What was the name of the British TV series about food management and preparation on a pre-medieval farm?
As much as they could, food was prepared as it might have happened 500 - 1,000 or more years ago.
Meats, milk & cheeses, fermentations, fruits. Cheese is milk storage.
The main presenter was so fond of talking about "experimental dinners," still gives me a giggle to think about him.
Finesse is not at play. Starvation and food security in the off-season from harvests were the game changers.
Inca had no practical beasts of burden, no wheels, extreme 3D scenery. Freeze dried potatoes were easier to transport
where you must carry everything.
Coastal First Nations in BC would make a great core for a TV series on food preservation.
I consider the region to extend from Oregon up into Alaska.
Oolican oil (you have to smell the decomposing fish to understand this one.)
Smoking and drying made up much of the rest of their food preservation.
So, their bulk harvesting methods become something to watch as well.
My next trick in the city, possibly next week, will be to cook 100 mussels or clams or both, over a fire outdoors.
I will cut out the meats with either other shells or my copper-bladed crooked knife.
Then I will string those on a cotton cord and run them through the smoker BBQ in tandem with some other meal preparation.
I have no idea how long they take to dry with heat. Have packed the camera for pictures of this fiasco.