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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: pottage, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. FOODFIC: Please Welcome Rob Carter, Author of The Language of Stones

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/38079.The_Language_Of_Stones

Food is probably in everyone's top ten list when it comes to good things to think about, especially when you're hungry. So what better way to get further into your favorite novel than to consider what the characters might be eating? Willand, the young hero in my mythic history – The Language of Stones, was a lad from a village background with simple tastes. For him and the other people of the Vale, the staple diet was a late medieval pottage, or thick stew, that followed the seasons. In spring and summer there was the fresh bounty of all that a green and pleasant land could provide.

In the fall, mushrooms, autumn fruits, nuts and berries, would be laid up in storage along with the harvest of new grain. In the dark depths of winter came the celebration of the solstice when cured meats were eaten, along with trout from the stream and coneys from the warrens along with the odd hare or two. Meat was not in great abundance in the Vale, being eaten perhaps only two days in seven, but there was a pleasing variety -- ducks and geese, ham and beef, and of course mutton. Eggs and all sorts of dairy produce were available also. There is a scene in The Giants' Dance (volume two) where Will and Gwydion hide in the cheese store of a great house, though they have more on their minds than food. Drink, too, was nicely various, with each village inn brewing its own beer and ale, each household making its own country wines from whatever fermentable base was available, such as quinces and medlars and the berries collected from elder trees. There were beehives in the gardens of the Vale that gave honey from which mead was made. Occasionally an enterprising peddler would bring in a flask of something more exotic by the way of fire waters from the mountains of the North.

But the Language of Stones universe, being magical, has more than peas and pottage. As with the sumptuary laws, which banned common folk from wearing certain kinds of rich cloth, there were certain foods reserved for the gentry, the aristocracy and those of royal blood. For instance, no commoner could kill a royal swan, on pain of death, and the same applied to game in the royal deer chases. Steaks cut from the haunches of gryphons, fire-drakes and the like were rare delicacies that sometimes appeared at high table on feast days, but special magical butchery was required to preserve the eater from ill. The lore of plants was a complicated business and a wide knowledge of magical herbs was maintained by specialist wizards. Plants, or "worts", were the province of Gort, the "Wortmaster," and if his spells didn't always work properly he could use his stock of dried leaves to add flavor to his dishes.

Apart from the obvious difficulties with locating such animals as gryphons, this seems like an appealing way to eat and I keep thinking I should write a companion cookbook. One day...


Thanks for stopping by to share your food for thought, Rob!



You can find Rob and his books here:





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2. Yes, Your Wash-Up

The title is from The Posthumous Papers of the Pickwick Club (wash-up is the way one of the characters pronounces worship), but I owe the idea of this post to two questions. I decided not to wait for the next set of “gleanings,” because my summer schedule will prevent me from answering questions and responding to comments with the regularity one could wish for. Both questions concern Engl. r.

The first was about the status of r. Some people say that r is not a real consonant. Is it true? Yes, partly. In rate, late, mate, and Nate, the sounds r, l, m, and n, known in the phonetic nomenclature as resonants, are consonants like any other (compare Kate, pate, fate, date, etc.), but word finally they can form the crest of the syllable and thus display a feature characteristic of vowels. For example, each of the words—Peter, bottle, bottom, and button—pronounced as Pet’r, botl, botm, and butn, has two syllables, and the peak (crest) of the second syllable is r, l, m, and n. It follows that resonants sometimes behave as consonants and sometimes as vowels.

The second question requires a much more elaborate answer. Why do so many people pronounce wash as warsh? It will be easily seen that the title of today’s post was inspired by this question. In my recent discussion of wh-spelling, I referred to the weakening of Engl. h, s, f, and th, a process that has been going on for at least two millennia. Resonants are also prone to weakening. One can observe this change with a naked eye (with a naked ear?). British English is “r-less” (that is, r is not pronounced in far, for, fur, cart, horse, bird, and their likes), while in most varieties of American speech they are sounded. Obviously, the loss of r after vowels occurred in British English after the colonization of the New World by English-speakers, who preserved the traditional pronunciation of ar, or, ir, and so forth (colonial languages are always more conservative than the language of the metropolis). In similar fashion, l was lost in some positions, but that happened before the 17th century, so that here British and American English share a common cause: compare balk, talk, walk, chalk, balm, calm, alms, and salmon (in which mute l is still spelled) with bilk, whelk, and bulk (in which l is pronounced). The weakening was capricious: for instance, in Dutch a similar process took place, but the Dutch for holt “wood” (obsolete except as a last name) and salt is hout and zout: l is neither pronounced nor (providentially) spelled in them. In Scotland, golf used to rhyme with loaf (I don’t think anything has changed in the last fifty years).

After vowels, especially word finally, r disappeared not only in British English but also in some varieties of German. Occasionally other sounds, when weakened, find their last refuge in r. The name of the Greek letter that designated the sound of r is rho. Hence the term rhotacism “a change of any consonant to r.” Long ago, z was weakened to r. This is the most ancient case of Germanic rhotacism. The difference between was and were, rai

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