- With over 20 historic recipes
Buy the ebook HERE 
Christmas today is a time of feasting, drinking and all round 
merrymaking. We serve vast meals that cause our dining tables to groan 
with the weight and our families to gasp at the luxury. 
But it is 
not just a matter of serving huge meals. Christmas - more than any other
 time of year - is associated with its own special foods, drinks and 
eating customs. 
Most Christmas foods are widely recognised. Roast 
turkey graces most tables, which also feature sprouts, roast potatoes, 
parsnips, bacon rolls, pigs in blankets, cranberry sauce and bread 
sauce. All that is in due course cleared away to be replaced by 
Christmas pud and mince pies. 
Others are very personal. I grew up in
 a household where supper on Christmas Eve was always sausages and mash,
 and where the adults began Christmas Day by trooping down to the 
kitchen for "Grandma's Special Christmas Tea", which was consumed with 
much lip smacking and joking. As a tot I found this early morning ritual
 a bit odd, but when I grew older I learned that "Grandma's Special 
Christmas Tea" involved my grandmother tipping a healthy dose of whisky 
into each mug before pouring out the tea. 
We take so much of this 
for granted as part and parcel of our Christmas traditions that we 
indulge ourselves without thinking. And if we do spare a thought we 
probably imagine that Christmas has always been like this. 
But it 
hasn't. Christmases of years gone by were very different. Oh, there has 
always been plenty of eating and drinking going on, but what has been 
eaten or drunk has varied enormously. 
So what did our ancestors eat and drink on the greatest feast of the year? 
Read on. 
Please
 note that in producing the recipes included in this book I have adapted
 original recipes found in books and manuscripts dating back to the 
times in question. Earlier recipes often did not include either precise 
measurements or detailed instructions, so I have experimented to find 
what seems to work best for me. I have generally sought to avoid recipes
 using ingredients that might be difficult to find these days or have 
suggested easily obtained alternatives when I have - how could I 
possibly miss out Mrs Beeton's original Christmas cake of 1861? Enjoy 
trying out these recipes and your taste of the past. 
Saturday, 26 November 2016
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
 

 
 

No comments:
Post a Comment