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Griet |
16.4.2007, 16:15
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#1
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Участник Группа: Пользователи Сообщений: 1 464 Регистрация: 24.2.2007 Пользователь №: 18 Город: г.Троицк, Красная Пахра, Москва. Военно-историческая группа (XV): Рота Св.Фомы Репутация: 12 |
http://www.godecookery.com/tacuin/tacuin10.htm
http://www.imagesonline.bl.uk/britishlibra...133/13307_2.jpg Title of Work: Carrara Herbal Author: Serapion the Younger, author; Filippo, Jacopo, scribe Illustrator: - Production: Italy (Padua); circa 1400 Language/Script: Italian translation from Arabic Английским по белому написано - огурец. Неужели ж.Правда перевод с арабского - то есть регионально книга - арабская, а переводилась в Падуе. Medieval and Ancient History of the Cucumber by Ian of Oertha The cucumber (or cowcumber) has a long and glorious history. The type familiar to North Americans (cucumis sativus) is only one of several varieties which have been eaten or used in medicine: other types include what Pliny called the "wild" cucumber (usually believed to be cucumis silvestris asininus), the Egyptian hairy cucumber (cucumis sate), and another variety, referred to by Pliny (the Elder) as the "Anguine or Erratic Cucumber" (I'm guessing; maybe the West India Cucumber, Cucumis Anguria?), the Sikkim cucumber (cucumis sativus var. sikkimensis, a Himalayan plant), and the squirting cucumber (ecballium elaterium). According to Alphonse de Candolle (in "Origin of Cultivated Plants"), a 19th Century botanist of some repute, the cucumber originated in India at least 3,000 years ago this morning (heh heh). Since pickling food has been around that long, it is possible people enjoyed pickled cucumbers in ancient times (a relief; how could they do without?). The Ancient Greeks and Romans spread the vegetable westward, and the Chinese spread the vegetable eastward. Tiberius Caesar was particularly fond of the cucumber, eating one every day of his life (in order to accomplish this, they were grown on carts, which could be kept inside when days were cool during the winter, and wheeled out into the sun; an early mobile greenhouse). The cucumber is mentioned in Torah; one of the the oldest books in the Bible (Numbers 11:5) and in the book of Isaiah (1:. This probably refers to the hairy cucumber; the Numbers reference complains that they are no longer available for consumption (they had just fled Egypt), the Isaiah reference includes a description of cultivation (so, by that point, they were available). The cucumber is mentioned in Sumerian writings, including certain proverbs ("Let Ishkur, god, king, split the fertile ground like a cucumber."), The Debate between Summer and Winter, and so on. Pliny the Elder (an ancient Roman historian and naturalist) wrote of several remedies using cucumbers of various types in Book XX. These include the Wild Cucumber (26 remedies, including one called "elaterium"), the Cultivated Cucumber (9), and the Anguine or Erratic (5 remedies). Palladius, a Greek writer, included a flea-killing recipe that included cucumber seed (along with water, cumin, and psilotre or lupine). Both Theophrastus and Apicius mention cucumbers, Theophrastus describing 3 varieties, and Apicius being more concerned with the eating (and usage). In medieval period manuscripts, you can find the cucumber mentioned in an herbal by Apuleis (MS Ashmole 1431, Bodleian Library, Oxford), apparently written between 1070 and 1100. The cucumber is mentioned (along with a method to keep "greene Cucumbers all the yeare") in Murrel's Two Books of Cookerie, 1638. It appears to be a method for pickling. It is also mentioned in "The Cooks Guide: Or Rare Receipts for Cookery, 1654" (another pickling reference). Sir Kenelm Digby (born 1603) writes of two recipes with cucumbers; the first, a veal-chicken-vegetable potage (Potage de Sante'), the second, a beef potage with either herbs or veggies. There is a recipe for cucumber salad in "Recipes Tried and True," a document from Marion, Ohio, dated 1894. In John Gerard's Herball, 1597, cucumber "taken in meats, is good for the stomack and other parts troubled with heat..." He also writes of a recipe with mutton, oatmeal and herbs (and cucumbers) to "cure all manner of sawce-flegme and copper faces." This to be eaten 3 meals a day. He writes of more curious uses for the cucumber, as well. Thomas Dawson, in "The Good Huswife's Jewell", 1596, has a recipe for a "sallet" of herbes (by which I take it he meant leafy vegetables), cucumbers or lemons (at least, he writes "lemmans"), sugar, vinegar, oil, flowers, and hard-boiled eggs. Cucumbers were grown in India 3,000 years ago, in Sumeria, Ancient Greece, the Roman Empire, 9th Century France (Charlemagne was a cucumber eater), early 1300's England (though they were later lost, and re-introduced in the mid-1500s), Spain at least by 1494 (the Spaniards transported them to Haiti that year via Chris Columbus), 1535 Montreal (according to Jacques Cartier), South Dakota by 1500 or so, New England at least by 1630, and reportedly in Ancient Thrace. Tzatziki was eaten by the Turks in the 1500s, and passed along to the Greeks; add that to your period cucumber dishes. In all, a number of peoples have eaten cucumbers during periods covered by re-enactors; it is conceivable that this popular item might be eaten anywhere, since Jewish people have been eating them since Ancient Egypt, and as a student of history knows, they've been everywhere. Not to mention the world-spanning empires which grew them (Greek, Roman, Ottoman) would have spread their use, as well. Неутешительный вывод - возможно еще в 13 веке в Англии люди могли наслаждаться соленым огурчиком, но потом огурцы "исчезли" и появились в Англии лишь в сер.15 в.Продвинутая Испания импортировала огурцы в 1494 году на Гаити( следует поблагодарить Колумба). Сообщение отредактировал Griet - 5.10.2011, 15:30 -------------------- To recreate the medieval period without compromise.(с)The Company of St. George
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Griet |
30.3.2012, 20:41
Сообщение
#2
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Участник Группа: Пользователи Сообщений: 1 464 Регистрация: 24.2.2007 Пользователь №: 18 Город: г.Троицк, Красная Пахра, Москва. Военно-историческая группа (XV): Рота Св.Фомы Репутация: 12 |
Pears Stewed with Cucumbers and Fis
(Gruszki Duszone z OgBrkami i Fiami) * This court dish, which was mentioned in the records of the royal garrison at Kmnyn in 1389, is not just a compote. It is a conceit meant to ~mitatep oached melon, doubtless somethzng stmilar to a casaba, and thwefore draws its inspiration from Byzantium or the eastern Mediterranean. Afler the opening of trade with Constantinople m the 9608, Byzantine goods and culinary ideas reached the Polish royal court through overland trade routes from the Black Sea. Put the cucumbers, figs, honey, cloves, cinnamon and 1 cup (250 ml) of water in a stewpan. Cover and cook gently over medium-low heat until the cucumbers are tender (about 20 minutes). Add the pears and cover. Continue to cook the mixture for 5 minutes, or until the pears are hot, then remove from heat. The cucumbers and pears should have a similar twxture. Let the compote cool to room temperature, then add the rosewater. Serve at room temperature either as a side dish for a banquet or as a dessert with fresh cream. At the medieval Polish table the cream would have been served from a small ewer. 4 cups (5011 g) cucumbers, pared, seeded, amd diced 1 cup (1 75 g) driedjigs, chopped 1 cup (2SO ml) honey 1/8 teaspoon ground cloyes 1/2 tearpoon ground cinnamon 4 cups (750 g) under-ripe pears, pared, cored, and diced 1 tablespoon (1 5 mi) wsewater fresh cream (optional) Сообщение отредактировал Griet - 30.3.2012, 20:44 -------------------- To recreate the medieval period without compromise.(с)The Company of St. George
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