Q&A with Ken Albala
Added 2021-12-09 05:39:58 +0000 UTCHi Patrons! This call is going out to everyone, but patrons will get first crack.
I'm filming an Q&A with the great food historian, Ken Albala and I'll be asking him your questions. Respond below with questions for him about anything food history including the 17th century dish for Chicken & Cherries that we'll be making (recipe below). He is a fount of knowledge, so here's your chance!
To boile chickens with cherries
Take strong broath straine it into a pipkin + put it in your chickens with a little sweet marjorum parsly + time bind them in a bundle + put them in with a little white wine whole mace suger + a spoonfull of rosewater let them boile wel + when they are ready to serve put in the cherries pickt from the stalkes then straine in the yolks of two or three eggs + a little salt so serve them on sippets
Comments
He was awesome 8 months ago and he’s still awesome today 😆
2022-07-31 05:09:49 +0000 UTCI know this is from 8 months ago, but I ADORE Ken Albala! I have his Great Courses series and it's wonderful
Jeeyon Shim
2022-07-31 04:53:21 +0000 UTCI'm curious about the roots of the porridge made famous by Hell's Kitchen in Minneapolis, Mahnomin Porridge. It's said to have been inspired by a Native American dish described in the journals of 19th-century fur traders. The modern dish is hearty and creamy, full of wild rice, nuts, and dried fruit. But I've never found any details on what it was like in its original form.
Jen With One N
2021-12-28 18:40:18 +0000 UTCAny chance there's a good history of squid ink in cooking?
2021-12-14 00:19:02 +0000 UTCIf you’re still taking questions. I like to know about the history of hydrosols and perfumes used in food across time.
2021-12-11 04:01:39 +0000 UTCTouching on what several others have asked, of the gaps in our historical cooking knowledge (mystery ingredients, extinct ingredients, unspecified processes), which one vexes him the most? Gotta love any recipe that includes the equivalent of "prepare in the usual way".
2021-12-10 17:57:53 +0000 UTCI would love to ask him about the history of hot spicy food. How this paradox of enjoying a fiscal painful experience became a staple in food cultures all around the world. (Perhaps it doesn't sound like it but I absolutely love spicy food:))
2021-12-10 14:20:49 +0000 UTCSome ancient, kingly recipes call for the meat to be cooked alive. Did that actually taste any better or was it merely a show of dominance and status to get served a meal so ceremoniously cooked?
2021-12-10 14:15:13 +0000 UTCIs there a recipe from the past that we will never be able to make either because the ingredients are unknown (they are listed, but we don't know to what they are referring) or because they no longer exist.
2021-12-10 10:19:07 +0000 UTCJust to clarify -- when you say "American biscuit" do you mean what Americans call "biscuits" or what Americans call "cookies" (And Brits call "biscuits")?
2021-12-10 10:15:06 +0000 UTCAt what point did eggs become larger? i.e. when following old recipes, how old is old enough to need to halve the number of eggs to account for eggs being larger nowadays?
Alice
2021-12-09 19:57:33 +0000 UTCWhat is one extinct ingredient, you wish you still could access?
Victoria Howard
2021-12-09 17:48:42 +0000 UTCWhat are, in historical recipes, the combinations of ingredients and flavors we would now find more daring? Have you actually tried them?
2021-12-09 16:58:25 +0000 UTCHow did once-universal dishes like blancmange disappear?
Umberto Hecko
2021-12-09 16:40:28 +0000 UTCI second this! maybe a follow up to add. "Traditional" dishes are hardly ever kept consistent generation to generation. It seems to me that nearly every "traditional" recipe from Europe or Asia these days has ingredients indigenous to the Americas. Is it possible to find the routes of these dishes pre-contact?
Nathan Blubaugh
2021-12-09 16:08:14 +0000 UTCalso address the confusion between lamprey and eels. Now or then, these can be mixed up.
Nathan Blubaugh
2021-12-09 16:03:39 +0000 UTCI'd like to hear a bit about pivotal innovations to the history of grain use and cultivation. • How different is grain today? • Pre-industrialization, was white flour really only for the rich? • When looking at old baking recipes, what compensations should we make when using modern grain ingredients? • What books would provide a deep dive into this topic?
Nathan Blubaugh
2021-12-09 16:00:13 +0000 UTC