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Title: Eggs in Pastry Cases - England, 14th Century
Categories: Medieval Egg Appetizer
Yield: 4 Servings
4 | tb | Water |
1/8 | ts | Saffron |
1 | c | Flour |
2 | tb | Sugar |
1/2 | ts | Salt |
6 | tb | Butter (3 oz) |
1 | Egg yolk | |
1 1/2 | tb | Beef bone marrow |
1 | ts | Powdered ginger |
1 | ts | Sugar |
4 | lg | Egg yolks (or 8 small ones) |
"Pety | Per | nollys" |
Bring the water to a boil with the saffron, then allow to cool. Chill. Sift the flour with the sugar and the salt. Cut in the butter with a pastry blender or two knives. Work in the egg yolk and saffron-tinted water. When the mixture is well blended, roll out on a floured board. Line four pastry shells with the pastry, and bake for 8 to 10 minutes at 400f. Lower the oven temperature to 350f. Put 1 tsp chopped marrow, a small pinch of ginger and sugar and 1 large or two small egg yolks into each pastry shell and bake in the oven until the egg yolks are just set. Serve hot or cold (bleah). Historically possible Variation: use duck eggs.
From one of "Two Fifteenth Century Cookbooks" (mid 1400's) Translated and compiled by Maxime de la Francaise in _Seven Centuries of English Cooking_ Grove Press, 1992. Typos by Jeff Pruett.
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