This was amazing. My mother’s ancestry is Cree and Cherokee. When we would go to re-enactments (or camping with my gran), she would cook around the fire exactly as you did - around the edge, not over the top. She said hanging the pot directly over the fire, the bottom was too hot and would scorch, or someone had to stir the pot frequently (and you could tumble everyone’s dinner into the fire). Pulling the coals to the side and using a pot or using a Dutch oven, you had more control over the heat. She never burned anything, and she actually baked cobblers and made fry bread. What I’d give to have some of that now….Iron Age technology still works, even if you use a cast iron pot. Good memories. Thank you.
that must have been pretty cool to watch. I've watched my husband oaxcan family make dishes this old way. What's crazy is they do it often. they have an outside kitchen which they use and prefer it over the modern kitchen they have inside their home
Well it makes sense that they would cook this way, since they learned how to cook over the fire with iron pots from the people who brought them iron pots...
@@DieLuftwaffelCooking in a pot isnt exactly hard to do, and earthenware pottery to cook in was still a thing in North America prior to European expansion. There were vast trade networks between different tribes so even assuming cherokee didn't make their own pottery to cook in (they did), they would have had access to it by way of neighbors and traders. *Im an Anthropology major. Cooking has existed for a VERY long time and in the absence of pottery, we use hollowed out voids (in logs, rocks, folded bark, large shaped leaves) and hot rocks. Iron pots are great, but this is a time honored skill that no one group would have had to introduce the other to.
@@DieLuftwaffel no, I’m sorry, Europeans were idiots in multiple ways when they arrived in the Americas. If anything Native Americans taught Europeans how to feed themselves/survive in the New World. Stick to what you know. 😂
@@Your-Least-Favorite-Stranger Europeans I Europe used clay pots for cooking all the way till WW2 and fire stoves too. Clay pots would break, but clay was the cheapest material. Cast iron pots and skillets were hella expensive and heavy. Only after industrial mass production of aluminum and steel pots started in the 1950-1970s that metal cookware got cheap
I am just surprised that this is 2 years old already and only 500 or so likes; surely there should be more for something this great and informative? What a remarkable woman. If the lights went out and we had to go back to basics, I for sure would go find this woman; basic survival.
Fun fact: we like to think global trade routes gave us a large amount of foods to choose from, yet, in reality, we are currently eating only around 25% of the varieties of food our ancestors did. This includes many wild edibles or simply local varieties of the same fruit or vegetable which tasted differently or had different properties. My favourite example for this is the plain apple, which Europe alone had something thousands of varities - nowadays only five American hybrids are grown commercially.
I'm trying to put together a winter diet for a larp event that fits an iron age aesthetic so this has been very helpful! I couldn't find anything anywhere about this topic, thank you so much.
As a Potter, we have always been interested in different ways of firing our pottery. And have tried all the different methods known in the earliest days we think that people might have wrapped food in clay, and then found out sometimes they could save the outer shell of clay and use it as a pot.
Thank you, thank you, thank you, Caroline for this wonderful and insightful video! I am in the long processes (years!) of writing a British Iron Age historical fiction story. I love to come across anything related to food, which can easily be replicated by most (unlike handmade clothing and tools), and thus, makes us feel closer to the past and our ancestors. I love experimental archaeology and living history so much! I'm a big fan of Time Team and the BBC 4 Living History Farm Series with the lovely Ruth Goodman, Peter Ginn, Alex Langlands, and Tom Pinfold. I specialized in American and Medieval Histories in University.
Thanks for the awesome video! I find it fascinating that a genetic condition called hemochromatosis where excess iron builds up in the body is the most common in traditionally celtic and other places which relied heavily on dairy. Calcium, largely found in dairy, inhibits the absorption of iron through digestion so they developed in response to the diet to be very efficient at absorbing iron. A great excess of it can cause a lot of problems but the treatment for it is still basically to take blood out of you, so I'm guessing it wouldn't have been much of a problem for say a warrior who gets banged around a lot (or a woman with very heavy periods like myself lol) 😂 This condition also leads to a bronzy or reddish tint to the skin, which I believe some roman authors described some celts having. Sorry for the random fact dump, I just find it incredibly fascinating how traces of our ancient diets are still reflected in our genes. I believe places like Ireland and Finland (which is where I live and was also very cattle reliant place once upon a time) also have some of the lowest rates of lactose intolerance and milk allergies!
@@marybillups4822 People did not become lactose intolerant. They were always intolerant and gained tolerance over time. I assume you mean a milk allergy, which is a reaction to certain proteins in milk. Those proteins might vary by species, whereas lactose is lactose, regardless of species.
I’ve got most of my cooking and eating utensils for Iron Age cooking, but I don’t yet have a proper pot or knife, this is an excellent way to show what I may want to look at and get for my own Iron Age cooking! Thank you for sharing!!!
Very interesting! I always thought they cooked in iron pots/cauldrons too. I thought clay pots would explode for cooking in! I never thought about the pots being placed in embers. I would imagine that a lot of cooking would've been done outdoors in dry warm weather to reduce the amount of smoke in the round house, plus it would be lighter to see what one was doing. I reckon in those days during good weather people spent much more time outdoors. I'm very glad potatoes eventually made their way to this island!
fascinating video. I'm glad you mentioned the importance of seasonality. With possibility of IT outages, learning how to go lower tech is really important
Caroline is such a wonderful presenter! She is so engaging and entertaining, while also giving a tonne of information. I've only seen her videos on TH-cam but I hope maybe someday I can visit a site where she's presenting and learn from her in person.
I am so glad to have found this video. I studied this period of time from the art history viewpoint, but I am also interested in how the people lived. I love to garden and am curious as to whether there are any indications of a kitchen garden, near the house. Were there temporary outdoor kitchens in the summertime for processing the vegetables, for drying, or for immediate feasting. You would need a shady awning over the processing area, a place to hang herbs for drying and use later as seasoning and remedies, I am also curious about fruit trees, and whether there were some in the village, or maybe they would travel a day or two to a wild orchard,. Hope I am not bombarding you with questions, What impresses me is the carefully considered use of resources. Thank you for your work, very inspiring.
take into account there were two sleeping periods during the night, first and second...in the very busy interval you could revive the fire, make some cooking, look after the animals beside or below etc.
That's actually true (depending on who you were, your living situation, etc.). Where men lived in close quarters and there was danger (which was many places for most of history), men would have shifts doing the night watch. Also during harvest you would be so exhausted from working as hard as possible all day, that you would go straight to sleep when the sun set, and often wake up in the night to have some wifey time or devotional prayer, and then go back to sleep for a bit before sunrise.
SO well explained! 🙂 Thought you did a really good job balancing the level of information needed & explaining the reasons behind things... esp. taking into account that many viewers may not ever have cooked with fire, grown their own food, or lived without electricity? Even for somebody who has some familiarity with those things, there's still great wee nuggets here like not tapping one's stirring-spoon for fear of cracking the pots... Presenter is very natural & fluent too, interesting & entertaining to listen to. Brava! 👏
I was worried about your sleeves and that flame . I am sure they had some horrific events because of this. Very informative and good advice for survival.
You do have a bit of an accent. You must come from the Little Britannia of course! Jokes aside, so much can be learned from an Iron Age cooking video, it's amazing!
Wonderful video. An open fire in the middle of the room seems very dangerous, both to the home and the cook. I imagine it was even more dangerous than Elizabethan hearths.
They would put it outside if at all possible Rainy days or winter they would have inside Can u imagine all the child burns? Maybe they assigned a kid to keep a baby out of fire n then taught a toddler about HOT. And kicked out kids if they got running around!
@YeshuaKingMessiah Yep they would have been very tough with youngsters by today's standards but it was necessary to keep them from getting hurt or dying.
Solcherart gelebte Geschichte oder Institute oder Vereine, die sich mit so etwas beschäftigen, muss es doch in Deutschland auch irgendwo geben. Weiß da jemand etwas?
the iron age people dint eat much pork or chicken tbh, pork only started to be eaten all over after the roman conquest because the roman are known to love pork and poultry.
❤ love the video❤ love the explanation❤ even love the accent… from Continental Europe❤ there is an issue with language @2:06 Please say it correctly, it is “Fewer eggs” NOT “less eggs”.❤ One man/woman & fewer men/women. - NOT “less men/women” Many people & fewer people - NOT “less people” and NOT “alot of people”
Her accent, French or Belgian as I can tell, is absolutely minimal. She's had to work hard for this. Can't understand the English of most walloons and French, I dare you to try hahah :)
@@AskTorin I wouldn't call that minimal but yea its lovely and nice to listen to ^^ agreed, many French people have difficulties with English, it's a bit "frowned" upon to speak English, they like to stick to their native French, it's understandable they are French after all.
I have a hard time believing a copper caldron would have been too expensive for the average household 4.5 grams of silver or 1 denarii a day was low end of pay in Roman times they worked 7 days in a 8 day week that’s over an ounce of silver a week yes a caldron would be expensive but not out of reach
@@YeshuaKingMessiah the video title states iron age i include the Roman invasion if we’re talking pre Roman yes society would’ve been a lot more communal the stone soup fable comes to mind
What a delightful and engaging presenter they have in Caroline.
This was amazing. My mother’s ancestry is Cree and Cherokee. When we would go to re-enactments (or camping with my gran), she would cook around the fire exactly as you did - around the edge, not over the top. She said hanging the pot directly over the fire, the bottom was too hot and would scorch, or someone had to stir the pot frequently (and you could tumble everyone’s dinner into the fire). Pulling the coals to the side and using a pot or using a Dutch oven, you had more control over the heat. She never burned anything, and she actually baked cobblers and made fry bread. What I’d give to have some of that now….Iron Age technology still works, even if you use a cast iron pot. Good memories. Thank you.
that must have been pretty cool to watch. I've watched my husband oaxcan family make dishes this old way. What's crazy is they do it often. they have an outside kitchen which they use and prefer it over the modern kitchen they have inside their home
Well it makes sense that they would cook this way, since they learned how to cook over the fire with iron pots from the people who brought them iron pots...
@@DieLuftwaffelCooking in a pot isnt exactly hard to do, and earthenware pottery to cook in was still a thing in North America prior to European expansion.
There were vast trade networks between different tribes so even assuming cherokee didn't make their own pottery to cook in (they did), they would have had access to it by way of neighbors and traders.
*Im an Anthropology major. Cooking has existed for a VERY long time and in the absence of pottery, we use hollowed out voids (in logs, rocks, folded bark, large shaped leaves) and hot rocks. Iron pots are great, but this is a time honored skill that no one group would have had to introduce the other to.
@@DieLuftwaffel no, I’m sorry, Europeans were idiots in multiple ways when they arrived in the Americas.
If anything Native Americans taught Europeans how to feed themselves/survive in the New World.
Stick to what you know. 😂
@@Your-Least-Favorite-Stranger Europeans I Europe used clay pots for cooking all the way till WW2 and fire stoves too. Clay pots would break, but clay was the cheapest material. Cast iron pots and skillets were hella expensive and heavy. Only after industrial mass production of aluminum and steel pots started in the 1950-1970s that metal cookware got cheap
One of the best videos on early medieval cooking! Thank you!
This is not early medieval, it's before the Romans came to Britain.
A lot of it carries on into the early medieval period though.
I am just surprised that this is 2 years old already and only 500 or so likes; surely there should be more for something this great and informative?
What a remarkable woman. If the lights went out and we had to go back to basics, I for sure would go find this woman; basic survival.
This is the most insightful video on the diet of Iron Age Britons I’ve seen on TH-cam, thank you for sharing.
It was, I hope there are more!
Fun fact: we like to think global trade routes gave us a large amount of foods to choose from, yet, in reality, we are currently eating only around 25% of the varieties of food our ancestors did. This includes many wild edibles or simply local varieties of the same fruit or vegetable which tasted differently or had different properties. My favourite example for this is the plain apple, which Europe alone had something thousands of varities - nowadays only five American hybrids are grown commercially.
She needs to make more videos. She is excellent at iron age.
I'm trying to put together a winter diet for a larp event that fits an iron age aesthetic so this has been very helpful! I couldn't find anything anywhere about this topic, thank you so much.
That's amazing. Hope everyone had a great time with great food as well! :D
As a Potter, we have always been interested in different ways of firing our pottery. And have tried all the different methods known in the earliest days we think that people might have wrapped food in clay, and then found out sometimes they could save the outer shell of clay and use it as a pot.
I'm going to look for burnished pottery now. We do reenactment of 18th century, but this is close to my heart, too.
Great display. You’ve made me rethink my medieval cookery.
Bear in mind the "medieval" period is a good 300 to 400 years after this
And spans a good 300 to 400 years.
Thank you, thank you, thank you, Caroline for this wonderful and insightful video! I am in the long processes (years!) of writing a British Iron Age historical fiction story. I love to come across anything related to food, which can easily be replicated by most (unlike handmade clothing and tools), and thus, makes us feel closer to the past and our ancestors. I love experimental archaeology and living history so much! I'm a big fan of Time Team and the BBC 4 Living History Farm Series with the lovely Ruth Goodman, Peter Ginn, Alex Langlands, and Tom Pinfold. I specialized in American and Medieval Histories in University.
I’d love to read it when you’re finished! I love Time Team and the Farm series too!
You guys need to make more videos, experimental archeology is fascinating
Thanks for the awesome video! I find it fascinating that a genetic condition called hemochromatosis where excess iron builds up in the body is the most common in traditionally celtic and other places which relied heavily on dairy. Calcium, largely found in dairy, inhibits the absorption of iron through digestion so they developed in response to the diet to be very efficient at absorbing iron. A great excess of it can cause a lot of problems but the treatment for it is still basically to take blood out of you, so I'm guessing it wouldn't have been much of a problem for say a warrior who gets banged around a lot (or a woman with very heavy periods like myself lol) 😂 This condition also leads to a bronzy or reddish tint to the skin, which I believe some roman authors described some celts having. Sorry for the random fact dump, I just find it incredibly fascinating how traces of our ancient diets are still reflected in our genes. I believe places like Ireland and Finland (which is where I live and was also very cattle reliant place once upon a time) also have some of the lowest rates of lactose intolerance and milk allergies!
Only calcium taken in at roughly same time as iron will inhibit it
Have dairy at brekkie with eggs then as a snack in afternoon. No problem then
That's fascinating! Thank you for sharing!
Also, there were ancient breeds of cattle that did not have the mutant gene that affected milk, that caused most people to become lactose intolerant.
@@marybillups4822 People did not become lactose intolerant. They were always intolerant and gained tolerance over time. I assume you mean a milk allergy, which is a reaction to certain proteins in milk. Those proteins might vary by species, whereas lactose is lactose, regardless of species.
@@YeshuaKingMessiah Good to know for people with iron deficiency
I’ve got most of my cooking and eating utensils for Iron Age cooking, but I don’t yet have a proper pot or knife, this is an excellent way to show what I may want to look at and get for my own Iron Age cooking! Thank you for sharing!!!
Brilliant. You give me answers to a lot of questions I have in my research.
This was WONDERFUL!!!!! What a LUXURY to have such a wide array of global foods available at any time of year in most places around the world.
And even with that luxury of food available, people still manage to not know how to cook! 😂
Absolutely fantastic channel. Glad this was on my feed!
This was so interesting! I would love to see a video of iron age cooking in the summer, its really fascinating
Very interesting! I always thought they cooked in iron pots/cauldrons too. I thought clay pots would explode for cooking in! I never thought about the pots being placed in embers. I would imagine that a lot of cooking would've been done outdoors in dry warm weather to reduce the amount of smoke in the round house, plus it would be lighter to see what one was doing. I reckon in those days during good weather people spent much more time outdoors. I'm very glad potatoes eventually made their way to this island!
They were outside as much as possible
Bldgs were for sleeping n storing and sheltering during bad weather
Life was lived in the yard at very least
outstanding!
Loved this video. It’s so interesting to see life from their point of view.
fascinating video. I'm glad you mentioned the importance of seasonality. With possibility of IT outages, learning how to go lower tech is really important
This is super.
I've learned so much and many questions answered.
Thankyou for posting 😁
This is really good you’ve included so much and gone into depth. Not one other video, I’ve came across has spoke about seasonality with food.
This is fantastic! So informative, thank you for sharing your expertise! 🙂
Genuinely, absolutely fascinating. Loved it.
Thank you for this insight into the diet of Iron Age people
This lady is a treasure.
What an exceptional presentation! Really engaging and informative
Caroline is such a wonderful presenter! She is so engaging and entertaining, while also giving a tonne of information. I've only seen her videos on TH-cam but I hope maybe someday I can visit a site where she's presenting and learn from her in person.
I am so glad to have found this video. I studied this period of time from the art history viewpoint, but I am also interested in how the people lived. I love to garden and am curious as to whether there are any indications of a kitchen garden, near the house. Were there temporary outdoor kitchens in the summertime for processing the vegetables, for drying, or for immediate feasting. You would need a shady awning over the processing area, a place to hang herbs for drying and use later as seasoning and remedies, I am also curious about fruit trees, and whether there were some in the village, or maybe they would travel a day or two to a wild orchard,. Hope I am not bombarding you with questions, What impresses me is the carefully considered use of resources. Thank you for your work, very inspiring.
Very interesting.
Thanks Debra :)
Absolutely brilliant, please do more on Iron Age cooking please!❤❤❤
take into account there were two sleeping periods during the night, first and second...in the very busy interval you could revive the fire, make some cooking, look after the animals beside or below etc.
That's actually true (depending on who you were, your living situation, etc.). Where men lived in close quarters and there was danger (which was many places for most of history), men would have shifts doing the night watch. Also during harvest you would be so exhausted from working as hard as possible all day, that you would go straight to sleep when the sun set, and often wake up in the night to have some wifey time or devotional prayer, and then go back to sleep for a bit before sunrise.
This woman is a gem 💯
SO well explained! 🙂 Thought you did a really good job balancing the level of information needed & explaining the reasons behind things... esp. taking into account that many viewers may not ever have cooked with fire, grown their own food, or lived without electricity?
Even for somebody who has some familiarity with those things, there's still great wee nuggets here like not tapping one's stirring-spoon for fear of cracking the pots... Presenter is very natural & fluent too, interesting & entertaining to listen to. Brava! 👏
Thank you! That was very interesting.
That was so interesting. Thank you very much..
1:48 I can already tell I’m going to enjoy this.
Thank you, excellent.
I was worried about your sleeves and that flame . I am sure they had some horrific events because of this. Very informative and good advice for survival.
Folks would have rolled up their sleeves while working around the fire. She's just doing a short video so it's not necessary.
Natural fibres don’t catch fire easily. Linen and wool don’t catch and burn easily like petrochemical fibres or melt like plastic modern fibres.
this is awesome you rule!!! thanks
Nice overview and explanation.
Brilliant!❤
You do have a bit of an accent. You must come from the Little Britannia of course!
Jokes aside, so much can be learned from an Iron Age cooking video, it's amazing!
Excellent teacher!
Awesome video! I enjoyed it very much.
What a fantastic video. Thank you ❤
excellent video
excellent thank you
Please caption your content so everyone can enjoy
It is CC
I like this video, I would love it if the audio was a little louder. She's a bit hard to hear. Wonderful content.
Wonderful video. An open fire in the middle of the room seems very dangerous, both to the home and the cook.
I imagine it was even more dangerous than Elizabethan hearths.
They would put it outside if at all possible
Rainy days or winter they would have inside
Can u imagine all the child burns? Maybe they assigned a kid to keep a baby out of fire n then taught a toddler about HOT. And kicked out kids if they got running around!
@YeshuaKingMessiah Yep they would have been very tough with youngsters by today's standards but it was necessary to keep them from getting hurt or dying.
Trying to place the accent, is it Belgian? Dutch?
Born in Eastern France according to her bio.
The fun part is that you can date this representation of iron age as 1900+, 1960+, 1990+, 2000+,2000+
Solcherart gelebte Geschichte oder Institute oder Vereine, die sich mit so etwas beschäftigen, muss es doch in Deutschland auch irgendwo geben. Weiß da jemand etwas?
Thank you👍💪 New sub 👍
Wouldn’t a fire be needed to keep babies warm?
They would be well dressed n kept on their moms besides. And sleep with their parents then into the child bed where they all snuggled too.
the iron age people dint eat much pork or chicken tbh, pork only started to be eaten all over after the roman conquest because the roman are known to love pork and poultry.
They had eggs, they ate poultry
Pig was prob the Roman influence tho
Don't know about chicken. But wild boar was everywhere and eaten frequently. Also you had pheasant and other chicken-like wildfowl to eat.
❤ love the video❤ love the explanation❤ even love the accent… from Continental Europe❤
there is an issue with language @2:06 Please say it correctly, it is “Fewer eggs” NOT “less eggs”.❤
One man/woman & fewer men/women. - NOT “less men/women”
Many people & fewer people - NOT “less people” and NOT “alot of people”
Excellent advice for Brexiteers.
What no Mc Donald’s😢
WHAT is the accent??
You’d also slaughter your animals in fall so you didn’t have expense of feeding them through winter. And they’d be nice and fat from summer plenty.
"slight" accent ^^
Her accent, French or Belgian as I can tell, is absolutely minimal. She's had to work hard for this. Can't understand the English of most walloons and French, I dare you to try hahah :)
@@AskTorin
Eastern France
You must be American. The strong British accent is her English fluency, the faint French one is her "accent".
Her English is better than most people, who are born to it. Her accent is lovely, and doesn’t impair communication at all.
@@AskTorin I wouldn't call that minimal but yea its lovely and nice to listen to ^^ agreed, many French people have difficulties with English, it's a bit "frowned" upon to speak English, they like to stick to their native French, it's understandable they are French after all.
I wish you cooked something
NARRATIVE.
Do your own research.
This is a skit.
Did your mother ever teach you to write in full sentences?
I have a hard time believing a copper caldron would have been too expensive for the average household 4.5 grams of silver or 1 denarii a day was low end of pay in Roman times they worked 7 days
in a 8 day week that’s over an ounce of silver a week yes a caldron would be expensive but not out of reach
She does preRoman UK
So its 900BC-100BC
Romans were there about 43BC
@@YeshuaKingMessiah the video title states iron age i include the Roman invasion if we’re talking pre Roman yes society would’ve been a lot more communal the stone soup fable comes to mind
@@mysteriousman8769 she doesn’t include it
I believe it says that in her description blurb
@@mysteriousman8769 or maybe another vid’s blurb
In one vid also she talks about it to another person
Except the iron age ended before the Romans came to Britain