pottage

/ˈpɑtɪd͡ʒ/

Etymology

From Middle English pottage, from Anglo-Norman and Old French potage, equivalent to pot + -age.

noun

  1. 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.”
  2. An oatmeal porridge.
  3. A dish made by stewing plantain, beans, or yam in a tomato- and pepper-based sauce.