Robin Hood’s menu
Wayfarer's bread (the outlaw's satchel bread)

Travel Bread with Rye and Wild Honey

TravelReconstruction🍯 🧂moyen4 h (incl. rising)

A dense, nourishing bread cake of rye and oats, enriched with wild honey and forest hazelnuts, baked under the ashes. The bread that does not go mouldy and satisfies hunger for a long time on the road.

Wayfarer's bread (the outlaw's satchel bread)

A dense, nourishing bread cake of rye and oats, enriched with wild honey and forest hazelnuts, baked under the ashes. The bread that does not go mouldy and satisfies hunger for a long time on the road.

When we're dashing under the canopy with soldiers at our heels, there's no time for fine fare! Stow this in your satchel: dense rye, honey I stole from the bees of an old hollow oak, and hazelnuts for strength. This bread keeps a week and fills your belly better than a feast. Always keep some on you, friend — freedom often goes hungry.
Robin Hood
Ingredients
  • Rye flourtwo measures (dense base)
  • Oatsone measure (texture and chew)
  • Wild honeya good spoonful (sweetness and preservation)
  • Hazelnutsa handful (energy)
  • Sourdough startera piece from yesterday (leavening)
  • Salta pinch (flavour)
How it was made : Rye, hardy and cheap, was the common grain in northern England. Honey — the only sweetener available before cane sugar, still extremely rare and expensive — also served as a preservative. Dense breads kept well and accompanied travellers and soldiers.
Sources : C. Anne Wilson, Food and Drink in Britain · Bridget Ann Henisch, The Medieval Cook