Today the word “breakfast” gets shuttlecocked across American streets like coffee. Ah, there’s nothing like a mug of coffee at 4 a.m. with some jazz music. Coffee’s good with breakfast, too. Hey, wait. Is that why breakfast wasn’t relatively prevalent in the Middle Ages?–because they didn’t have coffee? That’s a deep, sociological question. Today, I just want to answer the question “did people eat breakfast in the Middle Ages?”

It goes without saying that medieval people in general ate a lot less than Americans do today. With a lack of fridges and advanced food-preservation, most people in medieval times, especially indentured people, didn’t have an easy means of making a meal before going to work. If they didn’t keep the fire burning all night, they would have to make one with a tinder box or use an ember from the neighbors. Households with grooms might use that fire for other purposes, like keeping spiced wine warm or warming water for baths, and any form of liquid might be all a person needs to begin the day.

Employers with the means to have a meal ready in the early moments of the day had breakfast earlier than people who didn’t have the wherewithal. Many indentured workers were given nuncheons (snacks) as part of their wages. These nuncheons would be eaten during fast breaks before dinner, a large midday meal, and before supper, a second meal for after the day’s work was through. Generally, dinner and supper–two large meals instead of three–was the norm.

When speaking about the monastic and much of the familia in general, it wouldn’t be sensible for us to dispute the broad statement that there was a custom of “fasting piously” during the night. You definitely weren’t sinning if you skipped breakfast because you didn’t break your fast. Monks ate “collations” and then read Collationes by Cassian, and they would pray for forgiveness if eating was the first thing they did in the morning. There’re much more important things to do like witnessing God’s word! Veni Sancti Spiritus!

Armies on campaign carried a lot of preserved foods like biscuits and salted meats. Whatever the armies’ priorities were, breaking fast early in the day wasn’t a necessary given for any soldier. It took organization and order to issue meals to the entire army, and there might be more serious things to spend time organizing against when on campaign than breakfast. On certain campaigns, food might come as an extreme luxury during all eight hours of the day (Matins, Lauds, Prime, Tierce, Sext, None, Vespers, Compline).

Breakfast was sometimes given to the infant, the sick and the elderly by caretakers to help regain and maintain strength. If you were a healthy adult, you might be seen as weak for needing a breakfast depending on the context. The reason I speak so generally is because obviously customs in 10th century Paris were a lot different than 15th century Florence and Venice where people on average ate very well.

In a typical household somewhere in Europe during the Middle Ages, if you had some instant food you could eat in the morning before work like bread or vegetables that didn’t need to be cooked, or indeed leftovers from yesterday’s supper which had been kept warm next to the fire overnight, it might be wiser to save these foods for today’s supper anyways, especially if you had other people to feed. But it shouldn’t surprise anyone if people had a quick bite of some bread or leftovers before heading out the door in the morning, especially if their stomachs were grumbling.

In the average household of medieval cities, it was the wife’s job to go to the market almost every morning to get ingredients for the meals her family would have that day. This practice is a direct consequence of having a lack of ways to preserve food. Today, we can make breakfast in two minutes. In feudal society, there were only so many roles dedicated to preparing and cooking food. This same world had even fewer sinks, towels and soaps.

Almost every small thing we take for granted when it comes to making a quick breakfast today didn’t exist or was very rare in medieval times: electricity, running-water, transportation. Now ask yourself, if you didn’t have a steward and dozens of grooms to manage your fires, your laundry, your water-supply, your waste-management and so on, would you have breakfast? Or would you maximize the efficiency of your time by getting your arse to the fields?

In medieval records we have gobs and gobs of accounts of people having supper but very little of people having breakfast, and I think that’s for a good a reason. To wrap things up, let’s just that the way breakfast is treated in today’s Western culture didn’t exist in medieval times.

Sources:

Life in a Medieval City by Frances and Joseph Gies Food in Medieval Times by Melitta Weiss Adamson