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![]() Toasted bread soaked in a broth, sweetened and coloured with saffron. Dory or dorye is an old word meaning ‘golden’, as in the French ‘d’or’, so that the name means something like ‘golden sops’ . The receipt appears in several 14th to 16th century cookbooks (Cury 1390, Liber Cure 1430, Austin 1440, etc.) ![]() SOWPES DORRY Take Almonds brayed, draw them up with wine. Oil it, cast thereupon saffron and salt, take bread toasted in wine, lay thereof a layer and another of the sewe and all together. Flourish it with sugar powder ginger and serve it forth. ![]() Sowpus dorre. Take almondes, bray hem, wryng hom up; Boyle hom with wyn rede to sup; then temper hom with wyn, salt, I rede, And loke thou tost fyne wete brede, And lay in dysshes, dubene with wyne; Do in this dysshes mete, that is so fyne; Messe it forthe, and florysshe it then With sugur and gynger, as I the kenne. ![]() Soupes dorroy. Shere Oynonys, an fry them in oyle; thanne take wine, an boil with Oynonys, toast whyte bread an do on a dish, an caste ther-on good almond milk, & temper it with wine: thanne do the dorry a-bowte, an messe it forth. For other almond-based soups, see Almond Soup Barley Cream Soup Soup Dorye ![]() |
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