The Medieval History of the Christmas Cookie
GUEST BLOG—By
Stephanie Butler--It’s the most wonderful time of the year, when cooks around
the country take to their kitchens to bake cookies galore. Whether you prefer
gingerbread men, crisp springerle or crunchy biscotti, chances are you’ll enjoy
some fresh baked Christmas cookies this holiday season. Like many Christmas
traditions, the origin of this delicious custom lies ages ago, in solstice
rituals conducted long before Christmas became the huge commercial holiday it
is today.
Winter solstice festivals have been
held for eons, across the world. From Norway to West Africa, Ireland to India,
groups of people gathered to celebrate the changing of the seasons.
Celebrations revolved around food; after all, you had to feast before the
famine of the winter. Solstice often meant the arrival of the first frost, so
animals could be killed and kept safely to eat through the winter, and
fermented beverages like beer and wine that had been brewed in the spring were
finally ready to drink. As any modern host knows, a hearty roast and a stiff drink
need just one thing to complete the party: dessert.
By the Middle Ages, the Christmas
holiday had overtaken solstice rituals throughout much of present-day Europe.
However, the old feast traditions remained. And while the roast and drink
recipes were probably quite similar to what earlier Europeans had enjoyed, the
pastry world was experiencing some amazing changes. Spices like nutmeg,
cinnamon and black pepper were just starting to be widely used, and dried
exotic fruits like citron, apricots and dates added sweetness and texture to
the dessert tray. These items, along with ingredients like sugar, lard and
butter, would have been prized as expensive delicacies by medieval cooks. Only
on the most important holiday could families afford treats like these, which
led to a baking bonanza to prepare for Christmas. And unlike pies or cakes,
cookies could be easily shared and given to friends and neighbors. Our modern
Christmas cookies date back to these medieval gifts.
Though cookies have come a long way
since medieval times, some things haven’t changed. Many Christmas cookies are
still heavily spiced. We think of “traditional” Christmas flavors like
cinnamon, nutmeg and ginger, and those are exactly the same spices medieval
cooks would have used in their cookies ages ago. Gingerbread is a classic
Christmas cookie, and yet it’s also a cookie that would have tasted strikingly
similar back in the Middle Ages. Ginger, cinnamon, nutmeg and mace combine to
make a snappy, spicy taste, just like they would have back then. And
gingerbread uses molasses as a sweetener, something that medieval cooks would
appreciate as refined sugar was so expensive. These cooks would not have made
gingerbread men, however. The first person to try that was none other than
Queen Elizabeth I of England, who had the cookie molded into the shapes of her
favorite courtiers.
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