The Viviender is a Fifteenth Century book written in Middle French. It contains 60 recipies as well as household tips and medical advice.
One of the recipes
is ideal for Xmas dinner. Fill a cooked chicken with mercury,
sulfur and hot air, then bind both ends. The bird will appear to sing
when you loosen the bounds:
To make that Chicken
Sing when it is dead and roasted, whether on the spit or in the
platter. Take the neck of your chicken and bind it at one end and fill
it with quicksilver and ground sulphur, filling until it is roughly half
full; then bind the other end, but not too tightly. When you want it to
sing, [heat] your neck or chicken. When it is quite hot, and when the
mixture heats up, the air that is trying to escape will make the
chicken's sound. The same can be done with a gosling, with a piglet and
with any other birds. And if it doesn't cry loudly enough, tie the two
ends more tightly.
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