Food at Elisal: Difference between revisions
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==Growing crops== | |||
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Revision as of 09:57, 2 March 2026
See also: Food and drink • Crab fishing
Summary
In April in that climate:
- Spring greens are abundant.
- Goats are giving milk.
- Hens are laying well.
- Broad beans are in season.
- Grain stores are low but not gone.
- Olive oil is common (this matters — it shapes everything).
- Wine is available, but not luxurious.
Because they are isolated, their diet depends heavily on:
- What they catch
- What they grow in a small plot
- What they can preserve
Below is a realistic daily pattern.
Breakfast
Before going out to check traps and nets.
This would be simple and repetitive.
Likely Foods
- Pan moreno — coarse barley-wheat bread baked once or twice a week
- Olive oil poured into a shallow dish for dipping
- Crushed garlic rubbed on the bread
- A little fresh goat cheese (queso fresco)
- Possibly olives in brine
If grain is tight:
- A thin garlic broth (early form of sopa de ajo) made with:
- Water
- Garlic
- Olive oil
- A torn piece of stale bread
Drink
- Diluted red wine
- Or watered vinegar drink (poor man’s refreshment)
- Or water from a nearby spring
No fruit unless dried figs remain from autumn.
Midday Meal (Eaten by the Shore)
Carried in cloth or pouch.
Likely Foods
- More bread
- A slice of cheese
- Salted sardines or anchovies
- Raw spring onions or broad beans (eaten fresh)
- A hard-boiled egg (very plausible in April)
If they have time and a small fire:
- Freshly grilled small fish brushed with oil and salt
Drink
- Wine in a skin
- Water
They would not cook something elaborate at noon unless weather prevents fishing.
Main Meal (Largest Meal)
This is where you can show warmth, smell, and family rhythm.
They sell crab to the Cregan if possible. If some are too small or cracked, they eat those (guilty pleasure).
Most Likely Evening Dish: Fish Stew
A clay pot over coals containing:
- Fresh fish (bream, mullet, small hake, sardines)
- Garlic (essential)
- Onion
- Olive oil
- Bay leaf
- Handful of barley or stale bread to thicken
- Sometimes chickpeas from winter stores
It would be oily, fragrant, and slightly smoky.
Spring Additions (April Abundance)
They might add:
- Broad beans
- Chard
- Spinach
- Wild fennel
- Nettles (boiled first)
A simple side of boiled greens dressed in oil and salt is very realistic.
If They Keep Goats
Very plausible for isolated fisherfolk.
Then they also have:
- Fresh milk
- Curdled milk
- Soft cheese
- Possibly whey broth
General notes
Crab in April
In southern Iberian waters, crab would be good in spring.
How they prepare it:
- Boiled in seawater
- Split with a knife
- Meat picked and eaten with bread
- Sometimes mixed with garlic and oil
But crab is more valuable sold whole, so they only eat:
- Small ones
- Broken ones
- Unsold remainder
This detail shows poverty without stating it.
Drink Patterns
Poor coastal Spaniards would most commonly drink:
- Diluted red wine
- Water if safe
- No beer (less common in Iberian regions)
Wine would be thin and rough — not noble vintage.
Food Texture and Atmosphere (for Writing)
Their food would be:
- Heavy on garlic
- Glossed with olive oil
- Eaten from shared earthenware bowls
- With bread used as utensil
You would smell:
- Salt
- Fish oil
- Woodsmoke
- Garlic
- Wet rope
What They Would Not Have Often
- White bread
- Sugar
- Citrus in quantity (maybe one lemon tree if lucky)
- Meat (except rare rabbit or festival pork)
- Spices like pepper (too expensive)