By Vivienne
Brereton
Green growth The Holly
(Words and music by Henry VIII)
Christmas
has always been my favourite time of year. ‘White Christmas’, my favourite
Christmas movie. So when it came to writing a novel set in Tudor times, perhaps
it’s not surprising that the final part (of ‘A Phoenix Rising’, Book One of ‘The House of the Red Duke’) is called ‘The Christmas Castles’. My
inner elf (and inner foodie) came out to play and had endless hours of pleasure
researching how the Tudors celebrated the yuletide season. In fact, my elf was
granted three extra wishes because the novel is set in Scotland, England and
France so that meant all three Christmases came at once.
As
there is so much mention of the Christmas period in the novel, I thought it would
be fun to let the words of my characters speak for themselves, rather than just
write about a sixteenth century Christmas in general terms.
To
set a wintry scene, here is the first excerpt. It is Christmas Day in Zennor
Castle at the furthest tip of Cornwall and Cecily
Tredavoe (who just happens to like Christmas as much as me! Hmm) is excited
about having the four Bullen (Boleyn) children to stay….
*
“‘I pray you, my masters, be merry,
Quod estes in
convivio (As many as are at the
feast)
Caput apri
defero (The boar’s head I offer)
Reddens
laudes Domino.’ {Giving praise to the
Lord}.
The
great hall was filled to the rafters with the familiar strains of my favourite
carol, ‘The Boar’s Head’. Heartily joining in the chorus with my family,
friends and all our guests, at the far end, I could see four Castle servants
entering, bearing aloft a glazed, roasted boar’s head on a platter. It was set
in a circle of red and yellow jelly, and decorated with gilded bay leaves,
lemons and oranges. The music from the minstrels’ gallery above, accompanied
this impressive procession across the floor.
It
was gratifying to see the rapt expressions on the faces of the two Bullen boys,
watching the progress of the boar around the hall. Although it was a Tredavoe
family tradition and the centrepiece of the Christmas festivities, the entrance
of the boar’s head never lost its appeal. Thanks to a double-wicked wax candle
that had been wrapped in cotton and soaked in aqua vitae, before being placed in the roasted boar’s mouth, our
cook was able to produce a particularly fearsome, fire-breathing effect.
Christmas
was my best-loved time of the year; without exception, the Castle would be
transformed into a riot of colour. Yesterday, on our return from the chapel,
nursing our great secret, we’d excitedly helped the servants hang the usual
decorations. Green garlands with their bright red berries were strewn
everywhere, including the famous Kissing Bough made of willow and covered in
greenery, with its effigy of the child Jesus in the centre.
There
were oranges, dried fruit, and candles in every nook and cranny, and the famed
Lord of Misrule (in this case, Hugh, our family steward) had replaced Father
for a day of mischief and merriment. Beyond the diamond-paned windows, the
December sea was grey and stormy, but inside there was a roaring fire, good
cheer and much laughter.
With
so many friends, neighbours, relations, as well as a large part of the local
gentry, gathered this year, no expense had been spared. As well as the boar,
lavish helpings of swan and goose were being served to make up for the lack of
meat, cheese, or eggs, yesterday. Hogsheads of ale, Gascon claret and white
wine had been rolled out of the cellar for our guests, although of course I was
only allowed to consume the weak ale intended for the sick and the young.
‘I
don’t think I can eat another thing!’ protested Nan Bullen in a loud voice,
clutching her stomach and winning her a glare from her nearby father for
showing such bad manners in company.
I
smiled to myself, knowing full well that all the food we’d just eaten was
shortly to be followed by the famous Zennor Castle mince pies. They were in the
shape of a crib and made from thirteen ingredients to represent Jesus and his
Apostles, including my favourites of fresh chopped coriander and saffron. This
last had been bought in October from a travelling peddler who told me he was
from a strange-sounding place in Essex called Chipping Walden.
‘Don’t
worry, Nan, you’ll find room for mince pies and
warden pie,’ I assured her, first checking that Thomas Bullen was no longer
listening.
She
playfully puffed out her cheeks and I made a face back, knowing no one could
resist the delicious, piping hot pie, using Tredavoe pears and the peddler’s
saffron.”
*
Being such a
Christmassy person, my novel began with Twelfth Night and ended with it too.
Traditionally, New Year’s Day was when people gave gifts. Christmas Eve was not
quite as jolly as it perhaps is today because, as the last day of Advent, it
was a day of fasting. Having said that, I quickly learned from browsing through
all my medieval cookbooks that a cook had to make days of fasting as good as
all the others…because there were an awful lot of them.
As Maître Jacques, the
French cook in my novel says:
“‘This is when
almonds become a cook’s saviour, giving
us butter, cheese and milk.’”
With Twelfth Night
recurring throughout the novel as a day of importance, I incorporated it into
the story and even used it for a plot twist or two. The Prologue opens with a
pair of young lovers meeting illicitly in a bedchamber above while below the Twelfth
Night festivities continue apace….
“They fell silent for a few
moments, the air between them thick with unspoken words; from the great hall
below, came the faint sound of drums and the strains of a hurdy gurdy,
interspersed with gales of laughter from the revellers.
The boy nodded towards the
door, a thick swathe of dark chestnut hair falling across his face. ‘“Le branle des chevaux” {‘the horses’
brawl’}. Your brother seems to be leading everyone a merry dance in his role of
Lord of Misrule. What luck he managed to find the bean in the Twelfth Night
cake.’
His companion gave a
mischievous giggle. ‘I confess luck has very little to do with it. Will and I
long ago decided that finding the bean should be a matter of family honour.’”
Baking a cake with a bean
concealed inside was a tradition followed in several countries around Europe, including
France. Here, little Valentine de Fleury is complaining to an old man she’s
just met in the manor kitchens that there won’t be a Twelfth Night Cake this
year, much to her disappointment….
“‘We’re not allowed to have a King and Queen of the Bean
today because the real ones are coming to dine. Papa said it would be
disrespectful.’”
Across the North Sea, James of Scotland explains to his Tudor wife, Queen Margaret, how the French celebrate Twelfth Night differently
to their own version of Uphaliday….
“‘It’s called the
Feast of Epiphany or “La fête des Rois”
and, just as we do, they choose a King and Queen of the Bean to reign over it.’
‘Do they hide a bean in a cake
too?’
‘Aye. The man who finds the
bean in his slice is made king.’
‘Then he chooses his Queen?’
‘Ah, they do that a little
differently. All the names of the bonniest young lasses at court are put in a
hat. Then the newly created King of the Bean pulls out the name of his queen to
cries of: “La reine est faite!” The
pair are then set to make as much mischief as they like.’”
*
In Ardres Castle, near
Calais, on Twelfth Night, 1513 (towards the end of the novel), the traditional
cake becomes an object of controversy when two young men, Nicolas de La Barre, and Tristan
d’Ardres, are vying for the attentions of a beautiful young girl, married
to a man twice her age. Whoever finds the bean will hold the heart of his Queen….
“Nicolas
hoped to discover a bean amongst the dried fruit and be chosen as King of the
Bean. That would provide him with extra opportunity to carry out his mission.
To his annoyance, Tristan had been the one to find the bean…although the
circumstances were somewhat suspicious. Nicolas could have sworn he saw a
knowing look pass between Tristan and the Castle pastry cook.”
Of course, Twelfth
Night wouldn’t be Twelfth Night without Henry
VIII having to get in on the act. For the same celebrations of 1513, he
orders a feast at the Palace of Placentia, Greenwich, worthy of an Emperor from
ancient Rome, as well as a masque in the Italian style….
“‘I want this to be
the biggest and best Twelfth Night ever! Louis of France will discover I’m not
some pinch-spotted, twenty-one-year-old, not long finished playing with his wooden
soldiers. I want him to know who I am. And leave him in no doubt that there’ll
be a war this year.’”
*
With all this talk of Twelfth
Night and the cake containing the bean, it seems only fitting to finish off
with a recipe for it. It appears as a Stirling Castle recipe in the novel, but
why not? It’s quite possible their Castle cook produced something similar. This
one was very kindly given to me by Sophie Jackson from her wonderful book ‘The
Medieval Christmas’ {Sutton Publishing}. I tried out the recipe myself, (complete
with bean), and was very pleasantly surprised by how delicious it was. I can
thoroughly recommend it.
Thank you to Mary Anne for letting me write
about one of my favourite subjects. A Very Happy Christmas! And fun-filled Twelfth
Night everyone. May you be the one to find the bean….
Stirling Castle Twelfth Night
Cake…
170g
(6 oz) butter
170g
(6 oz) sugar
170g
(6oz) flour
½
teaspoon each of:
Ground
allspice, ground cinnamon, mace, ground ginger, ground coriander, ground nutmeg
2
grinds of pepper
3
tablespoons of brandy
3
eggs
340g
(12 oz) currants
42g
(11/2 ounces) flaked almonds
One
orange and one lemon grated.
1
tablespoon of honey
Preheat
the oven to 150 degrees C. Grease and line a 15cm round cake tin. For the
outside of the tin, prepare two strips of greaseproof paper and one long strip
of silver foil. For the top, cut a sheet of greaseproof paper and one of silver
foil. A piece of string will be needed to hold it all in place.
1) Soften the butter in a mixing bowl. Add the sugar and
cream together with the butter until the mixture appears light and fluffy.
2) Add the eggs one at a time, beating well and also
adding one tablespoon of flour to prevent curdling. Once all the eggs are mixed
in, add the brandy, then the flour and spices, folding them in to keep air in
the mixture.
3) Finally stir in the currants, almonds, lemon and
orange peel and honey.
4) Pour the mixture into the prepared cake tin. At this
point, you could also add a dried pea or a dried bean to the cake. Do not
use a kidney bean.
5) Cook for half an hour at 150 degrees C and then cover
the top with a sheet of greaseproof paper beneath one of silver foil. Turn the
oven down to 140 degrees C and bake for a further one hour fifteen minutes. For
the last ten/fifteen minutes, remove the foil to brown the top more. When a
warm rounded knife is placed inside, it should come out clean.
(The House of the Red Duke, #1)
By Vivienne Brereton
“If I have anything to do with it, we Howards will live forever.”
Thomas Howard Charismatic head of one of the most powerful Houses in Tudor England. An indomitable old man approaching eighty: soldier, courtier, politician, a ‘phoenix’ rising from the ashes. After a calamitous period of disgrace, the Howards, renowned for their good looks and charm, are once more riding high at the court of Henry VIII.
Set against the backdrop of the extraordinary 1520 ‘Field of Cloth of Gold’, it is a tale of ambition, love, and intrigue, with Thomas at the centre of this intricate tapestry
Will Thomas’s bold vow be fulfilled? Danger stalks the corridors of the royal courts of Europe. Uneasy lies the head beneath a crown. Every other ruler - a fickle bedfellow…or sworn enemy.
The action takes place in England, Scotland, and France. On either side of the Narrow Sea, four young lives are interwoven, partly unaware of each other, and certainly oblivious to what Dame Fortune has in store for them.
“Nicolas de La Barre laid his lute to one side, hardly bothering to stifle a yawn of boredom. Nevertheless, he couldn’t escape the fact he’d agreed to take on a new wife….”
Explosive family secrets are concealed behind the ancient walls of castles in three lands. But…
Thomas Howard Charismatic head of one of the most powerful Houses in Tudor England. An indomitable old man approaching eighty: soldier, courtier, politician, a ‘phoenix’ rising from the ashes. After a calamitous period of disgrace, the Howards, renowned for their good looks and charm, are once more riding high at the court of Henry VIII.
Set against the backdrop of the extraordinary 1520 ‘Field of Cloth of Gold’, it is a tale of ambition, love, and intrigue, with Thomas at the centre of this intricate tapestry
Will Thomas’s bold vow be fulfilled? Danger stalks the corridors of the royal courts of Europe. Uneasy lies the head beneath a crown. Every other ruler - a fickle bedfellow…or sworn enemy.
The action takes place in England, Scotland, and France. On either side of the Narrow Sea, four young lives are interwoven, partly unaware of each other, and certainly oblivious to what Dame Fortune has in store for them.
“Nicolas de La Barre laid his lute to one side, hardly bothering to stifle a yawn of boredom. Nevertheless, he couldn’t escape the fact he’d agreed to take on a new wife….”
Explosive family secrets are concealed behind the ancient walls of castles in three lands. But…
“There are no secrets that time does not reveal.”
A Phoenix Rising
I’m married with three sons so plenty of scope for Nicolas and Tristan! Anne Boleyn was the only character I found slightly elusive. All the others were so vivid, I had no problem getting into their heads. Of the kings, James was my favourite and after all my reading I hope I did him justice. All were brilliant men. Renaissance men, so cultured. What would they make of ours today? Harry could easily pass for Henry’s naughty little brother. Not sure Charles would make the grade.
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