Traditional English cooking: nettle pudding and other ancient recipes (2024)

Traditional English cooking: nettle pudding and other ancient recipes (1)

When you think of old-fashioned English cooking, it probably conjures up images of roast beef or steak and kidney pie. But nettle pudding makes those dishes look like young pretenders.

The creation from 6,000BC was yesterday declared Britain's oldest recipe.

It was a staple of Stone Age man, who made it by mixing nettles and other leaves such as dandelion and sorrel, with barley flour, salt and water.

Almost as old are smoky stew, which was made of bacon and smoked fish, and meat pudding, a forerunner of haggis and sausages.

Roast hedgehog was also a firm favourite some 8,000 years ago, the UKTV series The People's Cookbook will reveal.

Served with a wild duck or cinnamon sauce, hedgehog was the provenance of the rich, with its thorny nature meaning it would have been avoided by all but the most adventurous cooks.

Barley bread was popular from around 5,000BC, while pottage, or meat and vegetable stew, became part of the Ancient Briton's diet 3,000 years later.

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Traditional English cooking: nettle pudding and other ancient recipes (2)

With the arrival of the Romans came the concept of using eggs to blend and set foods, rather than just eating them whole.

Cracking the egg brought custards, pies and pastries, including the original mince pie.

Unlike the sweet versions favoured by 21st century Britons, the first mince contained meat. Fruit was also included, while alcohol and spices were used to preserve the mixture.

Passed on by word of mouth at first, recipes were written down from Roman times, with many going on to form part of today's staple diet.

Paul Moreton, of UKTV Food said: "Although British eating habits have obviously changed over the years, this shows that home-cooked dishes like pancakes and pottage have been passed down from generation to generation."

But, while pies, stews and dumplings may still be popular diet today, other ancient foods have fallen off most menus.

These include garum and liquamen. Made by the Romans from the 1st century AD, these pungent pastes and sauces, made from fish guts and heads, were used to flavour dishes.

Dr Ruth Fairchild, who spoke to food experts and archaeologists to compile the list of Britain's oldest recipes, said there is much to be learned from our forefathers' attitude to food.

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Traditional English cooking: nettle pudding and other ancient recipes (4)

The University of Wales Institute home economist, said: "You have to think how much more is wasted now than then.

"Food waste today is huge. A third of the food in our fridges is thrown away every week without being eaten.

"But they wouldn't have wasted anything, even hooves would have been used for something.

"They had to eat what was grown within a few miles, because it would have taken so long to collect everything, and even collecting water would have been a bit of a trial.

"Yet today, so many people don't want to cook because they think of it as a chore."

Watch The People's Cook Book on weekdays at 9pm on UKTV.

Nettle pudding

Ingredients

1 bunch of sorrel

1 bunch of watercress

1 bunch of dandelion leaves

2 bunches of young nettle leaves

Some chives

1 cup of barley flour

1 teaspoon salt

Method

Chop the herbs finely and mix in the barley flour and salt. Add enough water to bind it together and place in the centre of a linen or muslin cloth. Tie the cloth securely and add to a pot of simmering venison or wild boar (a pork joint will do just as well). Leave in the pot until the meat is cooked and serve with chunks of bread.

Smokey Fish Stew

Ingredients:

125g bacon

2 leeks

500g of any smoked fish

1 litre milk

1 cup cream

Some chives

1 tsp salt

Method:

Fry the bacon until the fat comes away from it and add the chopped leeks. Cook until tender. Add the fillets of fish and cover with the milk. Slowly cook in a pot near the fire until the fish is cooked, which is about 30 minutes. Pour in the cream, along with the chopped chives and salt. Among the fish remains found in prehistoric middens (waste pits) in northern Europe are: eel, carp, pike, perch, trout, salmon, plaice, bass, mullet, cod and spurdog.

Taken from Prehistoric Cooking by Jacqui Wood (Tempus, 2002); also at www.channel4.com/history/microsites/T/timeteam/snapshot_recipes

Patina of Elderberries

Ingredients:

6 bunches of elderberries

tsp pepper

1 tsp anchovy essence

4 fl oz (125ml) wine

4 fl oz (125ml) passum

4 fl oz (125ml) olive oil

6 eggs

Method:

Remove the fruits from the elderberry bunches. Wash, place in a saucepan with a little water, and simmer gently until just softened. Drain and arrange in a greased shallow pan. Add the pepper, moisten with anchovy essence, then add the wine and passum and mix well. Finally add the olive oil and bring to the boil. When the mixture is boiling, break the eggs into it and stir well to bind. When set, sprinkle pepper over it and serve hot or cold. If you are unsure of any of the plants in these recipes please check before picking in the wild and eating.

Given in Roman Cookery by Jane Renfrew (English Heritage, 1985)

Liquamen or Garum

Ingredients:

1 jar of salted anchovies (100g/3 oz)

700ml/24 fl oz water

400g/14 oz sea salt

A pinch of dried oregano

1 tbsp sapa

Method:

Dissolve the salt in the water over a low heat. Add the anchovies to the salted water with the oregano and sapa. Simmer gently for 20 minutes and then leave to cool. Strain the garum through a fine sieve or muslin cloth and store in a jar ready for use.

Another Roman recipe, mentioned in Roman Cookery: Ancient Recipes for Modern Kitchens by Mark Grant (Serif, 1999)

Mussels in Mitulis

Ingredients:

Mussels

Liquamen (see above)

Chopped leek

Cumin

Passum (very sweet wine sauce made by boiling the must – could use sapa above)

Method:

Mix the liquamen, chopped leek, cumin and passum or sweet wine. Add water. Cook until the mussels are tender.

Cited at: www.romans-in-britain.org.uk/arl_roman_recipes-mussels_in_sweet_wine_sauce

Roasted Meats (Hedgehog)

According to medieval experts: "Hedgehog should have its throat cut, be singed and gutted, then trussed like a pullet, then pressed in a towel until very dry; and then roast it and eat with cameline sauce, or in pastry with wild duck sauce. Note that if the hedgehog refuses to unroll, put it in hot water." (Taken from www.medievalcookery.com/oddities.shtm) This is, however, a dish based on traditional methods of cooking meat going back to prehistoric times.

Ingredients:

2–2.5kg joint of meat (or leg of lamb)

Sufficient long grass to cover the meat

Method:

Season the meat. Wrap it in long grass, first lengthways and then tying more grass crossways to secure the green wrapping in place. Prepare your barbecue and place a large pot filled with water on it. Cook the meat for about two hours. Once the meat has cooked, remove the grass then place the meat back in the barbecue to sear. Then carve and serve. (Nettle pudding can be boiled in the same pot and served as an accompaniment.)

See: www.celtnet.org.uk/recipes/ancient/boiled_ meat_grass.html

Pottage

Prepare some stock. It can contain meat or be vegetarian. Use stock cubes or leftover bones boiled and chopped up meat. Us
e about as much stock as the quantity of pottage you wish to end up with. In this stock cook as many different kinds of vegetables and herbs as you like. (Tomatoes and potatoes would not have been used.)

Suggestion of ingredients:

Onions of all varieties

Leeks

Cabbage of any kind (sorrel, cabbage)

Green beans or dried beans

Carrots

Turnips

Celery

Thyme, sage, parsley, marjoram, rosemary

Method:

When all the vegetables are cooked, add some porridge oats. If you want your pottage to be runny, like soup, add a couple of tablespoons of oats. If you want it to be extra thick and filling add a large cupful. Continue to simmer until the porridge is cooked. Adjust the seasoning and serve with bread and cheese.

Cited at www.stalbansmuseums.org.uk/recipes.htm

Porridge – a Roman speciality – was made not just from oats but wheat, millet and barley with milk or water salt or honey. Variants included Breakfast Porridge and Carthaginian Porridge.

Pancakes

In ancient times these would have been a seasonal delicacy as eggs would not have been available all year round. Perhaps that's why they have become associated with the season of Lent and Easter, when eggs would have been in abundance as the birds would be laying.

Ingredients:

125g wholewheat flour

500ml milk (from any domestic animal)

2 eggs (duck eggs get you closer to ancient times but hen eggs will do)

pinch of salt

butter to cook

Method:

To make pancakes simply whisk all the ingredients together then leave to stand for at least 90 minutes. At the end of this time heat a pan or a griddle, add a knob of butter and cook small spoonfuls of the mixture. The pancakes work well hot with honey or can be served cold spread with butter and jam.

Alternatives: Finely chop wood sorrel (has a lemony flavour) and mix into some honey and spread over the pancakes. Mix about 100g of toasted, chopped hazelnuts into the pancake mixture. Mix some fruit such as blackcurrants, blackberries, wild strawberries or elderberries into the mix.

See: www.celtnet.org.uk/recipes/ancient/pancakes

Nettle Pudding

Ingredients:

1 bunch of sorrel

1 bunch of watercress

1 bunch of dandelion leaves

2 bunches of young nettle leaves

Some chives

1 cup of barley flour

1 tsp salt

Method:

Chop the herbs and mix in the barley flour and salt. Add enough water to bind and place in the centre of a linen or muslin cloth. Tie the cloth and add to a pot of simmering venison or wild boar (a pork joint will do just as well). Leave in the pot until meat is cooked.

This dish is thought to date back to 6,000BC. It is described in Prehistoric Cooking by Jacqui Wood (Tempus, 2002)

Meat Pudding

Ingredients:

1 sheep's stomach or ox secum, cleaned and scalded, turned inside out and soaked overnight in cold salted water

heart and lungs of one lamb

450g/1lb beef or lamb trimmings, fat and lean

2 onions, finely chopped

225g/8oz oatmeal

1 tbsp salt

1 tsp ground black pepper

1 tsp ground dried coriander

1 tsp mace

1 tsp nutmeg

water, enough to cook the haggis stock from lungs and trimmings

Method:

Wash the lungs and heart. Place in large pan of cold water with the meat trimmings and bring to the boil. Cook for about 2 hours. When cooked, strain off the stock and set aside.

Mince the lungs, heart and trimmings. Put the minced mixture in a bowl and add the finely chopped onions, oatmeal and seasoning. Mix well and add enough stock to moisten the mixture. It should have a soft crumbly consistency.

Spoon the mixture into the sheep's stomach, so that it's just over half full. Sew up the stomach with strong thread and prick a couple of times so it doesn't explode while cooking.

Put the haggis in a pan of boiling water (enough to cover it) and cook for 3 hours without a lid. Keep adding water to keep it covered. To serve, cut open the haggis and spoon out the filling.

Another Neolithic treat, this recipe can be found at: www.bbc.co.uk/food/recipes/database/haggis

Barley Bread with Beer

Ingredients:

500g barley flour

500g stone-ground wheat flour

1 tsp salt

250g butter

Beer to mix

Method:

Mix the flours and salt together and rub in the butter. Add enough beer to make a soft dough and shape into small cakes. Cook on a hot stone (or griddle) until firm. This is a very light bread because of the addition of the beer and is good with cheese.

This is another ancient recipe described in Prehistoric Cooking by Jacqui Wood (Tempus, 2002)

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Traditional English cooking: nettle pudding and other ancient recipes (2024)

FAQs

Where did nettle pudding come from? ›

Research suggests nettle pudding may be the oldest known recipe, dating from 6000BC, closely followed by smokey stew, meat pudding, barley bread and roast hedgehog. The research was commissioned by UKTV Food to mark the start of new series The People's Cookbook.

What is the oldest dish in the world? ›

Nettle Pudding

Originating in 6000 BCE, England; it is the oldest dish of the world that's rich in nutrients. Nettle pudding is made with stinging nettles (wild leafy plant), breadcrumbs, suet, onions, and other herbs and spices.

How do you cook and eat stinging nettles? ›

Nettles need to be thoroughly cleaned and de-stung before eating. To do this, the easiest method is blanching them in boiling water and rinsing them afterward, squeezing out the water before sautéing them or adding them into soups or stews. By blanching the nettles, they get cleaned and broken down in one fell swoop.

What did Native Americans use nettles for? ›

Native Indigenous peoples have gathered stinging nettles since time immemorial. They can be used medicinally, ceremonially, made into fabric, nets, rope, and are a highly nutritious food source. The roots, seeds, stems and young, tender leaves are edible, so nettle has multiple culinary applications.

Are nettles related to Marijuanas? ›

The genus Cannabis was formerly placed in the nettle family (Urticaceae) or mulberry family (Moraceae), and later, along with the genus Humulus (hops), in a separate family, the hemp family (Cannabaceae sensu stricto).

What did Jesus eat? ›

To be specific, Jesus drank water and wine, ate only whole grain bread, abstained from pork and shellfish, and ate large quantities of healthy foods like olive oil, grapes, figs, pomegranates, various kinds of vegetables, and fish. This is “the Jesus way of eating” [p. xv].

What is the oldest food we still eat today? ›

The World's 10 Oldest Dishes And Where They Are Today
  • Indian curry, circa 2200-2500 B.C. ...
  • Pancakes, circa 11650 B.C. ...
  • Linzer Torte, circa 1653. ...
  • Tamales, circa 5000 B.C. ...
  • Burgers, circa 100 century A.D. ...
  • Mesopotamian Stew, circa 2140 B.C., and bone broth, circa 400 B.C. ...
  • Rice dishes, circa 4530 B.C. ...
  • Beer, circa 3500 B.C.
Sep 2, 2023

When should you not eat nettles? ›

At the first sign of nettles flowering and going to seed, you should stop picking the leaves – the plant starts to produce microscopic rods of calcium carbonate, which when absorbed into the body can interfere with our kidney function.

Who should avoid stinging nettle? ›

It is important to be careful when handling the nettle plant because touching it can cause an allergic rash. Stinging nettle should never be applied to an open wound. Because nettle can alter the menstrual cycle and may contribute to miscarriage, pregnant women should not use nettle.

What does stinging nettle do to the body? ›

Anti-inflammatory activity. Nettles are useful for a variety of inflammatory conditions such as arthritis and chronic myalgia. Nettle tea or herbal supplements have been shown to effectively treat gout, relieve muscle aches and minimize the symptoms of arthritis.

What is the history of nettle fabric? ›

In fact, people have been using nettle fibres in this way for around two thousand years, with the earliest records being from the Bronze Age in Voldtofte, Denmark. There is also evidence of nettle cloth production from all over Europe, including Scandinavia, Poland and Germany, as well as in Russia, China and Japan.

What country is nettle from? ›

It is a perennial herbaceous plant with spiny leaves, belonging to the nettle family (Urticaceae). While stinging nettle can be found almost anywhere, it is most common in Europe, North America, North Africa, and parts of Asia. It can be found in the wild in the hills and mountains of Nepal.

Why did the Romans bring nettles? ›

The Roman soldiers were said to have brought seeds with them to sow, so they could use the plants to keep warm through the reaction of their skin to the stings.

Why did the Romans bring stinging nettles? ›

The Roman troops were said to flail themselves with stinging nettle to keep warm and brought the seeds of a similar species, the Roman nettle (U. pilulifera) to England for that purpose “having been told that the climate of Britain was so cold that it was not to be endured” (Grieve, 1931).

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