Nicolas Copernicus’s menu
Posiłek mięsny świąteczny — meat dish for meat days and feasts

Roast Goose with Honey, Prunes and Spices

FestiveReconstruction🧂 🍯 🌶️difficile2 h 30

Slow-roasted goose, glazed with honey, stuffed with prunes and apples, scented with ginger, cinnamon and saffron. The dish for great occasions.

Posiłek mięsny świąteczny — meat dish for meat days and feasts

Slow-roasted goose, glazed with honey, stuffed with prunes and apples, scented with ginger, cinnamon and saffron. The dish for great occasions.

On days when the Church restores meat to us, my table knows how to rejoice as well. Take a fine fat goose from our ponds, prick it with prunes and apple quarters, and rub it with the spices that the Hanseatic merchants bring up to us: ginger, cinnamon, a little of that precious saffron that gilds the flesh as the Sun gilds the morning. Let it roast slowly, basting it with its honey. Patience, my friend: what ripens slowly, in the oven as in the firmament, is all the more perfect.
Nicolas Copernicus
Ingredients
  • Fat goose1 (centrepiece)
  • Prunesa handful (sweet garnish)
  • Applesa few (tart garnish)
  • Honeyenough (glaze)
  • Ginger, cinnamon, clovekorzenie (Hanseatic spices)
  • Saffrona few threads (color and fragrance)
How it was made : In medieval and Renaissance Central European cuisine, it was common to pair meat with sweet (honey, dried fruits) and expensive spices, signs of prestige. Saffron, brought by long-distance trade, colored festive dishes with symbolic gold. Goose was a traditional festive poultry in Poland, especially around St. Martin's Day.