Did you ever wonder what the Tudors ate and drank? What was Elizabeth
I's first meal after the defeat of the Spanish Armada? Which pies did
Henry VIII gorge on to go from a 32 to a 54-inch waist? The Tudor
Kitchen provides a new history of the Tudor kitchen, and over 500
sumptuous - and more everyday - recipes enjoyed by rich and poor, all
taken from authentic contemporary sources. The kitchens of the Tudor
palaces were equipped to feed a small army of courtiers, visiting
dignitaries and various hangers-on of the aristocracy. Tudor court food
purchases in just one year were no fewer than 8,200 sheep, 2,330 deer
and 53 wild boar, plus countless birds such as swan (and cygnet),
peacock, heron, capon, teal, gull and shoveler. Tudor feasting was
legendary; Henry VIII even managed to impress the French at the Field of
the Cloth of Gold in 1520 with a twelve-foot marble and gold leaf
fountain dispensing claret and white wine into silver cups, free for
all!