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Failure is the greatest teacher, this I firmly believe! And I had my first medieval cooking fail this past weekend.Many of you watched my livestream medieval cooking party, during which we experimented with a 15th century Italian โ€œcherry cheesecakeโ€ recipe by Maestro Martino, the OG master chef of Italian cooking (โ€œtorta de cerisaโ€, spellt a bunch of different ways in the various sources). The recipe called for fresh and aged cheese, and so I went with an aged cheese that was commonly available in 15th century Italy, Parmesan, combining that with a sheepโ€™s milk cream cheese that I had on hand.

So, it turns out that cherries + Parmesan cheese + sheepโ€™s milk cream cheese = super gross! It was a total fail. The texture was grainy (the Parmesan cheese was pounded in a mortar rather than grated); the acidic nature of both the cherries and the sheepโ€™s milk cream cheese combined with the very distinctive nutty flavor of the Parmesan resulted in something that was reminiscent of, umโ€ฆ.semi-digested food that oneโ€™s stomach has rejected. Mind you, to a 15th century Italian palate, this could have been a desirable flavor, but definitely to anyone in my household – and we regularly eat foodstuffs that modern Westerners generally eschewโ€ฆ

Thus, when I test this recipe again, here is what I will be changing:

1. Cream cheese or ricotta cheese made from cowโ€™s milk, a much more mild, โ€œsweeterโ€ less acidic option
2. An aged cheese with a more neutral flavor – for certain not a 24-month aged Parmesan! Maybe an aged mozzarella or aged โ€œfarmerโ€™sโ€ cheese even.

I am hoping my newly discovered 15th century cheese manual will provide hints as to other kinds of cheeses that would fit the profile of โ€œagedโ€ without being overpowering and will also have a less grainy texture when pounded.

Back to the kitchen counter we go! ๐Ÿ˜ƒ

#lessonslearned #cooking #howto #medievalfood #history #historyoffood #reenactment #livinghistory #MySCA

5 Comments

  1. If I had to put comic book thought bubble over your head, I would have labled it "Hmm, I baked a brick that tastes like Parmigiano only". I hope you still had fun baking it.

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