These recipes come from the cookbook “A feast of ice and fire.” Some of the recipes can also be found on the authors’ blog Inn at the Crossroads. I thought the food was delicious! About halfway through my plate I realized that the guys in the night’s watch pretty heavy and filling foods. It was all so tasty but I could hardly manage even 1 serving of each item. Since these recipes come from a cookbook, I’m not going to type them all out here but I’ll write out the recipes for my two favorite dishes, the apple cakes and the pork pie.
basic beef broth stew with veggies (carrots, celery, onions, and leeks) with beans and chunks of bacon
Basic yeast white bread recipe, raised overnight in fridge
yummm rack of lamb.. why does it have to be so expensive. It goes in the same category for me as scallops do, why so delicious but expensive These were great. The crust was quite good and the lamb turned out well.
Apples, pine nuts, and pecans mixed with honey and spices inside a fried pocket of dough. These were kind of like a medieval donut. These were SO good fresh and warm. I was worried they wouldn’t taste as good once they cooled down a bit but they still tasted great!
this basically tasted like blueberries with delicious pudding on them. What’s not to like? The cream was homemade from heavy whipping cream, sugar, egg yolks, and vanilla extract
Yellow split peas mixed with boiler onions, herbs, and spices
Pork mixed with onions and spices layered with spicy bbq sauce and apple slices. This was super tasty! I guess it’s like a delicious meatloaf but then you get bonus pie crust. Adapted “modern” recipe from the book. I didn’t include cheese because I though it had plenty of flavors without and it tasted amazing this way.
I really loved this stuffing. I think it would have had an even better texture if I had used real bread crumbs (instead of the kind from a can). I generally roast my chickens by coating liberally in salt, pepper, butter, and thyme.