Besides variety of different meats, and seafood, used fresh, salted, or smoked, medieval Europeans foraged for edible wild mushrooms. Official sources say that Chantrel mushrooms were often used during that period.
I love to explore the old ways of doing things. I also love baking, and eating good quality baked goods. This is a decent documentary that allows us to get a little glimpse into the lives of bakers from the Victorian age. These little experiments of trying to recreate the everyday reality of people from the past only gives us small fragments of how it really was. It’s impossible to recreate the full authentic picture of exactly what life was like for our ancestors, but I’m happy to at least get an idea of what it was.
https://youtu.be/IIxrL-JKbzE
https://youtu.be/IIxrL-JKbzE
YouTube
The Grim Life Of A Victorian Baker | Victorian Bakers | Absolute History
Four modern bakers bake their way through the era that gave us modern baking as we know it - the reign of Queen Victoria. Experts Alex Langlands and Annie Gray join them to tell the incredible story of our daily bread.
The journey begins in 1837, when bread…
The journey begins in 1837, when bread…
This happened to me, but my sunflower seed shells landed on one of my dogs that was riding in the car with me at the time.
Forwarded from Easter Tidings
This picture made me reminded of the ways our disconnect from nature is making us harm everything; ourselves, the earth, wild animals, and our pets. No, I’m not endorsing the idea that pets should replace children. But manipulative infiltrators used that idea to promote Middle Eastern anti-pet attitudes among floundering Europeans (mainly Americans of Euro descent) in “the scene.” I’m vocal of my strong opposition to caging dogs. And no, I don’t consider my dog my “child.” However, people forget that these are the children of another species. Young creature have needs. Locking a young being up alone is unbelievably detrimental and cruel. Why this picture stood out is because my puppy flops across me like this one in the center. He reaches up and snuggles like the one kissing his dog dad. He lays behind me with his head on my shoulder just like the one on the left. It occurred to me the parental role we DO take with companion animals from infancy. My dog has never been in a cage. He’s much better off for it.
Forwarded from Old and New European Art and Aesthetics
The Druid's Temple. North Yorkshire, England.