Recorded on Friday, November 8, 2024.
This dynamic webinar includes two papers, by academic researchers who specialize in the history of cheesemaking. In the first paper, “Making and Eating Cheese in Medieval England and Ireland,” Leslie Lockett uses written sources, both literary and historical, to explore cheesemaking in the British Isles during the early medieval period (around 600-1200 CE). Authors in England characterized cheese as a food that was produced in great quantities, but without cultivating distinctive or pleasant flavors; Irish authors of the same time period, in contrast, prized cheese as a prestigious food, and they recorded individual names for types of cheese that were characterized by distinctive shapes and textures. Second, Scott D. Stull’s paper, “Recreating Ancient and Historic Cheese through Experimental Archaeology,” combines material and written evidence for Neolithic European, ancient Roman, and medieval cheesemaking, such as the shapes of ancient cheesemaking vessels, analysis of lipid residues in pottery vessels, and (for more recent centuries) recipes and historical documents. All these classes of evidence inform the practice of experimental archaeology, in which ancient and historic cheeses are recreated in order to impart a more intimate understanding of the technologies of cheesemaking and the experience of consuming those cheeses.
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