Tuesday, December 2, 2008

A bake Mete

.xxxij. A bake Mete.—Take an make fayre lytel cofyns; þan take Perys, & ȝif þey ben lytelle, put .iij. in a cofynne, & pare clene, & be-twyn euery pere, ley a gobet of Marow; & yf þou haue no lytel Perys, take grete, & gobet ham, & so put hem in þe ovyn a whyle; þan take þin commade lyke as þou takyst to Dowcetys, & pore þer-on; but lat þe Marow & þe Pecyȝ* ben sene; & whan it is y-now, serue forth.


12 tart shells using favorite crust
6-18 pears depending on size
1/4 lb. butter cut into 12 lumps

2 cups milk
5 egg yolks
1/3 cup sugar
1/4 tspn. saffron

Prepare open tart shells, take peeled and pared pears and place them in the shells. Add a piece of butter on each. Bake the pies until the pears are tender. Mix milk, egg yolks, sugar and saffron into a basic custard mix. Pour over each pie letting the pear be seen and return to the oven until the custard sets. Serve warm or cold.

Any leftover custard can be baked separately.

This makes a great finger food for a sideboard, lunch or picnic meal. Custards are the basis of many great recipes and are surprisingly durable, quick and efficient. Learn custard/flan- baked and stovetop. That one recipe will serve you well in medieval and modern cooking- milk, egg and sugar, apply heat and serve.

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