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  • Stocking up on chips and Twinkies

  • and hitting the drive-thru for a greasy cheeseburger

  • seemed like modern institutions.

  • But the world's love affair with junk food

  • is a tale as old as time.

  • A lot of what would become the fast food industry

  • began in medieval Europe where people satisfy their junk food

  • cravings with some interesting cuisine.

  • But nights weren't exactly galloping the horses

  • through the drive-thru or grabbing candy bars

  • on their way to the castle.

  • Instead, medieval fast food catered

  • to travelers and the poor, and it wasn't always tasty.

  • Today in Weird History, we're taking a look

  • at what junk food was like in the middle ages.

  • But before we get started, be sure to subscribe

  • to the Weird History channel.

  • And while you're there, leave a comment and let us know what

  • other historical food topics you would like to hear about next.

  • OK.

  • Time to get medieval on those cool ranch Doritos.

  • London is a city known for its major landmarks

  • and for being a hub of British culture,

  • as well as being the place where Harry potter was

  • hatched in Big Ben by owls.

  • During the middle ages, London was

  • a center of trade and commerce.

  • But poverty throughout Europe was high.

  • So for many Londoners, it was an easy convenient, or even

  • possible, to cook at home.

  • Cooking equipment and fuel weren't exactly cheap.

  • On top of that, the poor were packed

  • into tenement housing that often didn't have any furnishings,

  • let alone a hearth.

  • Without a hearth, cooking was essentially

  • an unsalable mountain unless you wanted

  • to fill your home with smoke amiss burning or already meager

  • dwellings to the ground.

  • So people visited cook shops instead,

  • the old timey equivalent of picking up some takeout.

  • Cook shops sprouted up around the Thames

  • to serve the community's fast food needs.

  • These 24-hour cook shops supplied hot food

  • to tourists and residents alike.

  • They were open every day with menus

  • that changed depending on the season.

  • But instead of driving through on a chariot or horse,

  • the cook shops offered more of a stroll-through experience.

  • Customers would walk up to the shops

  • to purchase their favorite hot meal.

  • Others would buy what they wanted

  • and then take it home to eat later because scarfing down

  • a plate of takeout is not always what you want to do in public.

  • Cook shops weren't limited to London.

  • One city street in Bristol became known as Cook's Row.

  • Bristol's cook shops offered more variety, including poultry

  • and fish, and may have been among the first

  • to subscribe to the adage, it's the smell that sells.

  • They'd have their hearts outside the shop

  • and would strategically throw food on

  • to cook so that the smell would entice customers over

  • to grab a quick bite.

  • Some shops served sweets.

  • Others were known for their pancakes and bread.

  • But the most popular might have been

  • the shops that sold meat pies.

  • Those delicious meat-based treats were a popular seller,

  • kind of like a medieval hamburger,

  • but without the fries and Coke.

  • Speaking of burgers.

  • [MUSIC PLAYING]

  • Everyone loves a Big Mac.

  • There's just something about clenching

  • most of the basic food groups in your fist

  • and then horking them down like a snake smuggling dinner

  • through airport security.

  • Mm.

  • So it makes sense that meat pies, the dark age

  • version of the drive-in hamburger, were so popular.

  • These savory little hot pockets were filling and portable,

  • the mark of a blockbuster fast food item.

  • But Mrs. Lovett's signature dish had a dark side, spoiled meat.

  • As it turns out, rancid ingredients

  • could be a real problem in medieval cuisine.

  • According to a 13th century Norwich report,

  • cooks would use diseased pork in their pies

  • and serve them to customers without batting an eye.

  • It wasn't uncommon for shop owners

  • to warm up days old spoiled pies instead of wasting them.

  • Poverty was extremely desperate and food safety

  • wasn't exactly on the cooks' minds.

  • So the decision whether to heap expired food onto the garbage

  • cart or reheat it and sell it to customers

  • was often disturbingly easy.

  • Probably like it is today, if we're being totally honest.

  • When they weren't recycling bad food,

  • shops often undercooked the meat,

  • which earned some cooks a bad reputation.

  • A saying from the time claimed, god sends the meat,

  • but the devil sends the cooks.

  • The shift manager at Waffle House

  • used to say the same thing.

  • [MUSIC PLAYING]

  • Bread was one of the most common foods during Europe's castle

  • period, but most households didn't have their own grain.

  • So they had to buy it from bakers.

  • And while selling ready-made bread was great,

  • bakers could do much more than that for their customers.

  • For example, if someone brought their own meat to the bakery,

  • they could have the baker wrap it in bread and bake it.

  • The idea caught on, maybe a little too well.

  • London passed a law in 1350 preventing bakers

  • from charging more than a penny if customers brought

  • their own meat from home.

  • Meanwhile, you bring your own meat to Burger King one time,

  • and they ban you for life.

  • It wasn't like it was a cow.

  • I'm not sure what the big deal was.

  • Another modern day fast food item

  • came about around this time, too, the bread bowl.

  • Modern Europeans pioneered the concept

  • by serving soup and stews in a bowl made out of bread,

  • which they called trenchers.

  • The practice helped to bulk up a meal

  • and was probably cheaper as it cut down

  • on the need for dishes.

  • But bread bowls weren't the only carb loading option

  • of the middle ages.

  • In addition to being a staple of state fairs and aimless mall

  • wandering, soft pretzels were also

  • incredibly popular in medieval Europe.

  • Three simple ingredients combined

  • to create the twisted treat.

  • Just mix a little bit of water, some flour, and some salt.

  • And you've got yourself a filling snack officially

  • approved by the Catholic church.

  • That's right.

  • During fasting periods like lent when Catholics avoided

  • eating certain animal products, pretzels often took their place

  • as a substitute.

  • Monks would hand them out to kids reciting their prayers

  • while others would distribute them to the poor.

  • Outside of the church, pretzels became a symbol

  • of luck and prosperity.

  • And what's not to feel lucky about when you're chowing down

  • on a handmade pretzel?

  • Nothing completes a fast food run like a six pack of booze.

  • Because if you're treating yourself,

  • you might as well go all the way.

  • And while drinking alcohol has been a popular activity,

  • medieval Europeans really liked to drink.

  • Possibly because they were living in medieval Europe.

  • Not even lent had any effect on the common folks

  • thirst for memory or racing refreshment.

  • Part of observing lent meant not eating meat.

  • So folks would fill that gap in their regular diets

  • with other things.

  • Fish became the alternative choice for some.

  • Others turned to booze.

  • While it provided temporary solace from abstaining,

  • the practice of staying thoroughly soaked through lent

  • didn't sit well with some prominent religious figures.

  • In 1400, the Benedictine Monk, Robert Ripon,

  • had strong words for anyone drowning their sorrows.

  • He scolded excessive drinking as flying

  • in the face of the abstinence that

  • lent was meant to symbolize.

  • And opine that people got more drunk during

  • lent than they did during the entire rest of the year.

  • Of course, he probably didn't have

  • to eat some of the meat substitutes

  • that commoners were forced to turn to, like the mock egg,

  • a dish that was invented as a meat replacement during lent.

  • If he had, he might have been pounding brews in the tavern

  • right beside them.

  • Making a mock egg is easy, even today.

  • Just take a few empty egg shells,

  • fill them with a mixture of almond milk, jelly,

  • and crunchy almonds.

  • Then, dye it yellow and choke it down with a mug of ale.

  • Mm, tasty?

  • Now pass the beer, please.

  • Sugar is one of those things we take for granted today.

  • But during the medieval period, sugar

  • was pretty hard to come by and was usually

  • out of reach of the masses.

  • Only those who could afford the expensive sweet stuff

  • regularly consumed it.

  • So, rather than sugar-filled candy bars,

  • people would flock to the cook shops

  • for treats sweetened with honey.

  • A fritter recipe from the 14th century cookbook,

  • Anonimo Veneziano, calls for apples, saffron, flour,

  • and honey.

  • An earlier, more frugal fritter recipe

  • was just fried dough stuffed with ginger almonds

  • and topped with a delicious [? beet ?] juice.

  • Gingerbread, another popular item

  • for satisfying the peasantry sweet tooth,

  • also used honey incorporating ginger, cloves, and pepper

  • giving it an inimitable sweet and spicy flavor.

  • But when you're in the mood to throw money

  • at a cholesterol spike, there's nothing quite

  • like the funnel cake.

  • A delicious combo of fried dough and powdered sugar.

  • The mother of all carnival foods got its start

  • in medieval times.

  • Funnel cakes began as fried cakes called crisps.

  • Because of the sugary topping, the cakes were a rare treat.

  • Since ingredients like sugar was so limited,

  • people would often improvise their own recipes,

  • which is how we got dishes like fritter

  • of milk, which is just fried, sweetened, cottage cheese.

  • Otherwise known as a dessert you give your kids

  • when you want to punish them.

  • Waffles, as we know them, also came about during this time.

  • The original waffles date back to ancient Greece

  • known as Obelios.

  • They were flat cakes cooked between two plates.

  • And they weren't sweet, which is a huge oversight

  • that arguably contributed to Greece's downfall.

  • Later, the Catholic church began making

  • flour waffle wafers, which typically

  • depicted biblical scenes.

  • But it wasn't until the crusades win

  • a more recognizable version of waffle batter combining

  • cinnamon, honey, and cream really took off in Europe.

  • And, in the 15th century, the Dutch

  • invented the famous grid patterns

  • that transformed waffles into the optimal syrup

  • and whipped cream delivery systems celebrated by junk food

  • connoisseurs centuries later.

  • Initially, waffles were a common street food,

  • but would eventually become the breakfast and dessert

  • staple we fling into toasters to this day.

  • Thanks to the discovery of the New World, sugar

  • became affordable and accessible to everyone

  • by the 16th century.

  • London even opened a sugar refinery

  • prompting a trend that continues in modern food processing

  • today, adding sugar to almost everything.

  • Sugar quickly replaced honey in most desserts.

  • People began crystallizing their fruit

  • and syrups, and even started using sugar to season

  • their meats.

  • If you cover a plate of fish and vegetables with enough sugar,

  • eventually, it tastes just like sugar,

  • which was a welcome respite for poverty-stricken families

  • accustomed to eating rotten meat pies.

  • Sugary concoctions became popular junk foods

  • during the period, including crispy crust topped

  • with berries, fruit, or ginger, and

  • a sweet fruit-filled ravioli called Cuskynoles.

  • Cuskynoles is just a good name.

  • You can picture that on a Hostess wrapper

  • next to a mascot with the Cuskynoles kid.

  • This love of sweetness transformed the European diet

  • to such a degree that the word dessert can even

  • be traced back to this time.

  • Derived from the French word [? d'savere, ?] meaning

  • to clear the table, the French were

  • using it to mean last course by the mid-16th century.

  • The English later adapted dessert

  • to refer to the final course of fruits and sweets

  • that people ate after their meal.

  • The Cuskynoles kid would be proud.

  • So what do you think?

  • Would you be willing to try some junk food from the dark ages?

  • Let us know in the comments below.

  • And, while you're at it, check out some of these other videos

  • from our Weird History.

Stocking up on chips and Twinkies

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What Medieval Junk Food Was Like

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    林冠誼 に公開 2023 年 02 月 22 日
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