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  <div xml:id="emee_WomenAndCooking_Opener">
     <p xml:id="emee_WomenAndCooking_p1">In an age before supermarkets or industrialized food production, housewives from the common folk in the country were responsible for growing, raising, butchering, cooking, and preserving food in their households. They were likely the primary cooks in most households. In larger and wealthier households, even in the country, cooks were still likely female. These cooks in privileged homes ordered specialty goods in from the cities in order to prepare lavish meals, featuring as many as three meat dishes, for the lord’s table. They also prepared plainer foods for the many servants that staffed the manors, mansions, and castles of the early modern period.</p>
     <p xml:id="emee_WomenAndCooking_p2">In the image shown, a woman on the left a woman prepares a pastry, very likely a meat pie that contained herbs, meat, eggs, spices, and fruit. In the center, poultry or game for roasting or boiling hang. On the right, meat sizzles on the spit, as the woman adds herbs to the pottage, a kind of stew with meat, grain, and vegetables. Pottage was one of the mainstays of the diet for ordinary working people in early modern England. The main meal of the day occurred at mid-day, but pottage was likely available much of the day.</p>
     <p xml:id="emee_WomenAndCooking_p3">Gervase Markham’s 1615 book <title level="m">The English Housewife</title> lists this recipe for pottage:<cit><quote>If you will make pottage of the best and daintiest kind, you shall take mutton, veal, or kid, and having broke the bones, but not cut the flesh in pieces, and washed it, put it into a pot with fair water; after it is ready to boil, and is thoroughly scummed, you shall put in a good handful or two of small oatmeal, and then take whole lettuce, of the best and most inward leaves, whole spinach, whole endive, whole succory, and whole leaves of cauliflower, or the inward parts of white cabbage, with two or three sliced onions; and put all into the pot and boil them well together till the meat be enough, and the herbs so soft as may be, and stir them oft well together; and then season it with salt and as much verjuice <supplied>very tart apple vinegar</supplied> as will only turn the taste of the pottage; and so serve them up, covering the meat with the whole herbs, and adorning the dish with sippets <supplied>buttered toast triangles</supplied>.</quote></cit></p>
  </div>
  <div xml:id="emee_WomenAndCooking_MarketsSpices">
     <head>Markets and Spices</head>
     <p xml:id="emee_WomenAndCooking_p4">In urban centers, women of all classes could rely on markets that were open six days a week. In such markets, fishmongers, butchers, bakers, cheesemongers, and pepperers (for spices), among other merchants, sold both ingredients and prepared food. Smaller homes in the cities did not have ovens, and so buying bread from a baker was a standard practice, and many housewives sent their homemade pies to the neighborhood baker’s oven to be cooked.</p>
     <p xml:id="emee_WomenAndCooking_p5">In general, for those who could afford it, early modern food was heavily spiced with <term>warm</term> spices like ginger, nutmeg, cardamom, cloves, mace, and a bit of sugar—even meat dishes contained these ingredients. Vegetables such as cabbage, spinach, and sweet potatoes were eaten regularly, as were berries and stone fruits in season and imported citrus fruit when it could be purchased. Salads of raw greens were also popular. Eggs and dairy products made up a significant portion of the English diet, especially in the country where most homes raised poulstry and kept a cow.</p>
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  <div xml:id="emee_WomenAndCooking_Religion">
     <p xml:id="emee_WomenAndCooking_p6">Before England became Protestant in 1533, eating <term>flesh</term> (any meat) was forbidden on Fridays, during Lent, and on the many saints’ days. However, eating fish was permitted. During Elizabethan times, fish days were mandated by royal decree on Wednesdays, Fridays, and Saturdays <quote>for the increase of fishermen and mariners</quote>, an economic imperative that carried heavy fines for violators. The wealthy could, however, purchase a license to allow them to serve some meat dishes alongside fish on the 156 days a year that meat was technically forbidden.</p>
     <p xml:id="emee_WomenAndCooking_p7">During Lent, the season of Christian repentance prior to Easter, meat was only eaten on Sundays, so cooks in wealthier homes became ingenious in their recipes so they could include it in other ways. One cookery book of the period describes how to roast a pound of butter (coat it heavily in breadcrumbs and sugar).</p>
  </div>
  <div xml:id="emee_WomenAndCooking_biblioPrint">
     <head>Key Print Sources</head>
     <listBibl>
        <bibl><author>Orlin, Lena Cowen</author>. <title level="m">Elizabethan Households: An Anthology</title>. <publisher>Folger Shakespeare Library</publisher>, 1995.</bibl>
        
        <bibl><author>Picard, Liza</author>. <title level="m">Elizabeth’s London: Everyday Life in Elizabethan London</title>.  <publisher>St. Martin’s Press</publisher>, 2003.</bibl>
     </listBibl>
  </div>
      
  <div xml:id="emee_WomenAndCooking_biblioOnline">
     <head>Key Online Sources</head>
     <listBibl>
        <bibl><author>Best, Michael</author>. <title level="a">Cooks</title>. <title level="m">Shakespeare’s Life and Times</title>. <title level="s">Internet Shakespeare Editions</title>, <ref target="https://internetshakespeare.uvic.ca/Library/SLT/society/city%20life/trades/cooks.html">https://internetshakespeare.uvic.ca/Library/SLT/society/city%20life/trades/cooks.html</ref>. Accessed 25 Feb. 2023.</bibl>
        
        <bibl><author>Best, Michael</author>. <title level="a">Of Women and Kitchens</title>. <title level="m">Shakespeare’s Life and Times</title>. <title level="s">Internet Shakespeare Editions</title>, <ref target="https://internetshakespeare.uvic.ca/Library/SLT/society/huswifery/women&amp;kitchen.html">https://internetshakespeare.uvic.ca/Library/SLT/society/huswifery/women&amp;kitchen.html</ref>. Accessed 25 Feb. 2023.</bibl>
        
        <bibl><author>Matterer, James L</author>. <title level="m">Gode Cookery</title>, 2013, <ref target="http://www.godecookery.com/gcooktoc/gcooktoc.htm">http://www.godecookery.com/gcooktoc/gcooktoc.htm</ref>.</bibl>
        
        <bibl><author>Wolfe, Heather</author>. <title level="a">About that Frontispiece Portrait of Hannah Woolley…</title>. <title level="m">Folger Shakespeare Library</title>, 5 Sep. 2018, <ref target="https://www.folger.edu/blogs/collation/frontispiece-hannah-woolley/">https://www.folger.edu/blogs/collation/frontispiece-hannah-woolley/</ref>.</bibl>
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