Food From the Age of Shakespeare
By using cookbooks from the 17th century, one intrepid writer attempts to recreate dishes the Bard himself would have eaten
- By Amy Arden
- Smithsonian.com, April 22, 2011, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
The gooseberry fool was surprisingly easy. For color, I opted for ripe, red gooseberries instead of the pale green that Longe used. Per her instructions I scooped “two handfuls” in a bowl and used a spoon to “breake them very small.” With no guidelines for the amounts of sugar and rose water, I added what by my eye was about a half cup of sugar and several sprinkles of rose water. After the quart of cream had come to a “boyle,” I added a dash of nutmeg and folded in the gooseberry mixture. The fragrant rose water mingled with the aromatic spiced cream brought to mind a passage from Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream in which Titania, the fairy queen, is lulled to sleep in a forest of thyme and wild roses. “With sweet musk-roses and eglantine / There sleeps Titania.”
“Lett it stand till it bee cold,” Longe’s book instructed. I put the fool in the refrigerator, but during her day she might have chilled it in a root cellar or a purpose-built icehouse if she were lucky enough to afford one.
For the fricassee, I browned the pieces of rabbit in butter in a large skillet. I removed the meat, sautéed the chopped onions, parsley and thyme (a substitute for Fowler’s winter savory) and returned the rabbit to the pan and let it simmer about 20 minutes. I served the fricassee with peas and mashed potatoes. The common combination of herbs, onions and butter created a stew both savory and familiar, and the rabbit reminded me of chicken, but more flavorful and tender. My dinner guests ate with gusto, using the pan juices as gravy for the potatoes. Was this comfort food circa 1684?
As a finale, the fool was not quite as successful. Though delicately spiced, the mixture never fully solidified, leaving it a gloppy texture. Perhaps I didn’t boil the cream long enough. “A surprise to the palate,” said one guest puckering at the unfamiliar gooseberries. In my recipe makeover for the fool, I recommend raspberries, which have a delicate balance of sweet and tartness. Because we’re blessed with electrical appliances, I converted the fool recipe to a fast no-cook version. Over the centuries chicken became a popular fricassee meat and it will substitute well for the rabbit, which was common fare for our 17th-century ancestors. Fowler’s recipe called for a half pound of butter, but I used considerably less to spare our arteries.
As I offer these changes, I feel as if I’m scribbling a few notes in Sarah Longe’s and Elizabeth Fowler’s recipe books. Somehow, I don’t think they’d mind at all.
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Comments (4)
Hello Glynn,
Thank you for your comment, and apologies for the delay in responding. You're quite right that the potatoes are a modern addition. Peas were a common vegetable at the time, so you might say my side dishes paid a nod to food from the period without trying to replicate it exactly.
Thanks for reading!
Amy
Posted by Amy Arden on June 2,2011 | 12:11 PM
The cream of the Elizabethan era, and also, current day English cream, probably has more butterfat than the cream we get in American grocery stores. I think heavier cream would thicken better.
Posted by Susan Knorr on May 23,2011 | 07:21 AM
I love to read the old recipes and imagine what they were like as so many of the things used are not readily available.
One thing that Shakespear wouldn't have eaten though, are potatoes. They were not commonly used in England till much later.
Posted by Glynn Burrows on April 28,2011 | 03:47 AM
Red and green gooseberries have different flavours and uses! You may wish to try the Fool again using the Green gooseberries the receipt called for. Also, make sure that the gooseberries are the same variety (or similar) to the Elizabethan ones.
Posted by Angst Bunny on April 25,2011 | 12:39 PM