Swans were also much appreciated and viewed as a delicacy.
Young game was avoided owing to the little nourishment it contained and its indigestibility with the exception of young partridges and leverets which appeared at the most sumptuous banquets.
There was a time when they fattened pheasants as they did capons. Plovers were much enjoyed and they were roasted without being drawn, as also were turtle-doves and larks; "for," says an ancient author, "larks only eat small pebbles and sand, doves grains of juniper and scented herbs, and plovers feed on air." At a later period the same honour was conferred on woodcocks.
Thrushes, starlings, blackbirds, quail, and partridges were in equal repute according to the season. Of all the birds used for the table none could be compared to the young cuckoo taken just as it was full fledged. Middle Ages Food - Game Birds The following fruits were available during the Medieval era, even though many were looked upon with sheer distain, especially by the Upper Classes. The following list of fruits were available during the Middle Ages: - Peacock
- Heron
- Crane
- Crow
- Swan
- Stork
- Cormorant
- Thrushes
- Starlings
- Blackbirds
- Quail
- Cuckoo
- Lark
- Pheasants
- Partridges
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