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Perhaps the commonest food at a medieval inn was perpetual stew. Food was added every day, along with beer, wine, or water. The the pot was heated every day, and though the people of the time did not realize precisely what the benefit of this was, it killed any bacteria or mold that might want to try growing in the stew. Pots for meaty stews were cleaned out once every year at the beginning of Lent so people would not get meat in a meatless season. Pots for meatless stews and soups did not need to be cleaned for religious reasons, and there was more than one innkeeper who took pride in the fact that he had a soup over a hundred years old.

There was lots of bread.

Drinks were whatever local beverage was made. This was wine, in countries with vineyards, or cider, or ale. The ale was not seasoned with hops in most parts of Europe, so it had a taste very different from what it has today.

Clearly there were other foods available, and these also varied from place to place. Sausages and pickled vegetables would have been among the things served in many places. Seafood was common in fishing towns.

Medieval inns were important, as there were many travellers, both merchants and pilgrims. A really good example of description of a meal at an inn is in The Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer.

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15y ago

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