Home | Cookbooks | Diary | Magic Menu | Surprise! | More ≡

Meat Rice

Accompaniments

Rice cooked with meat, or in a meat broth. Hartley 1954 reports that “East End women make a rice pudding using broth … when cooked it is finished under the joint of Mutton.” This is similar to the “Rice of Flesh” found in cookbooks throughout the medieval period from Cury 1390 onwards.

See: For similar grain-and-broth accompaniments, see: Frumenty, Oat Pudding and the pork-and-rice Sturmye


Original Receipt in ‘The Forme of Cury‘ by the Chief Master-Cook of King Richard II, c1390 (Cury 1390)

RICE OF FLESH.
Take rice and wash them clean, and do them in earthen pot with good broth and let them seethe well. Afterward take almond milk and do thereto. And colour it with saffron and salt, and present forth.







MORE FROM Foods of England...
Cookbooks Diary Index Magic Menu Random Really English? Timeline Donate Royalty English Service Food Map of England Lost Foods Accompaniments Biscuits Breads Cakes and Scones Cheeses Classic Meals Curry Dishes Dairy Drinks Egg Dishes Fish Fruit Fruits & Vegetables Game & Offal Meat & Meat Dishes Pastries and Pies Pot Meals Poultry Preserves & Jams Puddings & Sweets Sauces and Spicery Sausages Scones Soups Sweets and Toffee About ... Bookshop

Email: [email protected]


COPYRIGHT and ALL RIGHTS RESERVED: © Glyn Hughes 2022
BUILT WITH WHIMBERRY