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Whilst we know that our readers are sensible people, on no account should anyone be crazy enough to try the herbal cures outlined without strict medical supervision. These are ancient remedies which include deadly poisons and should only be administered by a qualified herbalist.

Home Herb Garden – Meet Sir Kenelm Digby

digby Home Herb Garden   Meet Sir Kenelm DigbyAnd now for something completely different. But still a herbal connection.

Cavalier, inmate of courts, controversialist, man of science, occultist, privateer, conspirator, lover and wit, all describe Sir Kenelm Digby, born July 11, 1603,  elder son of  Sir Kenelm Digby. He was barely three years old when his father, the most guileless and the most obstinate of the Gunpowder Plotters, died on the scaffold. Sir Kenelm Digby, however, did not follow in his late and somewhat unlamented father’s footsteps.

The following extract is from a book kept in Edinburgh Castle, The Closet Of Sir Kenelm Digby Knight Opened,  which gives us a look into just one of many a story steeped in intrigue, treachery and British tradition. For our purposes, we simply report on one of Sir Digby’s recipes. (Thats the younger Sir Digby) Imagine the extent of his home herb garden.

MY LORD LUMLEY’S PEASE-PORAGE:

Take two quarts of Pease, and put them into an Ordinary quantity of Water, and when they are almost boiled, take out a pint of the Pease whole, and strain all the rest.

A little before you take out the pint of Pease, when they are all boiling together, put in almost an Ounce of Coriander-seed beaten very small, one Onion, some Mint, Parsley, Winter-savoury, Sweet-Marjoram from your home herb garden, all minced very small; when you have strained the Pease, put in the whole Pease and the strained again into the pot, and let them boil again, and a little before you take them up, put in half a pound of Sweet-butter.

You must season them in due time, and in the ordinary proportion with Pepper and Salt. This is a proportion to make about a Gallon of Pease-porage. The quantities are set down by guess. The Coriander-seeds are as much as you can conveniently take in the hollow of your hand. You may put in a great good Onion or two.

A pretty deal of Parsley, and if you will, and the season afford them, you may add what you like of other Porage herbs, such as they use for their Porages in France.

But if you take the savoury herbs dry, you must crumble or beat them to small Powder (as you do the Coriander-seed) and if any part of them be too big to pass through the strainer, after they have given their taste to the quantity, in boiling a sufficient while therein, you put them away with the husks of the Pease.

The Pint of Pease that you reserve whole, is only to show that it is Pease-porage. They must be of the thickness of ordinary Pease-porage. For which these proportions will make about a Gallon.

Now don’t all go rushing about finding ingredients in your own home herb garden and serving the dish at your next dinner party. I  wonder how accurately we could reproduce the recipe today. You would probably need to be a psychic and a very good guesser.

But ennit fascinating! Imagine talking like that all the time.

If you want more in the same vein, but with real duplicatable recipes,  register for our blogcast – you will get a weekly update of blog posts and access to several really interesting old time herb books including the one featured here – The Closet Of Sir Digby Knight Opened.

Next time a normal article – I promise. Let me know if you enjoyed this please.

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