The
Old Foodie Time-Travel Vicarious Dining Machine is taking you to eighteenth
century Wales today for Christmas dinner. Our source is A Tour in Wales. MDCCLXX [1770] by Henry Hughes, which was published
in 1778. The host for the dinner which we will be attending is Robert Wynne
III, MP for Caernarvon, who died childless in 1762, the estate of Bodyscallen
(Bodscallan) then passing to his younger brother. Note that the bill of fare
for the ‘Second Table” was for the guests of lesser social standing, not a
second feast for the whole party! Also
note that the bill of fare was not simply a list, but showed the arrangement of
the dishes on the table in the style of the time. Dishes were set on the table
in a strictly symmetrical and hierarchical manner (hence the apparent
duplications) so as to provide an impressive spectacle as the guests entered
the dining hall.
HOSPITALITY AT BODSCALLAN DURING THE TIME OF THE LATE ROBERT
WYNN, ESQ.
A Bill of Fare of the Freeholders Christmas Dinner at Bodscallan
Caernarvonshire, Wales
60 or 70
used to dine at the two tables.
No other
liquor but black strap, 7 years old,
being 24 bushels to a hogshead, permitted to be drunk on St. John's day.
N.B. also
some wheat roasted and thrown into this beer, to ripen it.
2 legs of boiled mutton
and dressed turneps.
|
A rump of boiled beef
and
dressed cabbage
Remd by
sirloin of roast beef.
|
Boiled Pork and
potatoes
|
Roast turkey
|
||
Fruit pudding, baked
|
Mutton pye
|
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Goose with sweet
groat pudding under it.
|
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Saddle of roasted mutton
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Custard pudding
|
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19 minced pies
|
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Boiled suet pudding
|
Legs of roasted pork
|
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Goose with sweet
groat pudding under it.
|
||
Mutton pye
|
Fruit pudding, baked
|
|
Hand of boiled pork
and potatoes
|
A rump of boiled beef
and
dressed cabbage
Remd by
sirloin of roast beef.
|
2 legs of mutton and
dressed turneps
|
SECOND TABLE
Boiled beef
|
||
Boiled leg of mutton
|
Dressed roots
|
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Goose and sweet groat
pudding
|
||
Baked pudding
|
Mutton pye
|
|
Minced pies, a dozen
|
||
Mutton pye
|
Baked pudding
|
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Goose and sweet groat
pudding
|
||
Pease pudding
|
Leg of mutton
|
|
Leg of boiled pork and
potatoes
|
I
am tempted and intrigued by the goose with sweet groat pudding – how about you?
Groats are hulled or crushed grain – usually oats - and a pudding at this time generally
meant a boiled bag or ‘sausage’of some sort of starchy substance whose purpose
was primarily intended to eke out (or completely substitute for) meat, in the
manner of Yorkshire Pudding, for example. Some form of plain, starchy grain
pudding or gruel was the staple food of the lower classes for centuries, but for
the class of folk attending this dinner, it was not of course necessary to be frugal
with meat, so the pudding would have served more as an accompaniment – and would
likely have been made with a richer, as well as sweeter, batter or mixture.
I
have been unable to find a recipe specifically for “Groat Pudding” – indeed,
the concept of a written recipe for such an ancient, universal, every-day
staple such as a pudding or gruel would have been quite strange to our ancestors. I will, however, come back to the topic in a
post in the New Year. Until then, I give you two versions of Custard Pudding
from The English Art of Cookery,
According to the Present Practice (1788) by Richard Briggs.
Custard
Pudding boiled.
TAKE
a pint of cream or new milk, boil it with a stick of cinnamon, a little
lemon-peel, and let it stand to cool; beat up the yolks of five and the whites
of three eggs, mix a spoonful of flour with the cream, then put in the eggs,
with a gill of sack [sherry], strain it all through a sieve, grate in a little
nutmeg, and sweeten it with fine powder sugar to your palate; wet a cloth,
flour it, pour in the pudding, tie it, but not too close, and boil it three
quarters of an hour; or butter a mould, bason, or small wooden bowl, put in the
pudding, tie a cloth over the top, and boil it one hour; when it is done turn
it gently into the dish, and pour melted butter and sugar mixed over it.
Custard
Pudding baked.
TAKE
a quart of new milk and boil it, with a stick of cinnamon, a little lemon-peel,
a laurel leaf, and a few coriander-seeds, sweeten it as it boils with loaf
sugar, and then let it stand to cool; beat up eight eggs well with a little of
the milk, and pour it backwards and forwards, in two pans, till the milk and
eggs are well mixed, put in a spoonful of rose water, and strain it all through
a sieve; lay a puff-paste round the edge of your dish, pour in the pudding,
bake it, and send it up hot or cold to table.
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