Everything about Frumenty totally explained
Frumenty (sometimes
furmity,
fromity, or
fermenty) was a popular dish in
Western European medieval cuisine. It was made primarily from boiled, cracked
wheat. Different recipes added milk, eggs or broth. Other recipes include
almonds,
currants,
rum,
sugar,
saffron and orange flower water. Frumenty was served with meat as a
pottage, traditionally with
venison or occasionally
porpoise.
For several centuries, frumenty was part of the traditional Celtic Christmas meal. In England it was often eaten on
Mothering Sunday, the fourth Sunday of
Lent. On that day many servants were allowed to visit their mothers and were often served frumenty to celebrate and give them a wholesome meal to prepare them for their return journey. The use of eggs would have been a brief respite from the Lenten fast.
The dish, described as 'furmity' and served with fruit and a slug of rum added under the counter, plays a major role in the plot of
Thomas Hardy's novel
The Mayor of Casterbridge. It is also mentioned in Lewis Carroll's
Through the Looking-Glass as a food that snap-dragon flies live on.
Further Information
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