hedberg wrote:There is a small local middle age marked each year where a buddy and I have considered to make a batch of sausages and heat (grill) onsite. This is for fun, but I would like to go as authentic as possible.
What I would like input with:
Recipe as close as possible to an original middle age recipe. I am thinking pig intestines and fairly large (as in 150 grams each).
Ideas on how to serve them. I am considering some sort of leaf instead of paper or cardboard plate. Normal plates isnt really an option.
Also what to serve with it: Ketchup wasnt invented and it doesnt look like mustard was used for sausages back them according to Wikipedia. I am considering making it anyway, but any ideas if anything else was served with sausages back then?
Please share any thoughts..
Speaking as a food historian specializing in medieval western European cuisine, I think I can help you out. I've retrieved some of my class notes from a class I taught on medieval sausages and sausagemaking a few years ago. I'll post recipes separately, mostly from the mid-14th to mid-16th centuries, from English, French, German, Italian, and Catalan-Italian sources, however you can reasonably assume that many of these recipes pre-date the cookery manuscripts in which they were found. Some are cased and some are not. You may want to consider uncased sausage, floured and pan-fried, as a simple alternative to casing, but that's up to you. Certainly, cased sausages of 150g are not unreasonable for modern serving size, though a little on the large side for most medieval service.
For serving them, if you want something entirely biodegradeable, consider the very medieval option of serving them on a slab of whole wheat or barley bread. Bread-as-plate, or bread trenchers, were common late into period. They soaked up sauces and juices and left little to clean up. Very practical. Inexpensive, coarse wheat bread was generally used as trenchers.
I wouldn't put lots of faith in Wikipedia. I've got medieval recipes for mustard and recommendations on their use with meats and fish dating back to at least 1324 and likely earlier than that. Take some mustard flour, like Coleman's, and moisten it with some meat broth (chicken broth is particularly good), wine or pale ale, and optionally sweeten with just a touch of honey. Use on all manner of meat and firm-fleshed fish. No reason not to serve hot mustard on the side with your sausages.
The meat was often minced with a pair of hefty knives called gavinets. There is an illustration of mince being made in the Luttrell Psalter.
Hope this helps. Recipes to follow.