The oldest word still in use in the English language is ‘town,
’according to the Oxford English
Dictionary, which cites the first written occurrence in 725. One hundred
years later, the word ‘honey’ is attested, in an Anglo-Saxon psalter, in the
phrase ‘Swoetran ofer hunig and biobread.’ This translates as ‘sweeter than
honey and bee-bread (honeycomb.)
Honey is defined by the OED as ‘A sweet viscid fluid, of
various shades from nearly white to deep golden, being the nectar of flowers
collected and worked up for food by certain insects, esp. the honey-bee’ – a fine
and accurate definition, to be sure, but one which does not do justice to the
great love-affair of humans with this marvelous food.
I am on a mission to find the early culinary uses of honey.
I have not yet delved into earlier texts, so I am starting in the second half
of the sixteenth century, in The widdowes treasure: Plentifully
furnished with sundry precious and approued secrets in physicke and chirurgery,
for the health and pleasure of mankinde. Hereunto are adioyned, sundry prittie
practices and conclusions of cookerie, vvith many profitable and wholesome
medicines for sundry diseases in cattle, by John
Partridge (1586.)
To make drie Peares.
Take faire water and Rosewater according to
the quantitie of your Peares, then take Honey as muche as you thinke good and
put in your Peares, then let them seethe very softly that thei breake not, then
take them out and put them in a Collander, and let them dreaine, then when you
drawe your bread put them into the Oven in some earthen panne, and if they be
not drie at the first, put them in againe until they be drie, then barrel them.
To keepe Venison freshed long tyme.
Presse out the bloud cleane, and put it into
an earthen pot, and fill it with clarified Honey two fingers above the fleshe,
and binde a leather cloase about the mouth that mo ayre enter.
1 comment:
Thank you for this. I've been writing about honey - and cooking with it - in relation to Anglo-Saxon literature and medieval literature in my blog - http://pagetoplate.blogspot.co.uk/2014/01/an-anglo-saxon-banquet-tucking-in-with.html
Becky
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