I
went to the marvelous Gervase Markham for the recipe for the day, and here it
is:
The best pancake.
To
make the best pancake, take two or three eggs, and break them into a dish, and
beat them well; then add a pretty quantity of fair running water, and beat all
well together; then put in cloves, mace, cinnamon, and nutmeg, and season it
with salt; which done, make it as thick as you think good with fine wheat
flour; then fry the cakes as thin as may be with sweet butter, or sweet seam,
and make them brown, and so serve them up with sugar strewed upon them. There
be some which mix pancakes with new milk or cream, but that makes them tough,
cloying, and not crisp, pleasant and savoury as running water.
The English Husewife(1615),
Gervase Markham.
I
am not sure why this dish made the list. The basic concept has remained
unchanged since the sixteenth century and before. I
think we will all agree that Bath Chaps, Squirrel Pie and several others on the list are all but ‘forgotten’,
but surely a basic pancake recipe does not qualify?
6.
Rabbit with Prunes
7.
Fife Brooth
8. Roman Pie
9.
16th C Pancakes
10.
A Grand Sallet
2 comments:
I first thought that "seam" was a typo for "cream", but that is contradicted a few sentences later. I finally found a definition of "seam" that readers might like to know. It's fat, grease, or lard, and is also spelled "seame" or "seyme".
Thanks Alys: I wasnt sure myself, but didnt have time to look it up. When I started this blog, I intended to gloss every old unusual word, but that idea quickly went by the board - barely enough time some days to write the post itself! I am always very grateful when someone else steps in to fill in the gaps!
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