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A la cocina
Cooking Pages

Mini-FAQ
on cooking and eating this stuff

How spicy are these recipes?

They're not spicy-hot, just flavourful from the addition of herbs and various spices. Many of the herbs used can be easily found in modern Mediterranean cooking (flat-leafed parsley, marjoram, thyme,...). The spices themselves are ones we normally have on desserts (ginger, cinnamon, nutmeg,...) but also in oriental cooking and in various sauces. If in doubt, play it safe by adding small quantities or leaving the sauce on the side.

Why is there sugar in so many dishes?

They loved it. And to their credit, where proportions are mentioned, it is not an excessive amount of sugar, and it is tempered by the use vinegar, verjus, unripe grapes or bitter orange. The result is more akin to eating a sweet and sour oriental dish than to a dessert proper. 
If you are still not convinced, think that ketchup and many other ready-prepared foodstuffs have sugar in them, too.

What kind of sugar did they use?

Sugar was expensive but less so in the Iberian peninsula, because both Portugal and Spain had plantations in rapid expansion. So yes, they did have sugar in this period (late 15th century) and it was cane sugar (see Encyclopaedia Brittanica). As to the question of how refined it was... It must have been pretty much white, otherwise they could not have used it to make manjar blanco (blancmanger). I would guess, though, that the leftovers from the refining process would probably be cheaper and used in recipes where the colouring didn't matter. 

What is this flat-leafed parsley stuff?

The parsley used in modern Spain and Italy (and probably the whole Mediterranean basin) is not as nice-looking as the pretty kind normally seen in Great Britain or the USA. But it is far tastier, actually changing the character of the recipes in which it enters. It also has useful properties, like off-setting the taste of garlic, leaving your mouth with a much cleaner palate. If you are serious at all about eating in a Mediterranean manner (modern or period), get some flat-leafed parsley, even if you have to plant it yourself (you will then also have parsley roots for a soup I have a recipe for). Parsley is rich in vitamin C and a wonderful thing all around.

What do you fry things with? Or life beyond lard and bacon.

The recipes almost always specify lard or something containing lard (like bacon) as the fat of choice. It is also used to keep the meat moist (when roasting, for example).
If you can not, or do not wish to, eat lard, I suggest you use olive oil (or some other quality single-seed vegetable oil).

This is somewhat justified as Nola gives "sweet oil" (sweet as opposed to rancid, I suppose) as an alternative to lard in his recipe for Morisque Aubergine, "because moors won't eat pork fat". Also because on fast days and throughout Lent animal fats were forbidden. This may also be the way to go for people with converso or late moorish personas.

For Lent Nola also suggests substituting meat broth with water with some fine oil and salt. Using this would leave us with a wide variety of vegetarian dishes.

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