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Learnings: Cook and Kitchen: Difference between revisions

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Created page with "{{Imageneed}} In poorer and humbler Anglo-Saxon homes, the living room and the kitchen would have been one and the same. However, some wealthy freemen and aristocrats may have..."
 
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{{Imageneed}}
{{Imageneed}}
In poorer and humbler Anglo-Saxon homes, the living room and the kitchen would have been one and the same. However, some wealthy freemen and aristocrats may have had their kitchens in a separate building next door.
In poorer and humbler [[Anglo-Saxons|Anglo-Saxon]] homes, the living room and the kitchen would have been one and the same. However, some wealthy {{Wiki|Churl|freemen}} and aristocrats may have had their kitchens in a separate building next door.


Pots and pans Like this one were sometimes made of cast iron but were mostly ceramic. Cooking could be done over a hearth, by suspending a pot above a fire, or by placing it directly on the embers. Meat may have been prepared by using a spit to grill it over the flames.
Pots and pans like this one were sometimes made of cast [[iron]] but were mostly ceramic. Cooking could be done over a hearth, by suspending a pot above a fire, or by placing it directly on the embers. Meat may have been prepared by using a spit to grill it over the flames.
[[Category:Discovery Tour: Viking Age]]
[[Category:Discovery Tour: Viking Age]]

Revision as of 17:03, 4 December 2021

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In poorer and humbler Anglo-Saxon homes, the living room and the kitchen would have been one and the same. However, some wealthy freemen and aristocrats may have had their kitchens in a separate building next door.

Pots and pans like this one were sometimes made of cast iron but were mostly ceramic. Cooking could be done over a hearth, by suspending a pot above a fire, or by placing it directly on the embers. Meat may have been prepared by using a spit to grill it over the flames.