Sunday, May 16, 2010

Food Fit for a King: A modern chef thinks of the menu for modern kings.

Jamie Oliver, a famous British chef, plans the dinner menu for modern kings - presidents and prime ministers of several countries.

Food Fit for a King: Food for an Indian King or Maharajah

What would an Indian King serve at his Royal Feast?

Food Fit for a King: Middle Ages Food for a King

Do you know what Kings eat when they have a Royal Feast? The historian of French cookery, Legrand d'Aussy, describes a great feast given in 1455 by the Count of Anjou, third son of King Louis II of Sicily. This description illustrates the theatrical representation of the banquet:

  • On the table was placed a centre-piece, which represented a green lawn, surrounded with large peacocks' feathers and green branches, to which were tied violets and other sweet-smelling flowers
  • In the middle of this lawn a fortress was placed, covered with silver
  • The fortress was hollow, and formed a sort of cage, in which several live birds were shut up, their tufts and feet being gilt
  • On its tower, which was gilt, three banners were placed
  • The first course consisted of a civet or hare, a quarter of stag which had been a night in salt, a stuffed chicken, and a loin of veal
  • The two last dishes were covered with a German sauce, with gilt sugar-plums, and pomegranate seeds
  • At each end, outside the green lawn, was an enormous pie, stacked with smaller pies, which formed a crown
  • The crust of the large pies were silvered all round and gilt at the top
  • Each pie contained a whole roe-deer, a gosling, three capons, six chickens, ten pigeons, one young rabbit, and, no doubt to serve as seasoning or stuffing, a minced loin of veal, two pounds of fat, and twenty-six hard-boiled eggs, covered with saffron and flavoured with cloves
  • For the three following courses, there was a roe-deer, a pig, a sturgeon cooked in parsley and vinegar, and covered with powdered ginger
  • A kid goat, two goslings, twelve chickens, as many pigeons, six young rabbits, two herons, a leveret, a fat capon stuffed, four chickens covered with yolks of eggs and sprinkled with spice, a wild boar, some wafers and stars
  • A jelly, part white and part red, representing the crests of the honored guests
  • Cream covered with fennel seeds and preserved in sugar
  • A white cream, cheese in slices, and strawberries
  • And, lastly, plums stewed in rose-water
  • Besides these four courses, there was a fifth, entirely composed of the prepared wines then popular, and of preserves. These consisted of fruits and various sweet pastries
Can you imagine how grand a Royal Feast was? Can you draw a picture of what you would see if you were there?