What it was like to visit a Medieval Tavern
Summary
TLDR本期视频带我们穿越回中世纪的酒馆,探索那时的饮食文化。视频中介绍了中世纪酒馆的三种类型:客栈、酒馆和啤酒屋,以及它们之间的区别。通过重现中世纪的食谱,特别是一道名为bokenade的牛肉炖菜,视频展示了中世纪烹饪的风味和特点。同时,视频还讲述了中世纪酒馆的社会功能和与之相关的一些历史故事,让观众对中世纪的日常生活有了更深入的了解。
Takeaways
- 🏰 中世纪酒馆是人们饮酒、赌博和进食的地方,其中一种流行的菜肴是牛肉浓汤,称为bokenade。
- 🍲 酒馆、客栈和啤酒屋在中世纪时期有不同的含义,但通常都能提供饮料和食物。
- 🥘 所谓的'猎人锅'或'永久炖菜'是一直炖煮的汤或炖菜,持续添加和替换食材。
- 🍵 一种名为banata或bukenade的炖菜在中世纪的英格兰和法国非常普遍。
- 🌿 制作bokenade需要的食材包括牛肉、羊肉或鸡肉,以及香草和香料,如欧芹、鼠尾草、海索草、小豆蔻和丁香。
- 🥚 中世纪的英语中,'eyroun'是鸡蛋的意思,但随着时间的推移,'eggs'成为了更通用的词汇。
- 📚 威廉·卡克斯顿在翻译维吉尔的《埃涅阿斯纪》时,对英语的变化感到困惑,并在印刷时选择了'eggs'作为标准词汇。
- 🍷 酒馆最初是提供葡萄酒的地方,由酿酒商经营,顾客可以要求查看酒桶以确认酒的真实性。
- 🏠 啤酒屋起初是私人住宅,家庭主妇会酿造并销售啤酒,随着时间的推移,也开始提供食物。
- 🚨 阿萨伊兹面包和啤酒法规定了面包和啤酒的价格,并设有啤酒检验员确保质量。
- 🍽️ 中世纪酒馆和客栈可能存在赌博、酗酒和卖淫等问题,但即便如此,它们仍是当时社会的重要组成部分。
Q & A
中世纪酒馆通常提供哪些食物和饮料?
-中世纪酒馆通常提供面包和奶酪等简单食物,以及各种饮料,如葡萄酒、苹果酒、梨酒和蜂蜜酒等。在一些声誉较好的酒馆,顾客还可以享用到牛肉浓汤或其他肉类炖菜。
'bokenade'是什么?
-‘bokenade’是一种中世纪常见的炖菜,主要由牛肉、小羊肉或鸡肉与骨头一起炖煮,加入欧芹、鼠尾草、海索草、小豆蔻和丁香等香料,最后加入蛋黄、姜、柠檬汁、藏红花和盐进行调味。
'verjuice'是什么?
-‘verjuice’是中世纪的一种果汁,由未成熟的葡萄制成,具有醋般的酸味,但同时也带有甜味。如果没有verjuice,可以用一半葡萄汁和一半红酒醋来模仿其味道。
中世纪的酒馆和客栈有何不同?
-中世纪的酒馆主要是提供饮食的地方,而客栈则提供住宿服务。酒馆最初主要提供葡萄酒,而客栈则提供食物和饮料给住宿的客人。随着时间的推移,这些场所的功能开始重叠,酒馆也开始提供住宿服务。
中世纪时期,如何保证酒的质量?
-中世纪时期,有专门的酒检员(wine criers)和啤酒检员(ale conners)负责检查酒的质量,确保酒类饮品是良好和健康的,并且按照规定价格销售。违反规定的酿酒商或酒馆老板会受到公开羞辱的惩罚。
中世纪酒馆中常见的社会问题有哪些?
-中世纪酒馆中常见的社会问题包括赌博、酗酒、卖淫等。这些问题常常导致暴力事件,甚至有人在离开酒馆后因醉酒而死亡。此外,即使是神职人员也被发现参与这些活动,尽管这在当时是被严厉禁止的。
《坎特伯雷故事集》中提到的‘Tabard’是一家什么类型的场所?
-《坎特伯雷故事集》中提到的‘Tabard’是一家客栈,是故事中所有角色在前往坎特伯雷朝圣之前聚集的地方。
中世纪时期,鸡蛋在英语中的不同称呼有哪些?
-中世纪时期,鸡蛋在英语中有两种称呼,一种是‘eggs’,另一种是‘eyroun’。随着时间的推移,‘eggs’成为了更通用的词汇。
中世纪酒馆中的‘perpetual stew’是什么概念?
-‘perpetual stew’是中世纪酒馆中一直炖煮的炖菜,每次从锅中取出食物后,会添加新的食材来替换,以此保持炖菜的持续供应。
中世纪酒馆中的肉食是如何准备的?
-中世纪酒馆中的肉食通常是将肉类与骨头一起炖煮,煮至肉类容易从骨头上脱落,然后将肉切成小块或撕成碎片,再与炖汤中的香料和调味料混合。
中世纪酒馆中的饮料价格如何?
-中世纪酒馆中的饮料价格因种类和质量而异。例如,14世纪时,来自加斯科涅的红葡萄酒大约3便士一加仑,而来自莱茵地区的葡萄酒则需要6到8便士一加仑。
中世纪酒馆和客栈的分布情况如何?
-在中世纪,尤其是在大城市如伦敦,酒馆和客栈非常普遍。例如,1309年的伦敦有354家不同的酒馆,大约每225人就有一家酒馆。
Outlines
🏰 中世纪酒馆的探索与美食体验
本段落介绍了中世纪酒馆的历史背景和文化意义,以及人们在其中的活动。中世纪酒馆不仅是喝酒、赌博和进食的场所,而且根据酒馆的质量和声誉,顾客可能会品尝到不同品质的食物,如牛肉杂烩。视频还提到了一些中世纪的烹饪方法和食材,如猎人锅和永恒炖菜,以及如何在现代重现这些古老的食谱。
🍇 探索中世纪的饮料文化
这一部分详细描述了中世纪酒馆中的饮料文化,特别是葡萄酒和其他酒类。介绍了不同种类的葡萄酒,如来自加斯科涅的红葡萄酒和来自莱茵地区的白葡萄酒,以及如何确保酒的真实性和质量。此外,还提到了酒馆中的其他饮料,如苹果酒、梨酒和蜂蜜酒,以及酒馆如何逐渐开始提供食物和住宿服务。
🍻 从家庭酿酒到公共酒馆
本段讲述了从家庭酿酒到公共酒馆的演变过程。最初,家庭酿酒是由家庭主妇制作并在家门口售卖的,随着时间的推移,这些家庭酿酒逐渐发展成为提供食物和住宿的酒馆。尽管这些酒馆的规模和质量参差不齐,但它们都必须保证所售酒水的质量,否则会受到公开羞辱等惩罚。
🍷 酒馆的风险与挑战
这一部分探讨了中世纪酒馆的风险和挑战,包括过度饮酒和赌博可能导致的健康和安全问题。通过历史文献中的案例,展示了酒馆中发生的暴力事件和不幸事故,以及当时社会对酒馆活动的态度和规范。
🍲 重现中世纪风味:Bokenade
最后一部分介绍了如何制作一道中世纪风味的菜肴——Bokenade。详细描述了烹饪过程,包括食材的选择、烹饪方法和调味技巧。通过现代的烹饪手法重现了中世纪的味道,同时提到了与视频制作相关的网站和赞助商Squarespace。
Mindmap
Keywords
💡中世纪酒馆
💡牛肉浓汤(bokenade)
💡食谱
💡语言变迁
💡历史饮食文化
💡中世纪英语
💡文化传播
💡历史重现
💡食物史
💡文化交流
Highlights
中世纪酒馆是赌博、饮酒和进食的地方,例如一种名为bokenade的牛肉浓汤。
中世纪晚期,如果你需要食物和饮料,你应该找到一个旅馆、酒馆或啤酒屋。
这些地方可能有不同的质量,你可能只会得到面包和奶酪,但在声誉良好的酒馆,你可以得到一碗浓汤或炖菜。
有些酒馆可能会有一个所谓的'猎人锅'或'永久炖菜',这是一种始终煮沸的炖汤或浓汤。
中世纪的食材选择会影响你的炖菜,可能会有蔬菜浓汤、豆类和卷心菜,或者是含有优质肉类的炖菜。
在中世纪,banata或bukenade或boknade是一种非常常见的炖菜,可以在英格兰和法国的烹饪手稿中找到。
食谱中的一些词汇,如'smite'(意为切),在现代英语中已不常用,但在当时是常见的。
William Caxton在1490年翻译了维吉尔的'Eneydos',并对当时英语的变化感到沮丧。
Caxton通过印刷机的广泛传播,选择了一些词汇的特定版本,这些版本一直沿用至今。
bokenade食谱需要的食材包括牛肉、山羊或鸡肉、欧芹、鼠尾草、新鲜的海索草、肉豆蔻、丁香、鸡蛋黄、姜、酸果汁和盐。
酸果汁(verjuice)是一种中世纪的未成熟葡萄汁,具有醋般的酸味,但也带有甜味。
'坎特伯雷故事集'中提到了名为The Tabard的实际历史酒馆,这是所有角色在前往坎特伯雷朝圣前聚集的地方。
在中世纪英格兰,旅馆、酒馆和啤酒屋是有区别的,但随着时间的推移,它们的定义开始重叠。
酒馆最初是供应葡萄酒的地方,由酿酒商经营,而啤酒屋最初是私人房屋,妻子出售自家酿造的啤酒。
阿莱检查员(ale conners)会检查啤酒的质量,并确保其价格合理。
中世纪酒馆常常是充满赌博、饮酒和卖淫的地方,但即便如此,几乎每个人都会至少一次踏入酒馆。
离开酒馆时醉酒是一个持续的问题,常常以不幸的结局告终。
即使是神职人员也会光顾酒馆,尽管这种行为受到了批评。
如果你在中世纪英格兰,可能应该远离看起来可疑的酒馆。
作者计划在即将到来的英格兰之行中住在声称是英格兰最古老的旅馆The Porch House。
bokenade的制作过程中,最后加入鸡蛋黄、姜、藏红花和盐,然后加入酸果汁即可完成。
bokenade的味道包含了中世纪风味,如藏红花、丁香、肉豆蔻和酸果汁,与现代牛肉炖菜的风味不同。
Transcripts
While a medieval tavern in a fantasy game might be where you'd go to
receive a quest from a hooded stranger in the corner, in real life
it was where you went to gamble, drink, and eat perhaps something like this bowl of beef pottage known as bokenade.
So thank you to Squarespace for sponsoring this video is we visit a medieval tavern
this time on Tasting History.
So if you ever find yourself in the late medieval period and you are in need of food and drink
you better find yourself an inn, tavern or ale house.
Now all three of those are not exactly synonymous and we'll talk about how they're different a little bit later but
in general you should be able to go to any of them and get a drink and probably some food.
Now depending on the quality of the establishment you might just be getting some bread and cheese
but if it's a reputable tavern you should be able to get a bowl of pottage or stew.
Now some of these places might have what today is called a hunter's pot or perpetual stew going.
And this is the concept of always having a cauldron of of stew or pottage going at all times basically
you would take a bowl from it and then replace the ingredients that you just took out so it's always replenishing itself.
Even today there are places that still practice this.
There's a place in Japan who has been serving the same broth since 1945
and in Perpignan France they served the same stew from the 15th century all the way up until World War II
when they couldn't get the right ingredients.
And in the Middle Ages getting the right ingredients would also influence what your stew would be.
You might just get a vegetable pottage and some place it would just be beans and cabbages,
but some places it might be like a fish stew or something with really quality meat in it.
One of the most common stews from this period which I found recipes for in pretty much every
cooking manuscript from England and France from the Middle Ages is called banata or bukenade or boknade.
"Take veal, kid, or hen, and boil them in fair water, or else in fresh broth,
and smite them in pieces, and pick them clean. And then draw the same broth through a strainer,
and cast there to parsley, sage, hyssop, mace, cloves
and let it boil till the flesh be enough.
Then set it from the fire, and thicken it up with raw yolks of egg,
and cast there to powdered ginger, verjuice, saffron and salt,
and then serve it forth for a good meat."
I just find it so interesting that while the spellings have obviously changed
and they would have been pronounced quite differently back in the day
the words themselves for the most part are the same words that we would use today.
Now there are words like smite which means to cut but we don't usually use it in in like recipes.
It's more of a Biblical cutting I guess, though maybe we should bring that back. In my next cookbook I'm going to
get rid of the word cut and use to smite.
Now there are a few words in the original that we don't use at all in English today like eyroun
which was a Middle English word for eggs,
though eggs was also a Middle English word for eggs and it is around the time of this recipe
that we see one get picked over the other.
In 1490 William Caxton translated Virgil's 'Eneydos' into English,
and he was frustrated with how the English language was changing at the time.
He tells a story of a mercer or cloth Merchant named Sheffield, and he was from the north of England and he finds himself in Kent in the south of England
and he goes up to this woman and and asks her for some eggs,
and she says I don't know what you're saying, I don't speak French.
Well neither did he because eggs is not a French word but
she didn't know the word eggs because she was from the south and she said eyroun.
Well someone nearby overheard the confusion and said ask for eyroun and he got his eggs.
But after telling this story Caxton admits that he's also confused,
and finds consternation in these two different words meaning the same thing.
And he writes "Lo, what should a man in these days now write: eggs or eyroun?
Certainly it is hard to please every man because of diversity and change of language."
But the thing is he picked one and he picked eggs and usually it wouldn't matter which one he picked in years before
because he would write it down and a few people would read it great,
but he was using a printing press so
thousands and thousands of these were going out and so eggs became the word to use.
And he did that with a lot of different words. He was the one that chose which version we use even to this day.
Anyway I just thought that was interesting, onto the recipe.
So for this bokenade what you'll need is: 3 to 4 pounds or about 1 and 1.5 kilograms of beef, goat or chicken with the bones
I'm using beef, originally it actually says veal but I'm just using beef for this.
Also kid in the recipe it says kid, that is goat. I'm always having people saying it's children!
No it's not, it's goats.
A small handful of parsley, a few leaves of sage, a few sprigs of fresh hyssop, 1/2 teaspoon of mace,
and 1/8 teaspoon of cloves, four egg yolks, a 1/2 teaspoon of ginger, 1/2 cup or 120 milliliters of verjuice.
So what exactly is verjuice or vertjus? It was a medieval way of making juice from unripened grapes,
and so it's not fermented or anything but it does have this like vinegary kind of acidness to it
but it's also sweet so if you don't have it maybe like half grape juice,
and half red wine vinegar might mimic the flavor.
Then a pinch of saffron threads ground up, and a teaspoon of salt.
So first put your meat into a large pot and cover it with water or broth or a combination of the two,
and then bring this to a boil and reduce to a simmer.
And make sure to skim off any scum or foam that forms on top.
Simmer this for about an hour or until the meat easily comes away from the bone.
And then take it off the heat, take the meat out and go ahead and smite your meat.
Also the knife that I'm using is this honkin knife,
it's a knife which I'm now calling my my smiting knife.
This was made for me, handmade, by one of my Patreon patrons and it mimics an older design from like the early Renaissance, I believe.
I just think it's so cool, so I'll put a link to-
cus he makes like hand done knives. I'll put a link to his stuff. Anyway, this is now my smiting knife.
So once your meat is smitten or smited, you want to strain the broth as much as you can until it's nice and clean.
Then return the meat to the pot and add the broth back in.
Add in the parsley, sage and hyssop all chopped very fine as well as the mace and the cloves.
Then stir everything together and bring it to a simmer.
Then set the lid on the pot and let it simmer for an hour or an hour and a half or 2 hours,
really until the meat is as tender as you want it to get. Also, keep an eye on it because you might need to add some water in case it all
steams away but that's why you want to leave the the lid on as you do it.
Anyway while it cooks, I'm going to tell you a little bit about what else you might find in a medieval tavern.
"Befell that in that season on a day, in Southwerk at the Tabard as I lay
ready to wenden on my pilgrimage to Canterbury with full devout courage."
That was from the prologue of 'The Canterbury Tales' by Geoffrey Chaucer
and being written between 1387 and 1400 it contains one of the first references to a named inn,
an actual historic inn, it was called The Tabard and this is where in 'The Canterbury Tales'
all of the characters gather just before heading south to Canterbury on their pilgrimage
which is kind of the whole point of the work. Chaucer talks about the owner of this inn and says
that he was a very good host "And to the supper he set us straight away.
He served us with victuals of the best kind. Strong was the wine and well pleased we were to drink."
Now when I picture this in my mind's eye I'm definitely influenced by
things like Lord of the Rings, and Dungeons and Dragons and all of these kind of medieval fantasy worlds,
but they aren't exactly like that. First of all there are a lot fewer like orcs and elves,
but also the inns and taverns and alehouses of medieval England at least
were not all the same. They were quite different, at least at different parts in their history.
Now of course throughout time their definitions overlapped-
there was a lot of variety within each classification but in general
you had the inns at the the top of the echelon, they tended to be the nicest.
And then there were the taverns and then the ale houses at the bottom.
The inns, how they started out at least, they were a place for people to stay the night,
usually they were kind of near the gate house of a city or a town or else
in between cities or towns, like a day's walk away maybe 20 miles away,
so it was a place that you could stop the night and stay. And just like a bed and breakfast they would often give you some food and drink,
but only just like a bed and breakfast to the people who were actually staying there,
you couldn't roll up, you know. You weren't staying there, you roll up and you're like I want some grub, that isn't how it happened.
Though at times in history inns found themselves making good money from the food and drink and so
they kind of said all right maybe we will just serve to anyone who comes up
and so it was like having a restaurant in a hotel which is still a thing today.
A tavern on the other hand was kind of the opposite, it was a place for people to come eat and drink, mainly drink,
but it was not typically a place to stay.
Originally taverns were places that served wine.
They were run by vintner who made or imported wine and remember this is a time when
wine was actually still being made in England, I think they do it again now,
but they had quite a bit of wine being made in England but it was mostly made by the church,
and they kept it all for themselves for I'm assuming communion.
So anyone else was having to get imported wine which was a lot more expensive.
The most common wine in England at the time was a red wine from Gascony that cost about 3 pennies a gallon,
twice as much as the very best ale.
Then there was Rhenish wine from the Rhine region which cost 6 to 8 pennies a gallon.
Now if you're paying this much for your wine you want to make sure that you're getting actually what you paid for
so if there's any question you can ask the tavener to let you down into the cellar
to see the actual barrel that your wine is coming from.
If a tavener was found to be selling adulterated or counterfeit wine
they would often be punished by being put in the pillary or the stocks and having that offending wine poured over their head,
public humiliation.
But they would also usually get kicked out of the guild which basically meant that they lost their business.
There were actually people whose job it was to go around and inspect the wine
and it was more popular in France than in England but these people were usually the town crier,
and they would do this kind of as part of their job and be called the wine crier.
In the 11th century there was a French writer who said,
"Wine criers cry with open mouth the wine which is for sale in the taverns at four farthings."
Now some were selling the worst wine and everything in between, there was a lot of variety.
In London alone in 1309 there were 354 different taverns so lots of variety,
and with a population of only 880,000 people, that's like one tavern for every 225 people
so business was booming.
It's probably why they started eventually selling other drinks commonly like cider from apples and perry from pears
especially in the west country and then mead which is made from honey.
Often that was more expensive and kind of kept for special occasions but I'm sure you could find different versions-
different versions all over. Also, I found a mead that I really like,
it's called Odin's Skull. It's not so sweet and kind of has a little spice to it.
I'll put a link in the description. It's really, really good if you like mead.
I should do another mead video 'cus I there are a lot of old mead recipes I need to cover.
More mead maybe coming up.
Anyway these taverns along with all these different drinks that they were now selling would often start to sell food,
and some would even have a room or two to let up like on the second or third floor of the building
so you can see that the lines between the definitions are already getting blurred.
Also these rooms, you didn't get like a room to yourself they usually would house like 10 or 12 different people who didn't know each other,
was like mash as many people into these rooms as possible.
If there was a bed, again lots of people sleeping in the same bed so it ain't the Holiday Inn.
Now the least extravagant of the three places to to get drinks and there were more places you could get drinks that, but that we're covering,
were the ale houses and when they started out they were just that,
it was a private house where the wife in the house was selling ale
because she would make a big batch of ale, but ale back then especially before hops, would only last a day two maybe three,
and so anything that the family couldn't drink themselves she would sell to everyone else,
and so she would stick a stick or a broom outside of the door and that was the signal letting everyone know that there was ale for sale.
Eventually these places too would serve some food though typically it wasn't the highest quality or as varied a menu.
You'd probably get some bread and cheese, maybe a meat pie, who knows.
Now just because these ale houses were less official than taverns and inns
that doesn't mean that it was just a free-for-all. They were still controlled they had to sell quality ale.
In fact in some ways it was even more controlled because ale was such a staple of the people people's diet,
it was a major form of calories for many people.
In 1266 the Assize of Bread and Ale went into effect,
and this tied the price of ale and of bread to the price of wheat and just like there were the wine criers,
there were ale conners who would go around to test the ale and make sure everything was on the up and up.
They were sworn "to examine and assay the beer and ale, and take care that they were good and wholesome,
and sold at proper prices according to the assize; and also to present all defaults of brewers to the next court leet."
A maae baker or brewer who failed to adhere to these new laws
"ought to undergo the judgment of the Pillory without any redemption of money.
Likewise the woman brewer shall be punished by the Trumbell, trebuchet, or castigatory,
if she offends diverse times and will not amend."
That is to say if an ale wife flouts the law over and over and and doesn't change her ways
then she's going to be punished and the punishments are all forms of a public humiliation,
though I had to kind of look into trebuchet because I think of a trebuchet and I'm like
were they flinging these poor women into like the walls of castles.
So it turns out there are smaller versions of trebuchet that were used just for dunking people into into the river,
and that's what it was. They weren't they weren't trebucheting women across the field.
Anyway if you are visiting an ale house, or a tavern, or an inn you'll want to take it easy.
Don't go overboard on either the food or the drink or else you might end up like poor Osbert of Elstow.
The Bedfordshire coroner's role of 1276 tells us what happened to poor osbert after he left a tavern.
"About midnight on 17th May Osbert le Wuayl son of William Crustemasse of Elstow, who was drunk and disgustingly overfed,
came from Bedford... towards his house... when he arrived at his house he had the falling sickness.
Fell upon a stone on the right side of his head breaking the whole of his head, and died by misadventure."
And while died by misadventure may sound cool I assure you it is not.
And it seems that leaving these taverns drunkenly was was an ongoing problem and often ended in your demise.
In another coroner's role from 1272 it says that Ralph son of Ralph left a tavern and was accosted by four men,
Robert Bernard of Wuten, Robert of Shefford, Richard Norman and Roger Brienne.
I love that every person in this story has a first name that starts with the letter R.
Even the tavern that Ralph was drinking at was owned by Robert Malon.
Anyway these four men Robert, Robert, Richard, and Roger ask Ralph if he is drunk and
he is and so he drunkenly says who are you?
And in response "because he was drunk, Robert sprang forward and struck Ralph across the crown of his head with a sparth axe...
so that blood and brains immediately flowed out, he immediately lost his speech and died thereof about midday on the morrow."
The thing is these ruffians who accosted Ralph are the exact type of people who would often be in the taverns themselves.
I mean there were those upscale establishments of course but
most it seems, at least that got written about, were dens of scum and villainy
that were filled with gambling, drinking and prostitution but even with such a terrible reputation
it seems that pretty much everybody found themselves in a tavern at at one point or another, even the clergy
but that was quite frowned upon as can be seen in this letter from around the year 1200.
"An archdeacon to a rural dean, greetings...
we have been given to understand that chaplains in your deanery live in less than upright fashion...
for they go to taverns as we have heard where they have inappropriate and illicit association with laypeople,
with the result that those who say priests are no different from laypeople are justified.
In order that in the future it cannot be said that, as a result of your laziness,
such chaplains have been found in your deanery, bestir yourself to correct these matters."
Another letter I found shows that whether you're a layperson or a clergyman
going and gambling at these taverns often led to ruin. In this letter
a man has lent the friend of a friend some money and now he is asking the friend to pay him that money back,
and the friend is like no.
"I do not wish to lend him anything of mine, for he is inveterate dice player and he loses everything that he gambles...
those who were with him in the tavern when he lost X and his pledges- they gained everything, right down to his drawers.
So take care that you refrain from handing over any more of your own money-
which you borrowed from me- and so lose on him what you ought to repay me.
So should you find yourself in medieval England maybe stay away from any taverns or in that seem a little dodgy.
I'm hoping that I have found an upstanding inn in The Porch House, Stow on the World
which I just booked several nights at when I'm going to England in June very, very excited.
Now they actually claim to be the oldest inn in England dating from the year 947 though
there are numerous places that make very similar claims uh so so it's hard to tell
exactly what they mean. There's a wonderful video by one of my favorite creators J. Draper, I'll put her stuff in the description she's great.
And she talks about how a lot of places are England's "oldest pub" or England's "oldest inn" and it often has to do with
like there is one stone that was here in 1450 and the rest of the place is new,
it's like you know the Pub of of Theseus but sometimes also
it's like yes in 900 there was definitely an inn here, and there's an inn here now,
but you know here it was like a dentist's office and here was a bank and you know.
Anyway, it doesn't matter. I'm still really, really excited to go.
And perhaps if I can, I can convince them to really lean into their medieval pedigree,
and make some bokenade like the one that I'm about to eat.
So as soon as the meat is nice and tender take it off the heat and then it is time to add the egg yolks.
Now if you just add the egg yolks right now they're going to scramble and it's going to be unpleasant so
what you need to do is let the broth cool down just a little bit and then take a little of that broth,
and slowly add it into the egg yolks as you're whisking and they will start to warm up.
Keep doing this until you've added about a 1/2 cup of the broth and then whisk in the ginger, and the saffron, and the salt,
and then you can add that to the stew.
Finally add in the verjuice and it is ready to go.
And here we are a bokenade fit for a medieval tavern.
So you want to add those egg yolks in like last thing before you serve it because if you ever have to reheat it
they do tend to scramble a little bit so they go from thickening it to to scrambled.
The taste is going to be the same but the the look is a little a little different and I did just have to reheat mine unfortunately.
Doesn't matter, here we go. The thing is smells wonderful the saffron is what hits me.
I was worried it was going to be the clove 'cus that's what was hitting me at the beginning, but now it's the saffron. Here we go.
Hm!
That's really good. That is so interesting because
you get those medieval flavors that you would never find in a modern beef stew;
like the saffron, like the cloves, like the mace, like verjuice which adds this kind of
biting acidity without being super acidic because a lot of medieval dishes will actually just add vinegar,
and that is the flavor that you get.
This is different there's a more of a sweetness to it.
Really, really nice and the meat just falls apart.
Anyway if you do want to make this or if I can get that in, in England to make it,
then I will point you toward the Tasting History website, tastinghistory.com
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and I will see you next time on Tasting History.
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