Outlander Kitchen

Historical and Character-Inspired Food from the fictional world of Diana Gabaldon.

Archive for the category “Outlander”

Dougal’s Poached Peach Sundae

“So you did it with Colum’s knowledge.  Was Letitia willing?” Knowing by now just what sort of ruthlessness they possessed, I wouldn’t put it past the brothers MacKenzie to have forced her.

Dougal nodded.  His anger had evaporated.

“Oh, aye, willing enough.  She didna fancy me particularly, but she wanted a child – enough to take me to her bed for the three months it took to start Hamish.  A boring job it was too,” Dougal added reflectively, scraping a bit of mud from his boot heel.  “I’d as soon swive a warm bowl of milk pudding.”

“And did you tell Colum that?”  I asked.  Hearing the edge in my voice, he looked up.  He regarded me levelly for a moment, then a faint smile lightened his face.

“No,” he said quietly.  “No, I didna tell him that.”  He looked down at his hands, turning them over as though looking for some secret hidden in the lines of his palms.

“I told him,” he said softly, not looking at me, “that she was tender and sweet as a ripe peach, and all that a man could want in a woman.”

Diana Gabaldon, Outlander (Chapter 34 – Dougal’s Story)

peach-sundae-single

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Outlander Light Switch Covers – DIY Saturday

outlander-excerpt-light-switch-cover

Nothing like an afternoon of crafting to pass away a rainy April day!

Literary light switch covers are a wonderfully semi-geeky and inexpensive way to bring books out from beneath their covers and decorate your living space with the words and passages you love.  Not surprising I chose to make some Outlander ones first.

Now, I’m usually a bit of a fuss pot when I craft…but the imperfectness of these corners reminds me of the dog-eared pages and taped-together covers from my beloved pre-Kindle DG collection…it’s nice to have them back on view and under my fingertips again.

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Roast Beef for a Wedding Feast from Outlander

At the inn, food was readily available, in the form of a modest wedding feast, including wine, fresh bread, and roast beef.

Dougal took me by the arm as I started for the stairs to freshen myself before eating.

“I want this marriage consummated, wi’ no uncertainty whatsoever,” Dougal instructed me firmly in an undertone.  “There’s to be no question of it bein’ a legal union, and no way open for annulment, or we’re all riskin’ our necks.”

“Seems to me you’re doing that anyway,” I remarked crossly.  “Mine, especially.”

Dougal patted me firmly on the rump.

“Dinna ye worry about that; ye just do your part.”  He looked me over critically, as though judging my capacity to perform my role adequately.

“I kent Jamie’s father.  If the lad’s much like him, ye’ll have to trouble at all.  Ah, Jamie lad!”  He hurried across the room, to where Jamie had come in from stabling the horses.  From the look on Jamie’s face, he was getting his orders as well.

Diana Gabaldon, Outlander, Chapter 15

wedding-feast

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Murtagh’s Gift to Ellen from Outlander

I caught a strange nonmetallic gleam in the depths of the box, and pointed.  “What’s that?”

“Oh, those,” she said, dipping into the box again.  “I’ve never worn them; they don’t suit me.  But you could wear them — you’re tall and queenly, like my mother was.  They were hers, ye ken.”

They were a pair of bracelets.  Each made from the curving, almost-circular tusk of a wild boar, polished to a deep ivory glow, the ends capped with silver tappets, etched with flowered tracery.

“Lord, they’re gorgeous!”  I’ve never seen anything so…so wonderfully barbaric.”

Jenny was amused.  “Aye, that they are.  Someone gave them to Mother as a wedding gift, but she never would say who.  My father used to tease her now and then about her admirer, but she wouldna tell him, either, just smiled like a cat that’s had cream to its supper.  Here, try them.”

The ivory was cool and heavy on my arm.  I couldn’t resist stroking the deep yellow surface, grained with age.

“Aye, they suit ye,” Jenny declared.  “And they go wi’ that yellow gown, as well.  Here are the earbobs — put these on, and we’ll go down.”

Diana Gabaldon,  Outlander (Chapter 31)

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Hot Broth at Castle Leoch from Outlander

“I’m so sorry…that is, I mean, thank you for…but I…” I was babbling, backing away from him with my face flaming.  He was a bit flushed, too, but not disconcerted.  He reached for my hand and pulled me back.  Careful not to touch me otherwise, he put a hand under my chin and forced my head up to face him.

“Ye need not be scairt of me,” he said softly.  “Nor of anyone here, so long as I’m with ye.” He let go and turned to the fire.

“You need somethin’ hot, lass,” he said matter-of-factly, “and a bit to eat as well.  Something in your belly will help more than anything.”  I laughed shakily at his attempts to pour broth one-handed, and went to help.  He was right; food did help.  We sipped broth and ate bread in a companionable silence, sharing the growing comfort of warmth and fullness.

Finally, he stood up, picking up the fallen quilt from the floor.  He dropped it back on the bed, and motioned me toward it.  “Do ye sleep a bit, Claire.  You’re worn out, and likely someone will want to talk wi’ ye before too long.”

This was a sinister reminder of my precarious position, but I was too exhausted to care much.  I uttered no more than a pro forma protest at taking the bed; I had never seen anything so enticing.  Jamie assured me that he could find a bed elsewhere.  I fell headfirst into the pile of quilts and was asleep before he reached the door.

Diana Gabaldon, Outlander (Chapter 4)

Broth from Castle Leoch

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