By J.S. Dunn
“Mead distilled sparkling, its praise is everywhere.”
Despite an ancient prohibition on killing swans in Irish myths, there is evidence that swans were indeed eaten for food, and swans winter at the river Boyne and other areas in great numbers. The prohibition re: swans was perhaps politically motivated or may have been an early conservation measure.
“Mead distilled sparkling, its praise is everywhere.”
From
Welsh myth, Song to Mead
What
did the ancient Irish eat at 4,000 years ago? And, what about the peoples in
what is now Spain’s Costa Verde, and up the Bay of Biscay to the Morbihan and
Brittany’s coasts? At first, researching prehistoric foods looks daunting.
The Dindshenchas, a medieval text of oral
histories, has clues to the early diet: the sacred salmon of knowledge, the
hazelnut which also imparts wisdom, cereal grains for porridge and brewing, and
various berries. The ancients made milk and butter from their herd animals. To
this day, well-formed oak casks holding Bronze Age butter turn up at digs in the
Irish bogs, the contents still smelling of dairy---though no one samples!
Meats
of early domesticated sheep and cattle, and cuts of wild deer and boar, show in
the bone counts from archaeological digs. Fish were trapped in wattle river
weirs long before the Bronze Age. The north Atlantic produces a diverse marine
life that is richer than the Mediterranean, and the Atlantic peoples consumed shellfish
in great numbers per the remains in ancient shell middens: mussels, whelks,
periwinkles, oysters, lobster.
Despite an ancient prohibition on killing swans in Irish myths, there is evidence that swans were indeed eaten for food, and swans winter at the river Boyne and other areas in great numbers. The prohibition re: swans was perhaps politically motivated or may have been an early conservation measure.
The
ancients’ knowledge of edible seeds, roots, and herbs, would far exceed our own
based on paleobotany surveys at excavations. They collected and dried the wild
apple, and berries, which were used for beverages in addition to mead from
fermented honey.
In
warmer latitudes like ancient Spain, the Bronze Age people began to cultivate the
olive and other fruiting shrubs. There is evidence they knew which acorn
varieties to collect, and ground those into flour. Spain’s meltingly tender
acorn-fed ham of today may have begun in antiquity given their early use of the
abundant acorns.
The
richness of the environment held bounty for those who well knew how to utilize
it. For these ancients, a feast was literally a sacrament of life. The reborn
winter solstice sun showed the ancients that spring’s bounty would return.
Boyne
solstice feast:
Smoked
salmon, smoked haddock
Dried
apples stewed with fresh or dried swan
Wild
boar, venison, joint of beef ; boiled or roasted
Meal
cakes of finely ground hazelnuts, seeds, and grains, sweetened with honey
Soft
white cheese, sweet butter
Mead,
herbal infusions, primitive beer and cider
Juniper
reduction sauce for modern roast wild game:
Here
is a simple (and relatively low-fat) reduction sauce if you happen to be
serving wild boar or venison for winter solstice or a more modern holiday.
Juniper berries impart a flavor like rosemary with a citrus hint. The berries
should be dried and crushed before use. Note, buy in a shop—don’t try to
harvest your own; some juniper varieties are toxic.
Roast
or sauté the meat, keep warm. Deglaze the pan with around ½ cup of red wine (or
Calvados, or Guinness, or whatever!), and simmer that mixture in a heavy
saucepan until the essence reduces by half in volume. The sauce should coat a
spoon. Add one chopped shallot ( or wild garlic shoots if you have those at
hand ) and 8 fluid ounces of beef
consommé ( not bouillon) and reduce again. If desired, butter (3 tbsp) can be
added for a smoother, shiny sauce or to correct overcooking! Add the crushed
juniper berries when almost ready to serve the sauce. 4-6 portions.
J.S. Dunn lived in Ireland during the past decade, on 12 lovely acres fronting a
salmon river. The author continues to research and travel the Atlantic coasts and
recently enjoyed wonderful seafood on
the Cotes d’Armor, and in Cornwall, and at the famed Lobster Pot restaurant in
County Wexford, Ireland.