Page:A History of Domestic Manners and Sentiments in England During the Middle Ages.djvu/372

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or2 Hijlory of 'Domejlic Manners The receipt for making farfed hrowet, or hroivet farfyn, is literally as follows : — Take almonds and pound them, and mix with beef broth, so as to make it thick, and put it in a pot with cloves, maces, and figs, currants, and minced ginger, and let all tliis seethe ; take bread, and steep it in sweet wine, and " draw it up," and put it to the almonds with sugar; then take conyngs {rabbits), or rabbettes {young rabbits), or squirrels, and first parboil and then fry them, and partridges parboiled ; fry them whole for a lord, but otherwise chop them into gobbets- and when they are almost fried, cast them in a pot, and let them boil altogether, and colour with sandal-wood and saffron; then add vinegar and powdered cinnamon strained with wine, and give it a boil; then take it from the fire, and see that the pottage is thin, and throw in a good quantity of powdered ginger. It is repeated, at the end of this receipt, that, for a lord, a coney, rabbit, fquirrel, or partridge, lliould be ferved whole in this manner. The other pottage in this courfe, charlet, was lefs complex, and was made thus : — Take sweet cow's milk, put it in a pan, throw into it the yolks and white of eggs, and boiled pork, pounded, and sage ; let it boil till it curds, and colour it with saffron. The following was the fyrup for a capon : — Take almonds, and pound them, and mix them with wine, till they make a thick "milk," and colour it with saffron, and put it in a saucepan, and put into it a good quantity of figs and currants, and add ground ginger, clove?, galingale {a jpice much ujed in the middle ages), and cinnamon ; let all this boil ; add sugar, and pour it over your capon or pheasant. The leche in this lirfl courfe was, perhaps, the difh which is called in the receipts a leche lumharde, which was made thus : — Take raw pork, and pull off the skin, and pick out the skin sinews, and pound the pork in a mortar with raw eggs ; add to it sugar, salt, raisins, currants, minced dates, powdered pepper, and cloves; put it in a bladder, and let it seethe till it be done enough, and then cut it into slips of the form of peas-cods : grind raisins in a mortar, mix them with red wine, and put to them almond-milk, coloured with sandal- wood and saffron, and add pepper and cloves, and then boil the whole ; when it is boiled, mix cinnamon and ginger with wine and pour on it, and so serve it. Browet of Almayne, which comes in with the fecond courfe of this dinner.