--- WyteRayven@aol.com > wrote: >I spoke to a friend who is well versed in both period food, as well as period >dyeing, about the possibility of using Indigo in a mead to turn it blue. > >She said that she didn't believe that indigo is toxic, but it is probably >indigestible. She didn't think that it would work for making a blue mead >though, because it isn't water soluble, and that the best that you would >probably come up with would be a powdered blue sediment at the bottom of the >mead. > >She did, however, make some suggestions. She recommended trying alkanet or >violets. Both were used in period to color food blue. > >Hope this helps, > >Dawn Indigo is indeed insoluble in water (not totally though, just in very minute quantities). A common method when dying fabric at home with indigo (or woad) is to ferment the pigment in urine for a few days. Directly after dying the fabric would have a greenish color which then oxidizes into blue. The use of violets have been discussed at the sca-cooks mailing list so there might be something about it in the Floriligium at http://www.florilegium.org/ but at the moment I can't recall if the discussion were aboutcoloring food or candied petals. /angus. == There comes a time in every man's life when he must feel tempted to spit in his hands, hoist the black flag and begin slitting throats. --H.L. Mencken _____________________________________________________________ Get your own mando cool and totally free email@iamawitch.com address at http://freemail.iamawitch.com today! ------------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe from this list, send email to majordomo@pbm.com containing the words "unsubscribe hist-brewing" (or unsubscribe hist-brewing-digest, if you get the digest.) To contact a human about problems, send mail to owner-hist-brewing@pbm.com