Albert the Great’s menu
Pulmentum (cooked dish of the refectory)

Pea and Leek Pulmentum

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A thick purée of split peas simmered with leeks, onion, and garden herbs, bound with a drizzle of oil and spiced with pepper. Simple, warm, comforting: the daily dish on lean days.

Pulmentum (cooked dish of the refectory)

A thick purée of split peas simmered with leeks, onion, and garden herbs, bound with a drizzle of oil and spiced with pepper. Simple, warm, comforting: the daily dish on lean days.

Draw near, and see what the sobriety of our Order puts in the bowl. The pea, you see, is of a warm and temperate nature: it restores the body's strength without weighing it down toward base things, which suits the mind that wishes to study. We soak it from Vespers, then let it melt slowly with the leek from our garden and a sprig of sage, until it falls apart like a paste. Eat it hot, in silence, while the brother reader nourishes your soul: for with the belly appeased, the intellect rises more easily toward Him who ordered all things.
Albert the Great
Ingredients
  • Dried peas (whole or split)two handfuls per diner (nourishing base)
  • Leeksa few (aromatic vegetable)
  • Onionone (base)
  • Oil or rendered bacon fat (depending on the day)a drizzle (fat binder)
  • Sage, parsley, lovagea bunch from the garden (flavor)
  • Pepper, saltto taste (seasoning)
How it was made : In medieval convents, legume porridges (peas, broad beans, lentils) formed the basis of the lean diet. They were cooked for hours in large copper cauldrons, without the precision of our scales: the amount of water and herbs was judged by eye and feel. Bacon fat appeared only on permitted meat days.
Sources : Humbert de Romans, Instructions pour les frères convers et la vie au réfectoire (13th c.) · Albert le Grand, De vegetabilibus et plantis (ca. 1260)