pottage
/ˈpɑtɪd͡ʒ/
Etymology
From Middle English pottage, from Anglo-Norman and Old French potage, equivalent to pot + -age.
noun
- A thick soup or stew, made by boiling vegetables, grains, and sometimes meat or fish, a staple food throughout Europe in the Middle Ages.“And they have not in many places, neither pease ne beans ne none other pottages but the broth of the flesh.”
- An oatmeal porridge.
- A dish made by stewing plantain, beans, or yam in a tomato- and pepper-based sauce.