Scappi's Renaissance Herb Torte

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  • Опубликовано: 21 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 2,7 тыс.

  • @TastingHistory
    @TastingHistory  4 года назад +806

    The description seems to not appear for some people today, so I'm posting the recipe below.
    Help Support the Channel with Patreon: www.patreon.com/tastinghistory
    MODERN RECIPE
    INGREDIENTS
    - Chard
    - Spinach
    - Mint
    - Marjoram
    - 1 lb (450g) Ricotta
    - ¾ lb (340g) Parmesan
    - 3oz (85g) of High Fat Cheese
    - 6 Tablespoons (85g) Butter Softened
    - 1 Tablespoons Pepper
    - 4 ½ Teaspoons Cinnamon
    - 1 ½ Teaspoons Cloves
    - 3 Medium Eggs
    - ½ Cup Sugar
    - 2 Portions of Flaky Pastry Dough
    METHOD
    1. Line a large pie tin or cake pan with pastry dough and blind bake it in a 450°F/230°C oven for 12-15 minutes, or until cooked. Remove from the oven and let cool.
    2. Reduce oven temperature to 350°F/180°C.
    3. Finely Chop all of your herbs/greens.
    4. Mix the cheeses in a large bowl until somewhat smooth. Add the eggs and beat until incorporated. Then add the butter, sugar, and spices and mix until combined. Finally, add in the greens and mix them by hand so as not to bruise the greens.
    5. Once the filling is well mixed, pour into the cooled pastry shell and smooth the top. Then top it with the other piece of pastry and press the edges into the bottom dough. Leave some ripples on the top crust to give room for the filling to expand during baking. Brush the top with an egg wash, then set on the bottom rack of the oven and bake for 1 hour.
    6. Once baked remove from the oven and serve warm.

    • @erickfrago7224
      @erickfrago7224 4 года назад +14

      I can imagine how 'weird' the taste is, cinnamon and clove, then sweet, and with min and marjoram

    • @tessasilberbauer6219
      @tessasilberbauer6219 4 года назад +6

      Thank you! Sounds like a precursor to quiche. I'll be trying this my next Pie Day.

    • @CynBH
      @CynBH 4 года назад +22

      As for a YA series, why not combine this channel with a character? An ordinary human who happens to be immortal. Their major passion is cooking, so they go from age to age and city to city, working in kitchens around the world, observing the society around them. Each book is a different age. Include a couple of recipes in each book. 😁

    • @CynBH
      @CynBH 4 года назад +11

      Bonus: you'd be encouraging a love of food history in the next generation 😊

    • @TheHopperUK
      @TheHopperUK 4 года назад +5

      @@CynBH That's an amazing idea for a book series! Write it:D

  • @TheR971
    @TheR971 4 года назад +2214

    "why procrastinate on that winter body" truly a word to live by. For it is either winter or winter is coming.

    • @stargirl7646
      @stargirl7646 4 года назад +20

      Truly profound words, I thank thee

    • @jerkfudgewater147
      @jerkfudgewater147 4 года назад +35

      “TREAT YO SELF!!!”

    • @melskunk
      @melskunk 4 года назад +38

      As a Canadian, this is unfortunately accurate

    • @Steff-in-a-pan
      @Steff-in-a-pan 4 года назад +8

      Preparing for winter on March 21st 👌

    • @justcam8453
      @justcam8453 4 года назад +4

      Now why did I read this while he said it lol

  • @madeinbusanjkjm
    @madeinbusanjkjm 4 года назад +1736

    "Why procrastinate on that winter body."
    This is now my new life motto, applicable to all seasons.

    • @nullpoint3346
      @nullpoint3346 3 года назад +20

      Call forth the Frost Skeleton.

    • @Makkiwacki
      @Makkiwacki 3 года назад +5

      I have seen you on every video of Rupauls drag race the pit stop and I must say ❤️ thank you

    • @joktjokt9613
      @joktjokt9613 3 года назад

      why are u verywhere ??????????????????????

    • @hotpikachu
      @hotpikachu 3 года назад

      Dude i see you on every cooking video calm down on the comments

    • @cerberaodollam
      @cerberaodollam 3 года назад

      Mincapball on point

  • @FormaAlert
    @FormaAlert 4 года назад +1214

    Yo this dude's Italian pronunciation is beautiful, I'm actually going to cry.

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  4 года назад +365

      ☺️ awww shucks

    • @Yokoto12343
      @Yokoto12343 3 года назад +14

      Eyyy Warframe player!

    • @riccardomartignago3422
      @riccardomartignago3422 3 года назад +27

      @@TastingHistory Actually not that bad but there's definetely room for improvement

    • @marialarson1711
      @marialarson1711 3 года назад +172

      The truest Italian stereotype is that it is impossible to please one.

    • @FormaAlert
      @FormaAlert 3 года назад +77

      @@riccardomartignago3422 And evidently room for pedantry

  • @jessetheunending9357
    @jessetheunending9357 4 года назад +549

    I love how honest he is about how good a dish tastes. On some dishes he's said "nope", some he's fallen in love with, and dishes like this he says "it's weird, it's delicious, but it's weird..."
    Thank you for entertaining me with dishes I've never heard of or tried before!

    • @angeliaparker-savage5401
      @angeliaparker-savage5401 3 года назад +40

      I agree. If something is icky, I want to know before I go through the trouble of making it. I remember when he made Kykeon. He's like..."yeah...uh...NO." *snicker*
      I love history, and I love learning to make very old or ancient recipes. This is one of my absolute FAVORITE channels ever... I'm SO glad I found it.

    • @ray.shoesmith
      @ray.shoesmith 6 месяцев назад +1

      Hard tack 🌕💥🌕

  • @julievoit370
    @julievoit370 4 года назад +340

    Max, you’re adorable. I’m an old lady, so I’m saying this in a big-sisterly way. Your show has become my favorite on RUclips. Keep making it, please.

    • @lisamrb4620
      @lisamrb4620 3 года назад +14

      My favourite, as well. He is adorable. Combine the recipes and the history, he makes it so interesting!

  • @connorgolden4
    @connorgolden4 4 года назад +1374

    This herb pie sounds so rich that it’ll probably try and commit tax evasion.

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  4 года назад +314

      Topical 🤣

    • @christophfischer4796
      @christophfischer4796 4 года назад +127

      It actually sounds rich enough to also get away with it.

    • @710LENNY
      @710LENNY 4 года назад +161

      You're overlooking the fact this was made for the Pope. It's tax exempt.

    • @withtrees
      @withtrees 3 года назад +21

      That joke was so rich it made the Monopoly man blush.

    • @TheComminustboxhead
      @TheComminustboxhead 3 года назад +4

      #citizensunited

  • @julian4868
    @julian4868 4 года назад +547

    “despite the cavalcade of coronary-clogging constituents,” that’s a hell of an alliteration!

    • @GiselleMF
      @GiselleMF 4 года назад +7

      I'm jealous that I didn't come up with it first.

    • @SEELE-ONE
      @SEELE-ONE 4 года назад +9

      That's a mouthful!

    • @komi-creative
      @komi-creative 4 года назад +3

      Very Moira - esque

    • @KickyFut
      @KickyFut 4 года назад +9

      A catch-all continuous collective!😁

    • @KayleBradley
      @KayleBradley 4 года назад +3

      He doesn't need to go that hard, but he does for us.

  • @sonipitts
    @sonipitts 4 года назад +761

    "For this recipe, you will need..."
    *Mrs. Crocombe enters the chat*

    • @jhernandez891
      @jhernandez891 4 года назад +3

      Yes!!

    • @CynBH
      @CynBH 4 года назад +3

      @JW McCabe THANK YOU!! ❤❤

    • @Nimesay1
      @Nimesay1 4 года назад +18

      I want a collab between these two so baddd

    • @CynBH
      @CynBH 4 года назад +29

      How about a collaboration between this channel and Baumgartner Restoration? While Baumgartner restores a painting and tells its history, Max tells history of the era and gives us a recipe.

    • @martynnotman3467
      @martynnotman3467 4 года назад +11

      "Mrs Crocombe enters the chat with a baseball bat"

  • @Carloshache
    @Carloshache 4 года назад +306

    We have a surviving descendant to this recipe that survives to this day: the beautiful "Torta Pasqualina" or Easter PIe from Liguria - which is also popular in parts of South America. A recipe you definitely got to try. In Pasqualina the herbs, the cheeses and the eggs are all separate layers which makes a less brown pie, definitely more visiually appealing. The dough used are thin sheets of bread dough stacked on each other. And of course Pasqualina has done away with all excess sugar and spice even though old style seasonings such as lemon peel and nutmeg might show up in some recipes.

    • @irinam8709
      @irinam8709 3 года назад +18

      I used to make even more simple pie! You just need 2 puff pastries, a box of feta cheese, an egg, 2-3 spoons of cream and a bouquet of your favourite herbs (spring onion works the best to me).

    • @BrianKelsay
      @BrianKelsay 3 года назад +7

      That sounds wonderful.

    • @mikehunt3688
      @mikehunt3688 3 года назад +10

      Nutmeg, huh? Dont let townsends find out.

    • @lkriticos7619
      @lkriticos7619 2 года назад +3

      I was just thinking that it sounds like something my Yiayia in Cyprus used to make around Easter.

    • @GothTear13
      @GothTear13 2 года назад +8

      Very similar to erbazzone too (something like herb/grass thing), typical of Emilia and southern Lombardy - it has chards, spinaches, parmesan and sometimes ricotta and/or rice, but there’s no sugar or spices, just salt and some onions (there’s really tons of recipes though). Top it off with prosciutto lard scraps and you’re in heaven

  • @sjenner76
    @sjenner76 4 года назад +1127

    ”But your Holiness, a camel can’t be a fish.” “Wrong you heretic! It’s a ship of the desert that carries it’s water within it. It’s an inside out fish. So it’s a fish! Peter has spoken! Now, make me filets of camel-fish!” “Yes your Holiness.”

  • @TastingHistory
    @TastingHistory  4 года назад +746

    I'm curious, what eras/cultures being covered on Tasting History are you most enjoying? What should I make more of?

    • @scrungycat407
      @scrungycat407 4 года назад +357

      Personally, I'm enjoying the Ancient Rome recipes the most. It's amazing to know we still have records of their food! That said, I'm just a novelty account so...

    • @sheenachristina2385
      @sheenachristina2385 4 года назад +243

      I enjoy it all!
      would love to learn about Japanese
      Food, and maybe how western influences may have changed aspects of it after opening themselves to trade.
      Either that or how a national dish became a “national dish.” Or all the weird gelatin foods that were all the hype in the 50’s.

    • @FullMonterey
      @FullMonterey 4 года назад +116

      More Anglo-Saxon/Early English recipes please! By far my favourite culture/period of history

    • @Paul.M.
      @Paul.M. 4 года назад +164

      Ancient recipes deffinitely, they're vague, exotic and often leave you guessing how the proper proportions should be, so that you can keep experimenting until you get it just right.

    • @Mal_Havok
      @Mal_Havok 4 года назад +66

      It’s have to be the *very* old stuff. It brings in unique ideas you don’t really see anywhere else in America

  • @quantumbandit6202
    @quantumbandit6202 4 года назад +374

    Speaking of eating like a king, have you ever considered making a video about dillegrout? It's a royal dish created for William the Conqueror, who apparently liked it so much that the cook who invented it was given a manor and his descendants were required to prepare it for all future coronations. Might make for an interesting episode.

    • @ragnkja
      @ragnkja 4 года назад +28

      Do you happen to know why it was not served for the six past coronations?

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  4 года назад +220

      It’s on the schedule 😁

    • @quantumbandit6202
      @quantumbandit6202 4 года назад +11

      @@ragnkja No idea. I guess tastes changed?

    • @revinaque1342
      @revinaque1342 4 года назад +42

      @@ragnkja Probably because no one wants to eat a sweet stew of chicken with Christmas spices in almond milk anymore 😄

    • @jayasuryangoral-maanyan3901
      @jayasuryangoral-maanyan3901 4 года назад +21

      @@ragnkja I'm shocked the tradition lasted so long honestly. Feudalism can be weirdly stable when it matters least I guess

  • @DavidFlowers777
    @DavidFlowers777 4 года назад +544

    Not gonna lie, when the pandemic is over you should totally open up a restaurant which only serves historic dishes, providing extra fun facts about the dishes on the menu

    • @malkhazbutkhuzi7133
      @malkhazbutkhuzi7133 3 года назад +10

      you are so underrated

    • @lindanorris2455
      @lindanorris2455 3 года назад +10

      RIGHT ON!

    • @StelCreator
      @StelCreator 3 года назад +13

      Definitely! I would love it if historians or teachers could sit down at the table and talk about the history of the meal, the ingredients, the methods and the origins of the recipes. My type of evening!

    • @daycmetrollingdeihatin5100
      @daycmetrollingdeihatin5100 3 года назад +20

      While it would no doubt have a fervid audience i highly doubt how financially viable it would be.... Considering how spread out the audience is

    • @JafuetTheSame
      @JafuetTheSame 2 года назад +14

      restaurant would be just three times more work and three times less money

  • @SebastianWitkowski
    @SebastianWitkowski 4 года назад +166

    SOOO I totally made this and my friends and I were shocked at how complex and yummy it is. I couldn't even feel the greens/parmesan. "Pope pie" is now gonna be a staple in my recipe book. Really great vegetarian dish too. Also, springform pans will make your life a lot easier when it comes to popping this beast out.

  •  3 года назад +15

    The horseshoe recipe actually makes a lot of sense: rusted iron is what you actually need to absorb iron in the body.
    That is why there are similar recipes all around europe that use acidic foods to corrode iron, like diping old gardening shovels in lemon juice, or putting iron nails into an apple for a week before removing them.

  • @sharoniponi
    @sharoniponi 4 года назад +152

    "there is no singing in this book..."
    NOT WITH THAT ATTITUDE MAX!

  • @Nickelplate1
    @Nickelplate1 4 года назад +613

    "Fat Cheese" is my street name.

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  4 года назад +143

      🤣 very intimidating

    • @cheyenneseleah2753
      @cheyenneseleah2753 4 года назад +44

      The cackle that left my body was unholy 😂😂

    • @Shayna11NM
      @Shayna11NM 2 года назад +5

      I love that more than you'll ever know. 💜🥰

    • @jazietk3763
      @jazietk3763 3 месяца назад

      Sneaky Santa is mine

  • @Ignideus
    @Ignideus 4 года назад +107

    I just can't get enough of this channel. Fantastic.

  • @sweepingtime
    @sweepingtime 4 года назад +155

    I would love to see a sign on Broadway that goes, "And now for the first time, SCAPPI'S OPERA" and the performance is basically the recipes being sung aloud.

    • @cimmerianj8997
      @cimmerianj8997 3 года назад +21

      whilst being cooked on stage

    • @Your-Least-Favorite-Stranger
      @Your-Least-Favorite-Stranger 3 года назад +11

      @@cimmerianj8997 *Pantomimed cooked on stage
      And everyone has to pantomime eating and accurately reacting to how they actually taste (one rehearsal had to involve actual cooking and sampling)

    • @wandanemer2630
      @wandanemer2630 2 года назад +3

      I need this now

    • @Cecilpedia
      @Cecilpedia 7 месяцев назад +1

      🎶SERVE IT HOT🎶

    • @abignothing
      @abignothing 7 месяцев назад +2

      cats the musical but its italian renaissance food singing about itself

  • @operationgoldfish8331
    @operationgoldfish8331 4 года назад +7

    I'm a cardiac rehab specialist nurse and every time I see a recipe that appeals to me from the past I have this calculation going on in my head thinking 'what can I ditch to make this healthy and at the same time stay tue to the recipe'. I think it just blew a circuit!
    But thanks for the ideas here. If you cut down on the butter and full fat cheese (and go for a wholemeal pastry instead of puff), you have the makings of a very nice quiche. I like the idea of including the spices but I don't tend to add sugar to anything if I can help it. We'll have to see if I can find the time to experiment ;)

  • @Anastas1786
    @Anastas1786 4 года назад +167

    "I love that he calls this a 'common herb tort'; it makes it sound so _light_ and _healthy..._ and then you read what's actually _in_ it and put your cardiologist on standby."
    To be fair, I think the most strictly accurate understanding of the name given the Italian is "tort of common herbs", not "common tort composed of herbs". It's a distinct difference.

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  4 года назад +45

      Correct. It’s the herbs that are common.

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  4 года назад +9

      Correct. It’s the herbs that are common.

    • @mellie4174
      @mellie4174 4 года назад +11

      Yes he said that in the video

    • @mercenarygundam1487
      @mercenarygundam1487 4 года назад +26

      @@TastingHistory It just needs bacon, Italian pork sausages and mushrooms and you might want to call in a priest to give you a prayer before your heart gives out.

    • @akiramado9198
      @akiramado9198 4 года назад

      Tomato, tomeato

  • @felixrivera895
    @felixrivera895 4 года назад +173

    My friend makes Rosemary cookies every year for christmas. They're sweet but herby. So I imagine it's like this in general. They're really good but, to reiterate, weird

    • @karenramnath9993
      @karenramnath9993 4 года назад +16

      Recipe?

    • @Your-Least-Favorite-Stranger
      @Your-Least-Favorite-Stranger 3 года назад +4

      Are they from somewhere in europe by chance? Example, theres a Russian tarragon drink; Europe and Russia tend to make interesting use of herbs in their cooking.

    • @sagapoetic8990
      @sagapoetic8990 3 года назад +7

      @@Your-Least-Favorite-Stranger Russian savoury pies and juniper vodka were some of my favourites when I was in the Peace Corps in neighboring Kazakhstan. I had no idea there were "medicinal" vodkas before that. I thought I was being hood winked but the juniper vodka was really good.

    • @Your-Least-Favorite-Stranger
      @Your-Least-Favorite-Stranger 3 года назад +6

      @@sagapoetic8990 oh yeah, Gin was originally hella medicinal. Derived from Juniper and medicinal herbs;tonic water was used to treat malaria but tasted like absolute ass so they added sugar syrup and gin to make soldiers drink it.
      Gin and tonic, medicinal cocktail, really cool stuff tbh.

    • @sagapoetic8990
      @sagapoetic8990 3 года назад +1

      @@Your-Least-Favorite-Stranger I had no idea about Gin's history

  • @tomunterwegs1206
    @tomunterwegs1206 4 года назад +263

    does black smoke or white smoke rise from the oven when it's done or still not?

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  4 года назад +102

      That’s good. I should have used that 🤣

    • @tomunterwegs1206
      @tomunterwegs1206 4 года назад +22

      @@TastingHistory still, yorr script, jokes and facial play is top and adds a lot of flavor to the history and dish itself ;-)

    • @ragnkja
      @ragnkja 4 года назад +30

      If cooked correctly, only white steam should come out when you open the oven door. Black smoke means you must try again.

    • @andrewryan3307
      @andrewryan3307 4 года назад +12

      @@ragnkja It's linked to the pope election... white (new Pope) or black (try again) smoke

    • @ragnkja
      @ragnkja 4 года назад +15

      Andrew Ryan
      Don’t explain the joke xD

  • @generalrubbish9513
    @generalrubbish9513 4 года назад +318

    Man, this whole "Is this a dessert or not?!" dilemma appears to be a very common theme with recipes from this sort of time period. People really went wild with the sugar and cinnamon back then, didn't they?

    • @olenickel6013
      @olenickel6013 3 года назад +64

      Curiously, there are some places where this kind of flavor profile survived to the modern day. Northern German dishes famously have a "broken sööt" (broken sweetness) flavor profile, where savory/salty and sweet flavors are mixed. (bean stew with pears; candied potatoes as a side to kale and sausages; sweet puddings with bacon...to name a few examples) And scandinavia as a whole loves its salted liquorice candy...

    • @generalrubbish9513
      @generalrubbish9513 3 года назад +21

      @@olenickel6013 I actually had some of that salted licorice candy once. Once. Wouldn't try it again. I'm unfortunately not a fan of licorice as is, and covering it in salmiak salt doesn't do it any favors, at least in my opinion. I do love me some salted caramel, though.

    • @olenickel6013
      @olenickel6013 3 года назад +16

      @@generalrubbish9513 It is very much an acquired taste. Personally, I couldn't live without.

    • @generalrubbish9513
      @generalrubbish9513 3 года назад +27

      @@olenickel6013 I've actually heard that licorice contains a compound that might taste completely different to different people, depending on various genetic factors that determine how your tastebuds develop, which would explain why people only ever seem to either love or hate licorice. Same goes for cilantro, actually.
      So yeah, it's possible that the reason why I and many other people hate licorice is because we've never tasted its "real" flavor and never will, thanks to our genes. Bummer, huh?

    • @jarredschenke3837
      @jarredschenke3837 3 года назад +6

      Let's not forget nutmeg

  • @fig4778
    @fig4778 4 года назад +97

    the iron thing doesn't surprise me much. my doctor recommended a lucky iron fish that is just a hunk of iron you boil with some water. with use it makes your iron levels better. its still weird but not unheard of

    • @CFinch360
      @CFinch360 3 года назад +16

      I have one of these and use it all the time, any time I'm making soup or stew, in goes the little iron fish.

    • @sagapoetic8990
      @sagapoetic8990 3 года назад +9

      Gives you insight into health issues and concerns at that time.

    • @tashag7567
      @tashag7567 3 года назад +17

      In ancient Greece, it was a nail dissolved in wine for warriors that lost a lot of blood

    • @geovannacampos6794
      @geovannacampos6794 3 года назад +6

      it was a popular practice in my country to put a nail on the beans while cooking if you had an iron deficit

    • @nataliajimenez1870
      @nataliajimenez1870 2 года назад +2

      @@tashag7567 Interesting!

  • @mahna_mahna
    @mahna_mahna 4 года назад +219

    I would love to go to a party where everyone baked a different dish (well, the successful ones!) and brought it. Then you get to taste all these ancient oddities while only having to go to the trouble of making one of them.

  • @storyspren
    @storyspren 4 года назад +42

    Scappi's paragraph of distrust sounds like a wordier version of "if you want it done right, you gotta do it yourself" :D

  • @lin7239
    @lin7239 4 года назад +24

    This is less rich than the modern Torta Salata but the idea is still the same in today’s Italy. There are many type of those “pies” yet my fave is this: spinach, eggs (beaten, they go in the filling), ricotta and ham. That’s it. It won’t make your cardiologist sweat and it is delish both hot and cold. I’m quite surprised on how this recipe is going strong even today, with a modified version. Thanks for the pleasant discovery of yet another ancient dish!

    • @pallasproserpina4118
      @pallasproserpina4118 4 года назад +3

      Seems kind of like a quiche!

    • @iota-09
      @iota-09 4 года назад +1

      Well italy does have a strong primary sector with private shops and small markets still being very much used by everyone in italy to buy stuff(although even if slowly, supermarkets et similia are taking over), which means natural ingredients are still a favourite and in turn, greens too, which aided in the survival of this recipe, albeit wuth slight modifications and variations based on region and specific recipe.

    • @KyrieFortune
      @KyrieFortune 4 года назад +1

      My roommates and I make torta salata at least once a month, I used to make it once a week because it lasts a couple of days and I just had a couple of consecutive days I was out and about from dawn to dusk, I'd just grab a quarter of torta with me.

    • @yungboy4216
      @yungboy4216 4 года назад +2

      wait, did you say **less** rich?

    • @Wazzen563
      @Wazzen563 4 года назад +1

      @@yungboy4216 Yeah. I *highly* doubt that.

  • @lexyesss
    @lexyesss 4 года назад +92

    "Just like I have that YA fantasy novel kickin' around in my head and ONE DAY I'm going to put it down in paper and ship it off to a publisher..." I feel called out, I'm--

    • @nmoney6655
      @nmoney6655 3 года назад +7

      I’m going to write a young adult fantasy novel about a dude that cheats on his wife and basically he dies and goes to hell for what he did

  • @meredithkenton
    @meredithkenton 4 года назад +34

    I grew up in the SCA and some of my fondest memories were meals that included cinnamon, nutmeg, clove, etc. in savory dishes - stuffing, chicken dishes, armored turnips.... It is something you'd have to get used to but it's one of my favorite flavor profiles.

    • @slwrabbits
      @slwrabbits 2 года назад +3

      Wait, what is an armored turnip?!

    • @meredithkenton
      @meredithkenton 2 года назад +7

      @@slwrabbits turnips layered with cheese in a spiced (cinnamon, clove, nutmeg) cream. Can recommend.

    • @5peciesunkn0wn
      @5peciesunkn0wn 2 года назад

      @@slwrabbits I'm pretty sure Max has a video on armored turnips. Yes! found it.
      ruclips.net/video/exTSP163sRg/видео.html

  • @BrighterHell
    @BrighterHell 4 года назад +164

    "Parmesan, the greatest of the cheeses". I see what you did there.

  • @rifflerunderhill7006
    @rifflerunderhill7006 4 года назад +155

    The conclave wheel might seem silly, but sounds a bit Covid appropriate.

    • @Erreul
      @Erreul 4 года назад +6

      I believe if, memory serves, that it was a way to give privacy to the 'people of import' while they were eating while keeping 'the common folk' away from the conversations and rumors of power.

    • @Jay-ln1co
      @Jay-ln1co 4 года назад +13

      Gotta self-isolate from that heresy.

    • @thecalicoheart7946
      @thecalicoheart7946 4 года назад +1

      @@Jay-ln1co 🤣🤣🤣

    • @humanearthling1484
      @humanearthling1484 4 года назад +3

      sounds like a papal Lazy Susan

    • @cynhanrahan4012
      @cynhanrahan4012 4 года назад +3

      It is because during the selection of a new pope, the cardinals are completely secluded and cannot even have servants attend them. It was supposed to make them hurry up and decide, but that is not the case, they take their own sweet time. Having everything delivered in a similar manner, even today.

  • @JustinY.
    @JustinY. 4 года назад +475

    Of course poets back then were so good at their job, if I had this dish to eat everyday, I would be an amazing poet too!

    • @vpmashup
      @vpmashup 4 года назад +16

      Hey, It's you

    • @abelcheng2073
      @abelcheng2073 4 года назад +52

      You know the channel is going big when Justin Y. Shows up.

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  4 года назад +91

      And then along cake Zeus! I watch that video often.

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  4 года назад +50

      And then along cake Zeus! I watch that video often.

    • @darealpoopster
      @darealpoopster 4 года назад +4

      @@TastingHistory Not often enough

  • @lc974
    @lc974 4 года назад +1

    That smooth removal of the cork. Flawless......

  • @dspiel
    @dspiel 2 года назад +2

    "Cavalcade of coronary clogging constituents" is yet another of your truly remarkable choices of phraseology. Oh how I enjoy this!

  • @zakhoncrack
    @zakhoncrack 4 года назад +90

    Hey TastingHistory! You should do a Recipe on Nettle Pudding! It dates back to 6000BC and would be really cool for you to try to make the oldest recipe known to man.

    • @surfband
      @surfband 4 года назад +17

      That would need to be a spring dish as the fresh grown tips of the nettle are used. Nettles must be cooked completely to be edible. I have made a nettle risotto that was delicious. Good suggestion.

    • @Dr.ZoidbergPhD
      @Dr.ZoidbergPhD 4 года назад +1

      That sounds foul lol

    • @soddinnutter5633
      @soddinnutter5633 4 года назад +9

      @@surfband Yes, nettles are only good in spring, before they flower. Apparently they develop some crystals which irritate the kidneys afterwards.

    • @leilas5419
      @leilas5419 4 года назад +3

      @@Dr.ZoidbergPhD nettles were not an uncommon ingredient since you can gather it, and is still eaten today in places

    • @karenramnath9993
      @karenramnath9993 4 года назад +1

      I don’t know what is nettle pudding, but an now highly intrigued. Yes please, can we have a video on nettle pudding?

  • @graefx
    @graefx 4 года назад +17

    An idea I've seen floated with par/pre baking a pie shell in older ovens is the over rack is a modern invention. Things would have been cooked with direct contact to the preheated stone floor of the oven, so cooking the pie on a preheated pizza stone might be fairly accurate and remove the necessity for par baking.
    I'm going to try this at some point. Reminds me a lot of a spinach pie I grew up eating. Just without cinnamon and sugar. Think my mom put mace in it too.

  • @rick149ou
    @rick149ou 4 года назад +184

    Note that Scabbi says "as sober as possible", and not "don't drink while working"
    Makes me think that people back then were tipsy all the time

    • @Rose-jz6sx
      @Rose-jz6sx 4 года назад +27

      Well if you lived somewhere where they drank beer instead of water...

    • @ajaxtelamonian5134
      @ajaxtelamonian5134 4 года назад +35

      Basically were. Watered down wine was drank for most of the day by the richer people and light beer by the peasants.

    • @BigPhilly365
      @BigPhilly365 3 года назад +26

      I believe it was for sanitation even the kids mixed alcohol with their water to make it safer and I also heard drinking alcohol that wasn’t watered down was seen as barbaric

    • @hic_tus
      @hic_tus 3 года назад

      not only back then haha

    • @st.michaelsknight6299
      @st.michaelsknight6299 2 года назад +2

      I mean kitchens now often have to tell their staff that.

  • @giwilreker
    @giwilreker 6 месяцев назад +1

    This was an amazing recipe. The flavours! We made it last night. We waited 20 minutes after cooking to cut it but it hadn't set. I would recommend waiting at least 30 minutes.

  • @SpookyDarling
    @SpookyDarling 4 года назад +93

    As a spice trader myself, I’m sure that the reason he put so much sugar and spices in his cooking was to make it ~fancy~ and ~expensive~

    • @alice88wa
      @alice88wa 2 года назад

      *cough* truffles *cough cough*

  • @OlEgSaS32
    @OlEgSaS32 4 года назад +166

    Man, the visible confusion on your face, you have to wonder what kind of influence Scappi must have had to create something like this, or if there was no influence and he just brute-forced spices and sugar into every dish he made because the wealthy were obsessed with spices, i just did a little digging around and it seems like he did this mostly for shock value, as quoted in "The Paris Review" : It was never enough for Scappi to please diners: he set out to amuse, astonish, and confuse them with vast menus of pungent flavors and retina-searing colors, presented in displays more akin to a performance art piece than a dinner party

    • @Zzyzzyzzs
      @Zzyzzyzzs 4 года назад +32

      It's pretty much that. The spice mix itself, flavor-wise, is pretty sensible and uncontroversial; he just took it and dialled the amount up to 10 because, obviously, the Vatican was really rich and the food had to be ostentatious. If anything, it's less the spices and more the sugar that was the real luxury item. It was incredibly hard to find pure sugar in good quantity in that period, so much so that it took slavery in the colonies (which happened after this) to make it available and remotely affordable. Much of European cooking didn't even use sugar until the Renaissance (they used honey or defrutum-type syrups instead) so, when it first became commercially available (usually only to the rich), they put it in _everything_ . That's why even many savory, meaty dishes like the original mince pies are sickly sweet.

    • @Mephiles343
      @Mephiles343 4 года назад +3

      So he was shitposting? XD

    • @Wazzen563
      @Wazzen563 4 года назад +1

      @@Mephiles343 Not even close.

    • @DonyaLane
      @DonyaLane 4 года назад

      That reminds me of what Joseph Haydn would sometimes do with musical humor. I'm thinking of the "Surprise Symphony," when he suddenly startled the audience, just when they least expected it!

  • @jonathantillian6528
    @jonathantillian6528 4 года назад +101

    Parmesan, the _grate-ist_ of the cheeses.
    I'll see myself out now.

    • @renpixie
      @renpixie 4 года назад +1

      Jonathan Copperfall
      Ba-DUM-bump 🌻

    • @Groovy_Bruce
      @Groovy_Bruce 3 года назад

      Yes, please do.

  • @hermeticbear
    @hermeticbear 4 года назад +37

    so, in Julia Child's Mastering the Art of French Cooking, she mentions that in cooking spinach and chard etc.. a pinch of nutmeg is added, or similar spice (ie cinnamon, clove, allspice) because it offsets the bitter flavor compounds in spinach and chard.
    if you add too much spice, it does make it weird though. Like, oh this is tasty and also why is this unsweetened dish trying to taste sweet.

    • @ajaxtelamonian5134
      @ajaxtelamonian5134 4 года назад +3

      An old recipe for braised greens I had included exactly that. Braised because they're collards and quite... robust. Tasty anyway. It was maggie blacks medieval cookbook.

    • @lenabreijer1311
      @lenabreijer1311 4 года назад +1

      Dutch recipes put nutmeg and butter on ALL vegetables.

  • @Azaghal1988
    @Azaghal1988 4 года назад +21

    Just so you know: You're the only channel i could find who combines my passion for history and general nerdyness with my other passion of cooking, not a common combination ;)

  • @Maidenless2690
    @Maidenless2690 4 года назад +4

    Thanks to you for a whole term we watched your videos for a term in school in cooking for "history cooking" it was the best

  • @wkang2758
    @wkang2758 4 года назад +5

    I love the way recipes were written back in the day. It's almost fantastical.

  • @erinanthony8821
    @erinanthony8821 4 года назад +12

    I absolutely love this channel, your enthusiasm and humour is delightful

  • @Wotcher
    @Wotcher 4 года назад +44

    Regarding the horseshoe, you can find videos on youtube of "iron fish" for treating anemia.

    • @vickiekostecki
      @vickiekostecki 4 года назад +5

      I believe they also recommend cooking things in a cast iron frying pan to help with anemia.

    • @stargirl7646
      @stargirl7646 4 года назад +1

      Oh wow! That part was fascinating - I’ll have to do some research. I wonder how much they knew about why it worked.

    • @blackvial
      @blackvial 4 года назад

      Another treatment is to take an apple and drive an iron nail into it and let it set for a while, remove the nail and give it to the patient

  • @LouseGrouse
    @LouseGrouse 3 года назад +1

    13:11 I love this lil guy. I thought he was waving n I waved back at him just as you said "shielding his face"

  • @Neerepha
    @Neerepha 4 года назад +17

    Minus the sugar and the spices, we still make this kind of torta. Especially when we have guests over, as an appetizer. PS: your Italian pronunciation is great!

  • @darthplagueis13
    @darthplagueis13 4 года назад +232

    "Indian Peacock" as an alternative name for turkey is pretty ironic, considering that peacocks are from india anyways.

    • @VannahSavage
      @VannahSavage 4 года назад +13

      I was just thinking this lol. What the heck did they call actual Indian peacocks then??

    • @petergray2712
      @petergray2712 4 года назад +27

      @@VannahSavage They called them peacocks (name dates back to the 13th century). Probably an early bait-and-switch tactic to sell them at a premium price. Maize btw was called Turkish Wheat in the British Isles until the 18th century.

    • @Coops1985
      @Coops1985 4 года назад +10

      weirdly, turkey in french and in hebrew translates to india also...

    • @Alex-fv2qs
      @Alex-fv2qs 4 года назад +14

      In spanish, pavo became the name for turkeys and peacocks tuned into pavos reales (Royal turkeys)

    • @corelli_cat1453
      @corelli_cat1453 4 года назад +16

      I think it’s Indian as in South American. I think Columbus brought a Turkey home and they dubbed it Indian chicken, Indian Peacock, and a variety of other names relating to both India, Peru, Turkey, and other unrelated locations.

  • @8pril34
    @8pril34 4 года назад +101

    Make semla, the pastry that killed a Swedish King.

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  4 года назад +78

      It’s on the schedule ☺️

    • @jhernandez891
      @jhernandez891 4 года назад +6

      That sounds cool!

    • @benhur6211
      @benhur6211 4 года назад +17

      TastingHistory killing a Swedish monarch is on your bucket list I see

    • @stephiechefy
      @stephiechefy 4 года назад +5

      Yes, semla 🤍 May I also recommend an examination of Eva Ekeblad and her work with potatoes. Groundbreaking science and history changing work.

  • @nighthawk0321
    @nighthawk0321 4 года назад +55

    Italian is so extra I applaud your ability to pronounce this stuff

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  4 года назад +14

      I try 😁

    • @fedra76it
      @fedra76it 4 года назад +1

      @@TastingHistory You very well succeed!

    • @vitriolicAmaranth
      @vitriolicAmaranth 4 года назад +2

      I think Italian words are fun to say. It's not THAT hard, for an english speaker or in general.
      You want extra, go look at some georgian words.

    • @rheinhartsilvento2576
      @rheinhartsilvento2576 4 года назад

      @@vitriolicAmaranth Good point 😁🙃😆

  • @StonedtotheBones13
    @StonedtotheBones13 3 года назад +5

    I really enjoyed the pictures included of Scappi's appendix! Even without them, the book would be a treasure just for how intact it is and the glimpse it provides into this renaissance life, but the pictures do make it invaluable!

  • @FishDinners
    @FishDinners 4 года назад +2

    This channel is the best thing that happened to me all quarantine

  • @gussyd1000
    @gussyd1000 4 года назад +25

    The indulgence comment sent my Lutheran soul to heaven! 🤣🤣🤣

  • @Mr.PepeSilvia
    @Mr.PepeSilvia 4 года назад +186

    If you ever say the words "pound" and "cheese" in the same sentence....you have my undivided attention

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  4 года назад +20

      🤣

    • @MrAranton
      @MrAranton 4 года назад +23

      "Three grams of that cheese cost fifty pounds"

    • @ragnkja
      @ragnkja 4 года назад +13

      MrAranton
      At £16 666.67/kg, that better be some very good cheese.

    • @horacegentleman3296
      @horacegentleman3296 4 года назад +4

      Charlie you really need to cut back on the cheese.

    • @essie23la
      @essie23la 4 года назад +9

      "to a pound of cauliflower add one tbsp of grated cheese"

  • @JohnSmith-ch9sm
    @JohnSmith-ch9sm 4 года назад +7

    Seriously this is now my favorite part of Tuesday.

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  4 года назад +3

      Thank you! 😁

    • @JohnSmith-ch9sm
      @JohnSmith-ch9sm 4 года назад +1

      Also, perhaps a historical Welsh dish?

    • @butterpecan977
      @butterpecan977 4 года назад

      @@TastingHistory I have added your channel to my list of spirit lifting youtube videos to help me fight depression while dealing with chronic illness. Much love.

  • @curtisnixon5313
    @curtisnixon5313 4 года назад +34

    I made this for a dinner party last weekend - without the sugar, cloves and cinnamon. Sooooo good!

  • @riktamsarkar7684
    @riktamsarkar7684 4 года назад +1

    I can't believe he reached 375k subscribers in just 7 months. When I subscribed to this channel it had around 18.7k subscribers I still remember about that. But he totally deserve it and deserve more than a million subscribers.

  • @lhfirex
    @lhfirex 4 года назад +26

    This video convinced me: We need an opera of "Scapi's Opera," letting those voices sing out all the recipes.
    Also, I really want to make this pie even though I'm a pretty bad baker.

  • @LadySquall11
    @LadySquall11 4 года назад +125

    “Who’s that Pokémon!”
    *Looks behind Max*
    “It’s Maganium!”

  • @nataschavisser573
    @nataschavisser573 3 года назад +3

    I made this for Christmas dinner. It is really great. It does not really taste as rich as you might think - the gloves and other spices balance out the sugar and cheeses quite well.

  • @obsidiandwarf
    @obsidiandwarf 4 года назад +165

    Scappi: 'He must be alert, patient and modest in evrything he does'.
    Gordon Ramsey: 'Fuck that!'

  • @bellehogel8665
    @bellehogel8665 4 года назад +33

    I wonder if the large amounts of spices and sugar are a way of showing off wealth and prestige.

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  4 года назад +18

      That’s absolutely the reason. Next week’s episode on the history of sugar goes into exactly that.

    • @qqg
      @qqg 4 года назад +3

      indeed they are -- I can think of a couple traditional italian recipes off the top of my head which are basically the same recipe (greens -- beet greens, spinach, or nettle, what was in season), cheeses and eggs baked in a flaky pie crust) , minus the sugar and (most of the) spices: the genoese "Torta Pasqualina" and the emilian "Erbazzone" (which has no eggs in the filling) - both still made to this day - hearty and simple but delicious. Sugar and spices were indeed an addition for the rich (and the Pope was probably the richest of them all).

    • @brucelee3388
      @brucelee3388 4 года назад +2

      At times pepper was literally worth its weight in gold. Then remember that the spices you get today are waaayy fresher than what could be had even as recently as the 1800's - in Sacappi's time pepper would have spent 1-2 years traveling in the leaky hold of a sailing ship and/or on animal back before it even got to your local merchant.

  • @jcphelps7054
    @jcphelps7054 4 года назад +18

    I think a modern iron soup recipe would just call for cooking it in a cast iron pot. Much more feasible than soaking ironwares in water.

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  4 года назад +10

      Though I kind of want to try horseshoe soup.

    • @ragnkja
      @ragnkja 4 года назад +5

      I prefer to get the “iron soup” I need by just making a tomato sauce or tomato soup in a cast iron pot.
      _Brunost,_ or caramelised whey cheese, is fortified with iron nowadays because it was traditionally made by boiling the whey in cast iron pots for hours, making it remarkably rich in iron for a dairy product.

    • @terriatca1
      @terriatca1 4 года назад

      @@TastingHistory Hopefully cleaned first.

  • @potatertot360
    @potatertot360 4 года назад +3

    I just want to reiterate how grateful I am that you have actual subtitles, not autogen ones.

  • @QuigleTheGnome
    @QuigleTheGnome Год назад +3

    He missed the opportunity to say “feast like a priest”

  • @crow__bar
    @crow__bar 4 года назад +3

    4:50 If you do not have pie weights, use normal crystal sugar instead. After baking one dish you really cannot tell the difference, but after multiple bakes, the sugar goes nice and toasty and can be used in other recipes or just to sprinkle on top of some other pastry dishes.

  • @DrFranklynAnderson
    @DrFranklynAnderson 4 года назад +21

    Oh my goodness, that’s my mother’s sausage-spinach pie! Minus the meat and with waaay too many spices, but it’s basically the same thing.

    • @janegardener1662
      @janegardener1662 4 года назад +3

      It reminds me of Greek feta pie Use feta cheese and garlic instead of 'fat cheese', spices and sugar.

    • @miamerle8965
      @miamerle8965 4 года назад

      It's vegetarian.

    • @prcervi
      @prcervi 4 года назад

      all the spice was just a rich flex of the "can afford to do this time and again" variety

    • @polarbearsaysyummy5845
      @polarbearsaysyummy5845 Год назад

      Sausage spinach pie sounds so YUMMY! What type of sausage did she use?

    • @DrFranklynAnderson
      @DrFranklynAnderson Год назад +1

      @@polarbearsaysyummy5845 Recipe says Italian, but she typically used whatever ground/bulk sausage she has on hand.

  • @Ben77788
    @Ben77788 3 года назад +16

    I’m surprised Food Network hasn’t picked this show up yet. It’s really entertaining and well done.

    • @effiebug4278
      @effiebug4278 3 года назад +2

      They'd make Alton Brown the host.

  • @illuvius32
    @illuvius32 4 года назад +1

    These are so, so, so, so good. A wonderful breath of fresh air amidst the apocalypse.

  • @lucasbritoo1236
    @lucasbritoo1236 4 года назад +2

    I LOVED Chikorita/Meganium growing up as a pokemon nerd, and it really feels fitting for this recipe haha

  • @rawnoodles8514
    @rawnoodles8514 4 года назад +37

    as an Swiss Italian I approve your pronunciation, my friend actually tought you were of Italian origin

  • @mavrifantasia
    @mavrifantasia 3 года назад +3

    I made a version of this for Christmas (but I changed the spices because I don't think my family would appreciate the ones in the original) and it was delicious! If anyone feels like tweaking it, you can safely taste your spice combinations if you add them to the cheese mix before adding the egg! So decadent, so delicious!

  • @KJ-lx2uc
    @KJ-lx2uc 4 года назад +8

    Now that looks like is an indulgence worth buying!

  • @dievyan
    @dievyan 4 года назад +8

    I got to say, his reactions at the end are just so authentic and you can tell that he's passionate about the stuff he talks about! Well done with this recipe again, and loving the history too!

  • @SharpForceTrauma
    @SharpForceTrauma 3 года назад +11

    Would i totally read a YA fantasy novel written by Max? Hell yeah.

  • @OcarinaSapphr-
    @OcarinaSapphr- 4 года назад +7

    I love *anything* you do- you add humour & interest to everything.
    I’d also love if you did an episode on the history of the stillroom, &/ or the changing ‘face’, as it were, of the kitchen.
    I find it one of the most fascinating places of pre-Modern era homes.... so much so that I started a novel called ‘The Stillroom Maid/ The Poor Relation’ (it’s a work in progress).
    I also wanted to mention, that I learnt a little while ago about a device called a kettlesaw hook... it made me realise I was definitely a naive idiot, in my lack of understanding for cooking in the past- *of course* people who took a whole year to cultivate their food, weren’t going to want to let it _burn_ & go to waste- they **could not** afford to do that; the kettlesaw hook was an ingenious device that allowed people to easily alter how close their pots got to the fire- that’s probably why they could have a pot on the fire all day; if the fire was low & the kettlesaw hook was closed- it was probably the equivalent of just keeping it warm.
    It’s amazing what assumptions you find yourself disabused of, when you really look into things..

  • @rejoyce318
    @rejoyce318 4 года назад +4

    I'm so glad you linked this video to the Pumpion Pie video - I missed it, somehow. Thanks, Max!

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  4 года назад +2

      Yay! This was one of my faves.

    • @rejoyce318
      @rejoyce318 4 года назад

      @@TastingHistory It does have vegetables - I mean, zucchini bread & carrot cake are vegetables, right? ;)

  • @sparkletone1684
    @sparkletone1684 4 года назад +67

    When you read the ingredients, I was like “Dang! No wonder the cardiologist needs to be on standby!” It looks delicious though!

  • @malevolententity3182
    @malevolententity3182 3 года назад +2

    This is basically medieval spinach artichoke dip in a pie crust and I’m absolutely here for it

  • @AngryTheGnome
    @AngryTheGnome 4 года назад +2

    I studied at the culinary school named after him, in Castel San Pietro Terme!
    Also in the Padania valley (north of Italy) we have this pie which is really similar to this one, but less thicker: Erbazzone, which is the "modern version"

  • @Eviltwin531
    @Eviltwin531 4 года назад +24

    Even today, if somebody suffers from anemia, it's not uncommon to recommend they start cooking with cast iron pans. It apparently infuses iron into the food and subsequently, into the person.
    And I just know, deep in my heart that Giada di Laurentis's ears perked up at the mention of mascarpone cheese.

    • @ragnkja
      @ragnkja 4 года назад +3

      Caramelised whey cheese is fortified with iron because it was traditionally made by boiled the whey for many hours in a huge iron pot.

    • @0neDoomedSpaceMarine
      @0neDoomedSpaceMarine 4 года назад +3

      Maybe that's why that stew I made from chicken, mushroom, carrot, onion, and cream, felt so extra hearty and giving. Washing that big and heavy cast iron pot is kind of tedious though.

    • @karinefonte516
      @karinefonte516 4 года назад +1

      Funny enough, I refused when my plumber offered to change some iron pipes here at my apartement so my water wouldn't be rusty anymore (it can be yellow sometimes, but it goes after a minute of water running and there's only a residue on it).

  • @gurplepanda3656
    @gurplepanda3656 4 года назад +4

    There kinda is something to the horseshoe thing. There is a thing called a lucky fish that they have gotten regions where iron deficiency to adopt. It's a steel fish that is boiled with the soup and imparts iron ions into the food.

    • @ELKvlt
      @ELKvlt 4 года назад

      I had the exact same thought. Lucky iron fish. Definitely more sanitary than a used horseshoe.

  • @ominousjorts
    @ominousjorts 4 года назад +5

    Perfect, an episode of Tasting History and then Bake Off right after! I timed this well

  • @xingcat
    @xingcat 4 года назад +15

    "This is so weird. It's really good, but weird," describes so many historical dishes.

  • @ReachThatForYou
    @ReachThatForYou Год назад +1

    Special thanks for just the lovely way you embraced the Italian accent in this episode. It’s so nice to hear the ending vowels of those beautiful words from an American speaking them.
    Molto grazie!

  • @GuillePuerto
    @GuillePuerto 4 года назад +25

    “dDespite the cavalcade of coronary-clogging constituents,”
    This the sort of writing that gets a like from me

  • @angelalovell5669
    @angelalovell5669 4 года назад +4

    The look you gave the camera after commenting on wine aiding patience in the kitchen is the reason I subbed. All the excellent content just backs that up (and the Pokémon characters lock everything in).

  • @sere2594
    @sere2594 4 года назад +38

    I'm gonna be honest in my answer to your query..anything I would never try on my own (cuz, ewww), but your willing to take one for the Tasting History Team. Beside that, I enjoy watching you make anything historical..your presentation and humour are why I am here! 😁🤗

  • @Absol152
    @Absol152 4 года назад +1

    I had to double check. I love that you change the pokemon plush in the background with every video.

  • @riariotraichu
    @riariotraichu 4 года назад +3

    Your unfiltered reactions to the dishes are really fun to watch!

  • @deepestphathums
    @deepestphathums 4 года назад +20

    I'd love to hear you talk more about some of the reasons why so many historical recipes include what we might consider "too much" seasoning.
    For one, because of the incredible distance many spices used to travel, by the time they reached their destination they would have lost a good deal of their potency.
    EDIT: Turns out the line about spices covering up the taste of old meat is a tired urban legend

    • @misscandle
      @misscandle 4 года назад +7

      Another common reason was indulgence. The wealth of a mans house could easily be seen in the amount of spices he lavished his guests with. Access to imports like spices was a marker of wealth, and just like today the wealthy are often uhh... "opulent". 🤭

    • @ragnkja
      @ragnkja 4 года назад +3

      They would not have used their most expensive imports on spoiled meat. Everything else you say makes sense, though.

    • @jayasuryangoral-maanyan3901
      @jayasuryangoral-maanyan3901 4 года назад +6

      @@misscandle Yes, and when europe developed a middle class, the upper classes started abandoning spicy food as it was less and less a mark of prestige and thus developed haute cuisine which focused on maximising the flavour of the main part of the dish.

  • @psychocuda
    @psychocuda 4 года назад +17

    Due to quarantine, I've had a winter body all summer...

  • @layna-heyhey
    @layna-heyhey 4 года назад +53

    Max needs his own show, seems perfect for like PBS "Max Miller: History Moment"

    • @MossyMozart
      @MossyMozart 4 года назад +1

      @Lana Jig-maker - as Chef Walter Staib has discovered, no matter how great your PBS show is, no matter how many Emmys it wins, it can be a CONSTANT STRUGGLE to keep enough funds coming in so that filming can proceed unabated. "A Taste of History" was/is a wonderful show that won 15 Emmys and that I hope can continue into the future. www.atasteofhistory.org/

    • @rochellezimmerbishop4681
      @rochellezimmerbishop4681 3 года назад +1

      He'll get picked up.

  • @olichallenger1566
    @olichallenger1566 4 года назад +1

    Loving the different pokemon plushies in the background of every video

  • @samuelyoon5603
    @samuelyoon5603 4 года назад +8

    This is incredibly high quality, thoughtful content.

  • @KareninaKahler
    @KareninaKahler 4 года назад +31

    Let's pause and discuss this YA novel you got spinning around in your head 🤔😊

    • @robinthrush9672
      @robinthrush9672 4 года назад +2

      Berry Potter and the Kitchen of Secrets
      Fry Light: Breaking Bread