|
Fantasy
Writing Links
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Fiction
Writing Links
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Main
Sections
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Book Reviews
|
|
Novel Writer Magazine |
| |
 |
| |
|
Subscribe Now |
| |
|
|
You need to sign up with these
services, but once you do, you can 'tag' your favorite articles so
others can find them |
| |
| |
|
|
Learn How to Write
Fantasy Stories
|
Preparing for The Fantasy Wedding - Part 3
Feeding the Guests
Medieval history provides plenty of rich detail for
fantasy novelists planning the menu for a wedding (or any
other feast). Barbaric by today's standards, etiquette at
a medieval feast allowed eating with fingers, though forks
and a knife were sometimes used. Napkins became popular
during this era, so you can include them. Remember that,
many who lived during these times were lucky to have
enough to eat on a regular basis. Starvation was a real
part of life and this fact may reflect in your character's
table manners.
Traditionally, the wedding feast took place the same day
as the wedding. Guests ate from wooden plates until the
food was gone. Glassware may be constructed of precious
metals, common clay or wood depending on social class.
The Medieval Wedding Guide by Vanessa Hand offers
specifics if you need a source for more details.
The Menu
Wedding feast particulars should fit the celebration
based on social class. Every social class celebrated
weddings. It wasn't uncommon for these elaborate feasts to
serve up to six courses. Basics your characters would find
on the menu include:
Roast quail
Turtledoves and partridge
Goose
Venison
Roasted boar (sanglier) Dangerous to hunt, wild boars
have long sharp tusks and teeth. Yet, huntsmen scoured the
forests using apple cores, rotten meat and peapods as
bait. Your characters might even find them feeding on
garbage dumped outside the village or castle. Smoking wild
pig preserved the meat.
Gilded and slivered calves' heads
Fish Most fishing was done with nets made by spinning
grasses, wool or flax. Contrary to what many would think
the job of spinning to make fishing (or hunting) nets was
man's work. Once they had the thread-like fabric spun,
they knotted it into complex patterns and attached bits of
stone, clay or led as weights. For fishing nets they
attached a piece of wood which floated so they could spot
their submerged nets. Fish were often preserved by
pickling in a salty brine or a fermented sauce called
garum which was prized by the ancients.
Roasted peacock
Mutton
Cheeses Because milk spoiled without refrigeration,
people learned to make yogurt and cheeses. Aged cheeses
can be kept without refrigeration for five years or more.
Most aged cheese was made using rennet (a piece of the
stomach lining from a cow).
Walnuts
Oysters steamed in almond milk Because animal milk
spoiled, Medieval cooks depended on the milky liquid
created by grinding almonds or walnuts and steeping the
pulp in boiling water for five minutes before running the
mixture through a sieve to remove coarse particles. Cooks
prepared almond milk fresh as needed or could store it
without danger of spoiling like animal milk.
Ale-flavored bread
Stewed cabbage
Tarts and custards
Spicy mulled wine.
Fruit Dried fruit included raisins, prunes, and dried
apples. Without refrigeration, little food could be
preserved. Apples were the only cultivated fruit.
Depending on the climate of your fantasy world, characters
can also collect wild fruits like pears, quinces, and even
peaches. Strawberries raspberries and red currants could
be found in the woods. Exotic foods like dates and
pistachio nuts should only be found on tables set for the
wealthy.
Fresh fruit preserves
Wine, Ale, and other Medieval Drinks Drinks included
water, ale, beer, mead, milk, and wine. Within castle
confines a well provided potable
drinking water. Fruit juices made from cherries, sloes
(a plum-like fruit), and mulberries present other possible
fermented choices.
What About Vegetables?
Few vegetables were eaten during medieval times, but
vegetables of this period include: carrots, cabbage,
lettuce, leeks, cardoons, onions, shallots, parsley and
asparagus.
Unlike the variety of salads we experience today, a
Medieval Sallat might consist of scallions, chives, radish
roots, turnips, boiled carrots, young lettuce, herbs,
nuts, olives, and vinegar and oil.
Spices and Flavorings If you show your cooks slaving in
the kitchen, keep the spices and flavorings period
specific. Include: Cloves, cinnamon, saffron, mace,
pepper, ginger, anise, nutmeg, basil, parsley, sage,
tansy, savory, betony, and rosemary.
What About Sugar?
Honey was a popular sweetener and preservative usually
supplied by the local monastery. Sugar became increasingly
popular among the wealthy. They were the only ones who
could afford it in large quantities.
|
|
Become a Topic Editor
Visit
the Forum
|
Contact Admin |
|
|
|
|
|
Shop For
Writer's Gifts
|
|
Mugs Mouse Pads T-shirts Gifts
Books Hats TopicAdsTM by
CafePress.com |
|
|
|
|
Copyright ©Grace Publishing 1999, 2004,
2006 All rights reserved, print, digital, audio No content may be
copied, or duplicated in any form, and distributed in print, audio, or
digital formats.
|