PATCHED
This clay
cooking pot
has four holes
where a patch was
stuck over a crack.
BERRY TASTY
Berries and wild fruits such
as apples, cherries, and
plums were gathered in
the summer. Vikings
may have grown fruit
trees in gardens as
well as picking
wild fruits in
the forest.
POACHED EGGS
In the Atlantic
Islands, Viking
settlers gathered
gulls’ eggs for
eating. They
also roasted
the gulls.
35
GARLIC BULB
Like modern cooks, the
Vikings added garlic
and onion to meat
stews and soups.
COOKING CAULDRON
Food was prepared around
the hearth in the center of the
living room. Meat was stewed in
huge pots called cauldrons made of
iron or soapstone. Some cauldrons
were hung over the fire on a chain
from the roof beam. Others, like this
one from the Oseberg ship, were
supported by a tripod.
Iron handle
Suspension loop
One of t he
tripod’s t hree legs
Iron cauldron
The tripod’s
pronged feet were
stuck into t he dirt
floor to keep t he
cauldron stable
BAYEUX BARBECUE
In this scene from the
Bayeux Tapestry (p. 10),
two Norman cooks heat
a cauldron. The fire sits in
a tray like a barbecue. To the
left, a third man lifts cooked
chunks of meat off a stove
onto a plate. The Vikings may
have cooked in similar ways.
CAUGHT ON THE WING
Game birds like this
duck were trapped or
hunted with short
arrows. Roasted
on a spit, it
would make a
tasty meal.
A HARE IN MY SOUP
Hares were trapped and hunted.
The Vikings also hunted elk,
deer, bears, wild boars, caribou,
seals, and whales for
meat. Sheep, cattle, pigs,
goats, geese, chickens,
turkeys, and even horses
were raised to be eaten.
Raspberry
Blackberry
Old crack Repair holes