MC Logo

Search Results


This is an excerpt from Two Fifteenth-Century Cookery-Books
(England, 1430)
The original source can be found at the University of Michigan's "Corpus of Middle English Prose and Verse"

lviij - Let lory. Take Mylke, an sette it ouer the fyre; take Salt and Safroun, an caste ther-to; take Eyroun, the 3olke an the Whyte y-strainyd a lyte, (Note: lyte = little.)and caste it ther-to; whan the Mylke his skaldyng hote, caste the stuf ther-to, an thenne stere yt tyll it crodde; and 3if thou wolt haue it a-forsyd with ly3t coste, Take Mylke, and make it skaldyng hote, and caste ther-to Raw 3olkes of Eyroun, Sugre, pouder Gyngere, Clowes, Maces, an let not fully boyle; and so hote, dresse it forth, an ley it on the crodde; and 3if thou wolt a-forse it in maner of charlet, do it in fastyng dayis, and serue it forth.

autodoc



Other versions of this recipe:

Lede lardes (Liber cure cocorum [Sloane MS 1986])

Alayd mylk (A Noble Boke off Cookry)

Larded boiled meat (Le Viandier de Taillevent)

Larded milk (Le Viandier de Taillevent)

LARDY MILK (Le Menagier de Paris)

Ledlardes (A Noble Boke off Cookry)

Letards (Thomas Awkbarow's Recipes (MS Harley 5401))

Lete Lardes (Forme of Cury)

Let lardes (Fourme of Curye [Rylands MS 7])

Lete Lorre (Thomas Awkbarow's Recipes (MS Harley 5401))

Letelorye (Forme of Cury)

Lete lorye (Fourme of Curye [Rylands MS 7])

Lethe lory (Two Fifteenth-Century Cookery-Books)

Letlardes (Two Fifteenth-Century Cookery-Books)

To make lyede milke (Gentyll manly Cokere (MS Pepys 1047))

Lette lardes (Two Fifteenth-Century Cookery-Books)