.

The episodes finally brought the deaths I had been expecting.  I was surprised by the pairing of the deaths but not too much else.  The changing allegiances is an interesting twist.

So only one more medieval meal and one more GOT.  I am certainly looking forward to it.  I am wondering how the series will end.  The last meal will be a show stopper.  It is probably good that the medieval cooking will end as I think some healthier eating is in order.  But it sure has been fun, pretending to be medieval for a short while.

Richard II and Episode 5

So this medieval meal is what the court of Richard II would have eaten. We know this because he is the first English king to have a cookbook written by his chefs. It is called The Forme of Cury. Fashion in clothing and entertaining were very important to this king.

For dinner is Roast pheasant with mustard sauce and Rose pudding. This will be accompanied by Barley bread and Leeks and sops in wine.

The roast pheasant is easy enough. I had to buy them though at University Seafood and Poultry. But for the recipe you just butter and a shallot inside and a rasher of bacon on the breast. Wrap in foil and roast for 1/2 hour. You then dredge with seasoned flour and roast 10 more minutes.

The sauce is sugar and mustard powder mixed with vinegar.

The rose pudding involved trying to find rose petals that might be edible. I ended up by a miniature rose plant from our local food co-op. Hopefully it is not too laden with chemicals.

The petals are blanched and squeezed. Milk and rice flour are heated together until thickened and then caster sugar, cinnamon, ginger, the petals, cream and salt are added.

It is thickened further over low heat and then dates and pine nuts are added. It is then chilled in decorative bowls.

So here is the Episode 5 meal:

I will give you a review of the meal and the episode in the coming days. I can hardly wait.

Episode 4 Review

meal

So the chicken was kind of plain.  It was poached in cider, bacon and water, and there were fresh herbs inside, but it was still pretty boring.  The pork rolls were really good.  The spice and currents inside helped.  The dipping sauce did not add much though.  The pea pottage was dull as ever but at least healthy.  The ‘pudding” was amazing.  The insides were dense and flavorful.  The recipes called for fresh savory, parsley, hyssop and sage.  I did not have access to fresh hyssop or savory so had to substitute sage and mint for the former and thyme for the latter.  And it all worked out.  The pie was very rich.  I have never had double cream before, and it is quite thick and very creamy.  The pie basically tasted like it with a little sweetness.  It was good, but I do not think I will make it again.  It is pure cholesterol.

Without spoilers, the show was good.  There were some major deaths and changing alliances that made things interesting.  Some of the characters are evolving so the last two episodes will be quite engaging to see where this all ends up!

Episode 4

So tonight’s medieval meal is also based on The Babees Book. So I do not need to provide any background information as I did that last week. On the menu tonight there is Pork rolls, Poached fowl and bacon with ‘pudding’, Pea pottage and Cream custard tart.

This is probably the most medieval-feeling meal I have made yet, even more than the baked rattlesnake and the pigeon pie. Because the ‘pudding’ is a stuffed chicken neck skin. We had to butcher one of our roosters especially for this recipe last Friday and carefully preserve the neck.

I started at 4:00 with the chicken. I gathered fresh herbs, chopped and mixed them. I put some in the chicken and tried to skewer and see it shut. Then I made the pudding with chopped chicken liver and heart with bread crumbs, the herbs and an egg. I had to sew an end of the neck skin, stuff it and sew the other end shut. Here is the stuffed neck:

stuffed chicken neck

Then I got the chicken in the pot, poached it for a while, added some bacon, poached more, added the neck and poached a lot longer.  Here it is all cooked up.

poached fowl

While this was poaching I worked on the pork rolls.  These were very similar to the fried fig rolls but with minced pork, poudre forte and currants.  I had a harder time rolling these ones up for some reason.  But these ones were baked instead of fried.  Here they are all cooked up.

pork rolls

There is a sauce for them.  It is just chicken stock boiled with minced pork and poudre dolce.  Here it is:

pork sauce

Then I worked on the pie.  I made a short crust pastry and cooked it.  Then I made the filling.  I was actually able to find double cream this time.  Last year I had to invent a substitute.

pie ingredients

Still using lots of saffron.  Here is the pie going in the oven.

custard pie

The whole time I was cooking the GOT episode 1-3 was on in the background.  It was pretty cool to hear all the dramatic music.  Here is Tom watching some of episode 3.

episode 3

And here is my meal.

meal

And here is the pie all cooked.

pie cooked

I will write a review of the meal and the episode tomorrow.  Happy GOT!

The Babees Book and GOT Episode 3 of Season 8, Part 2

I am sorry I am slow with the reviews. Work gets in the way sometimes.

So the meal was lovely. All three of us loved the braised beef. It had some unusual spices that were fun.

I am the only one who tried the pea pottage. It was good but not too exciting.

The Lasagne was over cooked and a little crisp. The spices were fun though. The dogs have been enjoying the leftover beef broth.

The fried fog pastries were a hit. Sweet despite the lack of sugar and the fried filo dough was nice. The only complaint from Tom is that there are too many seeds in figs.

No real spoilers but I had thought more of the major characters would perish in the last episode. Not really complaining, just an observation. It was enthralling to watch, even on my little laptop. We rewatched it the next night on a real TV to see the special effects better. Really looking forward to what’s next.

By the way, it is challenging to make an epic meal in a small trailer kitchen. Space was limited and the bed got used to hold food dishes. But I did it. The dish washing the next day without running water was also epic!