When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Medieval cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medieval_Cuisine

    Medieval cuisine. Medieval cuisine includes foods, eating habits, and cooking methods of various European cultures during the Middle Ages, which lasted from the 5th to the 15th century. During this period, diets and cooking changed less than they did in the early modern period that followed, when those changes helped lay the foundations for ...

  3. Sausage making - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sausage_making

    Traditional sausage making - stanching, Italy 2008. Small-scale industrial manufacturing in Russia. Meat ready for sausage making. Intestine for sausage making. The origins of meat preservation are lost to the ages but probably began when humans began to realize the preservative value of salt. [ 1 ]Sausage making originally developed as a means ...

  4. Regional cuisines of medieval Europe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regional_cuisines_of...

    Queen Esther and King Ahasuerus depicted dining on, among other things, a fish dish and a pretzel; illustration from Hortus deliciarum, Alsace, late 12th century.. Though various forms of dishes consisting of batter or dough cooked in fat, like crêpes, fritters and doughnuts were common in most of Europe, they were especially popular among Germans and known as krapfen (Old High German: "claw ...

  5. Scottish cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scottish_cuisine

    Scottish cuisine encompasses the cooking styles, traditions and recipes associated with Scotland. It has distinctive attributes and recipes of its own, but also shares much with other British and wider European cuisine as a result of local, regional, and continental influences—both ancient and modern. Scotland's natural larder of vegetables ...

  6. Curing (food preservation) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curing_(food_preservation)

    Curing is any of various food preservation and flavoring processes of foods such as meat, fish and vegetables, by the addition of salt, with the aim of drawing moisture out of the food by the process of osmosis. Because curing increases the solute concentration in the food and hence decreases its water potential, the food becomes inhospitable ...

  7. Chitterlings - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chitterlings

    Chitterlings (/ ˈtʃɪt (ər) lɪŋz /), sometimes spelled chitlins or chittlins, are the large intestines of domestic animals. They are usually made from pigs ' intestines. They may also be filled with a forcemeat to make sausage. [1] Intestine from other animals, such as cow, lamb, goose, and goat is also used for making chitterling.

  8. Tudor food and drink - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tudor_food_and_drink

    Tudor food and drink. Tudor food is the food consumed during the Tudor period of English history, from 1485 through 1603. A common source of food during the Tudor period was bread, which was sourced from a mixture of rye and wheat. Meat was eaten from Sundays to Thursdays, and fish was eaten on Fridays and Saturdays and during Lent. [1]

  9. Regensburg Sausage Kitchen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regensburg_Sausage_Kitchen

    Regensburg Sausage Kitchen. Coordinates: 49°01′16″N 12°05′51″E. Historische Wurstküche. The Historic Sausage Kitchen of Regensburg (German: Historische Wurstküche zu Regensburg) is a restaurant in Regensburg, Germany. This is notable as perhaps the oldest continuously open public restaurant in the world. In 1135 AD a building was ...