- Potage
Potage (from
Old French "pottage"; "potted dish") is a category of thicksoup s,stew s, orporridge s, in some of which meat and vegetables are boiled together with water until they form into a thick mush. Potage has its origins in the medieval cuisine of Northern France and increased in popularity fromHigh Middle Ages onward. A course in a medieval feast often began with one or two potages, which would be followed by roasted meats. During theTudor period , a good many Englishpeasant s' diets consisted almost solely of potage. Some Tudor-era people ate self-cultivated vegetables like cabbages and carrots and a few were able to supplement this from fruit gardens with fruit trees nearby.Some potages that were typical of
Medieval cuisine werefrumenty , jelly (flesh or fish in aspic), mawmenny (a thickened stew of capon or similar fowl), and pears in syrup. There were also many kinds of potages made of thickened liquids (such asmilk andalmond milk ) with mashedflower s, or mashed or strainedfruit .ee also
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Pottage
*Medieval cuisine
*Frumenty
*Sop
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