Since this year’s World Science Fiction Convention will be held in Glasgow, I was interested to see on the invaluable Cronaca an item on Glaswegian cuisine. The city is famous for the unhealthfulness of its denizens’ typical diet, so much so that one would have been, according to this report, better off dining there six centuries ago.
Glaswegians in 1405 had a better diet than the citizens of 2005, eating their “five-a-day” 600 years ahead of its time.
Even their light beer was healthier than sugar-laden fizzy concoctions that are today's favourite, according to new archaeologicalevidence. . . .
By analysing cesspit material, archaeologists discovered medieval citizens ate a healthy diet of fruit, vegetables, cereals and fish. It is a long way in time and culture from modern Glasgow, where obesity is so commonplace because of a junk food diet of pizza, burgers and fish suppers that the Scottish Executive is considering opening an NHS-funded stomach-stapling clinic in the city.
Professor Stephen Driscoll of Glasgow University’s archaeology department, said: “Around 100 bodies examined showed good health and the teeth were worn rather than decayed.
“The diet was healthier than today, with porridge, a little meat, fish, milk, cottage cheese and vegetables andfruits.”. . .
Frankie Phillips, of the British Dietetics Association, said: “There wouldn’t have been too many obese people in medieval times. We could certainly learn from some aspects of the diet that was uncovered.”
I’m not all that sentimental about the “healthy” medieval diet, which was seasonally deficient in vitamins and generally accompanied by a hundred hour work week, but the current “Glesca diet” may not be ideal for the well-being of science fiction fandom. If only a few 15th Century pubs would appear, Brigadoon-like, to supplement the chips-and-lemonade shops.
The Italian Aeneas Sylvius, later Pope, who visited Scotland in the reign of James I (1394-1437) reported that the common people ate more meat and bread thn was good for them, though bread was so expensive for the poor peasants that it was looked upon as a dainty. So even in 1405, the health police were up and about!
Posted by: Bruce Allardice | Thursday, June 16, 2005 at 07:58 PM