From spit roasting pig to hanging cream cheese from the rafters, from
baking roast pork under the ground in pits to cooking trout on wicker
frames over an open fire, cooking techniques in prehistoric Britain are
ingenious and revealing. There were no ovens and many vegetables and
breeds of animal familiar to us today had not yet arrived. In
reconstructing some of these techniques and recipes, the author has
discovered a different world, with a completely different approach to
food. This is native cuisine, cooked in a manner that persisted through
the Neolithic, Bronze and Iron Ages. This book first tells the story of
prehistoric settlement, and moves on to explore the hunting and foraging
techniques of the Mesolithic. After discussing the way in which the
Britons farmed, and what they grew, the book moves into the roundhouse
and the tools and utensils available. The final half of the book
examines the varied techniques used, from covering fish in clay, to
baking meat underground, spit roasting, brewing mead, boiling water with
hot stones and so on. All the techniques have been carried out by the
author.