Use BBC.com or the new BBC App to listen to BBC podcasts, Radio 4 and the World Service outside the UK.

Find out how to listen to other BBC stations

Episode details

Radio 4 Extra,11 May 2003,15 mins

Lincolnshire

Eat Your Garden

Available for 26 days

Archaeologists Francis and Maisie Pryor know more about the eating habits of prehistoric Britons than anyone else alive. In their digs across East Anglia, they've uncovered convincing proof that the farmers of pre-Roman Britain had developed a sophisticated food production system, based around huge flocks of semi-domesticated sheep. Whilst they don't claim to survive purely on creamed nettles, meadowsweet ale and vinegar cheese, they do keep their own flock of Neolithic sheep and need little persuasion to rustle up an ancient tribal feast. Wiz Clift joins the Pryors for a stroll around their Lincolnshire garden. She'll be in search of the herbs, vegetables and flowers that pre-Roman Britons would have used to liven up their mutton-based diet. When her trug is over-flowing, she'll be sitting Francis and Maisie around an open fire in a reconstructed Bronze Age hut for her own version of a Neolithic Sunday lunch. Producer: Alasdair Cross First broadcast on BBC Radio 4 in May 2003.

Programme Website
More episodes