Dine Like Henry VIII: 4 Recipes Fit for a King (2024)

This post contains some affiliate links

While an average Tudor family would have lived on a diet of stewed vegetables, pulses, grains, bacon and some dairy products, Henry himself was offered a tempting array of at least 13 freshly cooked dishes at every meal. Every day, he would choose from a huge buffet, sampling whatever took his fancy. Recipes for Henry VIII included a variety of pies, game, roasted meats, pottages and sweet dishes such as custards, fritters and jellies.

Some of his favourite dishes included venison, pies stuffed with oranges (recipe included here) and an early version of beef olives called Aloes (recipe also included here). As for desserts; jelly (recipe included below), tarts, fritters and strawberries (recipe included) are featured regularly.

There is plenty of evidence that Henry VIII loved fruit. Cherries and strawberries were particular favourites, which he enjoyed raw, while most other fruit (apples, pears, plums, damsons, peaches and later in his reign, apricots) were eaten cooked in pies, tarts, jellies or preserves (stewed). Citrus fruit (oranges and lemons) were extremely expensive because they had to be imported – but in 1534 Henry even bought an orange strainer! There are numerous accounts of people giving gifts of fruit to Henry throughout his life-time.

Whilst the majority of food at court was cooked in the main kitchens, the King’s food was prepared by his personal chef, a Frenchman called Pero Doux. He earned a whopping £23 16s 8d, (£7,150 in modern terms), with all the king’s food being cooked in a private kitchen below, or near to, his privy suite rooms.

So want to know what it was like to dine at the king’s table and eat the very dishes Henry VIII loved? Well, roll up your sleeves and let’s get cooking!

Recipes for Henry VIII # 1: Jelly Hippocras

The king was particularly fond of jelly made with hippocras. Here is an easy recipe from A Book of Cookrye, circa 1591. This modern version is from Peter Brears’Cooking & Dining in Tudor & Early Stuart England.

Dine Like Henry VIII: 4 Recipes Fit for a King (1)

Ingredients:

  • 300 ml. claret (red wine)
  • 100 g. sugar
  • 2 pieces root ginger
  • 5 cm stick cinnamon
  • ¼ crushed nutmeg
  • 6 cloves
  • ¼ tsp. coriander seeds
  • pinch of salt
  • 5 leaves gelatin

Method:

Lightly bruise the spices and gently simmer with the salt in 300 ml water for 10 mins. Pour claret into a pan, stir in the gelatin and leave to soak for 10 mins. Strain the spiced water through a fine cloth (or coffee filter) into the pan, stir in the sugar and gelatin mixture and gently heat while stirring until fully dissolved. Pour into a dish and leave to set in the fridge.

Recipes for Henry VIII # 2: A Dysschful of Snowe

The recipe is from the A Proper Newe Booke of co*kerye, circa 1545. This version is taken from Cooking & Dining in Tudor & Stuart England,by Peter Brears.

Dine Like Henry VIII: 4 Recipes Fit for a King (2)

Ingredients:

  • 1 pint of strawberries, halved
  • ½ cup of red wine
  • ¼ cup caster sugar
  • ¼ tsp cinnamon
  • ¼ tsp ginger

Cream :

  • ½ pt whipping cream
  • ¼ cup caster sugar
  • few drops of rose water
  • 1 egg white

Method :

Mix the strawberries with the wine, sugar and spices and chill for 2-3 hours. Put strawberries in a dish and make up the cream. Whip cream and egg white separately. Fold whipped cream into the egg white and add sugar and rosewater GENTLY. Spoon cream onto strawberries and serve immediately. (Note: this recipe contains uncooked egg white).

Henry VIII Recipe #3: To Make Aloes to Roast

From Thomas Dawson’s The Good Huswifes Jewell circa 1596, II, 13. This modern version is also from Peter Brears’ Cooking & Dining in Tudor and Early Stuart England. Note thatAloes’, is the old French for the larks they originally imitated and were made by spreading minced meat on thin slices of raw beef, which were rolled up and roasted on spits.

Dine Like Henry VIII: 4 Recipes Fit for a King (3)

Ingredients:

  • 4 thin slices of raw beef ( 4 in/ 10cm across )
  • 1 large onion, finely chopped
  • 1 tsp. parsley, finely chopped
  • 2 tbs. suet
  • 1 hard-boiled egg, finely chopped
  • 1 raw egg yolk, beaten

Method:

Lightly beat the steaks out flat. Mix the ingredients for the filling, spread over the steaks, roll them up and secure them with either small skewers, thread or thin twine. Place in a tin and oven roast at 170°C/325° F/ gas mark 3 for about 30 minutes, basting with a little fat, oil or butter from time to time. When tender, remove skewers, thread or twine and serve immediately.

Henry VIII Recipes # 4: Tarte of Apples and Orange Peels

This recipe is a bit harder to follow as it is in its original format. However, it is interesting to see that original recipes were targeted towards an audience assumed to be accomplished in cookery. This recipe is originally recorded inThe Good Huswifes Handmaide for the Kitchin, by Thomas Dawson; 1597. This version comes from The Tudor Cookbook by Terry Breverton.

Dine Like Henry VIII: 4 Recipes Fit for a King (4)

‘To make tarte of apples and orange peels. Take your oranges, and lay them in water a day and a night, then seethe them in fair water and honey. Let them seeth till they be soft. The let them soak in the syrup a day and a night. Then take them forth and cut them small, and then make your tart and season your apples with sugar, cinnamon and ginger, and put in a piece of butter. Lay a course of apples, and between the same course of apples, a course of oranges, and so course by course. And season your oranges as you seasoned your apples, with somewhat more sugar, then lay on the lid and put in the oven. When it is almost baked, take the rosewater and sugar, and boil them together till it be somewhat thick, then take out the tart. Take a feather and spread the rosewater and sugar on the lid, and set it into the oven again, and let the sugar harden on the lid, and let it not burn .’

Ingredients :

  • Seville ( bitter) Oranges
  • Sugar & Rosewater
  • Apples
  • Sugar
  • Cinnamon
  • Ginger
  • A batch of shortcrust pastry

If you have enjoyed these delightful recipes for Henry VIII and maybe want to read more about the king’s public and privy apartments at Hampton Court Palace, where he would have enjoyed this kind of food, follow this link.

Dine Like Henry VIII: 4 Recipes Fit for a King (5)

Each week, our Tudor recipe is contributed by Brigitte Webster. Brigitte runs the ‘Tudor and 17th Century Experience‘. She turned her passion for early English history into a business and opened a living history guesthouse, where people step back in time and totallyimmersethemselves in Tudor history by sleeping in Tudor beds, eating and drinking authentic, Tudor recipes. She also provides her guests with Tudor entertainment. She loves re-creating Tudor food and gardens and researching Tudor furniture.

Sources and recommended further reading.

Dine Like Henry VIII: 4 Recipes Fit for a King (2024)

FAQs

What would be on a Tudor menu? ›

Dishes included game, roasted or served in pies, lamb, venison and swan. For banquets, more unusual items, such as conger eel and porpoise could be on the menu. Sweet dishes were often served along with savoury. Only the King was given a fork, with which he ate sweet preserves.

What would the rich Tudors eat? ›

The rich would eat lots of meat, but only a few vegetables. They would also eat spices and sugar which the poor couldn't afford. Rich and poor Tudors ate very different food from each other. Vegetables which grew underground, (such as carrots and parsnips), were only considered fit for the poor.

What did the Royal Tudors eat for breakfast? ›

Rich Tudor's ate bread and drank beer for breakfast. Fruit was always cooked, as it was thought that raw fruit and vegetables were bad for you! The rich Tudors would also eat spices and sugar which the poor couldn't afford. The rich would drink beer,or wine,imported from France.

What did Anne Boleyn like to eat? ›

Anne was fond of fruit especially apples, damsons, and strawberries. When she was pregnant with Elizabeth she had a sudden strong craving for apples which according to the King, meant she was with child. Anne was also a big fan of strawberries and cream, a dish popularized by Cardinal Wolsey.

What did Tudor kings eat? ›

Three-quarters of the rich Tudor diet was made up of meat such as oxen, deer, calves, pigs, badger or wild boar. Birds were also eaten, such as chicken, pigeons, sparrows, heron, crane, pheasant, woodco*ck, partridge, blackbirds and peaco*cks.

What was King Henry VIII's favorite food? ›

Recipes for Henry VIII included a variety of pies, game, roasted meats, pottages and sweet dishes such as custards, fritters and jellies. Some of his favourite dishes included venison, pies stuffed with oranges (recipe included here) and an early version of beef olives called Aloes (recipe also included here).

What did the Tudors drink? ›

Everyone drank ale during the Tudor period, as water was considered unhealthy. Ale at the time was brewed without hops, and was not particularly alcoholic. The rich also drank wine, which was mostly imported from Europe, though some wine was produced by vineyards in Southern England.

What did poor Tudors eat for dinner? ›

Most people ate whatever they could grow. Poor people ate fruit and vegetables. If they had animals, they might have some dairy products and a little meat. They often cooked in a cauldron, boiling up a stew called 'pottage' made from mainly from vegetables.

What food made up 75% of rich people's diets in the Tudor period? ›

The rich Tudors had a diet made up of roughly 75% of meat such as deer, badger and wild boar. They also enjoyed eating lots of sugary treats, which would have been prepared by servants. They had much nicer bread than the poor as their bread was made of white of wholemeal flour.

What time did Tudors eat dinner? ›

The main meal of the day was dinner. In the first half of the century, 10 or 11am was the dining hour, but by the 1580s and 1590s it was becoming more usual to eat at around 12pm. In the houses of the rich, the meal could easily last a couple of hours.

What did Tudors eat for dessert? ›

While we're used to eating sweet desserts today, sugar was very expensive and rare in Tudor England. After gorging on meaty pies and puddings during a feast, wealthy Tudors would eat other types of sweet treats such as honeyed fruits, jelly and gingerbread, along with these cheesy fritters called smartards.

Did people drink water in Tudor times? ›

People didn't drink water, as it often made people sick, because it was mixed with sewage.

Did Henry cry when Catherine died? ›

At hearing the news of his first wife's death, Ives states that Henry cried, 'God be praised that we are free from all suspicion of war! ' (Ives, Pg. 295).

Why do people think Anne Boleyn had 6 fingers? ›

Named after Anne Boleyn, wife of Henry the VIII of England, for whom there is a common misperception of her having possessed six fingers on one hand, whereas closer inspection of the evidence suggests that she did not (Bell, 1877), the illusion described here gives the distinct impression of having six fingers, whereas ...

What condition did Anne Boleyn have? ›

Anne Boleyn nearly died of the sweating sickness

Henry's precautions, although unchivalrous, were sensible, since Anne did indeed prove to have been infected. Both she and her father became ill at Hever, with Henry sending his second-best doctor (since his first was unavailable) to treat her.

What desserts were on the Rich Tudor menu? ›

While we're used to eating sweet desserts today, sugar was very expensive and rare in Tudor England. After gorging on meaty pies and puddings during a feast, wealthy Tudors would eat other types of sweet treats such as honeyed fruits, jelly and gingerbread, along with these cheesy fritters called smartards.

What were the new foods in the Tudor times? ›

However, nearer the end of the Tudor period, new foods were brought over from the Americas; these included tomatoes and potatoes. Herbs were often used by rich Tudors to flavour their meals. They created separate herb gardens to grow what they needed, such as parsley, mint, rosemary, thyme and sage.

How many meals did Tudors eat? ›

Most households served three meals a day, although breakfast, if eaten at all, was not substantial: it consisted of bread, perhaps with butter and sage, washed down with a small ale. The main meal of the day was dinner.

References

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Jonah Leffler

Last Updated:

Views: 6296

Rating: 4.4 / 5 (45 voted)

Reviews: 92% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Jonah Leffler

Birthday: 1997-10-27

Address: 8987 Kieth Ports, Luettgenland, CT 54657-9808

Phone: +2611128251586

Job: Mining Supervisor

Hobby: Worldbuilding, Electronics, Amateur radio, Skiing, Cycling, Jogging, Taxidermy

Introduction: My name is Jonah Leffler, I am a determined, faithful, outstanding, inexpensive, cheerful, determined, smiling person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.