Entertaining from Ancient Rome to the Super Bowl AN ENCYCLOPEDIA
VOLUME 1: A–G
Edited by Melitta Weiss Adamson and Fr...
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Entertaining from Ancient Rome to the Super Bowl AN ENCYCLOPEDIA
VOLUME 1: A–G
Edited by Melitta Weiss Adamson and Francine Segan
GREENWOOD PRESS Westport, Connecticut • London
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Entertaining from Ancient Rome to the Super Bowl : an encyclopedia / edited by Melitta Weiss Adamson and Francine Segan. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978–0–313–33957–8 (set : alk. paper) ISBN 978–0–313–33958–5 (v. 1 : alk. paper) ISBN 978–0–313–33959–2 (v. 2 : alk. paper) 1. Entertaining—History—Encyclopedias. 2. Cookery, International—History— Encyclopedias. 3. Food habits—History—Encyclopedias. I. Adamson, Melitta Weiss. II. Segan, Francine. TX731.E5824 2008 641.3003—dc22 2008030543 British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data is available. Copyright © 2008 by Melitta Weiss Adamson and Francine Segan All rights reserved. No portion of this book may be reproduced, by any process or technique, without the express written consent of the publisher. Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 20080305043 ISBN: 978–0–313–33957–8 (set) 978–0–313–33958–5 (vol. 1) 978–0–313–33959–2 (vol. 2) First published in 2008 Greenwood Press, 88 Post Road West, Westport, CT 06881 An imprint of Greenwood Publishing Group, Inc. www.greenwood.com Printed in the United States of America
The paper used in this book complies with the Permanent Paper Standard issued by the National Information Standards Organization (Z39.48–1984). 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 The publisher has done its best to make sure the instructions and /or recipes in this book are correct. However, users should apply judgment and experience when preparing recipes, especially parents and teachers working with young people. The publisher accepts no responsibility for the outcome of any recipe included in this volume.
Contents
List of Entries
vii
Guide to Related Topics
ix
Preface
The Encyclopedia: A– G
xiii
1
Bibliography
551
About the Editors and Contributors
569
Index
579
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List of Entries
American Frontier Ancient Greece Ancient Rome Anniversary Parties Antipasto Aztec Entertaining Baby Shower Bachelor Party Bar/ Bat Mitzvah Barbeque Barn Raising Beer Halls and Beer Gardens Beeton, Isabella Betty Crocker Birthdays Blair House Block Party Book Clubs Books on Entertaining and Dining, History of Brazil Bridal Shower
Brunch Buffet Cake and Candles Catering Celtic Feasting Chafing Dish Champagne Cheese Course, History of Childhood in South India Children’s Birthday Parties Chinese Banquets Chinese New Year Chocolate Chopsticks Christmas Civil War Cocktails Coffeehouses in London Coffee Klatches Colonial America Colonial Mexico Cookbooks, History of
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List of Entries
Cookbooks, Tools for Entertaining Cordials and Liqueurs Cruise Ships Day of the Dead Debutante Balls Deepavali, Festival of Lights Dessert Dim Sum Dinner Parties Doilies and Coasters Door County Fish Boil Dutch Treat Easter Edible Centerpieces Egypt Etiquette Books Fast Food, History of Finger Bowls Food Network Fourth of July France Funeral Food Garden Party Halloween Hors d’oeuvres and Canapés Inca India Invitations Italy Japanese Cherry Blossom Festival Juneteenth Kaiseki Ryori Kentucky Derby Kitchen Staff Dress Kwanzaa La Quinceanera Luau Mardi Gras Masquerade
Medieval Mesta, Perle New Year’s Eve Parisian Cafés Party Favors Party Planners Philippine Fiestas Potluck Suppers Progressive Dinner Parties Prohibition Renaissance Rent Parties Restaurants Russia Saints’ Days Serving Platters Singles Soul Food St. Patrick’s Day Stewart, Martha Sub-Saharan Africa Sugaring Off Party Super Bowl Parties Table Service, French versus Russian Table Settings Tapas Taverns Tea Tearooms in America Thanksgiving Theme Parties Toasts Tupperware Party Valentine’s Day Wedding Receptions Wine World War II Zakuski
Guide to Related Topics
Accoutrements
Celebrations
Chopsticks Doilies and Coasters Edible Centerpieces Finger Bowls Invitations Kitchen Staff Dress Party Favors Serving Platters Table Settings Toasts
Anniversary Parties Baby Shower Bachelor Party Bar / Bat Mitzvah Birthdays Bridal Shower Children’s Birthday Parties Debutante Balls Juneteenth Kentucky Derby La Quinceanera Theme Parties Wedding Receptions
Beverages Beer Halls and Beer Gardens Champagne Cocktails Cordials and Liqueurs Prohibition Taverns Tea Tearooms in America Wine
Countries and Customs Brazil Childhood in South India Chinese Banquets Chinese New Year Colonial America Colonial Mexico
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Guide to Related Topics
Deepavali, Festival of Lights Door County Fish Boil Dutch Treat Egypt France India Italy Japanese Cherry Blossom Festival Kaiseki Ryori Philippine Fiestas Russia Sub-Saharan Africa Table Service, French vs. Russian Tea Zakuski
Bar / Bat Mitzvah Birthdays Bridal Shower Thanksgiving Wedding Receptions
Courses
Foods
Antipasto Cheese Course, History of Dessert Dim Sum Hors d’oeuvres and Canapés Kaiseki Ryori Potluck Suppers Table Service, French versus Russian Tapas Tea
Antipasto Cakes and Candles Cheese Course, History of Chocolate Dim Sum Fast Food, History of Hors d’oeuvres and Canapés Soul Food Tapas
Festivals Deepavali, Festival of Lights Japanese Cherry Blossom Festival Luau Mardi Gras Masquerade Rent Parties Sugaring Off Party
Histories Domestic Occasions Barbeque Barn Raising Blair House Book Clubs Brunch Chafing Dish Coffee Klatches Dinner Parties Funeral Food Garden Party Potluck Suppers Progressive Dinners Singles Tupperware Party
American Frontier Ancient Greece Ancient Rome Aztec Entertaining Celtic Feasting Civil War Colonial America Colonial Mexico Cruise Ships Inca India Medieval Prohibition Renaissance World War II Holidays
Families Anniversary Parties Baby Shower
Chinese New Year Christmas Day of the Dead
Guide to Related Topics Easter Fourth of July Halloween Kwanzaa New Year’s Eve Saints’ Days St. Patrick’s Day Thanksgiving Valentine’s Day
Food Network Party Planners Public Places
Beeton, Isabella Mesta, Perle Party Planners Stewart, Martha
Beer Halls and Beer Gardens Block Party Coffee Houses in London Cruise Ships Dutch Treat Fast Food, History of Parisian Cafés Rent Parties Restaurants Taverns Tearooms in America
Media
Serving Styles
Betty Crocker Books on Entertaining and Dining, History of Cookbooks, History of Cookbooks, Tools for Entertaining Etiquette Books
Buffet Catering Chafing Dish Potluck Suppers Table Service, French versus Russian
Hostesses
xi
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Preface
Throughout history humans have enjoyed dining and entertainment with family, friends, and strangers, in the privacy of their homes or in public places. They have interrupted their daily routines by celebrating religious or secular holidays, or such personal rites of passage as birth, coming-of-age, marriage, and death. Food plays a central role in all these activities. It is the most basic human need, but as the study of entertaining practices shows, food is much more than a means for survival. Imbued with symbolic meaning since the beginning of human history, food defines our individual selves. Not just what we eat, but how we eat it has traditionally determined our membership in a group, and our status and power within that group. The structures and rules we have built around our use of food make it a form of communication not dissimilar from language. And like language, food is a shared experience. The goal of this encyclopedia is to present to a general reader the dining and entertaining practices and traditions of cultures from around the world from ancient times to the present, at festivals and family events. The work has an anthropological perspective in that it seeks to explain the links between a culture’s political, economic, religious, or social circumstances and its method of dining and entertaining, with ample space being devoted to popular culture. The encyclopedia is arranged alphabetically from A to Z. Its 120 entries range in length from several hundred to over 5,000 words. They
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Preface
were written by 64 contributors who are all experts in their respective fields. The encyclopedia has a worldwide focus and offers the following special features: a Guide to Related Topics, cross-references in the entries whenever appropriate, a list of printed and /or digital sources for each entry to facilitate further research on the topic, and sidebars to 22 entries. The two-volume set is also richly illustrated and provides an extensive general bibliography for further study. The individual entries cover cultures as diverse as Brazil, Sub-Saharan Africa, Italy, or Russia; popular customs found in cultures from around the world, such as the Cherry Blossom Festival in Japan or Deepavali in India; time periods from antiquity to the present; dining-related objects such as chopsticks, finger bowls, or serving platters; a variety of foods, beverages, and courses that figure prominently in entertaining; domestic entertaining from barbeque to coffee klatch and Tupperware party; family celebrations such as birthdays, baby and bridal showers or bar / bat mitzvahs; holidays and festivals from Christmas to Kwanzaa to Sugaring Off Parties; entertaining in public places from the beer garden to the Parisian café; the role of the media in entertaining; as well as famous hostesses. Given the wide range and multifaceted nature of the topic of entertaining through world history, an effort was made to include as much material as is possible in a two-volume format. The encyclopedia is intended to provide a stepping stone for readers interested to delve deeper into the rich and fascinating world of entertaining. The alphabetical arrangement of the work makes it easy to retrieve information on a particular subject, but the encyclopedia also invites browsing. With the help of the Guide to Related Topics, the cross-references, illustrations, and bibliographic information, it furthermore provides the user with a powerful tool for larger research projects on any of the many aspects connected with entertaining, a topic everybody can relate to in their daily lives. By widening the view from North America to the world, it is hoped that the encyclopedia contributes in its own small way to our understanding and appreciation of world cultures with their many similarities and differences. Multiculturalism and mobility are the hallmarks of our age, and the more culturally literate we are the better we can understand our fellow humans with whom we share the planet. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS The realization of this project would not have been possible without the efforts of its many contributors and the enthusiastic support of the editorial staff at Greenwood Press. Special thanks go to Lindsay Claire, Senior Development Editor, who managed to keep the publication of the encyclopedia on track. She was not only a model of efficiency but an absolute pleasure to work with.
Melitta Weiss Adamson
A American Frontier In the early nineteenth century the new American republic underwent extraordinary transformations in every aspect of its life. Not least of these was the transformation in American ideals about who Americans themselves were and the new society that they were creating: a democratic republic inhabited and run by people with equal rights and opportunities. Such ideals, whether realized or not, flowed through the rules and practices of hospitality. Whether in lodging or dining, nowhere than on the new frontiers were democratic notions better seen and remarked upon by both visitors to the newly established United States and by Americans themselves. AMERICANS ON THE MOVE In 1794, Moreau de Saint-Méry, a French jurist of Santo Dominican birth who lived in the new United States for a few years observed, “One is astonished at the rapidity with which Americans have formed settlements in the interior. . . . He emigrates, especially if he be a northerner, to go South or West, to the backwoods of the United States on the Ohio, disposing of his property, selling the house, the wagon, the horse, the dog, anything that will fetch a price” (Moreau de Saint-Méry 1947).
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Americans were on the move as the nation’s population soared, mainly through immigration but also high birth rates. Census figures for 1790 give 3,918,000, living mainly along the eastern seaboard. Thirty years later it had risen to 10,086,000, and by 1840 it was 17,018,000. By the latter date 800,000 were foreign born. The West—west of the Allegheny Mountains, the Northwest Territories—beckoned. Land was abundant, cheap, and increasingly cleared of American Indians. The new state of Illinois, for example, had 55,211 white inhabitants in 1820 and 476,183 by 1840, but disease, war, and removal to areas west of the Mississippi River reduced tribes of the Illinois Confederacy to almost zero. To accommodate hunger for land and, as Moreau says, a ravening desire for money (all visitors from abroad noted Americans’ avarice as a central feature of their lives), America became the world’s center for innovations in transportation. Water and roads provided the first links to the gleaming west. The Ohio River, flowing from Pittsburgh provided a main highway to the Mississippi River and along it rose cities such as Wheeling, West Virginia, and Cincinnati, Ohio, in addition to numerous towns and villages. Families such as Abraham Lincoln’s followed the Ohio River from Kentucky to Indiana and Illinois, living in crude backwoods settlements with cooking and hospitality to match. As a young man Abraham Lincoln floated a flatboat down the Mississippi River to New Orleans and returned by steamboat. By then, the 1820s, steamboats were plying U.S. rivers and lakes in large numbers. Dangerous as they were—explosions, fires and consequent fatalities were common—these new boats carried many passengers, all of whom needed feeding, hence the rise of America’s first floating restaurants, catering to Americans’ peculiar dining habits. Steamboats were not wholly responsible for the most important construction feat of the period: the Erie Canal. Funded by the state of New York and finished in 1825, the 364 mile–long canal linked Lake Erie (at Buffalo) to New York City via the Hudson River. The canal brought goods from the Midwest and, in return, sent people from the east. If not for the canal, Chicago would not have developed into a major metropolis. Crudely made, rutted, mud and dust filled, roads were always a problem. Means of transport were either horseback, wagons (including Conestogas), and coaches, the latter two hardly knowing the comfort of cushioning springs. If ever the interior of the continent were to be developed, decent roads were necessary. The first federally funded road building project, the National Road (US Route 40 today) began at Cumberland, Maryland, in 1815, and reached Vandalia, Illinois, by the early 1830s. Thus was the Midwest opened further to settlement. Along the National Road route and many other new roadways, taverns, inns, hotels, hamlets, and towns sprang up. All, to one extent or another, catered to travelers, and a literature describing their journeys developed. The railroad was another—and one of the most amazing to contemporaries—aspect of the transportation revolution. From the first, the Baltimore
American Frontier and Ohio Railroad (B & O) in 1830, rails spread like spider webs across the country. Naturally, eating places and watering holes appeared at every stop: what may be the first lunch counter appeared at the Chicago rail terminus in the early 1850s. At railway stations, as along roads, rivers, and canals, hospitality and entertaining took on distinctly democratic American styles. HOSPITALITY ON THE ROAD AND IN NEW SETTLEMENTS Charles Woodmason, an Anglican minister, provided the earliest accounts of back country hospitality and culinary customs in rural North Carolina. His 1768 journal describing his efforts to civilize the Scotch–Irish Presbyterians of the region is a classic of dark humor, irony, and satire—a fascination with horrors. “These people eat twice a day only,” he said, “as for tea they know it not . . . neither beef nor mutton nor beer, or anything better than water.” In the back settlements people had stronger drink; Bourbon whiskey, distilled from the ubiquitous corn, rather than Scotch barley, was the common table drink. “Even little children were served whiskey at table, with a little sugar to sweeten its bitter taste” (Woodmason 1953). Wooden trenchers and wooden mugs, accompanied by hunting or scalping knives and big spoons, provided table settings; tables themselves were rough wooden trestles. There were only two meals a day, breakfast and midday. Even so Woodmason claimed that the food “and their Provisions I could not touch—All the Cookery of these People being exceeding filthy, and most execrable.” On one occasion he recalled: In this plight wet to the skin [I] rode to and fro till night came, when got to Cabbin of a poor Old Dutch Woman, who inform’d me that I was got into the Waxaw Distric among a tribe of Presbyterians . . . She had no Refreshments. Not a grain of Corn for the Horse, nor the least Subsistance. We left the Horse to shift for himself and to feed on the twigs and Bushes—Her Son was from home—She dry’d my Cloaths, and I sat up all Night by the Fire, quite tired and spent, having nor made what could be called a Meal for some days—Nothing but Indian Corn Meal to be had Bacon and Eggs in some Places—No Butter, Rice, or Milk—As for Tea and Coffee they know it not. These people are all from Ireland, and live wholly on Butter, Milk, Clabber and what in England is given to the Hogs and Dogs. (34)
This fare and the rough digs are reminiscent of many, but not all, travel stories from this time period. Bed and board in public hostelries varied greatly; stable, settled towns offered better accommodations. Bernhard Karl, Duke of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach, a German traveler to Utica, New York, in 1826 was pleased by his stay at Shepherds Hotel, which he described as tidy and cheap. The food served tells another story familiar to visitors of the time: Breakfast is announced a half hour after rising time. The table is set in the dining room and laden with beefsteak, mutton, a chicken or other roasted
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fowl, fish, and boiled potatoes, generally of good quality. The waiters, or, in some places, the waitresses, pass around tea or coffee. Since the Americans are usually reticent people, such a meal passes very quickly and silently. Dinner is normally served at two in the afternoon and tea at seven. The table is then set as at breakfast, with the addition of stews and pastry. Wine is never drunk at meals. On the table are water and whiskey which mixed are considered the healthiest drink in the summer. Everyone must reach for what he likes, since the food is never passed around. There are no napkins; the tablecloths must fill their place. Apart from the spoons, there is no silverware on the tables. The two-pronged forks and the knives are made of steel with handles of staghorn. A praiseworthy usage absolves the traveler of the necessity of tipping at his departure. (157)
Travelers with any sophistication—Europeans, especially—noted Americans’ lack of interest in fine dining, leisurely eating, and good dinner conversation. Rather, Americans ate fast, drank lots of hard liquor, smoked and spit tobacco (spittoons were fixtures in all public places), and wanted copious quantities of food. The main difference between the poor and wealthier appears to have been the latter, in the amount of food consumed. That most modern Americans today consume large quantities of cheap food shows the so-called progress of gastronomic democracy. In 1810 Margaret Van Horn Dwight left her home in New Haven, Connecticut, to find a new home in the new town of Warren, Ohio (along with a new hometown, she also found a husband and had 13 children). As described in her journal, the hospitality she received during the six-week long trek by wagon and by foot was abysmal. It makes one wonder why anyone would have chosen to undertake such a journey. Here is a description of what she experienced in West Chester, Pennsylvania: I should even rather drink clear rum out of the wooden bottle after the deacon has drank & wip’d it over with his hand, than to stay here another night (The house is very small & very dirty—it serves for a tavern, a store, & I should imagine hog’s pen stable & every thing else—The air is so impure I have scarcely been able to swallow since I enter’d the house—The landlady is a fat, dirty, ugly looking creature, yet I must confess very obliging—She has a very suspicious countenance & I am very afraid of her—She seems to be master, as well as mistress & storekeeper, & from the great noise she has been making directly under me for this half hour, I suspect she has been “stoning the raisins & watering the rum”—All the evening there has been a store full of noisy drunken fellows. (7–8)
Down the road, the hosts were more pleasant but the surroundings were no better: The house by day light looks worse then ever—every kind of thing in the room where they live—a chicken half pick’d hangs over the door—& pots, kettles, dirty dishes, potatoe barrels—& every thing else—& the old woman—it is beyond my power to describe her—but she & her husband & both very kind & obliging—it is as much as a body’s life is worth to go near them. The air has already had a medicinal effect upon me—I feel as if I had
American Frontier taken an emetic—& should stay till night I most certainly be oblig’d to take to my bed, & that would be certain death—I did not think that I could eat in the house—but I did not dare refuse. (64)
After slogging over the Alleghenies, through almost impassible streams and mud-clogged roads, and having to listen to lewd and blaspheming “Dutchmen” teamsters, Margaret, cold and tired, reached the promised land, a town much more pleasant than she had expected. The town was able to provide her with a good cup of lady-like tea. If travel overland was rough, all that was to change with steamboats and railroads. Steamboat accommodations and food ranged from crude to luxurious. Of the latter, an Ole Munch Raeder, Norwegian visitor crossing the Great Lakes from Buffalo to Milwaukee in 1847 observed: On the Great Lakes there is only one means of travel, for immigrants as well as for others, and that is the steamship. The elegance of such a ship is quite remarkable. The vessel is equipped in every possible way for the convenience of the passengers; there is, for example, a barber shop. There is also a band. (205)
Raeder liked America, Americans, and even American pigs, which he praised for their fecundity and garbage-cleaning ( by consuming it) habits. Other visitors were not so pleased. In 1827 Frances (Fannie) Trollope, an English author and mother of renowned author Anthony Trollope, came to America to seek a better life in Cincinnati, Ohio. Embarking on a grand ship, she soon discovered a carpet made filthy with spittle and wrote: “Let no one who wishes to receive agreeable impressions of American manners, commence their travels in a Mississippi steam boat; for myself, it is with all sincerity I declare, that I would infinitely prefer sharing the apartment of a party of well conditioned pigs to the being confined to its cabin.” Food was often not much better, hard venison and peach-sauce, and “hung beef, ‘chipped up’ raw being staples” (12–13). Charles Dickens was as famous on the west side of the Atlantic Ocean as he was at home in England. The demand to see him in the flesh was so great that in 1842 he did a tour, making a huge sum of money (needed to support his 10 children). His impressions of his adoring fans, as published in Martin Chuzzlewit and American Notes for General Circulation, chilled their enthusiasm. Boarding the Messenger bound for Cincinnati he found that “at each [meal], there are a great many small dishes and plates upon the table, with very little in them; so that although there is every appearance of a mighty ‘spread,’ there is seldom really more than a joint: except for those who fancy slices of beet-root, shreds of dried beef, complicated entanglements of yellow pickle; maize, Indian corn, apple-sauce, and pumpkin” (170). Dickens further described the eating habits of Americans: Some people fancy all these little dainties together (and sweet preserves beside), by way of relish to their roast pig. They are generally those dyspeptic ladies and gentlemen who eat unheard-of quantities of hot corn bread (almost as good for the digestion as a kneaded pin-cushion), for
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breakfast, and for supper. Those who do not observe this custom, and who help themselves several times instead, usually suck their knives and forks meditatively, until they have decided what to take next: then pull them out of their mouths: put them in the dish; help themselves; and fall to work again. At dinner, there is nothing to drink upon the table, but great jugs full of cold water. Nobody says anything, at any meal, to anybody. All the passengers are very dismal, and seem to have tremendous secrets weighing on their minds. There is no conversation, no laughter, no cheerfulness, no sociality, except in spitting; and that is done in silent fellowship round the stove, when the meal is over. Every man sits down, dull and languid; swallows his fare as if breakfasts, dinners, and suppers, were necessities of nature never to be coupled with recreation or enjoyment; and having bolted his food in a gloomy silence, bolts himself, in the same state. But for these animal observances, you might suppose the whole male portion of the company to be the melancholy ghosts of departed book-keepers, who had fallen dead at the desk: such is their weary air of business and calculation. Undertakers on duty would be sprightly beside them; and a collation of funeral-baked meats, in comparison with these meals, would be a sparkling festivity. (170)
Travelers on antebellum railroads could not expect better bed and board than early road voyagers. Train travel was slow (15 miles per hour in the 1830s), seats were hard, and in warm weather open windows allowed in all manner of cinders and smoke from the locomotive, plus dust that covered passengers from head to toe. Dining cars were not even thought about until the later 1860s, so passengers got snacks from vendors when trains stopped at stations (to take on water and fuel). In 1848, railroads from Chicago to Galena in the western part of Illinois had sheds at depots where passengers could buy food. Long trips necessitated overnight stays in hostelries where the food varied. For instance, in 1857, Stephen Sharply wrote about a trip on the Erie Railroad to Cleveland, then onto New York for his sister’s wedding. He described stopping in Oswego, New York, at the American Hotel for what he hoped would be a good dinner and a good night’s rest: “They served me at the American with a little hard nubbin of steak, whether beef, or venison, or mutton, I cannot say. And the Irish maid who served it in a long, cold ball accepted to think that I was coming the genteel strongly to be eating warm meat at that hour” (3). At least he did not have to share a bed with more than one fellow traveler, as was often the case in the nineteenth century. In the morning Sharply breakfasted upon the remains of that steak. But most of the passengers were less irritated than they might have been due to the liberal amounts of brandy with which they were fortified. Virtually every travel account by foreigners and many Americans mention how much liquor Americans drank everywhere but in church, and in the back country, people sometimes even drank in church. Charles Dickens did not return to the United States for another 20 years and Fanny Trollope never looked back once she returned to her native England. Both, along with many of their social class, disliked the rough,
Ancient Greece unschooled, masculine-egalitarian, avaricious culture that they found in the new United States. Such ideas, taken by contemporaries as embodying democracy itself, were borne out in hospitality. One frontier town was a model for hospitality: Chicago. In 1833, the year it was incorporated as a town, Chicago consisted of 200 people and about 40 buildings. Among them was the Sauganash Tavern, a two-story clapboard hotel-dance-halltavern operated by a colorful character named Mark Beaubien, who said, “I play de fiddle like the devil and keep hotel like hell.” Every night was dance night as Beaubien fiddled dance tunes for guests—Yankees, French-Canadians, Southerners, Potawatomis—all men without benefit of class and regardless of origin. Beaubien charged 50 cents a night for a space on the floor and a blanket, along with food and lots of whisky. Food was mainly game all year round but also included local beans, corn, fruit, and fish. The proprietor’s most celebrated lines about his restaurant service was: “I eats 50 people for dinner every day, by gar” (Hurlbut 332). Charles Dickens might have created a character like Beaubien, but Dickens wouldn’t have wanted to dine with him. Further Reading: Bernhard Karl, Duke of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach. Reise . . . durch Nord-Amerika in den Jahren 1825–1826. . . . Cited in Handlin, Oscar, ed. This Was America. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1949; Dickens, Charles. American Notes for General Circulation. New York: Penguin Classics, 1991 [1842]; Dwight, Margaret Van Horn. Ed Max Farrand. A Journey to Ohio in 1810. Reprint. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1991 [1912]; Fischer, David Hackett. Albion’s Seed Four British Folkways in America. New York. Oxford University Press, 1989; Hurlbut, Henry H. Chicago Antiquities, Comprising Original Items and Relations, Letters, Extracts, and Notes Pertaining to Early Chicago Embellished with Views, Portraits, Autographs, Etc. Chicago: Printed for the author, 1881; Moreau de Saint-Méry, Meredec. Ed. Kenneth and Anna M. Roberts. Moreau de Saint-Méry’s American Journey, 1793–1789. New York: Doubleday and Co., 1947; Raeder, Ole Munch. Trans and Ed. Gunnar J. Malmin. America in the Forties, the Letters of Ole Munch Raeder. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1929; “Three Days on the Erie Road,” Chicago Tribune, January 28, 1857, p. 3; Trollope, Frances M. Domestic Manners of the Americans. Ed John Lauritz Larson. St. James, NY: Brandywine Press, 1993 [1831]; Woodmason, Charles. Ed. Richard Hooker. The Carolina Backcountry on the Eve of the Revolution: The Journal and Other Writings of Charles Woodmason, Anglican Itinerant. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1953.
Bruce Kraig
Ancient Greece Archaic Greece was a collection of sovereign states in the classical Aegean. The Greeks included those living in the Balkan peninsula and also those settled in Asia Minor, southern Italy, southern France, and numerous Aegean islands. What bound them together were a common language, religious beliefs, and kinship. Those who lived outside these areas were
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regarded as “barbarians.” As in the case of the Romans, Greeks outside the Balkan peninsula assimilated some traits of their neighbors but many kept to the accustomed ways of their ancestors. In the Balkan peninsula the Greeks never formed a nation or a country as a united whole until they were conquered first by Macedonia and then by Rome. Within the Balkan peninsula the land was divided into city-states, of which the greatest were Athens, Sparta, and Thebes. Each city-state was determined to remain independent and was usually ruled by an elite group, but it was probably Sparta that had the most individual lifestyle and customs. During the Archaic Age (c. 630–480 B.C.) Athens suffered drought that led to uprisings, but these uprisings were put down by the lawgiver Solon, who also prevented famine by forbidding the export of corn and agricultural products. Only olive oil could be exported because there was a surplus of it. His tactics succeeded, and he also created the development of a city elite, which controlled many Greek states over several generations, thus ensuring stability. This stability enabled the Greeks to defeat the attack of the Persians in the fifth century B.C., and after the first Peloponnesian War, the stability led to the rise of the Athenian statesman Pericles. Pericles created an empire of states, dominated by Athens. Starting in 446 B.C., the age of Pericles lasted for 30 years, during which time the population of Athens and of other states was adequately fed. During the historic period of Greek history, the food eaten would obviously vary from area to area, but there seem to have been certain common foods and food products. When basic foods were available they provided great variety, especially for Athenians. A minor cereal in Greece was millet. The major cereals were einkorn and emmer (both are ancient varieties of wheat), and barley, the latter being both the two-row and six-row variety. The Phoenicians imported durum wheat into Greece. All these grains could be used to thicken stews, make a pottage or, more often, ground into flour. From the flour a large variety of breads and cakes were made. The Athenians were able to import more wheat than other cities, thus allowing them to have a preference for white bread (artos). Both wheat bread and flat, barley, griddle cakes (maza) could be easily obtained from city bakers or, as in country areas, be baked on flat stones. Poorer people subsisted on maza, which often served as a plate similar to the bread trencher of the medieval period. City bakers produced a variety of bread and pastries. In households, dough was put under a pot on which hot ashes were piled thus causing the dough to rise. Much of the bread, however, was unleavened, producing flat breads, although froth from beer could be used as a raising agent. Some wealthy households had their own specialized bakers. Cappadocian bakers were considered the best. Phoenician bakers would provide leavened bread as they worked with yeast or a yeast substitute. Bread was a staple to accompany opson, a variety of relishes—olive oil, onions, sheep or goat’s milk cheese, garlic, eggs, fish, smoked or pickled in brine, and, more rarely, tiny pieces of meat. Not all of these would be eaten at one meal. One product, trachanas made of boiled milk and coarsely ground millet, dried
Ancient Greece in sheets in the sun and then stored in tightly sealed jars was probably part of the diet. Other basic foods especially for the poorer elements of society were pulses. Many were gathered from the wild before being cultivated, such as vetch, peas, and lupines. Beans, lentils, peas and chickpeas were useful because they could be dried and stored as well as being used fresh. Chickpeas if roasted or eaten very young could be eaten as a dessert. Classical writers commented on the fact that they could cause intestinal gas but this downside was thought to be balanced out by their high nutritional value. Beans and peas could be added to meat stews; lentils, in particular, were used to make a filling stew or could be served on their own. Vegetables were plentiful and were often preferred to meat. These included cabbages, carrots, artichokes, chicory, onions and garlic, lettuce, leeks, celery, cucumber, and spinach. Both leaves and roots of beets and turnips were eaten. A wild form of asparagus was available. Herbs could enhance cooking of dishes. Thyme, dill, sage, basil, mint, rue, and hyssop were gathered from the wild or cultivated in gardens. Mushrooms and nettles were available in the wild. Some foods were used only by the poor: including fat hen, fennel, wild chervil, wild spinach, hoary mustard, and nightshade, all of which were mostly gathered rather than cultivated. The ancient Greeks enjoyed a wide variety of fruits, including grapes, figs, pomegranates, medlars, quinces, apples, and pears. Fruits were regarded more as appetizers at a meal than as dessert ingredients, although myrtle berries were an exception to this. Together with nuts fruits were regarded with pleasure at the end of a symposium. Apples may have been brought from Anatolia or Iraq, although wild, and presumably small and sour apples, were known in Greece. Other fruits included the wild and cultivated plum, cherries, watermelon and the musk melon, probably imported from western Asia, and a variety of berries. Dried figs and dates were imported from Anatolia, and their leaves were used as a wrapping for meat dishes. Medlars were eaten when they were so ripe that they were almost rotting. Nuts included almonds, walnuts, hazelnuts, and sweet chestnuts. Lentisk nuts, which were also chewed to cleanse the breath, and terebinth nuts are less known today but were popular with the ancient Greeks. Both the trees have tender shoots, which can be pickled before being eaten. Pine kernels were often used both as dessert and as an ingredient in cooking. Dairy products were rare apart from being made into cheese. Cheese, probably made from sheep and goat’s milk, was eaten throughout Greece. It was not eaten alone but with honey, figs, and olives. It could also be incorporated into bread baking. Oxygala, however, a form of yogurt, was eaten and sometimes mixed with honey. Ancient Greek and Roman cuisine did not rely on non-cultured milk products, which can be explained in part because without refrigeration milk becomes sour very quickly and hence was difficult to transport to more urban areas. Non-cultured milk products were, however, a regular part of the diet of shepherds and peasants who kept sheep and goats. The Greeks, similar to the Romans, regarded milk
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drinking as a feature of the barbarians, (the Greeks referred sneeringly to the Thracians as “Butter-eaters”). This might be due to the climatic fact that there was a line beyond which olive trees could not be grown. The southern European regions relied on olives and olive oil for cooking and other purposes whereas the northern areas were compelled to rely on milk products for their fats. Honey was the natural sweetener and preservative, and beekeeping, an admired skill, was a major occupation in Greece. The Greeks knew how plants from which the bees gathered pollen could flavor honey. Attic honey was flavored by thyme. Honey from Mount Hymettus was highly prized and was supplied to markets mainly in the form of honeycombs. In Athens it was eaten smeared on flat cakes. Mead produced by the fermentation of diluted honey was produced in Lydia. Meat was expensive. The killing of a kid, for example, meant a loss of a mature goat, which would produce milk and cheese; suckling pig was also considered a luxury. Athenaeus (c. A.D. 200), an Egyptian Greek author of the Deipnosophistae, a tale of 16 men dining together in Rome and discussing a broad variety of subjects including food, in commenting on Greek meals, wrote that goat’s meat was for slaves but wild boar meat should be kept for oneself and a friend. Butter and cheese made from sheep and goat’s milk was more appreciated than cow’s milk. Beef was more of a rarity because oxen were sacrificial animals. When they were slaughtered at religious festivals the meat would be distributed amongst those gathered to worship the deity. Dogs and asses were sometimes eaten. Whether this was a regular occurrence or done in times of famine is not certain. Meat was sometimes eaten in the form of sausages, of which the Greeks were inordinately fond. Animals such as hares, wild boars, wild goats, deer, and birds were hunted for food. Birds were best served spit roasted with cheese and oil sprinkled over them, perhaps eaten more of a snack than a full meal. These included domesticated fowls and geese as well as game birds—grouse, mallards, pigeons, and pheasants. Very few birds were safe from the culinary attentions of the ancient Greeks. Small birds of every variety including thrushes, blackbirds, chaffinches, sparrows, and larks were sold in markets. The eggs of these birds were also appreciated, either hard or soft-boiled. Both yolks and whites were used in preparing dishes. Most ancient Greek communities had some means of access to the sea so that fish was relatively cheap and plentiful. All types of fish were eaten including tunny, grey mullet, conger eel, dogfish, angel shark, and swordfish. Mackerel, mullet, and sturgeon could be imported from the Black Sea, the last more of a delicacy than a regular meal. Eels from Lake Kopaïs provided a more expensive dish; meals, which included this delicacy, were an example of conspicuous consumption. The Athenians despised small fish preferring to eat larger fish such as turbot and bream. The annual migration of tunny provided ample opportunities for catching large quantities of this fish, and it was eaten fresh and salted. Some of the smallest fish, however, were served as a fry called aphye, which could include squid and crabs.
Ancient Greece Shellfish was also abundant in coastal regions. Even cuttlefish could make a good meal. Oysters were particularly prized as they were by the Romans and were eaten in great quantities. Liquamen, the fish sauce, which was prized by the Romans, seems to have been devised in Bithynia, as a profitable way of making use of small fish, which might otherwise have been discarded. From there it spread to Greece, but it was the Romans who exploited and made use of it in so many of their dishes, as indicated by the recipes in the Roman cookery book of Apicius. Wild olive trees have been known in Greece from Neolithic times, but the first cultivated olives, with the intention of pressing olive oil, were grown in Crete and soon spread throughout Greece. The trees were prized because the goddess Athena was reputed to have raised an olive tree on the Acropolis in a contest with the god Poseidon for dominance of the land. Olive oil, which came in a variety of tastes, was most important for cooking, as a marinade and as a dip for bread. Wine was equally important. Grape pips are known from 4500 B.C. but this may indicate dried or fresh fruit and may not be connected with viticulture. Cultivation of vines appears to have been started about 2000 B.C. at Mytos in Crete. Evidence of wine-lees and grape pips was found in jars at Mycenae. Vineyards were usually small and the property of aristocratic producers until Solon encouraged the peasantry to plant vines. The Greek philosopher Theophrastus of Eresus (370–287 B.C.), who wrote on a wide variety of subjects, in his De Causis Plantarum (On Plant Physiology), explained the quality of soils and discussed the best conditions for planting, grafting techniques, and pruning methods. He advised that in hot climates grapes should be sprinkled with soil to shelter them from the sun. Harvesting took place in September. At first as elsewhere slaves treaded the grapes in a huge vat, but in the sixth century B.C. the Greeks invented the screw and the beam presses, which allowed more efficient extraction of the juice. Wine was then transferred to jars ( pithoi) or amphorae for transportation. The handles would be stamped with the merchant’s name and perhaps names of local officials who could guarantee the quality of the wine. The smaller the jar, the more expensive and the higher the quality of the vintage. Pig and goat wineskins were also used as containers. In his play Cyclops, Euripides made Odysseus put wine into wineskins to ply the Cyclops Polyphemos and make him drunk. The climate of Greece allowed harvests producing wine of even quality, unlike the more variable climate of northern Italy and Gaul. The Greeks added water to their wine, a feature that was also characteristic of the Romans. Different areas produced a variety of wines. Some areas added seawater to the wine; some added herbs and flavorings. Theophrastus noted that the mixing of aromatic Heracala wine with the salty Erythraean wine produced a strongly tasting wine. On the island of Thasos wine was mixed with honey to produce a sweet taste, and the result was regarded as a fine wine as were those of Lesbos, Lemnos, and Rhodes. Cheapest wines were akin in taste to vinegar but this was acceptable to Greek tastes as also was fresh
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grape juice. The best wines were left to mature. The poet Homer said that Odysseus’s strong room contained jars of old sweet-tasting wine, packed in rows along the wall. The Greek wine trade soon developed into a huge industry and was almost a monopoly until the second century B.C. when the Romans invaded Greece. As wine production expanded throughout the Roman Empire, prices dropped, and the Greek wine trade became a part of the Roman economy. The Greeks had a thriving agricultural economy, which on the whole provided them with ample food and drink. As with most other civilizations meals were determined by daylight hours. For both breakfast and lunch Greek eating habits remained simple. Breakfast was the breaking of the fast after a night’s sleep taken soon after sunrise; lunch (deipnon) might be a main meal or one that provided some nourishment, as a break from work. The evening meal was the time for relaxation and later became more elaborate, becoming the main meal (deipnon). This became the preliminary to the symposium, which was the time for entertainment, feasting, and wine drinking. For the Greeks the symposium was the ideal form of entertainment and drinking. This followed the main evening meal and became an all-male, aristocratic, social drinking party. The aim of these gatherings was to share pleasure, release tension, forget the cares of the outside world, and promote good
Red-figured Attic terracotta bell-crater from the fourth century B.C. Depiction of a symposium: guests are drinking from rhytons, while a girl plays the flute. Bildarchiv Preussischer Kulturbesitz/Art Resource, NY.
Ancient Greece fellowship. Vase paintings of women enjoying a symposium do exist, but these are probably indications of male fantasies. Women were present at the symposium as musicians, entertainers, loving companions, and even as attendants who looked after men who could not hold their wine. There were also betrothal symposia, usually held in the spring, at which eligible bachelors discussed the relative merits of girls who might become their brides with the girls’ fathers or brothers. The girls were not present but their marriage prospects would have been considered beforehand. On the island of Delos, an important festival to Apollo was held in May where games and sacrifices were followed by symposia at which suitors were chosen and girls betrothed. Alexander the Great, in what might be considered a parody of this, took with him a large tent that could hold over a hundred couches, which he used for lavish symposia and other entertainments, including the one when he forced his troops to marry Persian women. A symposiarch, or organizer, was in charge of arranging a carefully chosen guest list and then controlling the symposium while it occurred. A guest could ask to bring a friend, but he might just turn up with one and there were always gatecrashers seeking a free drinking session. The organizer, who kept a strict watch on the proceedings, would have no hesitation in expelling a guest who became objectionable. He controlled the pace of drinking and the entertainment and for this would have to have a commanding presence. According to Plutarch, who wrote a series of dialogues and questions in the first century A.D., including some which explained the symposia, the same spirit was required in marshalling a line of battle as in presiding at a symposium. The formalities of the symposium had to be strictly observed. Symposia usually took place in a square or oblong private dining room (andron), which opened directly onto the street or a courtyard, yet provided an intimate drinking place. The floor was usually composed of an elaborate mosaic or a design of pebbles. A small raised platform ran round the walls, and this seemed to have supported one side of the couches, usually 7, 9, or 11, which lined the walls. Guests reclined on these, one or two persons to a couch, and in front of each couch was a table. The custom of reclining on couches seems to have been adopted from the Near East, where the custom had been a royal prerogative. In Greece, it developed as early as the seventh century B.C. Youths aged 18 and over were deemed capable of attending a symposium and had the right to recline. There was an art in reclining. In Aristophanes’s play The Wasps a sophisticated young man, Bdelykleon, exasperatedly instructs his father, Philokleon, in the method of reclining and rearrangement of the legs. Reclining at meals set elite society apart from the lower classes and slaves. In Macedonia, for example, no man was allowed to recline until he had shown his prowess by capturing or killing a wild boar without the aid of nets. Before entering the room guests had to remove shoes and have their feet washed. Garlands of flowers might be offered as crowns or necklaces. The guests could then take their places. The chief guest sat on the first couch
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to the right of the entrance next to the host. To begin the symposium the host sprinkled wine on the floor and the guests commended themselves to each other in a fixed order. Refreshments and drinking vessels were placed on low tables and at the beginning three toasts were made. The first might be to the Olympian Gods, the second to the Heroes, and the third to Zeus Soter. The symposiarch then decreed what should be the ratio of wine to water and the speed of drinking. Water and wine were mixed in a ratio of 1:3, 1:5, and 2:3. Because the wine was not drunk at full strength, large quantities could be drunk. To drink wine undiluted was considered the action of a barbarian. Athenaeus (Deipnosophistae 436 e–f ) said that King Cleomenes of Sparta urged on by Scythian envoys drank wine undiluted and as a result in a fit of madness slashed himself to death with a knife. In his book The Laws, the Greek philosopher Plato thought that no one under the age of 18 should drink as it might inflame his high spirits. From 18 to 40, wine should be drunk in moderation. After 40, a man could drink as much as he liked to revive his youthful spirit and forget everyday worries. Wine was carried from storage to the symposium in decorated amphorae where it could be chilled in a psykter, a vessel with a rounded body, a short neck, and a high foot; the psykter could be placed in a large krater filled with cold water. The water was carried in a bronze or pottery two-handled hydria. Wine and water were mixed in a large krater, placed in the centre of the room. The krater was usually an elaborately decorated piece for it was the focal point and symbol of the symposium. The elaborate imagery expressed on the kraters often displayed events and experiences occurring at symposia. It was not unusual for revelers to drink three full kraters each evening. Liquid was drawn from the krater by a ladle ( kyathos) and placed in a shallow two-handled pottery drinking bowl ( kylix) or a two-handled cup (skyphos) of gold or silver. The aim of the symposium, however, was not drinking for its own sake; the aim of the symposium was to promote discussion on any subject. The symposium as described in Plato’s Symposium, for example, was concerned with defining the meaning of love. Athenaeus (Deipnosophistae 188 c–f ) said that Homer’s account of the symposium of Menalaus had young men proposing questions to each other as though they were in the company of learned men so they could hold civilized conversations. Plutarch in his Banquet of the Sages said that men did not attend symposia like vases to be filled but to speak seriously or to jest, and to hear and deliver speeches as the occasion required, especially if the participants are to take pleasure in conversing among themselves. Not everyone enjoyed symposia. Plutarch (A.D. 50–129), a priest at Delphi for 30 years, in his Moralia (2.2.147e) said that Pericles consistently declined invitations; he made one exception—the wedding feast of his cousin—and he even left that when libations were being poured at the beginning. Evenings ended with music, poetry, recitations, and playing games. A myrtle wreath was passed from one man to another until the host decreed
Ancient Greece a stop. The last man to hold the wreath had to recite or sing. A drinker might balance a wine cup on one arm or in the crook of an elbow and then attempt to pour wine into this cup from a cup held in his other hand. The aim here was obviously to balance the first cup successfully, and success might depend on the amount of wine consumed. Kottabos entailed throwing drops of wine at a metal disc placed on top of a column. Below was a larger disc. A guest hooked a kylix round the index finger of his right hand and spun it round in the air. Drops of wine would be flung out with the aim of knocking the disc off the column to hit the larger disc and make a great noise. Both accuracy and elegance with handling the kylix were taken into consideration. The prizes offered were simple—eggs, fruit, sweets, a pair of sandals, a cup, and cake. Other entertainments were less decorous. Courtesans, who had been well trained for their roles, played instruments, danced, or otherwise entertained the guests. Youths also took provided entertainment, many from distinguished families, probably as an introduction to the symposia. The Greek historian Xenophon (c. 428–354 B.C.) recorded that once two dancers acted a love scene between Ariadne and Dionysus so realistically that the subsequent embarrassment made the symposium end quickly. Even worse could happen if things got out of hand. Guests were reported to vomit and dance drunkenly through the streets and to crash other symposia, resulting in fights. Athenaeus reported that at Agrigentum in Sicily, some young men so overindulged with liquor that they imagined they were sailing in a trireme in a bad storm, tossed all the furniture and bedding out of the house to lighten the presumed ship. A crowd gathered outside and began to run off with this supposed jetsam. Even then the revelers did not stop but poured out of the house to cause mayhem in the street. Next day when still only half sober they were questioned by the magistrates and explained that they had only been trying to save themselves and the ship. The magistrates, probably remembering bouts of drinking when they had been young men, pardoned the revelers but said they must never drink so much again and this was promised. From then on, however, the house where the festivities had occurred was known as The Trireme. An even greater disaster occurred when Alexander, inflamed at a symposium by a passionate speech of a hataera (courtesan) by the name of Thais, led his companions on a drunken revel and set fire to the palace of Xerxes at Persepolis. In Plato’s Protagoras Socrates deplored this kind of behavior saying that where the drinkers are worthy and cultured men there will be no dancing or music or even dancing girls. These men would enjoy their own company without any frivolity, using the occasion to speak and listen in turn to each other. Yet in Xenophon’s version of a symposium, Socrates loved watching dancing girls and even tried to copy their movements. Symposia also might be places for plotting, for men were off their guard. Plutarch in his Parallel Lives (1.9.8) said that when Pelopidas, the Theban general, and his companions wished to get rid of the tyrants at Thebes, they proposed to carry out this action at a symposium. They wore
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women’s clothing over their armor and garlands of pine and fir to hide their faces. The symposium was so popular that it was adopted by the Romans but never to the same popularity possibly because the Romans preferred to have a banquet where food and drink were consumed together, rather than be kept just for social drinking. For the Greeks it was a male and elite pleasure, part of their cultural importance. One Greek state, however, had a completely different lifestyle that was based upon communal living and harsher societal rules in which the symposium had no part. This was Sparta. Spartan men ate one large meal a day in dining groups or messes (syssitia) of 15. Syssitia were compulsory and designed by the state to promote the Spartan ideology of hard living and male bonding amongst equals, although the men were divided by age and by their social status, which was determined by their martial prowess. Boys were separated from their mothers at the age of seven so that they could be included in their own separate messes. Admission to the mess was by lot. When a candidate was proposed, each Spartan in that particular mess took a piece of bread and put it into a bowl. If he had screwed up the bread, this meant he disapproved of the candidate, and a majority of screwed up pieces meant that the candidate would be rejected and excluded from that mess. He had to wait until he had proved himself either in warfare or by excelling in martial exercises before he could be presented again. Wine was permitted but any Spartan who became drunk or indulged in riotous behavior was immediately excluded from his mess. Unlike meals taken elsewhere in Greece, the men did not recline on couches but sat on hard wooden benches. Their main food consisted of barley bread, cheese, wine, figs, and the infamous black broth, a basic pork stew consisting of pork, pigs’ blood, and vinegar. This black broth seems to have acquired some reputation that only the Spartans could eat it. The Greek historian and philosopher Plutarch commented that a certain king of Pontus hired a Laconian cook to make this broth. When the king tasted it, he spat it out whereupon the cook said, “King, this soup should only be taken after a dip in the Eurotas,” a remark that seemingly indicates that the Spartans were in the habit of taking a bath before a meal. Athenaeus said that a Sybarite, after dining in a Spartan mess, remarked that it was reasonable for the Spartans to be the bravest of men since any sensible man would choose to die ten thousand deaths than have to eat such a wretched diet again. The food was not provided entirely by the state. A man had to bring to his mess each month a bushel of barley, eight gallons of wine, five pounds of cheese, two and half pounds of figs, together with opson, the relishes which could be made from meat, fish, and vegetables. When any person made a sacrifice to the gods it was expected that he would send a portion to his mess. Olive oil was provided by the state, and the Spartans ate barley cake soaked in olive oil. Calculations of the food provided have assumed that there were large surpluses, especially of wine. Some food must have been passed to the women, who kept houses for their men. Each Spartan warrior had a helot (a free laborer), who served him and could be called on to
Ancient Greece support him in times of war. Food and drink were given to the helots, and they were encouraged to drink as much as possible, including wine from the first pressing so that they would reel through the streets vomiting and making obscene gestures. Their drunken behavior would act as a warning to Spartan warriors both to show what could happen if they drank wine not mixed with water and also to remind them of their general behavior. In Crete men also sat to eat and ate their meals in common, with younger men serving the older ones. Sons sat on the floor by their fathers’ chairs and were served half the food of the father. All the food was served plain without any sauces. A separate table was allotted to strangers and foreigners. The Greek philosopher Plato admired this type of meal as being ideal for equality in a state although he preferred the Greek symposia for encouraging free discussion amongst equals. The symposium, however, never entirely lived up to Plato’s ideals. Once Greek freedom had collapsed under the Macedonian conquest in the fourth century B.C., the symposium became, if it had not been before, little more than a vacuous session of drinking and talking shop. In 359 B.C. Philip II became King of Macedon. He quickly saw that the Persian wars had weakened the grip of both Athens and Sparta on the Greek City states and accepted an invitation from the Thessalians to come to their aid and take over control of the sanctuary of Delphi. He found himself in opposition to Athens and defeated her in 338 B.C. at Chaeronea in central Greece. He did not destroy Athens; rather he preferred to create a federation with himself at its head so that he could lead an expedition to defeat the revived Persian Empire. Before this could happen, Philip was murdered in 336 B.C. His son, Alexander, then aged 20, intended to finish what his father had begun. He moved swiftly to defeat the Persians in three great victories. After the third in 331 B.C., the Persian King, Darius, was murdered, which left Alexander to press on with expeditions to Bactria and India. Here his troops refused to go any further. Alexander died in Babylon in 323 B.C. leaving an empire stretching from the Adriatic in the west to the Ganges in the east. In 12 years he had extended the boundaries of the Greek world far beyond what anyone could have imagined. He had destroyed the Persian Empire, burnt the great city of Persepolis and founded at least 70 cities called Alexandria, although the one in Egypt was to become his main legacy. Alexander had spread Greek culture throughout his empire. In many areas the influence of Greek culture was superficial, and local customs continued to exist. Alexander’s death in 323 B.C. left a vacuum, and his generals fought amongst themselves to establish their own territorial rights. Eventually three kingdoms were created. Macedonia, in the north, was formed under the Antigonid dynasty. In the south, Egypt was ruled by the Ptolomies, and in the east, Turkey, central Asia, Babylonia, and Syria were ruled by the Seleucids. These newly formed kingdoms were to face a more tenacious enemy. By 280 B.C. Roman armies were expanding into Greece. Several of the advances were the result of an appeal by a king or chieftain for help against an enemy, which only led to them succumbing to Rome.
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Further Reading: Dalby, Andrew. Siren Feasts. A History of Food and Gastronomy in Greece. London and New York: Routledge, 1995; Davidson, James N. Courtesans and Fishcakes: The Consuming Passions of Classical Athens. New York: Harper Collins, 1997; Flacelière, Robert. Daily Life in Greece at the Time of Pericles. London: Phoenix Press, 2002; Freeman, Charles. Egypt, Greece and Rome. Civilizations of the Ancient Mediterranean. 2nd ed. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1999; Jasny, N. The Wheats of Classical Antiquity. Baltimore: John Hopkins University Press, 1944; Lissarrague, François. The Aesthetics of the Greek Banquet: Images of Wine and Ritual. Translated by Andrew Szegedy-Maszak. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1987; Murray, Oswyn. Early Greece. 2nd ed. London: Fontana, 1993; Slater, William J, ed. Dining in a Classical Context. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1991; Xenophon. Symposium. Translation and commentary by Anthony J. Bowen. Warminster, England: Aris and Philips, 1998.
Joan P. Alcock
Ancient Rome On the whole the eating habits of ordinary Romans were sensible and abstemious. Quite obvious these habits changed throughout the long history of the Republic and the Empire and when the Romans conquered other areas and peoples. In the hotter parts of the Roman world most people ate frugally during the day and especially if they needed to keep their wits about them; in the colder areas more food might be necessary. Eating was also governed by when work could be done during the day. Most of the working class rose with the sun and went to bed with the sun, as lighting in the evening was so poor. In wealthier households, evening banquets and feasts were held, sometimes as part of political propaganda, to win support for political parties, and as a way for patrons to reward clients. In theory and probably in practice the Romans ate three meals a day. During the day, food was necessary to sustain the body, to provide energy, and to satisfy hunger. Breakfast (ientaculum) was the breaking of the nightly fast, food being taken as soon as a person got up, and therefore was little more than a piece of bread washed down with water and possibly wine. Lunch (prandium), which could be eaten any time between 10 A.M. and 2 P.M. according to when breakfast had been taken, was a snack meal— vegetables, fruit, bread, and a drink. The main aim was restorative. The evening meal (cena) usually consisted of three courses. The first (gustatio) was a taster—something like prepared vegetables, shellfish, and eggs. The main course (primae mensae) was roast, boiled, or braised meats, poultry, sausages, rissoles, and vegetables, flavored with herbs, spices, and liquamen, the ubiquitous Roman fish sauce. The last course (secundae mensae) consisted of desserts—small pastries, puddings made with pulses, egg dishes, fruit, and even more shellfish and oysters. Snails were especially popular as were dormice stuffed with spices. This last course could be a time for more luxurious eating and soft foods, for the softer the food—such as eels and
Ancient Rome fish—the more this indicated the wealth of the host. Yet there might be a danger in this food because the softness often verged on putrefaction, which could cause at the least an upset stomach and at its most virulent, death. Wine was the main beverage, though both beer and wine were drunk in the northern parts of the empire and in army camps. Wine could accompany all the courses but more abstemious Romans kept the custom of adding water to wine. The Romans expressed themselves as being shocked by the Celtic habit of drinking wine undiluted, but diluted wine allowed some Romans to drink more than might be normally expected. Drunkenness often accompanied a feast given by an emperor but ordinary households disapproved of drunkenness. The poet Martial was caustic about Sextilanus who drank twice the allowance of wine allotted and did not dilute it with water. Heavy drinking can lead to health problems, and cases of gout have been found in some skeletal remains of ancient Romans. Drinking vessels could be of glass, pewter, or silver. Drinking cups made of silver were highly prized because they indicated the high social status of the host. Excavations have revealed the silver treasures of the House of Menander at Pompeii and of the Villa della Pisanella at Boscoreale. Most of the silver consisted of drinking cups, some in pairs others in sets of four, intricately decorated, presumably chosen in accordance with the host’s taste as well as with regard to providing something for the guests to talk about, especially with admiration. Not all Romans had three meals a day. Poorer people existed on bread or pottages made from grains and pulses, fortified by pieces of meat or fish to give some protein. Bread was usually unleavened and baked in a crock over the fire but the dough might be given some raising agent such as froth from beer, sour grape juice, or sour dough left over from a previous unbaked batch. Bread was enriched by honey or cheese (placed in the middle); it was sprinkled with poppy or sesame seeds or enriched with fruit. In towns people bought bread from bakeries, which ground their own grain in a donkey mill and sieved the flour carefully, so that the bread produced was less gritty than that ground in the home rotary quern. Simple though the meals were, for dinner, some attempt was made to provide something extra, such as meat or fish, and vegetables grown in the adjoining garden. Dinner in wealthier households was the time for relaxation when friends joined the family gathering and were entertained. The poet Martial (ca. A.D. 40–103), a Spaniard who lived in Rome and wrote a book of Epigrams, invited his friends to dine at the ninth hour but the meal could be taken at any time after 4 P.M. Dinner, like a feast, was essential in binding together the family or the community. Dining together implied similar social status. Entertainment after the meal was expected. This could consist of singers, dancers, and reciters. The contents of a grave at Colchester (England) included four reclining figures, obviously the diners, and five other standing figures reading from a scroll, presumably the entertainers. Athletes might also be hired. A torn bikini, found in a well in London (England), may have been the remains of one or two garments covering a dancing female athlete
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who entertained appreciative guests. Hosts might entertain guests—not always very successfully. Seneca knew a freedman Calvisius Sabinus who paid his slaves to memorize the works of Hesiod and Homer, but he bored the guests by repeating half-forgotten lines learned from the slaves. The physical layout of spaces that are used for dining affect ability for communication as well as indicate relationships within a society. Hence, the couch and the position of the diners were very important. The Roman historian Livy (History 39.6) indicated that a number of foreign customs came to Rome from Asia Minor, and that the triumph of the Roman General Gnaeus Manlius Vulso in 187 B.C. over the Galatians intensified this custom when he brought booty back to Rome; luxuries such as couches, precious hangings, furniture, gold and silver vessels, and even cooks who specialized in a variety of culinary activities. The couches seem to have been the first triclinia couches to be used in Rome, but the custom of reclining almost certainly came from Greece. There were usually three couches, one placed on each of three sides of a small table. Each couch had places for three people, although couches placed in a semicircle were not unknown. The fourth side was left free for the slaves to place food on the table or to allow guests to watch any entertainment. Larger banquets and feasts would replicate this arrangement. The middle couch (summus) was for the most important guests; the middle place (imus in medio) was reserved for the guest of honor. The next important guest was placed at the nearest corner to the middle table on the righthand table. If a consul or an important dignitary was present, who might have to receive an urgent message, he sat to the right of the important guest so that he could easily be reached. The host sat next to him at the corner of the left-hand table ready to issue orders to servants. Presumably this arrangement, which meant that a diner was placed diagonally, almost in the lap of his neighbor, was part of a networking society. The Romans adopted the custom of reclining while eating from the practice of symposium, in which men in Ancient Greece gathered together to eat, drink, and talk, while reclining on couches. It’s possible that the Romans developed this custom around the third century B.C., when they came into contact with the Greeks of southern Italy, although the Etruscans had also adopted the custom. Adult males stretched out on couches, leaning on their left elbows and eating with their right hands. Boys might recline when they assumed the toga virilis, the toga of manhood, usually by the age of 16 or 17 but the privilege also implied that, as they had reached full citizenship, they had to restrain their teenage passions and submit to guidance in the rules of dining. Plutarch in his Moralia (679e – 680b) attempted to answer a question about the possible squashing together of diners on couches. He suggested that diners first lay flat on their stomachs to allow the right hand to reach for the food. When they had taken the food, they lay on their sides to give their neighbors more room. Probably people were so used to this way of dining that they thought nothing to it. If there were any discomfort, it would be worth it for a good meal.
Ancient Rome Slaves were permitted to recline during the festival of Saturnalia when roles were reversed and slaves were masters for that festival. Columella (active A.D. 60 – 65), who wrote a treatise on farming, De Re Rustica, advised that a bailiff should encourage farm workers to take meals with him in his house, but he should not recline except on feast days. Reclining meant total relaxation of the body. Sitting—a posture halfway between lying and standing—is only semi-relaxing. The Roman statesman and moralist Cato (234–149 B.C.) showed his stoicism by sitting at table and reclining only to sleep. Martial despised Maximus Syriscus not only for dissipating his fortune of 10 million sesterces but also for sitting on tavern stools and not reclining while he ate and talked. Lucian, a second-century A.D. prose essayist, was positive that the ability to imbibe while reclining distinguished a man from a beast and a gentleman from a slave. It is possible that Lucian included barbarians in this for on tombstones found in the northern empire people are portrayed sitting in chairs or on stools round tables on which a meal is laid. This seems to have been a custom adopted by Romano-Gallic or Romano-British people. Dining was the prerogative of social equals. Freeborn Romans did not dine with slaves. Slaves served guests. Slaves approached guests with bowls of water and napkins as soon as the guests entered the room and between courses; in an extravagant gesture slaves could offer the guests wine for washing. They could serve the food, press the guests to food and drink, anoint their feet, and spread coverlets. By the late empire handsome youths with long flowing hair were preferred, especially to pour out wine, and these “luckless boys,” as Seneca (Epistolae Morales 95.24, 47.5–8) said, had to “suffer shameful treatment” after a banquet was over. He also mentioned slaves standing silently while their masters dined: “When we recline at a banquet, one slave mops up the disgorged food, another crouches beneath the table and gathers the leftovers of the drunken guests. Another carves priceless game birds, and this is his only job.” At the end of the meal slaves had the right to consume leftover food and drink if they still had the stomach for this. A mosaic, now in the Vatican Museums and dated to the second century A.D. shows food debris lying on the ground—fish and chicken bones, seafood shells, lobster claws, fruits, and nuts at which a mouse is gnawing. Most guests dropped food on the floor expecting the slave to clear the debris; dregs of wine and vomit would not be unexpected. The sordid debris portrayed was probably depicted to amuse the guests but it was a reminder to the slaves that they must clean the floor after a meal or be punished. All slaves served their master warily as they did not know what could happen to them if they did not. Minor punishments were given for dropping a cup or spilling food; more brutal punishments were not unknown. One slave at a dinner given by the Emperor Caligula stole a silver plate. He had his hands cut off and was forced to parade among the guests with a placard round his neck proclaiming his offense. Emperors, in a custom copied by the wealthy, used a slave called a vocatur to watch the guests
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for their behavior. Unseemly behavior would ensure that they were not invited again. This man also checked what the guests were eating so that he could tell the emperor which food was liked by a guest so that he could be served it again or even which food he disliked so that he could be humiliated and forced to eat it next time. A vocatur was in charge of issuing invitations and allocating place sittings. This laid him open to bribery. One wealthy provincial secured an invitation to one of Caligula’s dinners by paying a vocatur 2,000 gold pieces. Such moneys made certain slaves very wealthy allowing them to progress in their careers, buying their freedom, and becoming freedmen. The majority were men, although women servants or slaves wearing long dresses appear in banqueting scenes on sarcophagi. A tombstone of M. Ulpius Phaedimus, who died in Rome aged 28, and was a freedman of Trajan, records his career. He began as a server of drinks, moved on to become a tricliniarch, an organizer of feasts, before being chosen to carve roasts and fowls for state banquets. In the early days of the Republic the Romans had a pride in self-reliance and frugality; eating and drinking was on a small or frugal scale. After the conquest of Sicily in 241 B.C., the Romans could indulge in the more exotic tastes of the Near Eastern regions. Public dinners now became fashionable. The term epulum, given to a Roman feast, was first a meal associated with some religious function such as the Ludi Romani, which included a feast in honor of Jupiter. In time its religious connotation diminished, and the term became associated with any opulent meal provided by a man, and occasionally by a woman, for friends or for the public. Another public feast, called a convivium, in its simplest form was based on the symposium of the Greeks although it could follow the symposium pattern. It was a meal for friends, held outside a household, and was intended both to express a relationship between equals as well as be an opportunity for patrons to entertain clients and show off their wealth. Freedmen and slaves were not admitted but they could eat together in guild (collegium) dinners. Joining a guild protected these men, who had no family ties, provided like company for entertainment, and ensured that they would be given a decent funeral with the correct rites. In Gabii, decurions and members of the priestly college of the Severi Augustales banqueted in public on their separate triclinia. Collegia buildings have been identified at Pompeii and Ostia. One building at Ostia founded in the reign of Hadrian seems to have been the collegium of the carpenters ( fabri tignuarii). A central court, surrounded by rooms, is extended by a wing containing four triclinia with masonry couches, was almost certainly the dining area. A story by the historian Livy shows both the power of a guild and a guild’s overall love of the good things in life. In 312 B.C. the censors forbid the guild of flute players from holding these regular feasts, probably because they were too rowdy. The guild promptly went on strike and decamped to Tibur. The Romans tried to entice them back, to no avail, but the Tibertines knew the weakness of the members. They plied the players with drink until
Ancient Rome they were intoxicated and fell asleep, packed them into carts, and sent them back to Rome. The flute players congregated in the Forum, but their appalling hangovers soon drove them home. Cicero wrote that Cato the Elder praised the early Romans for choosing the term convivium (con-vivere) to describe the relaxing and reclining of friends at feasts as it implies “a communion of life which is a better designation than that of the Greeks who call it sometimes a drinking together (symposium) or an eating together (syndeipon).” Cicero said that he enjoyed even an afternoon banquet—that is, one that began early and cut short business days—possibly the modern equivalent of the long lunch. In time the terms epulum and convivium both eventually came to mean large public feasts in a variety of contexts, for feeding and entertaining many more people than simply friends of the host. Some Romans might invite guests after a public feast to come to their own home. The Roman general Sulla (c. 138–78 B.C.) often followed a dinner with a drinking party in his own house where dancers and musicians entertained the guests. Women and children did not take part in dinners but women sometimes were allowed to join the convivium and could recline on couches together, although this was unusual. They could give elaborate dinner parties and even feasts for other women. There was still a gender problem. In 7 B.C. Livia, the wife of Augustus, wanted to entertain both senators and the wives of senators together but her son Tiberius objected, as this might be considered unseemly. She had to entertain the wives while her son Tiberius entertained the senators at a dinner in the portico of Livia. Unexpected guests posed another kind of problem. In 45 B.C. Cicero wrote to Atticus (Letters to Atticus 13.5 [353]) that he had been asked to entertain Julius Caesar after he had stopped overnight at Philippus place on his route from Pozzuoli. Unfortunately this included all Caesar’s retinue, who had to be put in three dining rooms. Caesar also brought with him 2,000 soldiers, although Cicero probably did not have to feed these men. Caesar had a bath, oiled his body, and came to dinner. As he was “following a course of emetics,” he was able to partake of “a fine well appointed meal” and he indicated that he had dined well. Cicero provided his guests with all they had wanted and boasted that “I showed that I knew how to live.” He added wryly that “they were not the kind of person to whom one says, ‘Do come again when you are next in the neighbourhood.’ Once is enough.” He added hastily, “it was a visit or should I call it a billeting, which was troublesome to me but not disagreeable.” Private banquets became notorious for their ostentation in entertainment. In the first century B.C., the soldier and administrator Lucius Lucullus’s extravagance became notorious. Once when Caesar and Pompey met him in the forum, Lucullus invited them to dinner. They said they would dine with him that day, but they would not allow him to give notice to his servants, hoping that he would be forced to give them a simple meal. Lucullus outwitted them, for he merely told his servants he would dine with
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them “in Apollo.” Each of his dining rooms had fixed allowance for dinners and in Apollo was served the most costly of foods. A banquet was therefore ready when the two guests came to dine. Such extravagance was satirized by one of the most famous accounts of a banquet. Titus Petronius, the presumed author of the Satyricon, who lived a life of notorious idleness, was attached to Nero’s court, probably in the 60s A.D. The Roman historian Tacitus records that when Petronius fell out of favor with the emperor in A.D. 66, he attempted to commit suicide by slitting his veins. He then bound them up, talked with his friends, had a good dinner, and slept for a while so that his death should appear natural, then resigned himself to death. His major work, The Satyricon, is a satirical work that records an extravagant, vulgar banquet given by Trimalchio, with its seven courses of 62 items, some served with Falernian wine said to be a hundred years old. Tricks included the outpouring of sausages and blood puddings when a pig’s belly was slit, and out of a boar’s slit belly, thrushes flew and were caught by fowlers and then cooked for the guests. Public feasts and banquets, often on a lavish scale, were intended to be a public affirmation of power and wealth. They were held by magistrates before elections and by family members to commiserate deaths or to celebrate birthdays. Status mattered. Cocceia Vera from Cura allocated money for a feast to be held in public on her birthday; the guests were arranged strictly in order of status. Decurions were placed on 10 triclinia, seviri were seated on two or more, and so on, thus reflecting the social spectrum. According to an inscription in Corfinium, a donor left a legacy to set up a carefully delineated fund for both the city council and the populace with the interest to provide a feast to remember him on the anniversary of his birthday. Decurions and their children got 30 sesterces each for a feast where they reclined. The Severi Augustales got 20 sesterces each and the plebeians 8 sesterces each for a dinner. The different choice of words indicates the different ranks of society. Only the decurions reclined; the rest sat. The seating arrangements indicate the privileged setting and the reinforcement of a social hierarchy. Generals held feasts for their troops after battles, senators fed their clients, and decurions and aediles entertained fellow citizens or their peers or gave public banquets to secure votes. Distinguished citizens also provided feasts for the populace. To take part in the festivities was to acknowledge, whether consciously or not, the superior power of the provider as well as the achievement of a collective identity. The three-day festival of the Arval Brethren, a high status brotherhood in Rome, made sacrificial offerings to the Dea Diva. After a libation had been made to the deity, the president of the brethren ate, followed by other members in order of status. On the third day slaves and freedmen were allowed to eat, but they were provided with good white bread instead of meat. In Rome generals and senators were expected to provide feasts. In 45 B.C. Julius Caesar gave a feast with 22,000 dining couches. Allowing three people to a couch, this would mean 66,000 people were feasted.
Ancient Rome Crassus in 70 B.C. held a feast for 10,000 tables of people after a sacrifice to Hercules and gave each person an additional allowance of grain for three months. In 74 B.C. Lucullus drove King Mithridates out of Bithynia and accounting this a triumph he gave a banquet for the senate and provided sacrificial feasts for the people, which included 1,000,000 jars of Greek wine, probably equivalent to four million liters. Such generosity was not confined to the elite. An inscription at Ostia records that P. Lucilius Gamala gave a feast on 217 dining couches, and on two occasions provided a lunch (prandium) for the coloni. C. Iunius Priscus at Arles gave two days of shows and a wild beast hunt for the citizens, a feast for the decurions on 13 triclinia and another on 34 biclinia for the advocates and other officials. Much of this feasting was linked to fierce competition for both public and private support. Emperors thought that this entertainment was a vital necessity to maintain power. Claudius entertained hundreds of guests and even went so far as to pass an edict allowing flatulence at banquets after he learned that one of his guests was acutely uncomfortable due to modesty. Domitian felt the need to provide entertainments in the Coliseum and the Circus Maximus. One of his most memorable feasts, given in the Coliseum on the Kalends of December A.D. 84, was recorded by the Latin poet Publius Statius. First, slaves handed out white napkins to the crowd. Then fruits were given—plums from Damascus, dates from Pontus and Palestine, figs from Asia Minor, and apples and pears from Amorica—all luxurious items. Pastries included some in the shape of human figures. Flamingoes, pheasants, and guinea fowl were tossed into the crowd for people to take home. Wine flowed freely, and the crowd was entertained by troops of dancing Lydian ladies and Syrians, and by gladiatorial fights, that included several by pigmies. The Emperor Caligula’s banquets were welcomed for their opulence but feared for what could happen, as he loved playing cruel jokes, especially reversal of roles where senators were stripped of their togas and dressed as slaves, then made to wait at table. On one occasion in A.D. 40, Caligula suddenly burst out laughing. The two consuls present nervously asked the reason for his mirth. Caligula replied that this was because he had just thought he could have had their throats slit before they had finished the meal. Both private and public dining was clearly appreciated, especially the latter. The first-century A.D. compiler of anecdotes, Valerius Maximus (Facta et Dictu Memorabilia 7.5), noted the hypocrisy: “For while the people approved of private frugality, publicly they set more store by an handsome show.” Seneca argued that the Roman people loathed private luxury, especially extravagant banquets, but they loved public splendor and expected some share in it. Cicero claimed that Cato the Elder disapproved of feasts, not surprisingly indicating that feasts could be seen as bribery to promote goodwill by providing food. Not all political intentions got results. Quintus Aelius Tubero was asked by his cousin Quintus Fabius Maximus to organize a funerary banquet for the people of Rome on the death of his uncle, Scipio Aemilius. Tubero, however, was a stoic who disapproved of extravagant
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entertainment. He therefore covered the couches with shabby goatskins and served food in poor Samian ware, which was declared by the people to be more appropriate for the death of Diogenes the Cynic than to honor the death of the mighty Africanus. The result was that Tubero was defeated when he stood for the office of praetor in the next election. The Romans extended the concept of feasting to the world of the dead. There were three aspects to this: meals provided for the dead and the mourners, meals provided to sustain the dead in the tomb, and food necessary to sustain the dead on the journey to the afterlife and in the afterlife. This applied both to burials and cremations. The funerary cult was based as much on fear as on piety, for it was believed that the dead were prone to resentment, even vengeance, if they felt they were neglected. To forestall this, the correct rites had to be carried out. In these rites food played an important part. Once the deceased had been cremated or placed in the tomb, a libation of wine to the Manes (spirits of the dead) was poured out. Offerings of food were taken at the tomb to be eaten in a funerary meal (silicernium) by members of the family. Sometimes poor strangers waited close to the tombs to partake of the feast after the mourners had departed, even though this was considered sacrilege. The period of mourning included purification ceremonies and meals, sometimes elaborate, eaten at the graveside, nine days after the funeral and then on personal anniversaries, such as birthdays, and annual festivals when the dead were commemorated. These celebrations had a dual purpose, ensuring that memories of the dead survived in the minds of friends and relations, and reassuring the dead that they were not forgotten by inclusion in the refreshment provided. Often money would be left in a will for the necessary food and drink—bread, cakes, meat, fruit, and wine. The Parentalia, held February 13 to 21, was the feast of parents and kinsfolk, when the dead were appeased by feasts and food offerings, including a family meal eaten at the grave. The Parentalia ended in the public festival of the Feralia, when the Manes (the spirits of the dead) were honored. The Lemuria, held on May 9, 11, and 13, was when hungry ghosts, the Lemures and the more dangerous Larvae (malevolent ghosts and evil spirits of the dead), gathered round the house. Meals were prepared for the ghosts. At midnight, the head of the family washed his hands in clean water and threw away black beans, while keeping his face averted, saying nine times: “These I cast, with these I redeem me and mine.” As he made his way out of the house, touching water on his route, the ghosts were believed to pick up and eat the beans. On anniversaries, relations and friends ate commemorative meals at the tomb, with a share provided for the dead person. The fact that it was not eaten did not mean that the dead spirit was not partaking of its share; it would be nourished either within its bones or its ashes. To prepare such meals, kitchens were sometimes provided at mausolea so that the food might be as elaborate as when eaten by the deceased when alive. Kitchens can be seen attached to certain tombs at Isola Sacra, the cemetery attached to Ostia,
Ancient Rome
Tombstone of Druisius with the representation of a funeral banquet, A.D. 80. Erich Lessing/Art Resource, NY.
the port of Rome. These tombs present the appearance of the dwellings of a well-to-do bourgeoisie. Meals shared at the tomb with the dead might not be enough to satisfy them. The tomb was the home for the dead, where they would expect all that they had had in life and food replenished their energies. Nourishment was provided by food placed within the tomb at the moment of interment or on the funeral pyre. Future nourishment from the human world came in the forms of food placed in tombs, and libations and burnt offerings at the tomb. These burnt offerings liberated the spirit of the food so that it passed to the dead. Libations could be delivered through pipes. For poorer people this meant the mouth of a flagon protruding above the ground
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serving both as a grave marker and an entrance for liquid nourishment. These can still be seen in situ at the Isola Sacra cemetery at Ostia. The funerary feast seems to have extended throughout the empire. In the catacombs of Kom el-Shuqqafa at Alexandria, Egypt, dating from the second century A.D., the dead were interred in a vast necropolis, reached by a spiral staircase, descending to a depth of 35 meters. A triclinium with three stone benches was provided, where meals could be eaten before the dead persons underwent the ritual Egyptian custom of evisceration and mummification, the processes of which are graphically represented on the wall of the principal tomb. When the catacombs were first excavated, wine amphora and tableware were found on a central wooden table in the triclinium. The premise of a tomb as an eternal home was constant in the Roman world. Trimalchio declared the importance of decorating one’s tomb carefully: “It is wrong to look after the house in which you live and to neglect the house in which you will stay much longer” (Petronius, Satyricon 71). Containers for ashes were placed in urns shaped as houses. The elaborate tombs at Ostia and those south of Rome, along the Via Latina near to its convergence with the Via Appia Nuova, are large square buildings, which take the form of rectangular houses. Some of the buildings have an underground burial chamber surmounted by a two-story building. Funerary gardens were also created round tombs where meals could be eaten. Trimalchio, who would have expected a funerary banquet on a grand scale, when giving directions for his future tomb, said that he would like to have an orchard with “various kinds of fruit growing round my ashes and plenty of vines” (Petronius, Satyricon 71). This concept can be seen in the Roman belief that the Elysium Fields were regarded as an idyllic landscape with abundant flowers and heavenly banquets. Some tombstones show the Totenmahl or funerary banquet. The deceased lies on a couch, holding out a cup as if to toast the living. A small three-legged table is in front, on which rests food. Such tombstones were popular in the Rhineland and Eastern Gaul. On one of the finest tombstones at Cologne, Germany, Gaius Julius Maternus, veteran of Legion I Minervia, reclines on a high-backed couch, with a pet dog at his feet. He raises a cup in his right hand and holds a serviette in his left. A meal of fruit and bread is set on a three-legged table covered with a fringed cloth. A banquet indeed for those who are about to enter the afterlife. Servants stand to left and right to wait on him. His wife, Maria Marcellina, seated in her basket chair, holds a bowl with more fruit. The dead expected to be nourished by these meals. Even so, none could escape the implacable reality that the pleasures of eating and drinking were ephemeral. Titus Flaminius, soldier of Legion XIV Gemina, on his tombstone in Britain at Wroxeter, Shropshire, was uncompromising: “I did my service and now I am here. Read this and be either more or less fortunate in your lifetime. The gods prohibit you from the wine-grape and water when you enter Tartarus” (Collingwood and Wright no 292).
Anniversary Parties Further Reading: Alcock, Joan P. “The Funerary Meal in the Cult of the Dead in Classical Roman Religion.” In Harlan Walker (ed). The Meal: Proceedings of the Oxford Symposium on Food and Cookery. Totnes, England: Prospect Book, 2001, pp. 31– 41; Aldrete, Gregory S: The Roman City: Rome, Pompeii, and Ostia. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2004; Apicius. The Roman Cookery Book: A Critical Translation of the Art of Cooking by Apicus for Use in the Study and in the Kitchen. Translated by Barbara Flower and Elisabeth Rosenbaum. London: George Harrop & Co., 1961; Brun, J. P., and A. Tchernia. Le Vin Romain Antique. Grenoble, France: Glénat, 1999; Collingwood, R. G., and R.R.P. Wright (eds.). The Roman Inscriptions of Britain. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1965; Donahue, John F. The Roman Community at Table during the Principate. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2004; Dunbabin, Katherine. The Roman Banquet: Images of Conviviality. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003; Giacosa, Ilaria Gozzini. A Taste of Ancient Rome. Translated by Anna Herklotz. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1992; Gold, Barbara K., and John F. Donahue (eds.). Roman Dining: A Special Issue of American Journal of Philology. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2005; McGovern, Patrick E., J. Fleming, and S. H. Katz (eds.). The Origins and Ancient History of Wine. Amsterdam, The Netherlands: Gordon and Breach, 1996; Meiggs, Ronald. Roman Ostia. 2nd edition. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1972; Nielsen, H. S., and I. Nielsen (eds.). Meals in a Social Context: Aspects of the Communal Meal in the Hellenistic and Roman World. Aarhus, Denmark: Aarhus University Press, 1998; Petronius.: The Satyricon. Translated by J. P. Sullivan. Harmondsworth, England: Penguin Books, 1965; Suetonius. The Twelve Caesars. Translated by Robert Graves. Harmondsworth, England: Penguin Books, 1957; Toynbee, J.M.C. Death and Burial in the Roman World. London: Thames and Hudson, 1971.
Joan P. Alcock
Anniversary Parties Anthropologists believe that early marriage was characterized by the capture of young women while out gathering food for their tribes or clans. Since tribes and clans were groups of extended family, a woman’s friends were often siblings, cousins, and other kin. A woman would be seized by a man from another tribe or clan who was assisted by his kinsmen while the other young women ran back to the village to get help from their fathers, brothers, and other male family members. Meanwhile the young woman and her captor would be in hiding until the search for her was terminated and, according to legend, the bride would be presented with a ring composed of braided grass that denoted her “taken” status. This period of hiding out usually lasted 30 days or one full cycle of the moon during which the new couple drank wine with honey and, at the end, the new bride was usually with child. From this initial explanation one can see the origins of brides, grooms, the bridal party, and the wedding band, in addition to the honeymoon. In time, this form of marriage by capture was replaced with a form of bartering for wives. Men and their brothers would approach fathers with
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daughters from neighboring clans or tribes to negotiate the exchange of goods for a bride. The price a groom would pay to the father of a woman to make her his wife was called bridewealth or wed and is considered the root from which the term wedding originates. This exchange of goods or wealth was to serve as compensation for the father who was losing a household worker rather than gaining a son-in-law; it is hypothesized that this concept of the father having to give up the labor contribution of his daughter is the origin of the term “giving away the bride.” Bartering for wives grew into the formation of alliances between fathers and leaders to create very large extended families that often chose to intermarry if they were aristocratic in an effort to create stronger blood ties to the crown, or enlarging and fortifying kingdoms. Bridewealth was complemented by the concept of the dowry, where fathers gave money to grooms to help financially support their daughters in married life. These dowries included everything from monetary gifts to tracts of land, and sometimes even the right to collect taxes from those that resided on the property. As brides became the property of their husbands these gifts also fell under his jurisdiction. These arranged marriages were often tactical maneuvers orchestrated by the aristocracy and confirmed by the church in an effort to legitimize them, as well as to curb some of the more flagrant behavior. As a result it was more likely that the anniversary honoring a ruler’s reign would be celebrated, instead of the marriage that may have helped to ensure his throne. The engagement ring is Western culture’s modern tie to bridewealth. It serves not only as a token of affection but puts forth an offer of marriage. The acceptance of the engagement ring begins the cycle of preparations to enter married life with its responsibilities and future duties of family. Bridewealth is a rarely practiced custom in scattered parts of the world, and the dowry system, though still practiced in many places, has also begun to diminish. Originally, the dowry included a financial arrangement between the bride’s father and her groom, while also including the items in the trousseau or hope chest, prepared by the bride. The groom provided daily care and the home in which they would dwell while the bride was responsible for daily housekeeping, raising of the children, and the décor of the home. Home décor items included bed linens, towels, and so forth, that were embellished with needlework featuring flowers, monograms, and other artistic elements attesting to the proficiency of decorative fine arts. In parts of the Middle East and Asia there is a complex system of laws codifying the ritual or limiting its practice, but there are groups that still use dowries. The social codes dictating the behavior of the medieval upper class did not pertain to those below them. Slaves were forbidden to marry but merchants, workers, and other lower class citizens were equally encouraged by economic necessity to marry. However, the nature of these unions differed greatly compared to their aristocratic cousins. Some historians suggest that the idea of a love match originated during the lower classes at this time. In time, this romantic notion swept through all classes and became an essential component leading to the celebration of the wedding anniversary.
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Anniversary Parties The first anniversary of a Anniversary Milestones and couple’s wedding is celebrated by consuming the top layer of their Anniversary American British wedding cake. In addition, there 1 paper cotton is also the ceremonial exchange of 2 cotton paper gifts. These gifts change with each year and have been modernized to 3 leather leather reflect the availability and useful4 linen, silk fruit, flowers ness of the items. The first anniver5 wood wood sary is traditionally celebrated with the gift of paper in America while 6 iron sugar the British equivalent is cotton and 7 wool, copper wool, copper modern gift givers offer clocks. 8 bronze bronze, pottery Traditionally, certain anniver9 pottery pottery, willow saries have been recognized as being milestones and are accom10 tin, aluminum tin panied by parties to honor the 11 steel steel occasion. The silver and golden 12 silk linen, silk anniversaries, the 25th and 50th respectively, are often cause for 13 lace lace children to fete their parents’ mar14 ivory ivory ital achievements. In cases such as 15 crystal crystal these, the parties can run the spectrum to simply enjoying cake and 20 china china coffee to something much more 25 silver silver lavish like a catered meal with 30 pearl pearl dancing or other forms of entertainment. Like the bridal shower 35 coral, jade coral and bachelor party that welcomed 40 ruby ruby the couple into matrimonial life, 45 sapphire sapphire this celebration should be a gift 50 gold gold honoring their achievement. According to some Germanic 55 emerald emerald traditions, anniversaries are cele60 diamond diamond brated more often. Because so 65 blue sapphire blue sapphire many Westerners are divorcing and remarrying, celebrations may occur 70 platinum platinum at earlier intervals, such as at 5, 10, or 75 diamond diamond 15 years. These celebrations, as well 80 oak oak as the yearly ones, can be as simple or elaborate as the couple likes. For some, this may be dinner at home or an evening out to a favorite restaurant and the exchange of gifts. Further Reading: Ackerman, Diane. A Natural History of Love. New York: Random House, 1994; Metrick, Sydney Barbara. I Do: A Guide to Creating Your Own
Gifts Modern clocks china crystal appliances silverware wooden desk item linens, lace leather diamond jewelry pearls textiles, furs gold watches platinum sterling silver diamond jade ruby sapphire gold emerald diamond blue sapphire platinum diamond oak
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Unique Wedding Ceremony. Berkeley, CA: Celestial Arts, 1992; Packham, Jo. Wedding Parties & Showers: Planning Memorable Celebrations. New York: Sterling Publishing Co., 1993; Waggoner, Susan. I Do! I Do! From the Veil to the Vows: How Classic Wedding Traditions Came to Be. New York: Rizzoli, 2002; Wallace, Carol McD. All Dressed in White: The Irresistible Rise of the American Wedding. New York: Penguin Books, 2004.
Alexa Reynolds Johnson
Antipasto Antipasto is the singular form of the less often used, plural term antipasti. It literally means before (anti) the meal ( pasto). Antipasto is considered the Italian equivalent of the appetizer course and defined as an assortment of hot or cold dishes served at the beginning of the meal. Despite the modern assumption of its similarity to American appetizers and French hors d’oeuvres, traditional antipasto has a much more complex purpose, as the actual intent of the dish is to heighten the anticipation for the meal to come, stimulate the palate without overwhelming it, and aid digestion. The term antipasto first appeared in the sixteenth century in the writings of Domenico Romoli, a gastronomic writer. Originally, antipasto was served specifically for gustato, or digestion, but it evolved to include all first course dishes. Antipasto arose from the menu crisis of a new bourgeois class. The aristocracy had a very complicated order to their meals serving very specific entremets following or preceding certain main dishes such as roasts. The bourgeois wanted to maintain the digestive functions of the upper-class feasts but needed to simplify them. From the nineteenth century on they altered the order of their menus and, following in the steps of the trattorie, finally decided on the three-course outline that is still used today. While there was some struggle to assign certain dishes to a specific course, antipasto developed easily, as any palate-stimulating dish was assigned to the new course. As the three-course bourgeois meal cemented itself, the idea of
An antipasto display at a wedding in Italy. Larry St. Pierre/Shutterstock.
Antipasto keeping the appetite alert and aiding digestion remained the only common threads connecting the gastronomic habits of both classes. Antipasto and hors d’oeuvres first became synonymous in the nineteenth century when international chefs tired of the strict boundaries of palate stimulations. Upscale French restaurants replaced the lighter Italianbased fare with more costly assortments of oysters, caviar, foie gras, and heavier hot morsels such as beignets, tartlets, fondue, and croquettes. Like appetizers and hors d’oeuvres, antipasto is served before the main meal, as the first course. Additionally, the number of dishes served has fluctuated throughout history. In past centuries, a spread of numerous dishes would normally be served, whereas now one sees smaller, more individual portions. Antipasto dishes always include seasonal ingredients and very simple flavors. The minimalism of the dishes entails very little preparation as most of them are served in the form in which they are purchased. Marinades and dressings consist of simple oils, vinegars, and other acids such as lemon juice; the addition of salt and herbs is also welcome; however, intense spice and bold flavors should be reserved for the main course because they damage the palate, making the following courses seem bland. Moreover, heavy dishes inhibit digestion, rather than promote it, and cause fullness too early in the meal. Drinks may be paired with antipasto, but along the same lines as the food served, they should be light and complement the food while not disturbing the palate; usually white wines are appropriate, as well as bitters such as Campari and Lillet or vermouths. The varieties of food offered in antipasto have a fairly vast range including everything from vegetables to seafood, and can range in temperature from cold to room temperature to hot. While the dressings are confined to oil, vinegar, lemon juice, and herbs, a selection of antipasto can be quite assorted. A high vegetable ratio, usually half of the dishes, is common for the antipasto course because it is an easy way to keep the course light. The other half of the course should be split between seafood, meat, and hot dishes. Salads can include a mélange of vegetables, seafood, or meats, and can be served chilled or lukewarm (legumes or greens are tossed with cooked meat, fish, other vegetables, or starches). Vegetable dishes simply consist of, among others, such traditional ingredients as artichokes and fennel, usually served with pepper and oil. Mushrooms are served with oils and a few drops of lemon juice, and truffles are shaved over other antipasto, such as cheeses, to add and intensify the flavor. Cooked beans are made into salads or served over biscuits or small toasts. Bruschetta are round toasts, usually made from day-old or stale bread, brushed with olive oil, garlic, and pepper, topped with fresh tomatoes and basil, seafood, or cheese. Fish and seafood are also very common in antipasto spreads. The Italian coastline offers a rich array of fish that are not substantial enough for main dishes but that make excellent first course dishes. Fish carpaccio and crudo dishes such as tuna crudo (raw tuna) are common. Bottarga, air-dried tuna or millet roe, is also popular. Seafood salads include a medley of marinated
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shellfish and mollusks including shrimp, squid (seppie, calamaretti, totani, moscardini), mussels, clams, sea truffles, oysters, crabs, scallops, and lobster. Another well-known antipasto category is salumi, salted and cured meat, mostly pork. Since Italy is so well known for cured meats like prosciutto di parma and Genoan salami, and such delicacies can simply be sliced and served on a platter (termed affettato misto), salumi is a very popular appetizer even outside of Italy. Other meats that can be included in the affettato misto are soppressata, speck, bresaola, coppa, and testa. They can also be dressed with oil and vinegar, or served with fruit such as the internationally famous dishes of prosciutto with melon or figs. Hot antipasto, because they are traditionally rather unusual, are less often seen among antipasto spreads, but are no less welcome. They are comforting in cold weather and can be part of lunch or dinner. They must be kept simple and maintain the qualities of cold and room temperature dishes. Hot dishes can include crostini (little toasts). Crostini are synonymous with bruschetta, but tend to be associated with the warm varieties; toppings include cheese, anchovies, cooked shellfish, or, more traditionally, chicken liver sauce. Small pizzas, or pizzette, also fall into this category, but to remain antipasto, they must be small and not too heavy. Fritelle are small fritters stuffed with various ingredients such as cured meats and cheese. Also, left over bits and pieces of meats, vegetables, and organ meats can be fried into small morsels. Although in the past 50 years, antipasto, appetizer, and hors d’oeuvre became completely interchangeable, traditional Italian antipasto are still served in Italy and in America, in many Italian restaurants and homes around the country. They are much appreciated at large parties, by the guests and hosts alike, as they require little preparation, can be made ahead of time, but are still tasty and easy to eat. They make the perfect first course for a host doubling as cook as they allow less time spent in the kitchen and more time spent with the guests. For a group of 10 or so a selection of 15 to 20 dishes of antipasto is appropriate; guests should always be allowed ample time, at least an hour, to enjoy the antipasto along with the company of the other guests. Further Reading: Bastianich, Lidia Matticchio, and Christopher Styler. Lidia’s Italian Table. New York: William Morrow and Company, 1998; Capatti, Alberto, and Massimo Montanari. Italian Cuisine: A Cultural History. New York: Columbia University Press, 2003; David, Elizabeth. Italian Food. New York: Penguin Books, 1999; May, Tony. Italian Cuisine. New York: St. Martin’s Press, 2005; The Silver Spoon. New York: Phaidon Press, 2006.
Allison Green
Aztec Entertaining The foodstuff available to the Aztecs prior to the arrival of the Spanish in 1519 consisted of the Mesoamerican trinity of corn, beans, and squash, with
Aztec Entertaining chili peppers for flavoring on the side. Meat came in the form of various birds, including turkeys; dogs; and the occasional deer. The Aztec diet was essentially a vegetarian one, with an astonishing variety of foods used in unique and creative ways. Although the Aztecs are known mostly for their practice of human sacrifice, research now indicates that—contrary to some of the disturbing accounts written by the early Spanish chroniclers like Fray Bernardino Sahagún and Bernal Díaz del Castillo and modern researchers like Michael Harner—human sacrifice was not meant to supply scarce protein to the protein-deficient Aztecs, but was rather a ritualized form of violence. Only certain priests and warriors ate human flesh in the form of ritualized cannibalism. Ritual feasts, royal banquets, and daily meals all carried different obligations and practices. Common to all three were the sources for the food: the huge market in Tenochtitlán, with much food grown in “floating gardens” called chinampas on Lake Xochimilco, and the tribute required of the outlying areas around the capital of Tenochtitlán. So rich was the food culture that ready-made foods like tamales and stews were available for people to buy and take home to eat. Corn was such an important food, so necessary for the physical survival of the people, that it underwrote much of culinary practice as well as religious practice. Nobles and poor peasants alike ate corn every day, in many guises. Atole, a sort of porridge more like a beverage made with ground corn, was a staple beverage, and tortillas were the “bread” of life. Feasts dedicated to the gods occurred monthly and special foods and meals were prepared to note the significance of each god. Most of the celebrations marked some aspect of the harvest. In the months before the harvest, wealthy nobles were required to share the surplus of their granaries with the poor by holding fiestas. Poor people stood in line for handfuls of tamales and atole. At the harvest itself, food offerings of fresh tortillas and chilies were made to the corn goddess, and the celebrants had to eat these foods at the feast. For the Lord of Rain and Thunder, the god Tlaloc, the Aztecs celebrated a special feast called the Great Vigil. In addition to an offering of the blood of a sacrificial victim, the Aztecs placed stews, chocolate, and tamales at the base of the statue of the god. Guards posted around the temple guarded the food from marauding enemies. Defilement of the meal was believed to bring terrible punishment to the Aztecs by the god. One of the most important feasts occurred every 52 years at the New Fire ceremony. This event meant that the cycle of the world would begin anew if the correct foods were offered to the gods in abundance. Some priests fasted for an entire year prior to this ceremony, others for 80 days, while the Aztec lords fasted for 8 days. Spanish accounts of the feasts enjoyed by the Aztec ruler Moctezuma emphasize the large number of dishes prepared for him. Daily meals included over 30 different dishes for him alone, with a thousand dishes concocted for his entourage. After a ritual washing of his hands by four maidens, Moctezuma ate alone behind a golden screen. Chronicler Bernal Díaz del
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Page from the Codex Fejérvár y-Mayer. Top panel depicts the fortunes of the maize plant during the last two years of a four-year period. In the third year (right), Tlaloc is dominant and blesses the plant, which is shown as Chalchihuitlicue. In the final year (left), Xipe Totec rules the maize and the plant fails. Werner Forman / Art Resource, NY.
Castillo provided one of the more detailed renditions of what a daily meal for the Aztec ruler entailed. “Every day they cooked him fowl, wattled fowl, pheasants, native partridges, quail, domestic and wild ducks, deer, peccary, reed birds and doves and hares and rabbits,” and that was just the beginning. He ended his meals with a form of hot chocolate, made from ground cacao beans. As in many places in the Americas, Aztec banquets took place early in the morning. Presentation of the dishes was an important part of the dining experience. Cooks decorated tamales with seeds and beans, and tortillas were often baked in different shapes, including that of butterflies, an important animal for the Aztecs, since they believed that butterflies were the returned souls of warriors. Aztec nobles and upper-class people held banquets for various nonritualized occasions, and Fray Bernardino Sahagún left one of the most
Aztec Entertaining detailed descriptions of Aztec eating habits, including two accounts of banquets related to him by Aztec informers. One banquet was held for a baptism, and the other, given by a merchant, was a unique and costly occasion. The baptism banquet, not detailed in the account, probably featured toasted maize and beans with a sauce of chili, as well some meat and fish. Even here, the gods demanded their portion and each guest dropped a small amount of food on the ground for the god Tlaltecuhtli. Servers received the leftover food. Sahagún states that the men drank chocolate after the meal, while the women took atole. Sahagún’s comments about the use of alcohol are especially interesting. If guests were unhappy with the meal, etiquette required the host to hold another banquet the following day and in the meantime, the older people—both men and women—were served weak pulque, an alcoholic beverage made from the maguey plant. Allowed to imbibe as much as they wished, unlike the rest of the population, soon the inebriated older people would start singing and telling jokes and stories. The extraordinary banquet held by the merchant required intricate preparations, including special treatment for the chocolate to be served. The host recruited his friends and family members to assist him with all facets of the banquet, including serving and seating the guests. Tobacco use demanded special smoking tubes, the banquet area had to be purified by a priest with incense, and the men ate hallucinogenic mushrooms and retold their visions. The food served is not described in detail, but it was likely a meat stew with chili and tortillas. The next day, the leftovers appeared and it was a good omen if enough food was left, signifying prosperity for the host and his family. The common people ate much differently than did the Aztec lords and wealthy merchants. Celebrating the festival of Tlacaxipehualiztli, similar to Easter, called for offerings of food and many of the poor could not offer more than stale tortillas and rank bitter sauces. The daily eating patterns of the poor included chili, salt, tortillas, and beans or other vegetables available made into stews. In his account of Aztec culture, Sahagún includes some of the short pithy lectures for children’s good behavior so characteristic of Aztec literature, warning children of the need to be moderate and prudent in all things related to eating and drinking, including ritual hand washing and cleanliness at meals. Further Reading: Coe, Sophie D. America’s First Cuisines. Austin: University of Texas Press, 1994; Cortés, Hernán. Letters from Mexico. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2001; Díaz del Castillo, Bernal. Historia verdadera de la conquista de la Nueva España. México: Nueva Mundo, 1943; Long-Solis, Janet, and Luis Alberto Vargas. Food Culture in Mexico. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2005; Pilcher, Jeffrey M. Que Vivan Los Tamales: Food and the Making of Mexican Identity. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1998; Rojas de Perdomo, Lucía. Cocina Prehispánica. Santafé de Bogotá, Colombia: Editorial Voluntad, SA, 1994; Sahagún, Bernardino de. General History of the Things of New Spain: Florentine Codex. Santa Fe, NM: School of American Research. 1950.
Cynthia D. Bertelsen
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B Baby Shower It has long been the custom to present gifts to newborns, although the gifting usually took place after the child was born, commonly when the child was presented or was christened. In the late nineteenth century it became popular for new mothers to host a tea for friends a month or so after the birth of the child. Victorians discouraged visitors during the first weeks following delivery. Many obstetric texts of the period recommended nine days of complete bed rest for the new mother. This was particularly true for upper-class women, who were thought to be more delicate and more susceptible to post-partum complications. The length of time that a woman remained “a bed” after delivery varied with her constitution, personality, and economic situation. Victorians would never have hosted a party prior to the birth of the child. Pregnant women were expected to avoid the public view as much as possible. Women of the leisure class remained indoors during the latter months of their pregnancy. Infant mortality in the last decades of the nineteenth century ranged from 15.1 to 21.4 percent, and it was not until the early twentieth century that the infant mortality rate fell into to the single digits. In a time of such high infant mortality, families would never have presumed to celebrate prior to the birth.
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The traditional baby shower, where mothers-to-be are “showered” with presents for the awaited child, can be traced to the American post–World War II era. As soldiers returned home, women resumed traditional roles. Marriage and childbearing became cultural and career goals for most women in the decade immediately following the war. The surge in the birthrate that occurred in America in the postwar period has been dubbed the “baby boom,” and launched a child-centered culture that celebrated children. Advances in prenatal and neonatal care had reduced infant mortality rates to the point where celebration of a birth could be done in anticipation of the actual event. Baby showers are traditionally held only prior to the birth of the first child, but in recent years, smaller events, sometimes referred to as sprinkles, are held for subsequent childbirths as well. Originally only one shower would be given for an expectant mother. Now, some women receive several showers due to the fact that they may have a wider variety of friends, coworkers, and family than in the past. Each group may elect to give a smaller shower composed only of members from that group. Baby showers are also now given for mothers who are adopting a baby. Sometimes “Welcome Baby!” showers are held after the baby arrives when health issues exist or if key participants cannot attend the event prior to the birth. Showers are usually given a month or two prior to delivery while the mother-to-be is still comfortable and to anticipate unexpected early arrivals. Typically they are held in the afternoon. This harkens back to the Victorian teas for the new baby. Showers range from casual to very elegant events. They can be hosted in someone’s home or they can take place in a restaurant, country club, or community hall. Generally, they only last a few hours. Traditionally, showers are all female events but in more recent years couples showers have become acceptable. Sometimes the shower starts as an “all girl” event with the father-to-be arriving with the other men
A pregnant woman reacting with delight as she opens a baby shower gift. © Glenda Powers | Dreamstime.com.
Bachelor Party after all the traditional activities have concluded, but in time for the food. Originally, refreshment at showers was light, such as tea, small sandwiches, and cakes. Today refreshments range from informal finger food to full meals at restaurants. There usually is a cake honoring the mother-to-be. The focus of the baby shower is the opening and displaying of the gifts. Originally, many gifts were handmade. Women would knit or crochet sweaters, caps, booties, and blankets, or embroider coverlets and bibs for the new baby. While this handiwork is still done, many baby shower gifts are storebought. Common gifts range from clothing, toys, and disposable diapers to car seats, strollers, and baby furniture. Generally, guests receive a small party favor as a keepsake of the event. Many showers include playing games. Some are event-related adaptations of traditional wordplay, memory, and trivia games, such as baby name bingo where baby names replace the numbers on bingo cards or gift bingo where the cards contain the name of a gift and as each gift is opened guests mark their cards appropriately. A popular memory game displays the contents of a baby’s travel bag for two or more minutes, then covers the display and asks guests to make a list of the contents. Some games are more physical and involve relays or timed competitions, which may be individual or team. Contests may include hands-free passing of a baby bottle or undressing and redressing a baby doll. The clothespin game is also popular. When guests arrive, they receive a clothespin and are informed of the rules. If they say the word baby, the person who hears them takes their clothespin. This continues for the entire party. At the end of the event, the person with the most clothespins wins. The traditional colors for baby showers are pink and blue or other pastels. Nowadays, many mothers-to-be know the sex of their child so it is common for the decor to be all pink for a girl or blue for a boy. Symbols used in decoration include umbrellas, a play on the term shower, storks, such baby-related items as teddy bears, alphabet blocks, baby bottles, rattles, safety pins, and, of course, babies. Some baby showers are themed. Planners select a baby-related symbol such as teddy bears, rubber duckies, or Noah’s ark and use theme-related images on invitations, for table settings, and other decorations. Further Reading: Glendenning, Paula. The Baby Shower Book: Etiquette, Decorating, Games, Food. Holbrook, MA: Adams Media Corporation, 1960; Jenkins, Jennifer. The Everything Baby Shower Book: From Surprise Parties to Office Celebrations, How to Throw an Outstanding Event for the Mother-to-be. Holbrook, MA: Adams Media Corporation, 2000; Long, Becky, and Bruce Lansky. Themed Baby Showers: Mother Goose to Noah’s Ark. Minnetonka, MN: Meadowbrook Press, 2003; Wai, Joan. 100 + Baby Shower Games. Studio City, CA: The Brainstorm Company, 2005.
Dorothy Denneen Volo
Bachelor Party Anywhere from a few weeks prior to or on the night before the wedding ceremony, male guests gather to toast the groom on his upcoming nuptials
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and the end to his days as a bachelor. Traditionally, this event is hosted by the best man with assistance from the groomsmen, and invitations to attend are issued not only to the groomsmen but also to the male family members of the bride and groom, as well as any male friends or family members that have offered emotional support to the groom during his days as a single man. Most modern bachelor parties involve dinner, drinks, and activities, such as cards, conversation, possibly cigars, and other behavior traditionally frowned upon by wives. Legend says the first bachelor parties took place among warriors from Sparta when groups of men would go out and drink a great deal with the soon-to-be married man, who would pledge his ongoing support and loyalty to his brothers in arms, despite his upcoming nuptials and the beginning of his life as a married man. As marriages became less about building alliances and power, the idea of a mutually accepted match based on love became more established and bachelor parties became more focused on the end of the groom’s days as a bachelor and on the beginning of his wife-to-be taking control over their finances. Bachelor parties continued to celebrate the end of a man’s bachelor days but as time went by also collected secret funds so the now married man could continue to have money to drink with his friends. With each drink poured at the bachelor party, the groom and his men toast the bride while collecting money for the future husband’s social drinking fund. The tradition of smashing the glass after toasting the bride occurred during this time and is based on the idea that the glass could serve no nobler function after such an event. These convivial and spirit-fueled celebrations may be considered the basis for the booze-fueled nights of debauchery often illustrated by movies and other popular culture. Since the later half of the twentieth century these celebrations of bachelorhood have come to include exotic dancers, strippers jumping out of faux cakes, and other highly elaborate forms of entertainment that are sometimes meant to chide and embarrass the groom. While these may be the ideas put forth by Hollywood, the majority of how-to books on the subject offer other thoughts. With more bachelor parties taking place weeks prior to the wedding ceremony and guests having more discretionary income, some parties travel to destination cities like Las Vegas, New Orleans, New York, and so on. These bachelor weekends might incorporate golf, spa treatments, fine dining, and more opportunities for the men to get together and enjoy one another’s company. Some of the time can be used for visits to clubs while other guests choose more athletic pursuits like deep sea fishing, attending sporting events, or even gourmet events such as wine or scotch tastings led by a sommelier or spirit specialist. As a rule the only gifts exchanged are the other guests covering their own expenses and a portion of those for the groom-to-be. In the past decade female guests have been invited to bachelor parties. For some couples the bachelor and bachelorette parties have become an extension of the rehearsal dinner and wedding reception, thereby offering
Bachelor Party a less lascivious, alcohol-fueled night-of-no-regrets into an evening where families and friends spend more time talking and visiting together. While bachelor parties continue to be an American activity, their European counterpart, the stag party, also continues to flourish in the form of getaway weekends. The hen party, which evolved from the more traditional bridal or bridesmaid’s luncheon, is the European equivalent to the American bachelorette party. The bachelorette or hen party allows women a chance to get rowdy, dance, and have some fun at local pubs, clubs, or bars. It is important to note that some Asian cultures have a unique form of male bonding after the ceremony and honeymoon. Upon returning to the bride’s home in Korea, the men of her household ( brothers and cousins) begin rough housing the groom by playfully tackling and punching him until the bride or her parents come to his rescue. This introduction ceremony is called p’ye-back, and scholars have traced its origins to the tradition of marriage-by-capture. Anthropologists suggest that early grooms from rival tribes kidnapped women who were out foraging and were then beaten by men in her family when the couple was discovered. Another version of male bonding occurs in African and some Caribbean countries. This custom is called queh-queh and originated in Guyana. Troupes of drummers, dancers, and singers go to the homes of the bride and groom two or three days prior to the wedding with a big performance the night before the ceremony. During the singing and drumming, family members are remembered, stories from African history are retold, and songs are sung to prepare the couple for their wedding night. The ceremony is filled with heavy sexual overtones highlighting male sexual prowess and feminine attributes. Further Reading: Ackerman, Diane. A Natural History of Love. New York: Random House, 1994; Bachelor Party. Directed by Neal Israel, starring Tom Hanks and Tawny Kitaen. Bachelor Party Productions, Aspect Radio Film and Twin Continental, distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corporation, 1984; Berardo, Felix M., and Hernan Vera. “The Groomal Shower: A Variation of the American Bridal Shower.” Family Relations, vol. 30, no. 3 (July 1981): 395–401; Costa, Shu Shu. Wild Geese and Tea: An Asian American Wedding Planner. New York: Riverhead Books, 1997; Cury, James Oliver. The Playboy Guide to Bachelor Parties: Everything You Need to Know About Planning the Groom’s Rite of Passage from Simple to Sinful. New York: Fireside, 2004; Greco, Gail. Shower Handbook: The Complete Guide to Planning the Perfect Party. Greensboro, NC: WallaceHomestead Book Company, 1988; Hopkins, Ginny. The Bride’s Book of Showers. New York: Grosset & Dunlap Publishers, 1993; Skidelsky, William. “Food.” New Statesman, vol. 16, issue 762 (2003): 56; Sturgis, Ingrid. The Nubian Wedding Book. New York: Crown Publishing, 1997; Wallace, Carol McD. All Dressed in White: The Irresistible Rise of the American Wedding. New York: Penguin Books, 1993; Williams, Clover Nolan. “The Bachelor’s Transgression: Identity and Difference in the Bachelor Party.” The Journal of American Folklore, vol. 107, no. 423, Bodylore ( Winter 1994): 106–120.
Alexa Reynolds Johnson
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Bar/Bat Mitzvah
Bar/Bat Mitzvah The Bar/ Bat Mitzvah ceremony is a Jewish religious ceremony held when a young man or woman reaches the age of adulthood. The word mitzvah is from Aramaic and means “commandment.” Bar is son and bat is daughter. Literally, Bar Mitzvah means “son of the commandment,” and Bat Mitzvah, “daughter of the commandment.” The terms are used both to indicate the ceremony of initiation and the child who has reached the age of commandment. Under Jewish law, children are not obligated to observe the commandments, although they are encouraged to do so and to learn what their obligations will be as adults. Adulthood is linked to showing signs of puberty. Boys are considered to have reached adulthood at the age of 13 years and one day. As girls mature earlier, the age for girls is 12 years and one day. The Bar/ Bat Mitzvah ceremony formally marks the assumption of the responsibility to follow the 613 laws of the Torah. The Bar/ Bat Mitzvah is morally responsible for his or her own actions. Among the privileges of the Bar Mitzvah is that he may be counted as one of the number of Jewish adults required for main public prayers. He may also lead the services and read from the Torah at the public reading in the synagogue. He can also own personal property and engage in most business and monetary transactions as a full adult. The young man or young woman becomes a Bar/Bat Mitzvah when they attain the proper age. No ceremony is required and, in fact, the ceremony is a relatively modern development. In its most basic form, the occasion is the Bar Mitzvah’s first aliyah, where the celebrant is called up to the Torah to recite a blessing over the weekly reading. Today, it is common
A young man at his Bar Mitzvah. Gordon Swanson /Shutterstock.
Bar/Bat Mitzvah for the Bar Mitzvah to learn the entire Haftarah, a chapter-length passage from the Torah, and recite it at the service in the traditional ritual chant. In some congregations the celebrant reads the entire weekly Torah portion and leads part of the services, or leads the congregation in certain important prayers. Being called up to read the Torah is symbolic of having reached maturity and is the first public demonstration of the celebrant’s new role as a full member of the community. Most congregational Hebrew schools offer special classes to prepare Bar/Bat Mitzvah students. Generally, the celebrant is also required to make a speech, which traditionally opens with the declaration, “Today I am a man.” The speech may be made after reading the Torah or it may be part of the celebratory feast, which takes place following the ceremony. Often this provides an occasion for the celebrant to thank his parents for their love and care and the guests for sharing in the celebration. In some denominations it is customary for the audience to commence singing loudly a short time after the speech has begun. This is done to shorten the length of the speech when the celebrant is nervous and would be embarrassed if he could not complete the speech due to stage fright. The father of the Bar Mitzvah recites a prayer of thanks for having been relieved of the burden of being responsible for the sins of the son. The Bat Mitzvah is a twentieth-century custom. Most Orthodox denominations reject the concept that women can read publicly from the Torah or lead prayer service. For them, the Bat Mitzvah is little more than a celebratory party. In non-Orthodox sects, a young woman’s Bat Mitzvah is celebrated in the same way as a young man’s. This egalitarian format did not gain any real support until after the 1960s. In more modern times it has become customary for a reception to follow the religious ceremony. Historically, the celebration was little more than a glass of schnapps and a piece of angel food cake, but today these celebrations can be quite elaborate, rivaling weddings with invitations, favors, entertainment, and food. “Mazel Tov” (congratulations) is the traditional toast. It is customary to give a gift to the Bar/Bat Mitzvah to commemorate the occasion and as a token of appreciation for the Torah speech. Traditionally, gifts have a religious or educational value. Religious items, writing implements, gift certificates, and savings bonds, which can be put toward the young person’s education, are popular. Recently, gifts of cash have become quite common. Monetary gifts are often given in multiples of 18. The Hebrew word for life is chai. The two Hebrew letters that make up the word are chet and yud, which in Gematria, the numerical value of Hebrew letters, equal 18. Giving money in multiples of $18 is symbolic of giving chai or life. These gifts are considered very auspicious. Many Bar Mitzvahs receive their first tallith or prayer shawl, which is used for the special day, from their parents. Some religious men celebrate a second Bar Mitzvah at age 83. The Torah identifies the average life span as 70 years. An 83-year-old can be considered as having reached 13 in a “second life.” Once a person is Bar Mitzvah, he remains so for the remainder of his life, but the occasion can be used
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Barbeque
to reaffirm one’s commitment to Judaism. With more and more people remaining vital in later life, the practice is gaining increasing popularity in a number of different denominations. Further Reading: Lenernan, Helen, and Cantor Helen Lenernan, eds. Bar/Bat Mitzvah Basics: A Practical Family Guide and Coming of Age Together. Woodstock, VT: Jewish Lights Publishing, 2001; Marcus, Ivan G. The Jewish Life Cycle; Rites of Passage from Biblical Times to the Modern Age. Seattle: University of Washington Press, 2004; Olitsky, Kerry M. An Encyclopedia of American Synagogue Ritual. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2000; Weinrib, Rabbi Yonah, and Rabbi Yaakov Salomon. The Bar Mitzvah Treasury. Brooklyn, NY: Judaica Illuminations, 2005; Weiss, Arnine. Becoming a Bar Mitzvah: A Treasury of Stories. Scranton, PA: University of Scranton, 2005.
Dorothy Denneen Volo
Barbeque In the historical context, barbeques were commonly held in association with communal activities such as house and barn raisings, birthdays, weddings, funerals, holidays, church socials, and political rallies. Such gatherings—with all the trappings of singing, dancing, music, games, food, and beverages (some alcoholic)—were opportunities for community socialization and family interaction. Yet barbeque is more than just a few happy suburbanites or tailgating sports fans coming together around grilled meats and beer. No place on earth is more closely associated with the genuine concept of barbeque— no place summons to the mind the images of the traditional American community at play—than the nineteenth-century South. Barbeque developed into a regional symbol of Southern solidarity that is now cherished by many, regardless of race, class, or gender, often unburdened by the negative history of oppression and slavery in the American South. Nonetheless, as late as 1968, barbeque—this time serving as the nexus of a black–white racial dispute at a black-owned pork barbeque restaurant— played a role in the legislative history of the desegregation in the South. Supreme Court Associate Justice Thurgood Marshall, siding with the majority of the court in Newman v. Piggy Park Enterprises (1968), noted that the rights of all citizens of the United States guaranteed under the Civil Rights Act of 1964 were to be accorded the highest priority if abridged by state or local laws. Today, good Southern-style barbeque draws fans from every class, race, and region. The quintessential ingredient in traditional Southern-style barbeque ( barbecue or Bar-B-Q, if you will ) was pork. Those who followed an alternative barbeque style utilizing beef, chicken, turkey, or lamb (as in Kentucky and parts of Texas or Virginia) have generally been considered outside the protocol of genuine Southern-style barbeque cooking. The characteristics of traditional barbeque were initially set down in the pre–Civil War decades
Barbeque and reaffirmed in the postwar period throughout the so-called Barbeque Belt, a region of the Southeast that includes (in whole or in part) all the states that joined the Confederacy in 1861. Those Americans outside this region might “grill” their meats and poultry in open pits or over charcoal briquettes; they might slather them in hot sauce and molasses; but they don’t barbeque (8 to 10 hours of slow cooking and basting) in the historical Southern style. It has been noted that “as long as there has been a South, and people who think of themselves as Southerners, food has been central to the region’s image, its personality, and its character” (Egerton 2). Despite intraregional differences and arguments over which type of barbeque is best, an old-fashioned pig-roasting remains symbolic of all the good things that were, and continue to be, uniquely Southern in the Barbeque Belt. Pork, somehow, is thought to embrace the humble historical origins of Southern foodways as does no other food. Southerners have maintained strong ties to pork barbeque and the traditional antebellum recipes associated with it as an expression of their unique heritage of gracious hospitality. Whether chopped, shredded, pulled, or slabbed, pork barbeque—served with sauce and side dishes of beans, corn, or other vegetables and breads—has become a Southern cultural icon.
A man prepares barbeque chicken at a street festival. © Mike Brake | Dreamstime.com.
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Although its etymology is obscure, the term barbeque probably has West Indian origins. The preparation of pork barbeque is directly traceable—if not uniquely so—to a method of slowly cooking meats over hot coals in a deep pit dug in the ground. The West Indian name for this practice is barbacoa, and because the plantation slaves (many with Caribbean ancestry) oversaw the preparations for barbeque in the antebellum period, the terms are thought to derive from the same root. The cultural association of the old plantation South and the islands of the Caribbean cannot be overemphasized. Almost 100 years ago Gaillard Hunt, a historian of the early 1800s, noted, “In the North one found English manners; in the Middle region a thousand shades had colored English manners; [but] in the South the manners were those of the West-Indies” (30). Americans from each section of the United States were well aware of these distinctions and of their own regional loyalties, often to the point of being aggressively proud of them. From colonial times, pork was the most common meat consumed in the Southern diet. In the antebellum period, Southerners ate, on average, five pounds of pork for every pound of beef they consumed (Taylor 27). Ironically, a great deal of pork was raised and consumed in other regions of the United States as well, but relatively little pork was exported from any section of the country because it was a convenient and popular food. Moreover, beef consumption on a national level was not significant until railroads and refrigerated freight cars made their appearance in the 1870s. Thereafter, beef consumption became a craze in many of the cities of the Northeast and Midwest that were connected to the cattle markets by rail, while pork remained the so-called other white meat for most of the financially stressed South. Even in colonial times hogs were of great value because they reproduced themselves in large numbers and fed themselves in the brushwood. Unlike cattle, which needed pasture or fodder during most of the year as well as protection from predation and the elements, hogs could be set loose in the margins of the fields, in the woodlots, or even in the forests to fend for themselves. Most breeds of hog were capable of defending themselves against common forest predators. Children often collected vegetable refuse and acorns to entice the almost-wild hogs from the woods, and they periodically drove the beasts into the farmstead where they could be penned, fattened, and butchered in late autumn. Slaughtering became a time for celebration, and the neighbors might be invited to share in the work and in the largess. Pork was easily preserved by salting, soaking, and smoking, and it maintained its flavor and condition better than beef under the same conditions. It was a common practice among yeomen farmers and upper-class planters alike to sell their wood-smoked and honey-cured hams and sides of bacon as well as the surplus lard, chittlins (intestines and other internal organs), ears, feet, and other parts of the hog in order to make a little extra money. In 1856, the mistress of a Georgia plantation recorded selling 170 pounds of ham in town in a single transaction. Pork might be served three times a day in some households without engendering comment. Poorer families lived on a so-called hog and hominy
Barbeque diet of bacon or salt-pork, boiled greens, corn pone or grits sweetened with molasses, coffee, and little else. New York’s Knickerbocker Magazine reported that an inn in Georgetown, South Carolina, served “hog and hominy, and corn-cake for breakfast; waffles, hog and hominy for dinner; and hog, hominy, and corn-cake for supper.” However, the “hog” was not likely to be fresh pork. Salt-pork, cured ham, and bacon were the staple varieties during most of the year, but fresh pork was generally available during the harvest season or when an individual animal was slaughtered for a barbeque. Those unfamiliar with Southern cuisine erroneously attributed a diet heavy in pork products to a state of financial distress. On the contrary, food in the South was prepared for its taste and for the satisfaction it brought to the appetite and the palate. There were few in the South outside the plantation aristocracy who were intentionally making social, economic, or political statements through their dietary choices (Volo and Volo 230). The nullification crises of the 1820s and 1830s regarding state’s rights, and the secession crisis of the 1850s leading up to the Civil War saw an increase in sectionalism and Southern nationalism. The groundswell of secession made increased pork production an important component of the war effort, and many Southern families fattened a hog or two on corn cobs, cow peas, or scraps specifically for the Southern cause. Moreover, barbeques quickly became the focus of political rallies during these times of crisis, and the plantation owners used them as a tool for consensus-building among the non-slaveowning white population. The traditional Southern barbeque developed from gatherings like these, and the gatherings themselves have become emblematic of the Southern way of life as seen through the romantic eyes of many writers and the lenses of many cinematographers. Chief among these writers was Margaret Mitchell, who dedicated a large portion of her novel Gone With the Wind (1936) to the barbeque held at Twelve Oaks, the plantation of the dashing Ashley Wilkes. In this setting she developed her characters—especially the flirtatious and controlling Scarlet O’Hara and the ruthless and sophisticated Rhett Butler. Against the background of the barbeque, Mitchell laid the foundations for the rest of the novel. Mitchell’s novel was also made into a significant and influential motion picture in the magical cinemagraphic year of 1939, and the colorful celluloid scenes of communal merry-making helped to establish for many the characteristics of the Southern way of life that was lost in the winds of civil war. Gone With the Wind was—unknowingly perhaps—the culmination of an extended public relations crusade, begun during Reconstruction (1865–1877), that attempted to resurrect and repair the image which Southerners had of themselves. Although the false romanticism, portrayed in Mitchell’s work and the subsequent film, has largely passed out of modern Southern culture, barbeques still remain a vital part of Southern society, culture, and politics. While barbeques are generally representative of most things Southern, there are geographic differences in cooking methodology, saucing, and side dishes even among the most “Southern” of Barbeque Belt residents.
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State-by-state and town-by-town variations can be found, and local residents revel in and argue over the relative merits and details of their own recipes. Nonetheless, the common thread remains slow-cooked pork, while the differences are generally found in cooking styles, serving methods, sauces, and the use of side dishes. The coastal Atlantic regions of the South—the so-called tidewater regions—were the first to develop pork barbeque served with a simple vinegar-based sauce, cornbread, lemonade, and appropriate side dishes, but as barbeque moved west with the flow of settlement during the antebellum period these were supplanted by the sweet tomato sauces of Tennessee and Mississippi and the fiery red sauces of East Texas and Louisiana. In North Carolina, the meat was chopped or sliced and served with a peppery vinegar sauce, coleslaw, and hush puppies. In South Carolina and Georgia, the meat was also chopped or sliced, but it was served with a yellow mustard-based sauce, a light bread, and a hash made with rice. So-called pulled pork, initially found mostly in Tennessee and widely adopted in the Southern borderlands, was shredded by hand and served with a sauce flavored with pepper and molasses. The Alabama variety of pulled pork was developed later and was a good deal spicier. On the western border of the Barbeque Belt, as in Arkansas, Louisiana, and parts of Texas, the sauces varied and the pork was sometimes offered in slabs or on the ribs. Nonetheless, the baked beans, coleslaws, and potato salads were almost identical to those side dishes found in the East. Other sides included butter beans, creamed corn, collard greens, kale, and other slow-cooked vegetables. Barbeque is not just a meal that makes people feel good. It is a concept that “binds together the tastes of both the people in the big house and the poorest occupants of the back end of the broken-down barn” (Bass 314). It is a gathering, celebration, and manifestation of Southern-ness. Further Reading: Bass, S. Jonathan. “How ‘bout a Hand for the Hog: The Enduring Nature of the Swine as a Cultural Symbol of the South.” Southern Culture, Vol. 1, No. 3, (1995): 301–320; Egerton, John, Ann Bleidt Egerton, and Al Clayton. Southern Food: At Home, On the Road, In History. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1987; Hunt, Gaillard. As We Were, Life in America, 1814. Stockbridge, MA: Berkshire House Publishing, [1914] 1993; Taylor, Joel Gray. Eating, Drinking and Visiting in the Old South: An Informal American History. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1982; Volo, Dorothy Denneen, and James M. Volo. Family Life in 19th-Century America. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2007.
James M. Volo
Barn Raising A barn raising party is an event at which a community gathers to join forces to build a barn in one day—a task that would otherwise be unmanageable by
Barn Raising
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the individual members of that community. An important aspect of a barnraising event is socializing, celebration, and food. The traditional barn raising most commonly occurs in the Amish, Mennonite, and Pennsylvania Dutch communities in the Eastern states of North America. People in these communities are members of religious groups that originated in sixteenth-century Europe during the Protestant Reformation. These groups separated from the established state church and created their own rules about conservative mode of dress, method of worship; they held sacred their values of peace, love, and forgiveness. Because of religious persecution, in the 1700s these groups began to establish settlements in the United States, beginning in Lancaster, Pennsylvania. These farm-centered communities isolated themselves from neighboring groups, creating self-supporting communities based on their dependence on mutual aid. It was during this time of early settlement that the greatest amount of barn raisings occurred, because each family farm needed a barn in order to function properly. A typical barn raising occurs after months of planning and preparation, including laying a foundation and cutting lumber. The entire community comes together at the farm to raise a timber-frame barn, usually in one day.
Amish workers raise a new barn near Tollesboro, Kentucky, 2007. The structure should be ready for use by nightfall. AP/Wide World Photo.
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The skills of every member of the community are utilized, bringing together between 100 and 200 workers. Older, more experienced men direct the construction, while younger men provide the labor. The women prepare food and provide beverages and—sometimes—first aid. Children also participate: the boys bringing tools and materials to the men; the girls helping with food preparation. Children watch the event carefully in order to learn their future roles as adults. After a morning of building, generally the wooden framework of the barn is in place. A long line of tables and church benches are brought in to seat the workers, or some may sit on quilts under the trees. The women serve an elaborate lunch including roasted meats and chicken, potatoes, casseroles, and lemonade. After lunch, construction work resumes until an afternoon snack break is taken for dessert, which may include pies, puddings, and doughnuts. By the end of the day, the barn is usually near being finished. The barn raising ultimately serves as a unifying event for the community. It is a sort of community-based insurance policy that individual families can depend upon in case of emergency. Today the greatest concentration of Amish and Mennonite communities in the United States is in Pennsylvania, Ohio, and Indiana. To varying degrees, modern-day Amish and Mennonites reject modern technology, driving horse and buggies, refusing to use electricity or phones in their homes, dressing in their traditional manner, and worshipping in their own churches, as they have for centuries. Barn raisings still occur in these communities, mostly for newlywed couples establishing a working family farm or for families whose barns have burned or need replacement. Depending on how conservative a particular community is, a modern-day barn raising will appear much the same as it has for centuries. The men still build the wooden barns without the aid of modern construction equipment or electric tools, only their tool belts. The women cook and transport similar menus, preparing a feast without modern kitchen equipment, and transporting it by horse and buggy to the site. In less conservative communities, skilled workers may occasionally be brought in from outside the community to fulfill specific needs, and equipment such as cranes may be brought in to assist. The term barn raising has come to signify the sharing and pooling of work, unpaid, for the benefit of one or all. Modern-day examples of such shared effort in the United States are the nonprofit organization Habitat for Humanity, which assembles volunteers to build homes for lower-income families in the United States, and schools, which erect new buildings with the help of all members of the school community and call it a barn raising. Worldwide, there are examples of other cultures practicing the tradition of gathering the community for such events. The Finnish talkoot (work weekend ) is an example of a tradition of voluntary teamwork. The talkoot is an event in a traditional Finnish village at which villagers gather and work together toward a common goal. The Norwegian dugnad is an event at which people voluntarily pull together to help a member or members of
Beer Halls and Beer Gardens the community. Every fall there is a dugnad telethon, which raises money for disabled people in Norway. Both the talkoot and the dugnad have the effect of creating a strong sense of community, similar to barn raisings in North America. Further Reading: Adams, Marcia. Cooking from Quilt Country: Hearty Recipes from Amish and Mennonite Kitchens. New York: Clarkson Potter, 1988; Coleman, Bill. Amish Odyssey: Photographs. New York: Alfred Van Der Marck Editions. 1988; Showalter, Mary Emma. Mennonite Community Cookbook; Favorite Family Recipes. Philadelphia: J. C. Winston, 1950.
Tamara V. Bigelow
Beer Halls and Beer Gardens People have gathered in public places to drink beer since ancient times. In Germany, beer halls are more than just a place of entertainment: they are centuries-old institutions. The beer hall has long been a center of social life and often the largest meeting place in town. Some are called Keller or Bierkeller, a reflection of the practice during pre-refrigeration days of storing beer in cellars to keep it cool. Others go by the name Ratskeller (townhallcellar), a term dating back to when the local government stored beer in the cellars beneath city hall and sold it to citizens. Germany’s largest beer halls can accommodate as many as 5,000 drinkers. Some are buildings once occupied by breweries that long ago moved because they were fire hazards or because clean water was more available outside the city center. The most famous beer hall in the world is the Hofbräuhaus, or “royal court brewery,” which was established in Munich in 1579. Munich is also home to two other huge beer halls, the Löwenbräukeller and the Paulaner Keller, which offer traditional Bavarian food and entertainment. Beer halls can be found in cities and towns throughout Germany, as well as in other Continental countries such as Austria and the Czech Republic. U Fleku, one of a number of beer halls in downtown Prague, has stood for more than 500 years. It breaks tradition by serving a dark-colored house beer instead of golden-colored Czech-style lager. In the larger cities, huge establishments were built with high ceilings and filled with trees and plants in an effort to create the atmosphere of an outdoor park. This way even when it was too cold to drink outside, there remained a feeling of being in a garden. Although those establishments were covered and enclosed, they were commonly referred to as beer gardens rather than beer halls. The terms were used interchangeably, and still are today. In Germany, many establishments offer both a beer hall and a beer garden, and proprietors bring the beer barrels outdoors and tap them at the first sign of warm weather. Communal drinking had fallen out of favor in post–Revolutionary War America. It was not only unfashionable in that era for large groups of people
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The Court, Hofbräuhaus in Munich, Germany, c. 1890–1900. Library of Congress.
to drink socially, but many Americans then associated beer drinking with idleness. The German immigrants who arrived in America during the nineteenth century brought with them the tradition of communal beer drinking. In the towns where they settled, the Germans quickly built breweries and later, beer halls similar to those in which they drank back home. That was especially true in the part of America bounded by Cincinnati, St. Louis, and Milwaukee, where Germans settled by the millions, and breweries were as much a part of community life as churches, schools, and flour mills. The Germans believed that beer was best enjoyed with food, fresh air, and music. Like in Germany, when the weather permitted, immigrants gathered in beer gardens, outdoor venues that were planted with groves of trees and filled with rows of shared tables. A beer garden in Milwaukee, which opened in 1843, was typical, offering flowers, promenades, and a band. The success of these early beer gardens encouraged others, including many brewery owners, to open their own. Beer halls also could be found outside the Midwest, especially in major cities such as New York, Philadelphia, and San Francisco. By the end of the Civil War there were an estimated three to four thousand beer gardens in New York City alone. The Bowery in lower Manhattan was famous for the number of beer gardens as well as their size. Some were immense buildings capable of accommodating as many as 1,200 guests. Beer gardens also sprang up outside city centers and attracted visitors in search of a respite from urban noise and pollution. Most patrons were German, and the beer garden was part of their so-called Continental Sunday when people engaged
Beer Halls and Beer Gardens in sports, entertainment, and drinking as opposed to the Puritan tradition of reserving the Sabbath for prayer and rest. Many of the beer halls called themselves “gardens” and their decor attempted to replicate the outdoors, though they were in fact roofed and enclosed and open year-round. The larger beer halls, which were described as being of “Wagnerian dimensions,” offered entertainment as well as recreation such as billiards and bowling that appealed to young urban men who enjoyed a night on the town. Then, as now, young people were trendsetters, and they popularized lager beer in this country. Lager beer is a golden-colored, crisper- and cleaner-tasting, and less-potent beverage than the dark, rich English-style ales that Americans had consumed since colonial times. Today, lager accounts for the vast majority of the world’s beer consumption. Lager beer acquires its distinctive taste and alcoholic content from a strain of yeast that thrives at lower temperatures. As a result, the beer must be stored for a long period of time in a cool place (lager comes from the German verb lagern, which means “to store”). In the days before refrigeration, beer was stored in cellars beneath the beer garden, and the shade from the trees protected the beer from the warm temperatures above. Beer gardens became larger and more elaborate over the years. For example, Schnaider’s Garden, which opened in St. Louis in 1872, featured “wondrous lighting, an abundance of shade trees, countless rows of tables [and] . . . a King Gambrinus-adorned bandstand where the orchestra always seems to be playing a lilting Johann Strauss waltz.” By the century’s end, the largest beer gardens offered such entertainment as Wild West shows, dance halls, live animals, and lavish nighttime light displays. Schlitz Palm Gardens and Pabst Park in Milwaukee, which were popular gathering places at the turn of the century, are considered the forerunners of today’s theme parks. In an era when there were vast differences in wealth, beer gardens were democratizing institutions. The spirit of Gemütlichkeit, a word that signifies intimacy and comfort, was one of inclusiveness—all ages and sexes were welcome—as well as one that discouraged class distinctions. People from all walks of life had an opportunity to mix on an equal basis inside beer gardens. Author Ray Oldenburg called them an outstanding example of a successful “third place,” somewhere other than the home and the workplace where people could gather. Beer gardens kept costs low so that even people of modest means could take part often. A proprietor who overcharged his customers was held in as low regard as customers who engaged in drunkenness and fighting. In the United States, the beer hall was a stark contrast to so-called Irish bars, by which the Germans meant dark establishments that catered to an all-male clientele and were dominated by a bar where customers drank standing up. The Germans, by contrast, viewed drinking places as extensions of their homes. Their beer halls were well-lit establishments filled with large tables, which customers—including total strangers—shared. Sharing tables with strangers is still the custom in Germany. In a beer hall, it was not unusual to find three generations of the same family together. Many nonGermans also considered beer halls more wholesome than taverns because
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of the spirit of Gemütlichkeit that prevailed in beer halls. In addition to lager, beer halls served traditional food such as sausages, sauerkraut, Bismarck herring, rollmops, and Sauerbraten, or marinated pot roast. These foods remain staples of beer hall menus. An article in the December 1864 Illustrated London News noted that patrons of beer gardens were “chiefly well-to-do mechanics and tradespeople, who bring their wives, and children with them, and even the baby is sure to be treated with a modicum of the ruddy malt.” The presence of wives and children in beer gardens helped to curb drunkenness. Buying rounds of drinks was unheard of; the German custom was for each customer to pay for his or her own beer, which we now refer to as Dutch treat. Beverages stronger than beer were rarely served. Most importantly, disorderly behavior was not tolerated: it offended the Germans’ fondness for order, and was incompatible with the welcoming spirit of Gemütlichkeit. The Germans believed that informal socializing held their communities together. People who formed friendships over beer often joined in a wide range of voluntary organizations, such as gymnastic clubs and singing societies, that formed the basis of middle-class life in German cities and towns. Thanks to the Germans, many Americans made beer, rather than liquor, their beverage of choice. Beer halls flourished during America’s so-called golden age of brewing, the period from about 1870 until the onset of Prohibition, when Americans had a wide choice of both drinking establishments and styles of beer. However, Americans of native birth and the Protestant faith remained hostile to drinking and to the foreign cultures that embraced it. They were especially offended by the tradition of bringing children into beer halls and setting aside Sundays for recreation and drinking. The brewing industry responded to the forces of temperance during the Prohibition by promoting beer as a beverage of moderation and holding up the Germans as examples of responsible use of alcohol. Ultimately, they fought a losing battle. Anti-German sentiment during World War I proved to be a tipping point. Americans questioned the loyalty of German American beer barons, and the political climate swung toward prohibition of all alcohol. Even though the beer garden remains a fixture of social life in Germany, there are far fewer beer gardens in America now than there were before Prohibition. Nevertheless, the institution managed to survive Prohibition. For example, the Schaefer Center, an immense beer garden, was one of the top attractions of the 1939 New York World’s Fair. Beer gardens that offer traditional food and entertainment still exist in many communities with German American populations. One of them, Blob’s Park in Jessup, Maryland, takes credit for having staged the nation’s first Oktoberfest celebration in 1947. Even today traditional beer halls still can be found, especially in cities in the Great Lakes region. In addition, some modern microbreweries, such as the Pennsylvania Brewing Company in Pittsburgh, offer modern versions of the German beer hall; and the Hofbräuhaus has opened smaller, somewhat Americanized versions of the original Munich landmark in the Cincinnati area and in Las Vegas.
Beeton, Isabella Further Reading: Anderson, Will. Beer, USA: 500 Years of America’s Beer Facts, Beer Folklore, Beer Photos, and Beer Fun. Dobbs Ferry, NY: Morgan & Morgan, Publishers, 1986; Baron, Stanley. Brewed in America: A History of Beer and Ale in the United States. Boston: Little, Brown & Company, 1975; Dornbusch, Horst. Prost! The Story of German Beer. Boulder, CO: Brewers Publications, 1997; Gabbacia, Donna R. We Are What We Eat: Ethnic Food and the Making of Americans. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1998; Mariani, John. America Eats Out: An Illustrated History of Restaurants, Taverns, Coffee Shops, Speakeasies, and Other Establishments That Have Fed Us for 350 Years. New York: William Morrow & Company, 1991; Oldenburg, Ray. The Great Good Place: Cafes, Coffee Shops, Bookstores, Bars, Hair Salons and Other Hangouts at the Heart of a Community. 3rd Edition. New York: Marlowe, 1999.
Paul Ruschmann
Beeton, Isabella Isabella Beeton, the remarkable author of the most comprehensive nineteenth-century book on entertaining, cooking, and household management, was a bright young wife and mother doing her part to make the family business a success. She was born Isabella Mary Mayson in Cheapside, London, on March 12, 1836, the oldest of four children. Her father, Benjamin Mayson, died at age 39 and her mother remarried and moved to Epson, adding four step-siblings and, in time, 13 more children to the family. Coming from a family of 21 children, Isabella must have had the opportunity to learn a great deal about organization at an early age. While still in her teens, Isabella was sent to school in Heidelberg, Germany, where she studied piano. Shortly after her return to the family home in Epson she visited London and met publisher Samuel Orchart Beeton. They married in July of 1856 and at the age of 21 she began producing articles about cooking, entertaining, domestic management, and embroidery as well as translating serialized French novels for his publications. From 1859 to1861, she wrote a monthly supplement to the Englishwoman’s Domestic Magazine: An Illustrated Journal Combining Practical Information, Instruction & Amusement and in October of 1861 the supplements were bound together and published as Beeton’s Book of Household Management; Comprising Information for the Mistress, Housekeeper, Cook, Kitchen-Maid, Butler, Footman, Coachman, Valet, Upper and Under House-Maids, Lady’s-Maid, Maid-of-all-Work, Laundry-Maid, Nurse and Nurse-Maid, Monthly, Wet, and Sick Nurses, Etc. Etc.—Also Sanitary, Medical & Legal Memoranda; with a History of the Origin, Properties, and Uses of all Things Connected with Home Life and Comfort by Mrs. Isabella Beeton. In the preface to the book, Mrs. Beeton notes, “If I had known beforehand that this book would have cost me the labour which it has, I should never have been courageous enough to commence it.” She goes on to explain that she did so in order to help housewives compete with the “attractions” their husbands might otherwise find in “clubs, well-ordered taverns and dining-houses.”
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During this time, in addition to her work on the publications and managing her household, Isabella Beeton gave birth to four sons. The first two, both named Samuel Orchart, died in infancy. The third, named Orchart, was born in 1863, and Mayson Moss was born in January of 1865. Within a week of his birth, Isabella died at the age of 28. Two years after her death, Samuel Beeton suffered financial problems and sold the copyrights to all his publications as well as to Isabella’s book. Starting in 1888 the new publisher made extensive revisions to the book and has continued to do so for over a century. Facsimile editions of the original are now available. Beeton’s Book of Household Management was not England’s first household management guide but it immediately became the most important; it sold more than 60,000 copies in the first year and nearly two million by 1868. The 1,112-page book is an all-inclusive collection of the latest information on everything a Victorian homemaker needed to know in order to successfully run a middle-class English household. Still in the process of organizing a new household herself, Mrs. Beeton had a talent for focusing on the most reliable and useful information. She skillfully selected, compiled, and edited material from many sources and presented it in a unique and appealing style that kept readers interested. Recipes were written in a modern, easy-to-use format said to have been borrowed from Eliza Acton. Each included a list of ingredients and a paragraph headed “Mode,” that
A color plate from Beeton’s Book of Household Management by Isabella Beeton, 1859– 61. The Art Archive /John Meek.
Betty Crocker included clear instructions. Most included an estimate of the time required, the average cost, and a full-color engraving of the finished dish. In her preface Beeton notes that “for the matter of the recipes, I am indebted, in some measure, to the correspondents of the ‘Englishwoman’s Domestic Magazine,’ who have obligingly placed at my disposal their formulae for many original preparations.” She goes on to credit “a large private circle,” “diligent study of the works of the best modern writers on cookery,” and “friends in England, Scotland, Ireland, France, and Germany” for assistance with the almost 900 pages of recipes. As with each subject, entertaining etiquette was covered in detail from planning (“a private dinner-party should consist of not less than the number of the Graces, or more than that of the Muses”); the arrival of guests; seating, food and wine service; dinner conversation; to good-byes. The section starts with a warning to the hostess. “Hospitality is a most excellent virtue; but care must be taken that the love of company, for its own sake, does not become a prevailing passion; for then the habit is no longer hospitality, but dissipation.” Beeton advises that “the mistress should remember that it is her duty to make her guests feel happy, comfortable, and quite at their ease,” and concludes that entertaining “gives a fillip to life” and makes “the quiet happy home of an English gentlewoman appear the more delightful and enjoyable.” Further Reading: Beeton, Isabella. Beeton’s Book of Household Management: A First Edition Facsimile. London: Jonathan Cape Limited, 1971; Beeton, Isabella. Beeton’s Book of Household Management. London: Ward, Lock & Company, 1888; Davidson, Alan. The Oxford Companion to Food. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1999; Hughes, Kathryn. The Short Life and Long Times of Mrs. Beeton: The First Domestic Goddess. New York: Anchor, 2007; Project Gutenberg eBook. The Book of Household Management, by Isabella Beeton, http://www.gutenberg. org /files /10136/10136.txt; Science in the Nineteenth-Century Periodical. The Englishwoman’s Domestic Magazine, 1852–77, http://www.sciper.org / browse / ED_desc.html.
Joanne Lamb Hayes
Betty Crocker Often called “America’s First Lady of Food,” Betty Crocker has been one of the most successful and enduring food marketing icons of the last century. She was created in 1921 by the Washburn Crosby Company of Minneapolis (one of many regional milling companies that merged in 1928 to become the world’s largest miller, General Mills), and arrived on the scene ready to add a personal touch to the baking and entertaining advice the company offered to purchasers of their Gold Medal flour. A very successful promotional contest had increased the volume of the company’s consumer correspondence and company directors felt that a warm and friendly response from a single knowledgeable authority would promote
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their product’s image better than responses from an ever-changing staff of individuals using their own names. Samuel Gale, the advertising manager of Washburn Crosby at that time, is credited with her creation. The popular nickname, Betty, was chosen for her first name, and her last name was inspired by the surname of William G. Crocker, a recently retired director of the company. A contest was held among the female employees for the most characteristic signature. Secretary Florence Lindeberg won the contest and to this day her Betty Crocker signature is used on all correspondence as well as on packaging. Supported by home economist Janette Kelley and the company’s Home Service Department, Betty Crocker was able to respond to the hundreds of homemakers who wrote to her each day, making each feel that they were receiving a personal note from a real woman. From the start, a large proportion of the correspondence dealt with entertaining. Women who were comfortable cooking for their families felt they needed help baking for special events. To offer hands-on help, the company created a series of cooking schools all across the country. In 1924, Betty became even more real with the introduction of her Friday morning radio show, later named the Betty Crocker Cooking School of the Air, from Minneapolis radio station, WCCO. Marjorie Husted, the new Director of the Home Service Department, wrote the script for the first 10 years and was the voice of Betty for the Midwestern show. Before becoming a national broadcast, the show appeared in many other cities with a different actress as Betty in each location. During its 24-year run, the show became a lifeline for American women struggling to provide memorable celebrations as well as nutritious meals for their families as the country suffered the Great Depression and World War II. Betty Crocker became such a trusted friend and respected advisor in households nationwide that a 1945 Fortune magazine poll named her the second most famous woman in America after Eleanor Roosevelt. The radio show was followed by a television show, the Betty Crocker Magazine of the Air, starting in 1951. An actress, Adelaide Hawley, was the first to become Betty Crocker on television and was followed by several other actresses as the show continued through the 1950s. The Washburn Crosby Company was not new to publishing; in 1880 a 60-page version of Miss Parloa’s New Cook Book and Marketing Guide was published to promote the company’s flour. (The original, by Maria Parloa, one of the two first directors of the Boston Cooking School, was 430 pages. General Mills produced reproductions of the Washburn Crosby booklet in the 1970s.) After the arrival of Betty Crocker, the company increased their publishing activity and offered entertaining advice with small cookbooks and pamphlets such as Betty Crocker’s $25,000 Recipe Set Featuring Recipes From World Famous Chefs For Foods That Enchant Men and Betty Crocker’s 101 Delicious Bisquick Creations As Made And Served by Well-Known Gracious Hostesses, Famous Chefs, Distinguished Epicures and Smart Luminaries of Movieland, both produced in 1933. From 1941 to 1945, General Mills published a series of wartime booklets and the Betty Crocker Cook Book of
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All-Purpose Baking to help homemakers cope with rationing and scarcity. As America recovered from more than a decade of hard times followed by the uncertainty of war, Betty Crocker supported the celebration with the 1947 introduction of their PartyCake line, the first double-layer butter cake mixes, and more importantly with the release of the comprehensive hardback Betty Crocker’s Picture Cook Book (known as “Big Red” because of the color of its cover). When released in 1950, the book was an overnight success and has been revised periodically ever since. Its tenth edition was released in 2005 and has continued the tradition of providing the entertaining menus, recipes, serving suggestions, and kitchen tricks that hostesses count on. Through the years, Betty Crocker has continued to produce books focused on entertaining, with titles such as Betty Crocker’s Guide to Easy Entertaining (1959), Betty Crocker’s Hostess Cookbook: A Wealth of Ideas For Today’s Entertaining (1967), Betty Crocker’s Dinner Parties: A Contemporary Guide to Easy Entertaining (1970), Betty Crocker’s Buffets: Menus, Recipes and Planning Tips for Easy and Successful Home Entertaining (1984), Betty Crocker’s Easy Entertaining (1992), Betty Crocker’s Entertaining Basics: Learning to Entertain with Confidence (2001), Betty Crocker Basics: How to Cook and Entertain with Confidence (2005). Many of these have been reprinted over the years and continue to appear on bookstore shelves. While Betty Crocker had previously appeared in product advertisements drawn by various artists, her first official portrait was commissioned in 1936. Inspired by the features of the General Mills Home Service De-
A Betty Crocker cake mix advertisement from 1952. © Mary Evans Picture Library/Alamy.
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partment staff, New York artist Neysa McMein created a quintessential 1930s homemaker, serious yet compassionate and quite properly dressed. The original 1936 portrait was revised in 1955, 1965, 1969, 1972, 1980, 1986, and 1996 to reflect the style of the era. The 1996 revision, commissioned to celebrate her 75th anniversary, is a watercolor by John Stuart Ingle based on a digital portrait that combined the faces of 75 American women chosen by General Mills to represent the racial diversity of their customers. Although the Betty Crocker red spoon and signature logo first used in 1954 has now replaced her portrait on most Betty Crocker products, she still represents the personal side of General Mills in marketing materials and in the many cookbooks that bear her name. Further Reading: Anderson, Jean. The American Century Cookbook: The Most Popular Recipes of the 20th Century. New York: Clarkson N. Potter, 1997; Crocker, Betty. Betty Crocker’s New Picture Cook Book. New York: McGraw Hill, 1961; General Mills. History of Betty Crocker. http://www.generalmills.com /corporate / company/ hist_betty.pdf; Marks, Susan. Finding Betty Crocker: The Secret Life of America’s First Lady of Food. New York: Simon & Schuster, 2005; reprinted by University of Minnesota Press, 2007; Schenone, Laura. A Thousand Years Over a Hot Stove: A History of American Women Told Through Food, Recipes, and Remembrances. New York: W. W. Norton, 2003.
Joanne Lamb Hayes
Birthdays There can be no doubt that birthdays are big in America and in many other parts of the world now. But that was not always true. Once calendars had been established by the Egyptians in around 4000 B.C., it made possible the annual observance of the birth day for those wealthy and powerful individuals for whom records were kept. The custom spread around the eastern Mediterranean, and Greeks and Romans adopted it. The Bible mentions that the Egyptian pharaoh’s birthday was observed, as was Herod’s birthday in the first century A.D. Romans stationed in Britain about the same time as Herod appear to have organized festive events around their birthdays by inviting friends. As the Roman Catholic Church began to keep records, the celebration of birthdays by others of wealth and position spread into Europe. Earlier, in those parts of the world where record keeping was less prevalent, individual birthdays were neither recorded nor observed. Today, modern technology has made birth–record keeping possible throughout most of the world, and birth dates are used as one means of identification for various governmental functions. Although almost every individual has a recorded birth date, it may not be observed or celebrated, if that has not been the custom of the community. This is still true in much of rural and village Africa although in urban areas, birthday celebrations are being adopted based on Western customs. In India,
Birthdays where the time and date of one’s birth are carefully recorded for future determination of one’s horoscope and auspicious dates for marriages, business ventures, or other important events, birthdays of children or adults, except among the urban affluent, are not celebrated with parties or other similar events, although on the birthday morning the child may be taken to the temple with a gift of rice or other food offering. Hindus living in the United States, however, are more likely to follow Western celebration traditions. In predominantly Catholic nations, where individuals frequently are given a saint’s name to assure their protection, the saint’s day, whenever that occurs during the calendar year, may be celebrated instead of the actual birthday. A typical celebration may include feasting for family members and friends. A particularly elaborately celebrated saint’s day is St. Joseph’s Day on March 19, in honor of Saint Joseph, the spouse of Mary, when an Italian American or Mexican American family may prepare a huge feast table and invite neighbors and friends to partake. Besides saints’ days, the major religions give even more importance to their founders’ birth dates: the birthday of Mohammed is a national holiday in Muslim nations and is observed by Muslims everywhere; Christmas is a religious and legal holiday in much of the Western hemisphere and Europe, and is observed among Christians elsewhere; and Buddhists celebrate the birthday of the Buddha. Today, many nations annually honor the birthdays of their past great leaders or current royalty with special events including parties, community gatherings, and parades. Such dates may be established as legal holidays if the honoree is no longer living. Over the years there have been many ways to observe or celebrate an individual’s birthday, with the goal of making the honoree feel special and conveying wishes for a long life. Less frequent in earlier times but occurring more often today, a party of some sort is part of the celebration of a birthday, sometimes regardless of the wishes of the honoree. A party may be impromptu and very simple or planned over a long period of time and elaborate. In either case it may or may not be a total surprise to the birthday person. The latter is especially true of children’s and young people’s birthdays. For adult birthday parties, the opportunity to socialize with friends and loved ones may be the primary purpose of the event. For children’s parties, depending on the age of the birthday child and guests, some form of entertainment usually is planned: games such as hitting a piñata containing small gifts or sweets for all the guests; a theme; entertainment such as a clown or a magician; or an interesting or exciting experience. Accompanying this late-twentieth-century expansion of parties has been the development of an entire industry engaged in the design, manufacture, and marketing of party supplies: paper and plastic dishes and utensils, party hats, favors, decorations, and other fanciful items. Also easily available are many books and magazine and newspaper articles that advise how to prepare for and conduct a successful birthday party, complete with suggested menus. These are usually written to help with entertaining young children but suggestions for adult parties
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are plentiful, too. Some cookbooks and women’s magazines from the late nineteenth century onward have also included suggestions for celebrating the birthdays of such American leaders as George Washington and Abraham Lincoln. Food always plays an important role in any celebration. It may be just light refreshments, usually including a birthday cake, or it may be a full meal that includes favorites of the honoree. In the last 200 years, a birthday cake has assumed an increasingly important role in birthday party food, but occasionally the sweet part of the refreshments or meal does not include cake, but a pie or other foods favored by the birthday person. An early reference to a birthday party for a young girl appears in the family correspondence of Margaret Bayard Smith, an American, in a letter written to her sister in 1811. It described the special meal prepared for the attendees (about 20 adults and children), followed by a birthday cake and ice cream. The dinner was preceded by the gathering of flowers and greens to garland everyone. Garlanding was an early nineteenth-century custom to honor someone. It was mentioned by Louisa May Alcott, writing of being garlanded at her own childhood birthday celebration. Flowers other than garlands also are a traditional birthday gift. Gifts to the honoree are a part of the celebration, too. These may take many forms. Music as an appropriate gift has a long history. Composers have written music in honor of birthdays, whether for a reigning monarch or loved one, and our classical music has many well-known examples of specially composed music. In some cases, the music was played to awaken the honoree on the birthday morning. Original poems may be recited, ditties sung, or songs specially written to honor the birthday person may be performed. One song has become traditional and almost ubiquitous at American birthday celebrations: the “Happy Birthday” song, which usually accompanies the presentation and cutting of the birthday cake. The song was composed in 1893 as “Good Morning to All” by two kindergarten-teacher sisters, Mildred and Patty Hill. How the original words were changed is unknown although some sources attribute it to Tin Pan Alley. Since 1910, “Happy Birthday to You” has been sung at American birthday celebrations and now is reputed to be the most popular song ever, worldwide. At a party for a younger child, who has grown in height, knowledge, and abilities, the celebration likely will be more focused on those gains. So the singing of “Happy Birthday” may be followed by the child guests attempting to spank the birthday child, each administering one spank and finishing with a pinch, while saying, “And a pinch to grow an inch.” Although this custom is of obscure origin, its persistence may be somewhat due to the fact that it permits a mild expression of childish hostility. Another example of perhaps hidden hostility is the Spanish custom of pulling the honoree’s earlobes, once for each year. Birthday greeting cards are sent through the mail from those who can’t extend good wishes in person; cards can also be presented in person or used to accompany a gift. Johann Gutenberg’s invention of the printing press
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that uses moveable type in the late 1400s led to an easy and relatively inexpensive means of printing. By the late nineteenth century, colorful greeting cards were being exchanged among friends at the Christmas and New Year holidays. This custom achieved wide popularity, and soon after, greeting cards were being produced for birthdays and now for almost every other possible occasion. A huge greeting card industry has developed, with birthday cards that target specific relationships, and may be religious in nature, saccharine, humorous, in bad taste, or mildly insulting. Because a birthday signifies the passage of time, it often involves such symbols as burning candles, once used to measure time, or special foods symbolic of long life. For example, among Chinese Americans, birthday foods may be buns, shaped and colored like peaches, with a sweet filling, or wheat noodles, stretched very long and served in soup. Some birthdays are more significant than others and are recognized as important rites of passage. Turning 13 (or 12 for a girl) is such a time for a young Jewish boy or girl because it’s the age when they rigorously prepare themselves for the Bar/Bat Mitzvah, an important ceremony that will make them full participants in the religious life of the Jewish community. Following the successful completion of the Bar or Bat Mitzvah requirements, a celebratory party is held for the family’s relatives and friends. For a young girl in the Latino community, reaching the age of 15 years requires a special celebration, called la quinceanera. It’s usually an elaborate and costly occasion, with many members of the family’s community of friends and relatives involved in planning, participating in, and paying for it, and it serves as a signal that the honoree has reached womanhood. Both the Bar and Bat Mitzvah and la quinceanera indicate a comSweet Sixteen ing of age. Similarly, a debutante ball is given when a young female In American culture, the celebration of the 16th birthday is an debutante reaches the age of 18 to important rite of passage. In a country where adulthood is leindicate that she is now eligible to gally acknowledged at 18, the 16th birthday recognizes a young enter the adult social world. adult’s burgeoning maturity. Sweet sixteen celebrations have often inspired musicians and Among family and friends, filmmakers. Ray Orbinson, Chuck Berry, Billy Idol, and Hillary often extraordinary attention is Duff have all recorded songs with the theme of “sweet sixteen.” paid to birthdays at the ages of 50, The 1984 film Sixteen Candles, starring Molly Ringwald, remains 75, 80, or older, and special gatherpopular. ings are held. Senior citizens may Although sweet sixteen parties have traditionally been the receive a congratulatory letter from domain of girls, American boys are increasingly beginning to the president (if requested by a celebrate their 16th year with a party. Sweet sixteen celebrafriend or family member) starting tions range from simple family affairs to lavish extravaganzas. at age 80. A popular reality show on MTV, Super Sweet Sixteen, depicts the The invention of the camera expensive sweet sixteen parties of boys and girls where luxury in the nineteenth century meant cars, designer clothes, celebrity entertainment, and extravagant that many American celebravenues have replaced homemade cakes and parties at home. tory event are now recorded with Wanda Mann photographs taken by one or more
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of the participants, and birthday parties are certainly no exception. From a one-year-old’s first taste of frosting to an 80-year-old’s attempts to blow out what appears to be a cake on fire, all is preserved on film for posterity. Today’s digital cameras have resulted in a proliferation of such photos, and all the supplies and equipment to display and store them, yielding yet another recently developed industry. In the United States, the custom of celebrating birthdays is no longer limited to humans. Occasionally one receives an invitation for a birthday party, or notices a picture in the newspaper of a birthday party, for a family pet. When such occasions occur, invited guests may be similar pets and their owners, or family members and friends. There may be party hats for the honoree and guests, the usual kinds of pictures taken and, except for specially prepared food for the pets, the usual birthday party refreshments served. Further Reading: Cherkasky, Shirley. “Birthday Foods.” In Solomon Katz, Ed. Encyclopedia of Food and Culture. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 2003; Ewen, David. All the Years of Popular Music. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: PrenticeHall, 1977; Humphrey, Theodore C. “A Family Celebrates a Birthday: Of Life and Cakes.” In Theodore C. Humphrey and Lin T. Humphrey, Eds. “We Gather Together”: Food and Festival in American Life. Logan: Utah State University Press, 1991; Jernow, Liza. “Birthdays.” In Andrew Smith, Ed. The Oxford Encyclopedia of Food and Drink in America. Vol. I. New York: Oxford University Press, 2004.
Shirley Cherkasky
Blair House Since 1942, Blair House has been America’s most exclusive guest house. Located at 1651–1653 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, opposite the Executive Office Building of the White House, it welcomes visiting heads of state, select foreign dignitaries, and, on occasion, past, present, and future United States presidents and first ladies. The original house has had political connections since its construction in 1824. During the nearly 120 years that it was a private home, many important political guests were entertained there and decisions that would change the history of the United States were made in its rooms. Then in 1942, when 24-hour wartime activity made it impossible to continue to house official guests in the White House and Washington hotels were filled to capacity, moving into the townhouses across the street became the ideal solution. Stanley Woodward, chief of protocol for Franklin Roosevelt, arranged for the federal government to purchase Blair House and put it into service immediately. Finding it not large enough for America’s expanding guest list, the adjacent Lee House was purchased in 1943. In 1969 and 1970 the complex expanded into two 1860 townhouses on Jackson Place facing Lafayette Park. Today, under the jurisdiction of the Department of State, the expanded Blair House now elegantly hosts guests of the White House while they are in Washington. The four original town houses have kept their exterior appearance while the interior spaces have been combined
Blair House
The Blair House. © Christina Deridder | Dreamstime.com.
to make 70,000 square feet of living space, an area bigger than the White House itself. There are now 119 rooms including 14 guest bedrooms, 8 staff bedrooms, 35 bathrooms, 4 dining rooms, a kitchen, laundry, drycleaner, exercise room, flower shop, and hair salon. A specially trained 24-hour staff provides for the comfort and safety of guests, making every effort to see that they feel at home. When a visiting head-of-state is in residence the flag of the guest’s country flies over the Blair House. The original sand-colored limestone townhouse at 1651 Pennsylvania Avenue was built in 1824 for Joseph Lovell, first Surgeon General of the United States. Lovell also organized the Army Corps of Engineers. In 1830, Andrew Jackson invited Frankfort, Kentucky journalist Francis Preston Blair to move to Washington to become editor of the pro-administration paper, the Globe. Blair and his family moved to Washington and in 1837 moved into the house. Blair had written pro-Jackson articles before coming to Washington and was politically active immediately upon his arrival in the capital. When Jackson took office in 1829, his cabinet was divided by disagreements between Vice President John C. Calhoun and Secretary of State Martin Van Buren and was unable to make decisions. Jackson created an unofficial advisory group known as his “Kitchen Cabinet,” and Blair became one of its most influential members. This group functioned as the President’s cabinet until the 1831 resignation of Calhoun and Secretary of War H. John Eaton. Blair remained an influential consultant to Jackson and to Martin Van Buren, who followed Jackson as president. In 1834, Blair and John C. Rives started a second newspaper, the Congressional Globe. It first provided a synopsis of Congressional proceedings but soon took on the recording of all Congressional business. In 1873 it became the Congressional Record and is still in publication.
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When James K. Polk became president in 1845, Blair was forced to sell the Globe. He moved his family to Silver Springs and rented the Pennsylvania Avenue House first to secretary of the Navy, George Bancroft, and then to Secretary of the Interior, Thomas Ewing. In 1850, Ewing’s daughter, Eleanor Boyle Ewing, married General William Tecumseh Sherman in a ceremony in Blair House. In 1852 the Blair family returned to the house and their oldest son Montgomery, a lawyer, returned to Washington and moved into the house. He would later become Postmaster General under Lincoln. In 1859, Blair built the adjacent townhouse, 1653 Pennsylvania Avenue, known as the Lee House, for his daughter Elizabeth and her husband, Admiral Samuel Phillips Lee. Blair supported Abraham Lincoln in the 1860 election and became a trusted friend and confidant. During his Presidency, Lincoln frequently crossed the street to sit in Blair’s study and discuss the day’s problems. In that room in 1861, at Lincoln’s request, Blair tried to convince Robert E. Lee to take command of the Union army. Lee refused and several days later accepted command of the Confederate Army of Northern Virginia. The room is now known as the Lincoln Room. The Blair family continued to own the home until 1942, a total of 105 years. In May of 1942, the first White House guest to stay in Blair House was President Manuel Prado of Peru. The extensive list of world leaders entertained in the house includes General Charles de Gaulle (July 6 to 10, 1944), when he was leader of the Free French living in England; Chaim Weizmann, first president of Israel (May 24 and 25, 1948); Jawaharlal Nehru, first prime minister of post-colonial India (December 19, 1956) with his daughter Indira Gandhi; and Queen Elizabeth II of the United
The Blair House in Washington, D.C., 1945. Library of Congress.
Blair House Kingdom and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh (May 14 to 17, 1991). In addition, the president-elect often stays in the house on the night preceding the inauguration. One of the busiest times in Blair House was the more than three-year residency of President Truman and his family. Shortly after the 1948 election, the Trumans noticed structural problems in the White House. The family moved across the street to what was then known as the Blair–Lee House, while extensive repairs were made to the White House. During this period, the house was referred to as the “Truman White House,” and many historical decisions were made in its rooms. Although the move complicated entertaining, Mrs. Truman was noted for her efficiency and adjusted to the situation by giving a series of small less-formal parties in order to include all the guests she would have entertained in one large party in the White House. The social highlight of the Truman residency at Blair House was entertaining Princess Elizabeth of Great Britain and Prince Philip. In his book about his years as White House Chef, Alonzo Fields gives the menu for the luncheon served on November 1, 1951 in the princess and prince’s honor. The meal started with canapés served with a choice of old fashioneds, martinis, or orange or tomato juice and went on to include honeydew melon, seminole, smothered pheasant, currant jelly, bread sauce, fried samp (cornmeal mush), broccoli with lemon drawn butter, baked stuffed tomatoes, rolls, green salad Roquefort cheese bowl with radish garnish and french dressing, toasted Triscuits, Stanley cream molds, and sponge drops, all accompanied by sparkling Burgundy. On this and most Trumanera menus, dessert was followed by nuts, fruits, candies, demitasse, cigars, cigarettes, and liqueurs. American traditions such as roast turkey, oyster dressing, sweet potatoes, and succotash appear on a number of the menus. The Lee Dining Room, which seats 22 people, was used for Cabinet meetings as well as for breakfasts, luncheons, and very small state dinners. (Large state dinners were held in Washington hotels.) Many of the things for which the Truman administration is best remembered happened around its large dining table. In 1948 the Marshall Plan was created in that room. In June of 1950, the decision to enter the Korean War was made in meetings there, and the decision in April of 1951 to relieve General Douglas MacArthur of his command in Korea came from this room. On November 1, 1950, Puerto Rican nationalists attempted to assassinate President Truman by storming the front door of the Blair House but were stopped by White House police. Blair House was named to the National Register of Historic Places on October 15, 1966, and to the National Historic Landmarks program on October 25, 1973. Further Reading: Fields, Alonzo. My 21 Years in the White House. New York: CowardMcCann, 1961; http://www.blairhouse.org/; http://www.nps.gov/nr/travel /wash / dc25.htm; http://www.state.gov/s/cpr/what/blair/; Parents Magazine. The First Ladies Cook Book: Favorite Recipes of All the Presidents of the United States. New York: GMG Publishing, 1982.
Joanne Lamb Hayes
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Block Party
Block Party A block party is a social gathering organized by residents of a specific street block or neighborhood, held in the street or nearby yard or park. It is an occasion for neighbors, longtime and new to the area, to share conversation over food and drink. Seasonal block parties may mark the beginning of long, hot summer days and many go on to become annual events. Block parties often foster connection within the larger community by celebrating ethnic and religious holidays and historical events. Some block parties raise funds for local public school programs, while others support the revitalization of a business district or focus on improving neighborhood environmental concerns. Whatever the occasion, block party planners are usually required to obtain city or municipal permits. In many urban areas, fire and police departments manage requests for road closures. Depending upon the number of participants, insurance coverage may be mandatory. As a courtesy, a petition is circulated door-to-door among residents to announce upcoming block party dates and activities. Block party–goers must comply with regulations for recycling and trash disposal and adhere to local noise ordinances. The block party by its very nature calls for outdoor cooking methods, and the grill is paramount. Menus feature popular items such as barbeque ribs, hamburgers, hot dogs, grilled chicken, sausage, and fish. Ethnic specialties are often a highlight, prepared by practiced neighborhood cooks. A bounty of side salads, condiments, and desserts are displayed on folding tables, and coolers are stocked with soda, lemonade, and beer and wine. Neighbors and friends casually arrange chairs and tables in the street, and others choose to sit on front porches or curbside. Committees appointed early in the party-planning process supervise children’s activities and coordinate music or live entertainment. In parts of the Caribbean, block parties take the form of lively street dance parties known as “jump ups.” The general populace and tourists alike dance to the beat of steel drum performers and feast on island specialties such as grilled fish and meat. Early block parties of the 1900s advertised skating and dance contests. The Harlem block party debuted around 1914 and was known for its active social scene and live jazz. Block parties also reflected the political climate of the times. Parties were held in support of candidates running for office and in celebration of the momentous end of World War II. Subsequent block parties worked to recruit volunteers for Civil Defense groups in the 1950s. Up until the 1960s, with the onset of the civil rights movement, block parties were often racially segregated by neighborhood. The block party as social occasion continues to thrive and has evolved into a viable grass roots effort with potential to initiate change on a neighborhood level and beyond. The national Night Out movement of the 1990s urged people to hold block parties throughout the community to ward off
Book Clubs crime and increase safety awareness. In college communities, block parties have become a means for students and residents to build consensus around potentially divisive issues. The virtual block party has appeared in densely populated urban areas in the form of shared online electronic calendars and bulletin boards. Given the reality that residents may not know one another, the virtual block party is an effective tool for sharing information and news pertaining to a very concise area defined by address. Block parties of the future are likely to remain rooted in community, one that allows residents to conduct business in the wider world and still maintain a sense of community wherever they live. Because people are able to stay connected with neighborhood issues, the impetus for social participation thrives, as does quality of life, and ultimately, sense of place. Further Reading: “Block Party tonight at St. Nicholas Rink.” Atlanta Constitution. August 14, 1908, p. 7, col. 2; Banks, Marcus. “Block Parties, Street Fairs, Street Festivals.” August 26, 2005. http://www.gothamgazette.com /article /com munitydevelopment /20060826/20/1543; Blackburn, Robert. “Block Dance,” The Magpie. January 1938, v. 22, n. 1, p. 66; Dobson, Charles. Community Building Activities, part 2–6. The Citizen’s Handbook. Vancouver Citizen’s Committee. http:www.vcn.bc.ca /citizens-handbook /2_06_block_parties.html; “Skating and dancing at Lake View Casino.” Frederick News-Maryland. September 22, 1908, p. 5; Gertz, Emily. “Neighbornode and Hyperlocal Networking.” August 13, 2005. http://worldchanging.com /archives /003297.html; “Krewe of Boo to hold block party, costume contest.” New Orleans City Business, October 26, 2007. City Business Staff Report; “Block Parties to Recruit CD Aides.” Los Angeles Times. January 8, 1956; “City Waves Flag and Cheers Wilson.” “War, Topic of Orators.” New York Times. July 6, 1915, p. 18; Prescott, Carlson. “Old St. Pat’s World’s Largest Block Party.” http://gochicago.about.com /od /eventsfestivalsholidays /p / block_party.htm; Project for Public Spaces. “Changing the World One Block at a Time.” http://www.pps.org /info /newsletter /august2007/one_block; Rollens, Patrick. “Block Parties and the Hyperlocal Urban Dweller.” WorldChanging Team. August 18, 2007; “St. Croix-Gros Islet ‘Jump ups . . .’ ” Food & Wine. 2006, p. 267; “The Best Block Party.” New Hampshire Business Review. June 8, 2007; “In Manhattan, it’s good when it’s the pits.” Restaurant Hospitality. July 2006, p. 30; Walljasper, Jay, et al. The Great Neighborhood Book: A Do-It-Yourself Guide to Placemaking. Gabriola Island, B.C.: New Society Publishing, 2007; “Block Parties for Service Men Are Way to Boost Morale.” Washington Post. September 26, 1941; Weidemann, Liz. “Poway: $4.2 million later, Poway to hold block party.” San Diego Business Journal. June 18, 2007; Wood, Trina. “Campus builds a community bridge.” University Communications. October 12, 2007. http://www.dateline.ucdavis.edu /dl_detail.lasso?id=9781.
Suzanne C. Weltman
Book Clubs In the United States, the first book clubs were formed in the early 1700s, and literary discussion groups date back even further in Europe. American
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book clubs originally were organized by individuals who wanted private printings of books and essays written by members of the group. One such group, which was formed in 1726 and is called The Junto, claims Benjamin Franklin among its founding members. The Junto was the basis for the first lending library, the Philadelphia Library, which later became the library at the University of Pennsylvania. Most book clubs do not have such an auspicious background and have left obscure historical footprints. Despite this fact, organized discussion groups have played a significant role in the social history of the United States. Two groups founded in 1868—The New England Woman’s Club and New York’s Sorosis—were major, documented organizations created in response to women’s exclusion from fraternal and professional organizations. These discussion groups connected women to the broader world, offered an umbrella organization under which new chapters were created, and provided a model upon which the modern women’s book club was built. In the early twentieth century, the living rooms, porches, and gardens where women met to talk about books became a safe place to discuss social issues. At the time, college was not an option for many women and these groups offered access to learning. The awareness and agitation created from the discussions initiated some of the first steps toward political reform and social activism on a variety of topics, including abolition and women’s suffrage. The legacy of social activism deepened over the years and played a significant role in cultural changes, particularly in the women’s rights movement. The consciousness-raising groups of the 1960s and 1970s were outcrops of these original clubs. As other outlets for women’s social activism evolved, reading groups became less concerned with political issues. New groups did not feel the same social mandate toward affecting change. In the 1980s book clubs became wildly popular, and with the increase in popularity the structure of clubs changed. The meetings became less formal and more social. In most modern groups no one is responsible for writing up formal notes. Meeting preparation, if any exists at all, usually consists of little more than a brief author biography and a few possible discussion questions. One event that cannot be overlooked in discussing the recent boom in the number of book groups was the formation of Oprah’s Book Club in 1996. Originally dismissed by critics and the literary elite, Oprah seems to have won over even the toughest pundits. A passionate reader and book lover, Oprah selects each title herself and has resisted the publishing industries’ overtures to market to her readers. Toni Morrison, Nobel-prize winning writer and author of several Oprah’s Book Club selections, credits Oprah with giving the novel back its life of being talked about. The book club “meets” on air once a month with Oprah, the author, and several viewers who are selected by writing to the show and requesting the chance to participate in the discussion. The shows
Book Clubs are usually taped at Oprah’s house and provide viewers with a conversation, as well as a glimpse into a book-club meeting: the table is covered with linen, china, and crystal; the food is elegant and looks delicious; and the location is serene and lush. Oprah models how to talk about books as well as how to host a book club. Book clubs are formed at the grass-root level through informal networks. Groups depend on word-of-mouth to recruit participants and have performed limited outreach to gain new members. This is beginning to change as Internet message boards and chat forums gain mainstream users. New groups are easy to form—it is as simple as asking a few friends and colleagues to get together to discuss a book, picking a time and a location, and creating a setting where people feel comfortable to talk. Once a few dedicated participants become involved, it is easy to increase membership by asking new people to join. Surrounded by technology meant to support connections, such as cell phones, e-mail, and instant messaging, it is harder than ever before to keep up face-to-face relationships. This is part of the reason why many women active in book clubs feel that the in-person conversation is as important—if not more important—than reading the book. Book clubs meet on a regular basis, with each group forming its own method for selecting the date. A rule, such as meeting on the first Wednesday of the month or any day in the third week of the month, helps to keep the meetings consistent. It is also good to have a regular time of day in place. Establishing regular meeting times helps members avoid scheduling other commitments at the same time. Every book club must have a book to discuss for each meeting. Always selected in advance, the book can be picked in a number of ways, including choosing books that some members have already read; forming a list of potential books and having individuals read them to see if they are right for the group; selecting books that have won awards or are on best-seller lists; identifying a genre, author, or theme; or letting members take turns picking a book. Enough time has to be allotted between meetings to purchase and read the book. If a particularly long work is chosen, it may be a good idea to plan two sessions for the discussion or allow extra time between meetings. Some groups have a list of books prepared a few months in advance so members can schedule their reading. Sometimes the best discussions are not about the books that everyone loved. The debate about why members feel the way that they do is likely to stimulate talk about the writing style, plot, themes, and characters. Most often book groups rotate their meetings to the homes of different members, but groups can also arrange to meet in a local bar, restaurant, or community hall. The food and beverages vary depending on the time of the meeting and the group’s preferences, but a little something should always be served. Commonly, the host will offer a spread of light snacks and appetizers such as dips with vegetables and pita wedges, cheese and crackers,
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nuts, chips, mixed olives, and cold cuts. Wine is usually served, but nonalcoholic beverages should also be available. Some groups try to incorporate the theme of the book being discussed into the food served. If particular dishes are mentioned in the story, this can be simply a matter of recreating those dishes. If there isn’t any specific food mentioned, tying the book to the menu may involve selecting food from the region where the book is set or picking dishes indicative of the time period of the story. Whatever the host decides to serve, the important thing is to create a comfortable setting that will encourage discussion of the book. With good food and wine, friends, and lively conversation, there is really nothing to stop a book-club meeting from becoming a favorite way to socialize and entertain. Further Reading: Farr, Cecilia Konchor. Reading Oprah: How Oprah’s Book Club Changed the Way America Reads. Albany: State University of New York Press, 2005; Long, Elizabeth. Book Clubs: Women and the Uses of Reading in Everyday Life. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 2003; Rooney, Kathleen. Reading With Oprah: The Book Club That Changed America. Fayetteville: The University of Arkansas Press, 2005.
Erin G. Marrazzo
Books on Entertaining and Dining, History of “Man, it has been said, is a dining animal,” according to Isabella Beeton, the English author of The Book of Household Management, which was first published in 1861. Dining and entertaining occur for numerous reasons. Each host or hostess, town or principality has motives and reasons for opulent displays of food. At just about any time throughout history, banquets and feasts took place for many of the following reasons: raw displays of power and political domination; public relations; appeasement of the gods; cementing of social connections; celebration of good harvests; escape from everyday life, for example, saints’ days; sheer pleasure; and major life passages such as weddings, funerals, and the birth of children. With few exceptions, the people who held these opulent feasts and banquets throughout history were the elite of every society in which they occurred. They possessed the wealth and manpower, in the form of slaves or servants, to create a “court” or “palace” cuisine. Written accounts from many world cultures indicate that banquet-givers generally fall into the following categories: royalty, nobility, ecclesiastical dignitaries, politicians, and, later, wealthy merchants and traders. Thus these people were the audience for many of the earliest books on dining and entertaining, who used the books
Books on Entertaining and Dining, History of to instruct their armies of cooks on how to prepare food and carry out plans for extravaganzas of all sorts. Later, particularly in the nineteenth century, as women became more literate, and social and economic changes resulted in fewer household servants, books on dining and entertaining shifted to a focus on instructing women in the niceties of dining and entertaining on both grand and small scales. The first “works” on entertaining and dining were actually nothing more than words passed down from one cook to another. The oral tradition has held sway in the cooking world for most of history; not until the late nineteenth century or later did people begin to rely more on the written word than on word of mouth for cooking information. The earliest banquet-giver for whom a written record exists was Ashurnasirpal II (883–859 B.C.), in Assyria, who feted almost 70,000 people over a 10-day period. The menu was engraved on a sandstone block. The ancient Middle East witnessed a multitude of banquets like that of Ashurnasirpal II. Athenaeus’s fourth-century work, Deipnosophists, “The Learned Banquet,” was printed in Europe in 1514, and indicated that banqueting was common in Ancient Greece. The Greek philosopher Plato (c. 427–347 B.C.), in his Symposium, narrates the conversation at a banquet replete with drinking. He downplays the importance of food and cooking, stating that cooking is not an art; yet setting the Symposium at a banquet indicates clearly that banqueting was an important part of ancient Greek culture. The Greeks in turn influenced the Romans. Marcus Gavius Apicius was a Roman gourmet and epicure living around the first century A.D. Apicius, as he is often referred to, compiled two of the oldest and best preserved cookbooks, De Re Coquinaria (“The Art of Cooking”), also known as Artis Magiricae Libre X, and De condituris, which treated the preparation of sauces. De Re Coquinaria became available in printed form in Europe in 1498 and was translated for the first time into English in 1926 by Joseph Dommers Vehling. In his Natural History (X.133), Pliny said of him, “Apicius, the most gluttonous gorger of all spendthrifts, established the view that the flamingo’s tongue has a specially fine flavor.” Arab cookbook authors, influenced by both the Greeks and the Persians, produced some of the earliest treatises on cooking and entertaining; the intended audiences for these early cookbooks were princes and caliphs. In A.D. 377, Ibn al-Nadim mentioned a number of early Arab cookery books in his Fihrist, but all have been lost. Mas’u¯dõ¯, in his Murõ¯ j al-dhahab, mentions his own lost book—Akhba¯ r al-zama¯ n, which discusses the perfect gentleman and how to behave. He describes the book as “a sketch of culinary art indispensable to any man who shares his table.” In A.D. 400, Ibn Miskawayh, librarian and Buyid minister, penned a cookbook, indicating that high officials tended to involve themselves heavily in matters of food and drink. In Asia, the Mughals of India also produced handbooks for their ruling classes. Ain-I-Akbari, a manual similar to Machiavelli’s The Prince, contains
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a chapter devoted to recipes. China’s Emperor T’ang of Shang Dynasty (sixteenth to eleventh century B.C.) appointed his chef, Yi Yin, as prime minister. Yin wrote the Annals of Master Lü, where he classified foodstuffs and applied flavoring techniques to them. Another important culinary work in China was Li chi, from the Chou period (1050–256 B.C.), containing information about how to behave at banquets, how to eat, and how to serve. The Important Things to Know About Eating and Drinking, by Huou, Kublai Khan’s (A.D. 1215–1294) master chef, focused on soups and included information pertaining to household management. In Japan, families like the Konoe, who served as sessho (regent) and kanpaku (chief adviser) to the emperor, kept manuscript cookbooks in the form of scrolls that date back around one thousand years. These scrolls still have not been translated into English. Although China and the Middle East produced a number of the earliest works touting the protocol of dining and entertaining for powerful people, Europe began to catch up with production of books with the invention of the Gutenberg printing press and moveable type. The first German cookbook, Küchenmeisterey, was published in 1485 in pamphlet form in Nuremberg. In what is now modern Italy, food and dining were considered to be worthy of recording, and some of the best records on dining emanate from that area. An early Italian manuscript cookbook by Maestro Martino, Libro de arte coquinaria, written in 1425, set the tone for many of the books that followed, in particular for De Honesta Voluptate, by Vatican librarian Bartolomeo Sacchi di Piadena, called Platina. His 1475 work contains sections on what to eat for various courses—his prescription for the third course: “A bit of very hard cheese is thought to seal the stomach and stop vapors from seeking the head and brain.” He also advised ending a meal with fruit and nuts, a very modern concept. Platina took approximately 250 recipes from Maestro Martino, amply illustrating a common trend that lasted for centuries, that of borrowing recipes. Giovanni de’Rosselli also pirated recipes from Martino when he published his Epulario in 1516. Epulario went through 26 editions, the last being published in Venice in 1682. An anonymous Italian manuscript cookbook dating to the end of the fifteenth century, Cuoco Napoltetano (The Neapolitan Recipe Collection), contains a number of opulent banquet menus. An example of the recipe collections, or “courtly dining guides,” produced for the managers of large noble, royal, and ecclesiastical households, The Neapolitan Recipe Collection is representative of many of the books produced by such writers as Cesare Evitascandalo (Dialogo del mastro di casa, 1598), Vincenzo Cervio (Trinciante, 1593), Antonio Frugoli (Practica e Scalcaria, 1638), Vittorio Lancelotti (Lo Scalco Prattico, 1627), Giovan Battista Rossetti (Dello Scalco, 1584), and Cristoforo da Messisbugo (Banchetti, composizioni di vivande et apparecchio generale, 1549). Messisbugo lists all the equipment and other non-food necessities to plan and carry out a large banquet for a noble house, based on Messisbugo’s experience as the steward for the Dukes of Este.
Books on Entertaining and Dining, History of The work of Bartolomeo Scappi, the1570 Opera di M. B. Scappi: Cuoco secreto di Pappa Pio Quinto (Private Cook of Pope Pius V), included the first printed picture of a fork. Scappi worked as a cook for Pope Pius V and included a sumptuous banquet served in four courses, with over 47 different dishes. Scappi’s work also included menus for a full year. In addition to advice on banquets, many of these books also linked dining with health and nutrition, a trend that grew particularly strong during the Renaissance. In England, manuscripts on dining for the royal courts and noble households first appeared with the oldest English cookbook, A Forme of Cury, written by Richard II’s master cooks in 1390 on a scroll that rolled up. This astonishing work mentions many spices and other exotic foodstuffs like whales, seals, and herons. The authors of Cury added that the book had the “approval and consent of the masters of medicine and of philosophy that dwelt in his (Richard II’s) court.” The first printed English cookbook, A Noble Boke of Festes Royalle and Cokery: A Boke for a Pryncis Housholde or any other Estates, appeared in 1500. Others followed; their audience were the noble class wealthy enough to afford them and read them. Boke on Kervynge de Wynken de Worde, about carving meat for banquets for noble feasts, was published in 1508. Thomas Dawson’s The Good Huswifes Jewell (1585) was written not just for nobility planning banquets but for gentlewomen in charge of day-to-day household tasks. One such housewife might have been Elinor Fettiplace, author of Elinor Fettiplace’s Receipt Book: Elizabethan Country House Cooking, written in 1604, but not published until 1986. Fettiplace’s book presents a valuable picture of life during a time of political upheaval. And Gervase Markham, in his The English Hus-wife from 1615, inserts a chapter on banqueting, titled “Banqueting and made dishes with other conceits and secrets.” Hannah Wooley, in 1670, published the first successful cookbook written by a woman, The Queen-Like Closet. The French produced similar books on dining and entertaining, beginning with Guillaume Tirel dit Taillevent’s Le Viandier (fourteenth century); he served as master cook for Charles V and Charles VI. The Ménagier de Paris was written over a two-year period (1392–1394) by a husband of somewhat advanced age for his young, inexperienced wife to assist her in her housekeeping as the mistress of a large, wealthy household. Traces of the recipes in Le Viandier and the Ménagier de Paris can be found in numerous later cookbooks, illustrating the spread of recipes and the massive pilfering of ideas that occurred. In his Memoirs, Olivier de la Marche—maître d’hotel (steward) and captain of the guards for Philip the Good and Charles the Bold, Dukes of Burgundy—recounts how he planned the Feast of the Pheasant in 1454 and Charles’s wedding feast for his marriage to Margaret of York in 1468. One of the most influential French courtly dining guides was kitchen steward Pierre François de la Varenne’s Le Cuisiner François (The French Cook), published in 1651 and dedicated to his patron, the Marquis d’Uxelles,
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followed by numerous others, including François Massialot’s Le Cuisinier roial et bourgeois (1691), which was the first cookbook known to arrange recipes alphabetically. La Varenne’s work appears to be the first cookbook to record a number of techniques that made French cooking the standard in Europe and elsewhere for centuries to come. Early British authors borrowed heavily from the French. Many of the early French books were translated into English, such as Massialot’s Le Cuisinier roial et bourgeois as The Court and Country Cook (1702) and a version of La Varenne’s Le Cuisiner François as The French Cook (1653). And many English authors also wrote books with a noble audience in mind. Robert May’s The Accomplisht Cook, or the Art and Mystery of Cookery (1660), possibly the most important cookbook of its time, brought French influences into the English cooking repertoire. May cooked for many noble British families and came from a family of cooks. William Rabisha, who wrote The Whole Body of Cookery Dissected (1682), came from a similar professional background. Both May’s and Rabisha’s books went through several editions and influenced other authors of the time. Other authors and works of note include Patrick Lamb’s Royal Cookery; or, the Complete Court Cook (1710), Robert Smith’s Court Cookery (1723), and Charles Carter’s The Complete Practical Cook (1730). Well-known French pre-revolutionary author François Marin, author of Les Dons de Comus (1739), included sections aimed at the bourgeoisie. His contemporary Menon wrote La science du maître d’hotel, cuisinier (The Science of the Steward, Cook; 1749) and La science du maître d’hotel, confiseur (The Science of the Steward, Pastry Cook; 1750), both aimed at large households. In the American colonies, households relied on dining and entertaining books of British and French origin. American cooks consulted books by English female authors like Eliza Smith’s The Compleat Housewife (1727), Elizabeth Raffald’s The Experienced English Housekeeper (1769), and Hannah Glasse’s The Art of Cookery Made Plain and Easy (1747). At the end of the eighteenth century, men on both sides of the Atlantic began frequenting taverns and banqueting clubs in large numbers, and entertaining their fellows outside of the home. Several chefs at these clubs published their recipes, including John Farley, who wrote The London Art of Cookery (1783). With the ripping apart of social structures caused by the American Revolution of 1776 and the French Revolution of 1789, dining and entertaining books took on a different tone. In the case of English books (and subsequent American), courtly cooking took a backseat to a more practical approach, that of the country housewife. Bridging the books written for the aristocracy and the bourgeoisie were the highly influential books by Antonin Carême, who cooked for Napoleon, the Romanovs, the Rothschilds, Rossini, and King George IV. Carême’s works include L’art de la cuisine française au dix-neuvième siècle (The Art of French Cooking in the Nineteenth Century; 1833); Le pâtissier royal parisien ( The Royal Parisian Pastry Maker; 1815); Le maitre d’hotel
Books on Entertaining and Dining, History of français: ouvrage contenant un traité des menus servis a Paris, a Saint-Pétersburg, a Londres et a Vienne ( The French Steward . . . ; 1822); Carême’s works influenced generations of chefs. French author Jean-Anthèlme BrillatSavarin wrote part of his idiosyncratic and unique book, The Physiology of Taste, in the new United States after he fled France during the Reign of Terror. Brillat-Savarin’s book had the flavor of some of the courtly handbooks favored by writers of the courtly dining manuals, but it had a practical side as well. English authors Eliza Acton and Isabella Beeton wrote two of the most influential books of the nineteenth century. Acton’s Modern Cookery for Private Families (1845) listed ingredients and provided cooking times for the housewife who had no experienced cook to rely upon. Greatly influenced by Acton’s book, Beeton’s The Book of Household Management (1861) contained detailed chapters on entertaining and table settings. Mrs. Beeton assumed the presence of servants in the households of her readers. She included diagrams of where to place specific menu items on the table served à la russe (in the Russian manner). Books also appeared for people with lower incomes and only one servant. Some of the most popular of these books were by Charles Francatelli, a student of Carême’s and chief cook to Queen Victoria. His first book, The Modern Cook (1846) went through 29 editions. A later book, The Cook’s Guide and Housekeeper’s & Butler’s Assistant (1861), provided information for managers of nearly any household, including information for entertaining. Alexis Soyer, a French celebrity chef, also wrote A Shilling Cookery Book for the People (1855), geared towards people of modest means. In the United States in the nineteenth century, authors began writing more for the housewife than for the professional cook in a large household. Men took on the role of chef in hotel kitchens, while women held dinner parties in the home. Books on dining and entertaining focused on smaller home-based parties and dinners. The Virginia Housewife (1824) by American cookbook author Mary Randolph, a relative of Thomas Jefferson’s, went through many printings and proved to be practical, and at the same time, replete with dishes that could be cooked and served by servants. What followed Mrs. Randolph’s work were several trends in dining and entertaining, impacted by the Industrial Revolution and the Civil War. Consequently, books on entertaining and on dining began to reflect the demographic makeup of American society. While relatively few books specifically related to entertaining were published in the nineteenth century, by the turn of the twentieth century and after the First World War, books on entertaining skyrocketed in number, particularly during the 1950s and afterwards. Early examples of this trend include Mary F. Henderson’s Practical Cooking and Dinner Giving: A Treatise Containing Practical Instructions in Cooking; in the Combination and Serving of Dishes; and in the Fashionable Modes of Entertaining at Breakfast, Lunch, and Dinner (1895) and The Party Book, by Winnifred Shaw Fales and Mary Harrod Northend (c. 1912).
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Women’s magazines published recipes in their pages and books on entertaining, as attested by The New Hospitality: Correct Table Service for Breakfasts, Luncheons, Teas, Dinners, Suppers (1924), written by Lillian Purdy Goldsborough for McCall’s. Themed parties became popular as well and books like Putnam’s Book of Parties (1927), by Marguerite Aspinwall, provided women with ideas. Kitchen gadget and processed-food manufacturers produced booklets meant to guide housewives, who were increasingly servantless and more literate. After World War II, the movement toward servantless households increased considerably and well-known cookbook authors like James Beard wrote about entertaining, as his Hors d’Oeuvres and Canapés (1940) and James Beard’s Menus for Entertaining (1965) attest. Julia Child bounded in with her Mastering the Art of French Cooking (volume I in 1961, volume II in 1970); her work made it possible for people to cook good French food at home. Martha Stewart, starting with the book Entertaining (1982), blazed the way for authors like Sheila Lukins and Julie Russo and their Silver Palate Good Times Cookbook (1984), as well as the Barefoot Contessa, Ina Gaskin, and her Barefoot Contessa Parties! (2001). As the twenty first century opened, entertaining books focused on quick and easy dishes and menus, using many processed convenience foods as well as fresh foods from increasingly popular farmers markets. Examples are Rachael Ray’s Open House Cookbook: Over 200 Recipes for Easy Entertaining (2006) and Marian Burros’s The New Elegant But Easy Cookbook (2003). Entertaining outdoors and grilling rose in popularity, generating cookbooks like Cheryl and Bill Jamison’s The Big Book of Outdoor Cooking and Entertaining: Spirited Recipes and Expert Tips for Barbecuing, Charcoal and Gas Grilling, Rotisserie Roasting, Smoking, Deep-Frying, and Making Merry (2006). And the General Mills icon Betty Crocker still spoke with authority, as in Betty Crocker’s Entertaining Basics: Learning to Entertain with Confidence (2001). Further Reading: Albala, Ken. The Banquet: Dining in the Great Courts of Late Renaissance Europe. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2007; Albala, Ken. Eating Right in the Renaissance. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2002; Chang, K. C. Food in Chinese Culture: Anthropological and Historical Perspectives. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1977; Fisher, Carol. The American Cookbook: A History. Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Company, 2006; Hunter, Lynette. “Proliferating Publications: the Progress of Victorian Cookery Literature.” In Wilson, C. Anne, ed. Eating with the Victorians. Stroud, Gloucestershire: Sutton Publishing, 2004, p. 50–67; Masudi, Les Prairies d’or, Paris, 1861–1877, vol. VIII, p. 103–4. M’Abd al-Hamid. Cairo, n.d., Vol. IV, p. 163; Mennell, Stephen. All Manners of Food: Eating and Taste in England and France from the Middle Ages to the Present. New York: Basil Blackwell, 1985; Pennell, Elizabeth Robins, and Bruce Rogers. My Cookery Books. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin and Co., 1903; Quayle, Eric. Old Cook Books: An Illustrated History. New York: E. P. Dutton, 1978; Strong, Roy. Feast: A History of Grand Eating. Orlando, FL: Harcourt, 2002; Symons, Michael. A History of Cooks and Cooking. Urbana: University of Illinois
Brazil Press, 2000; Thirsk, Joan. “The Food Scene Captured in Print, 1500–50.” In Food in Early Modern England: Phases, Fads, Fashions 1500–1760. London: Hambledon Continuum, 2007, pp. 11–26.
Cynthia D. Bertelsen
Brazil Brazil stands out among the South American countries both for its size, as it occupies half of the continent, and for having gained its independence without suffering any of the bloody wars experienced by the other South American Spanish-speaking countries. Many people associate Brazil’s history with savage cannibalistic tribes and with the traditional celebration of carnival. Many are unaware of the interesting progressive history of Brazilian hospitality, ranging from the natives’ welcoming ways to the highly refined receptions in the days of the empire. Probably based on the chronicles written by the Europeans after their first encounters with the native population starting in 1500, the country’s first inhabitants developed a reputation as cannibals. This is especially due to a book written by a German adventurer called Hans Staden, who recounted the story of being held captive by the Tupinamba tribe. The book was originally entitled True Story and Description of a Country of Wild, Naked, Grim, Man-Eating People in the New World, America and published in 1557. Upon its first publication, the book was translated into Latin, Dutch, English, Italian, and Spanish, with new editions being published ever since. Such widespread popularity can be attributed to the interesting topic the book addresses and its simple enjoyable style. Brazil’s association with carnival can be attributed to the more than century-long development of the tourism industry, which has devoted itself to spreading the attractive peculiarities of this festival. These two pictures— practicing cannibalism and celebrating carnival—have hidden very important aspects of Brazilian social life, which have been consigned to only a few experts. THE ENCOUNTER OF EUROPEANS AND INDIGENOUS PEOPLES Cannibalistic practices were certainly usual among the inhabitants of the Brazilian coastal zones reached by the Europeans in the sixteenth century, but it is also a fact that the victims of such practices were those considered to be enemies. French Calvinist minister John Lerius (Jean de Léry), who visited Brazil in 1557 and 1558, wrote a detailed travelog, in which there is a chapter on the Tupinamba tribe’s hospitality. Léry considered their way to welcome and treat guests particularly interesting. In the first encounter the natives began by asking Léry his name, eliciting no response as he did not understand their language. Subsequently, one of the natives
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took off Léry’s hat and put it on himself, while another one did the same with his sword, and another one with his cape—all of which was done while screaming and running all around the village. This situation disturbed and frightened the guest until the accompanying interpreter explained that such attitude was customary when foreigners arrived. The interpreter confirmed this after a while when Léry was given back all his possessions. The Mussucá, the head of the family, was chosen as a host and once Léry arrived at the Mussucá’s house, Léry had to settle himself into a hammock and remain silent for some time. The native women immediately approached the hammock and sat around the guest on the floor; then they covered their faces with their hands and started crying and saying, “You worked so hard to come to see us! He’s good, he’s brave.” As he was European, they would add, “you brought us very nice things we don’t have here.” The expected reaction to this strange tearful welcome was to also be tearful or at least pretending to be so by emitting profound sighs. After all these odd greetings, the head of the family, who, during this time, had remained quiet in a corner of the house making arrows, would ask the guest, “Did you arrive? . . . How are you?,” which, with the help of the interpreter, had to be answered by saying, “I arrived.” Immediately afterwards, the host asked him if he wanted to eat, and in the case of an affirmative answer, he would order the preparation of tapioca meal served to him in a clay pot as well as some meat, poultry, or fish, and other delicacies. This was placed on the floor, as tables and chairs were not part of their furniture. The guest would be presented with cauin—a fermented beverage prepared with water and tapioca. After eating, drinking and resting or sleeping in their homes, the guest should present the native males with knives or scissors, the women with combs and mirrors, and the children with hooks. These curious rules governing etiquette had to be carried out ceremoniously. It is also known that the Portuguese arriving on the Brazilian coasts in 1500 as part of Pedro Alvares Cabral’s expedition established a friendly relationship with the same native tribe. In one of the first gestures of hospitality, the Cabral expedition invited the natives to the Nao Capitana and offered them a meal of wheat bread, boiled fish, comfits, pies, honey, and figs in syrup. The Portuguese made the natives sit on chairs around a table to have this meal, which surprised the natives, who were used to eating on the floor and who, furthermore, rejected these delicacies initially offered. Some days afterwards, a new invitation was presented, and this time the guests ate the offered food. And this was the beginning of hospitality on Brazilian lands. FAZENDEIROS’S MEETINGS In the last decades of the sixteenth century the Portuguese Captaincies had already settled all along the Brazilian coasts. The economic basis of such a colonization process was the exploitation of sugar cane in fazendas, or plantations, where sugar mills were built to process sugar cane and obtain sugar (not very refined) and eau-de-vie. At the beginning, the natives
Brazil were the work force of these establishments, though not for long, as they were soon replaced by the slaves brought from Africa, who were thought to have greater physical resistance, thereby theoretically allowing for higher productivity. Some cities had already been founded, but the largest groups of people were in the plantations. This is where elite social life mainly took place, guided by the landowners or senhores de engenho. There is an early testimony from a resident of Pernambuco in 1584 saying that the owners of these farms loved banquets and that 10 or 12 of them would usually meet in one of the plantations to eat and to drink many different wines brought from Portugal. These colonists’ feasts would go on until the nineteenth century. Travelers passing by the property could have a rest and cool themselves down, as they were usually offered food and lodging. These houses at the plantations could even be considered inn-like as they warmly welcomed travelers. Long conversations would take place, which kept the residents informed of the latest news and events that had occurred in the surroundings, in the cities, and in far-off places. Moreover, when there was a religious festivity, birthday, or wedding, big parties were thrown, to which neighboring landowners and visiting travelers were invited. The weddings could go on for a whole week, and so cows, pigs, and turkeys were slaughtered, while pies, puddings, and varied desserts were prepared in the kitchen. Music and dance would provide entertainment at such celebrations—not only European dances, but also samba or dances of African origin. The female cooks of the sugar mill estates, mainly Africans, were in charge of the preparation of the dishes to be served, which were the result
Illustration of a sugar mill from Voyage pittoresque et historique au Bresil. Jean Baptiste Debret, 1835. Giraudon/Art Resource, NY.
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of the mixture, adaptation, or appropriation of ingredients and recipes from the Europeans and the natives, with some African contributions. Wheat bread was virtually replaced by farinha (tapioca flour), while beans, game (venison, peccary, and armadillo, among others) and tropical fruits (papaya, guava, avocado, pineapple, etc.) were incorporated into the landowners’ cuisine. The main cooking methods were boiling and frying. The latter was carried out with palm oil or dendé, a word that came to mean “tasty or very prized thing.” It was during this colonial period when the Brazilian repertoire of traditional cuisine took form. The manners observed at the table by the plantation owners were still very primitive: they used knives and spoons, but no forks, as they commonly used their fingers to bring food into their mouths— similar to what their European contemporaries did. Urban etiquette, as it was known afterwards, began to be incorporated in the eighteenth century, especially in the cities and with the arrival of the viceroys sent by the Portuguese Crown. It was customary that only the men would sit at the table and that the women and the children would be seated to one side and commonly on the floor. However, housewives gradually began to be accepted at meals when there were guests, especially during the eighteenth century. The slaves working at the sugar mills mainly lived on tapioca flour or cornmeal, depending on Brazil’s geographical zone—the former in the north and the latter in the center and the south. They would also eat some meat or bacon once a week or some game or fish when possible, and in some places salted fish. The main beverage was garapa, made with water and honey from sugar cane. This simple diet was complemented with the fruit that could be found locally, mainly bananas. Despite their servant status, the Africans organized their own small parties when they had the time, in which they danced and sang to the rhythm of the drums and other instruments. THE PORTUGUESE MONARCHY MOVES TO BRAZIL As a result of Napoléon’s threats and invasions to the Iberian Peninsula, the royal Portuguese Braganza family, protected by England, decided to move to its main South American colony. In 1807 Maria I and João VI arrived in the New World and transferred their court to Rio de Janeiro, marking the beginning of Brazil’s political separation. During their reign the colony enjoyed extraordinary prosperity. In 1821, King João VI decided to return to Portugal, leaving his son Pedro I as regent in Brazil. On September 7, 1822, with the support of the colonists, Pedro I declared Brazil’s Independence—remembered as the day of the Grito do Ipiranga. Brazil’s imperial period lasted from 1822 until 1889 with the abdication of Emperor Pedro II. Such a long-lasting monarchic period brought about significant changes, especially within the elites living in the cities. As expected, the lifestyle of monarchs and emperors in the court incorporated European aristocratic patterns, which gave rise to the numerous nobility that transformed the habits of social relationships. From 1808 and
Brazil on, painters, sculptors, musicians, architects, scientists, but also chief waiters, cooks, and confectioners started to travel from Europe to Brazil, many of them hired by the crown. In Rio de Janeiro, the capital city, the monarchs and the nobility began to build big residences endowed with spacious kitchens, halls equipped with luxurious furniture, china dinner services, glassware and silverware brought from Europe. This gave rise to a sort of competition among aristocrats and families with great economic power, who flaunted their wealth when socializing. Something similar occurred inland, when the Emperor Pedro II promoted the creation of a small summer city 37 miles north of Rio de Janeiro in the Serra da Estrela valley, which had a very cool climate. In 1857 the monarch named this city Petrópolis (city of Peter) and, because that is where he spent the hot summer days, he decided to have a palace built there. Following his lead, some of his courtiers also built beautiful villas there. This new city became the center of summer social life; parties were held which involved dancing, listening to music, and enjoying banquets. Although following in the tradition of European courts, Emporer Pedro II’s court manners were not always as regal as one might expect, as least according to Maximilian of Austria, who, during his visit to Brazil in 1860, shortly before he was named Emperor of Mexico, had the opportunity to get to know the customs of Pedro II. In a letter sent from Rio de Janeiro, Maximilian said he had been shocked when he saw that the Brazilian monarch had no qualms about attending certain commoner parties and mixing with his most humble subjects on such occasions. This shows a clear difference between the attitudes of these two monarchs toward the people: the Brazilian establishing a democratic relationship and the Austrian keeping an aristocratic distance. In 1840, during the empire days, the cookbook O Cozinheiro Imperial was published in Rio de Janeiro—a book that released subsequent editions even afterwards, in the Republican times. This first sample of the Brazilian gastronomic literature included not only a large number of recipes but also an appendix on table manners. The anonymous author—concealing his or her identity through the initials R.C.M.—describes very well in the foreword of the book the importance of this art and its state in Brazil at that time: “From the innumerable and indispensable arts that are useful to the life of civilized human beings, there is one that has advanced by leaps and bounds in a few years. This art, culinary science, whose great influence at the same time contributes to the healthy state of our body, strengthens social bonds, multiplies the number of relationships, boosts trade and industry, eases habits, and joins people in festive and brotherly gatherings. . . . The most industrialized and civilized nations constantly promote this noble science and make its mysteries appear in numerous publications that build up the manual of cuisine artists. Brazil lacked a treaty that specifically dealt with culinary arts. With merely one or two compilations published in Portugal many years ago, which were no longer satisfactory for the lack of variety in the dishes and necessary explanations, the number of recipes, all of which were very delayed in relation to the current state of sciences, such need for
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a culinary treaty was already felt by all” (R.C.M. v). The author goes on to say that Brazilian fish, poultry, and fruits have a great reputation for their variety, taste, and delicateness, including recipes with these ingredients. However, most of the recipes presented in the work have a European origin, and many others correspond to the French cooking style. The book also contains suggested menus for banquets, ranging from what is called a “Common banquet” to a “Model banquet to be presented to an important figure,” including “Special French-style banquets,” as well as banquets for those accompanying the invited figures, such as the cooking staff or the servants. The menus for important guests had to include at least 10 types of delicacies or iguarias, as was the case of special French-style banquets, for which it was suggested: potau-feu, chicken, hen and chick meat, rabbit, artichokes, truffles, ham, capers, and kids, followed by braised ducks, stewed tongue, and partridges; then, turkey, asparagus, calf’s head; and then other preparations finally followed by the choice of two desserts, including a liquid fudge called manjar blanco, cream tarts, curd cheese pies, pears, cherries, almonds, and a variety of cakes. They were real Pantagruelian proposals. It is possible to get an idea of the abundance of food suggested for these banquets by taking a look at the servant’s meals, which include six starters, six soup dishes, six roasted dishes, six pastry dishes, six sweet dishes, and six fruit dishes. Obviously, the idea was to emulate the customs of the European royal families. In big reunions there was not only food, but also music, interpreted by professionals that had been hired for that special occasion or by guests who stood out for playing certain musical instruments—especially the piano or violin—or who were outstanding singers. Poetry recitals were also performed, in which literary young people would present their creations. These were luxurious receptions where the main families competed among themselves, gaining regular practice. Some of them rose to fame for the refinement of conversation, music, and, of course, the contribution of culinary gifts. Native traders and those coming from England, France, and Germany who settled in Brazilian cities could supply a great variety of household goods that were particularly sought after by Brazil’s well-off inhabitants. The reigning families or those from the empire were therefore able to acquire or expressly order a luxurious set of household goods that included solid gold or silver sets of dishes, fine porcelain, and glasses made of expensive crystals. REPUBLICAN HOSPITALITY The establishment of the Republic in Brazil—known as “The Coffee Republic” due to the culture’s dominant role in the plantation activity—did not imply the disappearance of feasts or the interruption of literature being produced on gastronomic matters. The great politicians of this new period, as well as traders and plantation owners, did not stop imitating the sumptuousness of the empire, but it is a fact that more and more often their cuisine and that of many other Brazilians started to feature the typical meals that
Brazil had originated during colonial times. At the end of the nineteenth century, a cookbook entitled Cozinheiro Nacional was published in Rio de Janeiro by the H. Garnier house, with no mention of the author, although credited by scholars to Paulo Valle. This book—which is extremely difficult to find both in bookstores and libraries—emerges as a sort of antagonistic work compared to the one that had thus far been deemed representative of the Brazilian cuisine, namely the above-mentioned O Cozinheiro Imperial. The author of this new cookbook decided to start it with a foreword, the significance of which has not been appreciated by those who have studied the South American food history. As the work is so difficult to find, it is worth taking a look at these introductory lines, which build up a new declaration of independence, but this time in the culinary field: Incidentally, we will not servilely copy the cookbooks crawling in foreign bookstores and simply provide them with a national stamp resulting from the language in which we write; neither will we provide our work with a fake cover and literally translate word for word from other books that are found in the whole world, thereby choosing the unknown road of despicable plagiarism and destroying the importance we give to our work and the usefulness the reader is rightly expecting from it. Our duty is a different one; our objective is far more reaching than this; and by including the word “national” in the title of our work, we believed to be making a solemn commitment, namely presenting a cuisine that is Brazilian from all points of view. We will thus indicate the country’s methods used to prepare the meat from the numerous mammals that live all over its mountains and fields, birds that inhabit its diverse climates, fish that cross its rivers and seas, reptiles that slither under its vast verdant groves, and, finally, the innumerable vegetables and tubers that nature’s liberal and prodigal hand spontaneously scattered on its blessed soil. These mammals, birds, fish, reptiles, plants and tubers are totally different from the European ones in taste, appearance, form and virtue, and therefore are required to be prepared in certain ways.
The author then admits this is a difficult task and confesses his/her awareness that, despite the efforts made, the objective will remain far off and with the conviction that the way would be paved for other more learned authors who would follow this course with greater success. And the author goes on: It is time for this country to emancipate from the European tutelage, under which it has lived until the present; it is time for it to be described as nature provides, free and independent of foreign influences, giving account of its own ways to cook the countless products of its vast flora, the delicious and delicate meat from its quite varied fauna, putting an end to the anachronism of simply conforming to foreign books explaining preparations of substances that cannot be found in the country or that can only be acquired at very high costs . . . and so as we believe to be doing a great service to Brazil by publishing this work, we suppose we will also be doing it to other nations by making known a great number of delicious, healthy and revitalizing dishes that have been so far unknown, but that from now on
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will be public knowledge and thus adequately appreciated by the people. And just as Brazil has been and still is a customer of other countries, from which it has bought their food, it will now be able to provide them with the different products that this book will make known and which will provide them with health, robustness and a long life.
If you take a look at the index of the book in question, you will find numerous recipes that show the author’s stance: 16 recipes of tapir, including one in which it is lightly fried with hearts of palm, another one prepared with yam as a soup, another one as a steak, and another one as an ingredient of a moqueca (a stew seasoned with coriander, lemon, onion, coconut milk, palm oil, and pepper), among others; 7 recipes of capybara, with its meat ranging from roasted to stewed; 6 recipes of a rodent called cutía; 3 of lontra or nutria; 7 of macaco or monkey, with its meat ranging from roasted to braised with bananas; 12 of agouti or paca, including meatballs, as well as roasted, braised, and stewed dishes; 32 of queixato or peccary, in which its head, spareribs, sirloin, and legs are prepared using many different seasonings; 9 of prea—a kind of hare; 4 of coati; 4 of frog; 5 of cayman; 6 of tatú or armadillo; 26 of venison; 8 of macaw and parrot; and 5 of a freshwater fish called surubi. This is just a brief sample from the book of the repertoire of dishes that are made with ingredients that are native to Brazil. While this nationalist offering included particular dishes from the country, all in all it did not succeed in gaining authority in the urban cuisine. If we take a look at the whole work, we will see that the author had already anticipated this, as most recipes are of Portuguese-Brazilian or European origin. And this is understandable, because the book was actually read in the cities, where it was not easy at all to find the wild native animals proposed in the recipes. Moreover, among the menus suggested at the end of the book is the Almoço Brazileiro (Brazilian lunch), which recommends roasted sucking pig, mixed pickles (in English in the original), Nantes sardines, olives, salami slices, fried eggs, chicken fritters, fillet steak, roasted calf, refried hen meat, oranges, marmalade, and bread, among other things. The same happens with a Banquete Brazileiro (Brazilian banquet), despite the fact that it also includes dishes such as roasted monkeys, parrots with rice and salad, and hearts of palm pies. Finally, it is important to note that the book presents the feijoada—a bean-based stew that, since then, has invaded Brazilian cuisine becoming Brazil’s national dish. Of great importance is the fact that the European immigrants—mainly Germans, Austrians, Poles, Italians, and Arabs—who arrived in Brazil since the end of the nineteenth century, kept their customs for a long time, creating very exclusive communities whose members continued to celebrate traditions and to take part in the wine and dine customs from their homelands. For example, the Italian immigrants kept the custom of their filós or meetings, where acquaintances or neighbors came together to chat, play, and sing, as well as eat the typical Italian dishes. It was only during the last four decades of the twentieth century when the descendants of those immigrants mixed among themselves and with the rest of the Portuguese-
Bridal Shower Brazilian population, generating a high degree of homogenization, obviously fostered by urban development and the key role of mass media. Today, such a melting pot is considered to have resulted in the so-called friendly people, as Brazilians are labeled. Hospitality and generosity have become typical features of the Brazilian character. And it should be added that this tendency to treat others cordially does not necessarily imply that they show courtesy, but rather that they treat others in a down-to-earth way. Further Reading: Fernandes, Caloca. Viagem Gastronômica através do Brasil. São Paulo: Senac, 2004 (Bilingual Edition Portuguese–English); Freyre, Gilberto. Brazil: an Interpretation. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1945; Freyre, Gilberto. New World in the Tropics. The Culture of Modern Brazil. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1959; Freyre, Gilberto. The Masters and the Slaves: a Study in the Development of Brazilian Civilization. Translated by Samuel Putnam. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1946; Harding, Bertita. Southern Empire: Brazil. New York: Coward-McCann, 1948; Hernâni, Donato. Frutas Brasil Frutas. São Paulo: Empresa das Artes, 1991 (Bilingual edition Portuguese–English); Kidder, Daniel P., and James C. Fletcher. Brazil and the Brazilians portrayed in historical and descriptive sketches. Boston: Little, Brown, and Company, 1868; Léry, Jean de. “Extracts out of the Historie of John Lerius a Frenchman, Who Lived in Brasill with Mons. Villegagnon, Ann. 1557 and 58.” In Hakluytus Posthumus or Purchas His Pilgrimes. Samuel Purchas, ed., vol. XVI, 518–579. Glasgow: James MacLehose and Sons, 1905; Ribeiro, Darcy. The Brazilian People: The Formation and Meaning of Brazil. Translated by Gregory Rabassa. Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 2000; R.C.M. O Cozinheiro Imperial. 5th ed. Rio de Janeiro: Eduardo y Henrique Laemmert, 1866; Staden, Hans. The True History of His Captivity, 1557. Translated and edited by Malcom Letts. New York: Argonaut, 1929; Valle, Paulo. Cozinheiro Nacional. Rio de Janeiro: H. Garnier, n.d.
José Lovera Translated by Ainoa Larrauri
Bridal Shower According to legend, a young Dutch girl was in love with a poor young man who was so generous to others that he was unable to accumulate a fortune of his own. Because of this lack of wealth the girl’s father considered her lover a poor marriage prospect, and the girl’s father refused to give them a dowry, the financial stake promised to the groom upon marriage to a woman by her family. The dowry was intended to pay not only for her upkeep but also her future, should her husband pass. Dowries can include everything from money and land to cloth needed to make all the clothing the bride would wear during her life. According to the legend, sympathetic villagers decided to help the young couple by making up the dowry themselves. Each person gave a treasured possession of his own until they had contributed all the household goods a bride was expected to bring to her new home. Another story tells of a hostess who took a parasol and, after filling it with
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small gifts, opened the umbrella over the head of a bride thus, literally showering the bride with gifts. Historically, bridal showers are often associated with the dowry system, trousseaus, and hope chests. Men were responsible for providing a dwelling and furnishing it. In addition to the dowry, the young bride-to-bes were also expected to prepare for their upcoming marriages by acquiring the skills necessary to run a household, keep up a house, and raise a family. While daily chores and caring for siblings would have helped to prepare women for these duties, they were also expected to show a mastery over more artistic elements. For upper-class families who could afford tutors, the daughters learned how to read, speak foreign languages, and, in some cases, play musical instruments. All young women were expected to master a variety of types of needle and thread handwork to decorate aprons, linens, and so on. These items were put aside in storage, often in what is called a hope chest, until the wedding day, when the bride-to-be would be required to set up her own house. The French cousin to the hope chest is called the trousseau. Delicately embellished items would offer the first elements of decor to new homes and attest to the refinement of the women dwelling within. Brides brought bed and table linens in addition to quilts, handkerchiefs, and dresser scarves. Early nineteenth-century brides could have as many as 24 sets of the linens made from fine damask and embroidered with a monogram, whereas raw linen and crochet detail were more prevalent in earlier or less affluent times. Personal items, such as chemises, corset covers, nightgowns, petticoats, and so on, would also be stored in large quantities. Women were expected to bring enough clothes to last the first year of the marriage, and these greater amounts were possible due to widespread use of the sewing machine in the 1850s. They were also necessary due to the harsh cleansers and bleaches used to care for the items. Trousseau or hope chest items were set out on display for the women in attendance to admire at a quilting bee where the women assembled a quilt for the bride-to-be. In time, these bees became the wedding or bridal, shower, and sometimes the trousseau items were even chronicled in newspapers and department store windows for the general public depending on the renown of the couple. American pioneer women would gather to admire the items in a bride’s hope chest and participate in an activity called pounding, where each woman would bring a pound of butter, flour, sugar, or other necessary ingredient to set up a properly stocked kitchen. These pounding parties showered the bride with essential baking and cooking items necessary to provide the first meals in her new home. Guests would not give everyday gifts such as house linens for fear it would imply the bride was ill equipped with basic needs. The modern bridal shower began to emerge in the 1920s when department and other specialty stores set aside space for wedding items and named specific staff to attend to young brides. In time the gift registry was born and has since been adopted by department stores coast to coast, as well as home and building stores; shops specializing in gourmet
Bridal Shower cookware, kitchen- and bath-related items; and mass retailers such as Target and Kmart. With the advent of Internet shopping, couples can register for virtually anything if they work with retailers who suite their interests. This level of flexibility allows couples of all ages and circumstances to participate in this tradition. In addition to purchasing gifts there is also a tradition called wishing well. If these words are on the invitation, guests are encouraged to bring a smaller, inexpensive but useful gift, such as a can of cleanser, sponges, or batteries. These gifts do not have any tags on them but are placed in a mock wishing well container created by the hostess so these little useful items are given to the new bride to wish her well. These traditionally all-female parties serve light food and drinks while friends and family chat with the bride regarding her wedding plans, visit among themselves, and sometimes play party games or participate in contests arranged by the hostess of the shower. The bridal shower is usually hosted by the maid or matron of honor, but can also be hosted by a close friend or relative of the bride in someone’s home, a restaurant, or party room. It is possible for a bride to have multiple showers but it is important not to schedule the showers too close to the wedding itself, invite too many guests, or overwhelm guests with too many gift requests. Traditionally, showers include female relations, friends from school, work or social clubs, and neighbors, as well as anyone else the bride suggests to the shower hostess(es). Light menus include salads and tea sandwiches; refreshing punches, sparkling cocktails, coffee, and tea; and cake or some other desserts with fruit that would best reflect the theme of the event. Themes for showers can be tailored to fit the bride and her interests. Some popular themes include gardening, bed and bath, fine dining, gourmet cookery, and so on. Gifts from the registry, gift certificates, or items related to the theme are welcome. Hostesses can use these themes to devise short games that encourage guests to mix and meet one another. For many brides this is an excellent opportunity to chat with older relatives and the female members of her soon-to-be husband’s family. One important detail to note, near the end of the shower the groom should appear out of respect to those gathered and proffering gifts to help fill his home. This is an excellent opportunity for him to thank the guests for their kindness. He may also want to assist the bride with loading of the presents and transporting them from the hostess’s home. One activity called loading the bride has the bride-to-be in the center of a circle surrounded by married and widowed women. Each woman takes a turn offering marital advice and life lessons to help assist and prepare the woman as she goes from being a single woman to a married one. This intergenerational experience is one way in which female knowledge is handed down and the bride-to-be is welcomed to the sisterhood of being a wife. Historically brides were often young and uneducated about sexual relations. During queh queh, a custom originating in Guyana, troupes of drummers, dancers, and singers go to the bride’s home two or three days prior to the wedding with a big performance the night before that often includes
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the groom and his family and friends. During the early performance there is a great deal of information shared with the bride regarding sex and what to expect from her wedding night with some of the lyrics, dancing, and drumming rising to a fevered pitch while highlighting male sexual prowess, virility, and sensuality. In other cultures the brides are schooled in these lessons by aunts or other female relatives in anticipation of the wedding. But not all customs during this time prior to the wedding are joyous: there can be a great deal of emotion during this transitional period between single life and marriage. An ancient Chinese custom called a sisters gathering or sisters party offers a different emotional experience for the bride-to-be. During earlier times, marriage was an uncertain fate for young women who were preparing to leave their homes, friends, and everything they had ever known. The anxiety this produced was further complicated by the fact that the young bride would be living with the groom and his family, answering not only to her husband, but to her mother-in-law. The bride-to-be was allowed to express this range of emotions for three days prior to the wedding with kuge, weeping songs and marriage laments. These dirges were memorized or prompted by the sisters, her actual sisters, cousins, aunts, and friends, who gathered to hear her lamentations through crying, weeping, cursing, laughter, and so on, until the bride was spent and thus emotionally resigned to her new status. A new trend in America is to make the pre-wedding event one of mixed genders. The new co-ed wedding shower allows for couples to invite friends of all ages and interests to shower them with gifts. It also addresses the changing relationship between men and women as more couples celebrate their vows later in life and have close friends of both genders. This style of shower also address the need for finding gifts for brides and grooms who have already set up homes or are re-marrying and are now in the process of integrating household items. New registries have emerged to help couples save for homes, donate to charity, or purchase trips and more luxurious goods. Changing times are reflected in the gifts couples register for as their wants and needs differ from earlier brides and grooms. Further Reading: Adams, Michele, and Gia Russo. Wedding Showers: Ideas and Recipes for the Perfect Party. San Francisco: Chronicle Books, 2000; Arnold, Caroline, and Jane F. Kendall. How People Get Married. New York: Franklin Watts, 1987; Benedict, Ruth. Showers. Milwaukee, WI: Reiman Publications, 1980; Clark, Beverly. Bridal Showers: Special Touches and Unique Ideas for Throwing a Fabulous Shower. Carpinteria, CA: Wilshire Publications, 2000; Costa, Shu Shu. Wild Geese and Tea: An Asian American Wedding Planner. New York: Riverhead Books, 1997; Greco, Gail. Bridal Shower Handbook: The Complete Guide to Planning the Perfect Party. Greensboro, NC: Wallace-Homestead Book Company, 1988; Hopkins, Ginny. The Bride’s Book of Showers. New York: Grosset & Dunlap Publishers, 1973; Packham, Jo. Wedding Parties & Showers: Planning Memorable Celebrations. New York: Sterling Publishing Co., 1993; Sturgis, Ingrid. The Nubian Wedding Book: Words and Rituals to Celebrate and Plan an AfricanAmerican Wedding. New York: Crown Publishing, 1997; Wallace, Carol McD.
Brunch All Dressed in White: The Irresistible Rise of the American Wedding. New York: Penguin Books, 2004.
Alexa Reynolds Johnson
Brunch Brunch, a portmanteau of breakfast and lunch, is the quintessential American weekend overindulgence. Essentially both urban and urbane, brunch is characterized by the eating of several courses, mid-day, usually consumed with generous amounts of alcoholic beverages. With roots in working-class Germany, and origins in nineteenth-century New Orleans, brunch has become a distinct phenomenon of the English-speaking world; a reoccurring (non-holiday specific) meal as celebration, a celebration (of luxury) as meal. Brunch, as a term, first appeared in Punch magazine (August 1, 1896) and has been attributed to several sources: British university student slang; a writer by the name of Guy Beringer; and a flurry of in-vogue, post-hunt lunches enjoyed by upper class men. Punch, a satirical literary periodical, outlined the meal’s auspicious beginnings, “To be fashionable nowadays we must ‘brunch.’ ” Teasingly the article comments on the new high-fashion meals, “At Oxford . . . an important distinction was drawn. The combinationmeal, when nearer the usual breakfast hour, is ‘brunch,’ and, when nearer luncheon, is ‘blunch.’ ” According to Colin Spencer’s history of British cuisine, as the wealth of the late-nineteenth-century empire grew, so did its range of breakfast provisions. More privileged households observed as many as four different types of breakfasts, from family style to an opulent feast of roast meats and birds. Brunch’s fashionable restaurant settings, though, can be traced to the American South. The restaurants and eateries of New Orleans, Louisiana, have long claimed to be the inheritors of the birthplace of brunch. In New Orleans, lunches are famous for indolently turning into dinner, with diners conversing and eating from noon to night. Though famed century-old establishments such as Brennan’s continue to serve a multi-course, mid-morning meal in New Orleans, it was a now long-defunct eatery named Begué’s that started the tradition. Madame Begué raised the morning meal to a fine art, spanning several courses and, often, including bottles of wine. She called the repast a “second breakfast.” At Begué’s, those customers fortunate enough to procure one of only thirty reserved seats at the 11 A.M. mealtime served each day, could look forward to a four-hour feast, six to seven courses downed with chicory coffee and champagne. Omelets, which fortified the spread, were filled with hearty ingredients: oysters, veal, or fried potatoes. The menu changed daily and was always a table d’hôte (or “host’s table,” a multi-course menu with limited
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choices and a set price), but the house specialty liver à la Begué—beef liver fried in lard—was invariably served on Saturdays. Madame Begué, born Elizabeth Kettenring, emigrated from Bavaria, Germany, to New Orleans in 1853 and married Louis Dutrey, a butcher of Gascon descent. At Dutrey’s Coffee House, Elizabeth and Louis served hungry French Market vendors a quick midmorning snack. She combined the Bavarian meal of brotzeit, bread-time—a bite of bread, sausage and beer before lunch—with the French omelet. After the death of Louis, Elizabeth married another Gascon, Hypolite Begué, and renamed the eatery. Begué’s restaurant was then expanded and table service added. The changes were made in time for New Orleans’ post–Civil War renaissance and the World’s Fair and Exposition of 1884. The local gentry were soon struggling with tourists for the few available seats. Begué’s “second breakfast” enjoyed national prominence and accentuated two cookbooks by the madame of the house. Around the turn of the century, brunch became a fixture on other American metropolitan dining scenes. In New York City noshing on the bagel brunch—cream cheese, capers, tomato, red onion, and lox—became the highlight of a social weekend. Eggs Benedict—poached eggs, Canadian bacon, and English muffin smothered in hollandaise sauce—also originated in New York, but how it first began is a still a matter of contention. Some accounts credit playboy Lemuel Benedict, who placed an order—though on toast—at the Waldorf Hotel in 1894. Others place the creation of eggs Benedict in the kitchen of chef Charles Ranhofer at the famed Delmonico’s restaurant. Today, a brunch eater is just as likely to find huevos rancheros and frittatas alongside the traditional stuffed omelets. Mexican, Southern United States, and Chinese (dim sum) interpretations of brunch have become particularly popular with the upscale crowd. However, breakfast items such as seasonal fruit, pancakes, waffles, and French toast are still taken at brunch, as are seafood, roasted meats and poultry, sausages, sandwiches, soups, and salads. Along with freshly squeezed juices and coffee, alcohol is still commonly quaffed with brunch: champagne cocktails (mimosas) and tomatospiced Bloody Marys are the most common. Ever overindulgent, brunch is now seen as an occasion to eat dessert in the afternoon, sometimes after breakfast fare. Brunch remains a celebratory act of feasting. Holidays—Easter, Mother’s Day, Valentine’s Day—are popular brunching days. Brunch has disseminated and can now be encountered on fast-food menus and throughout the world. McDonald’s take on the eggs Benedict, the Egg McMuffin, enlarges the ordinary drive-thru breakfast. The French, always adverse to adopting American habits, do now eat a grand petit déjeuner or ‘big breakfast.’ In South Korea, where the official work week was recently reduced to five days, residents of Seoul celebrated the newfound weekend by socializing over pancakes and bagels at brunch. And true to form, in New Orleans and New York brunch may still be had seven days a week.
Buffet Further Reading: Beyer, Gregory. “Was He the Eggman?” The New York Times. April 8, 2007, Section 14, 1; “Brunch v. Blunch!” Punch, Or the London Charivari. August 1, 1896, 58; Fertel, Rien T. “Beginning With Begué’s.” New Orleans The Times-Picayune. December 8, 2006, Lagniappe Section, 34–37; Lee, Su Hyun. “A New Lifestyle in South Korea: First Weekends, and Now Brunch.” The New York Times. November 2, 2007, Section A4; Spencer, Colin. British Food: An Extraordinary Thousand Years of History. New York: Columbia University Press, 2002, 259–261.
Rien T. Fertel
Buffet The word buffet originally referred to a sideboard or a tiered table. Restauranteurs often presented a tiered table loaded with various types of meat, fish, fruit and vegetables, and delicate pastry at the entrance to their restaurants. This opulent and elegant presentation served to please the patron visually and also to showcase what riches the restaurant had to offer in the meal to come. In modern usage, a buffet is a way of serving food, in which a variety of food is presented on a large table to be picked up and eaten by guests as they please. Buffet can also mean a piece of furniture used to display expensive silverware, or a sideboard on which to stack plates, silverware, and napkins to be used in this type of self-service meal. A buffet, a sideboard covered with fancy linen and costly silverware, was an important part of medieval banquets. No guest actually ate at this sideboard, and it served no purpose other than displaying the host’s wealth, but in a broader cultural context, it played a significant role in the banquet as a political opportunity to impress, threaten, or coax those in power. This practice of displaying rich fabric and silverware (called “court cupboard” in England, buffet in France, referring both to the practice and the piece of furniture used for this purpose) was observed well into the Baroque period; Louis XIV’s collection and display on his luxurious buffet is one of the most famous. In the old days, when traveling took longer than it does today, providing nourishment in the car of a train or at a station (buffets de gare) might have had more urgency and significance than it does today. Especially in the case of the buffet car, the service took advantage of the convenience of the buffet-style meal, that is, self-service, inasmuch as the food was already made and often portioned. There are, however, some legendary buffets de gare, such as the gare de Avignon, Lille, Lyon, and Valenciennes, some of which have attracted travelers and non-travelers alike. In the Gare de Lyon a restaurant called Le Train Bleu was established to impress tourists visiting the Paris Exhibition of 1900 (the establishment flaunts art-deco gilded arches, an opulent ceiling, and wall paintings depicting scenes from the train’s route); it was designated a historical monument in 1972. They have a formal restaurant upstairs, and the space underneath the stairs, where an
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informal café is situated today, used to be a place where servants would wait while their masters and mistresses dined above. The word Smörgåsbord is today used interchangeably with buffet. The Swedish tradition of Smörgåsbord (the word literally means “sandwich, or buttered-bread, table”) can either consist of various finger foods to be eaten before the meal, or the meal itself. The food, which can be either hot or cold (famous examples include cured herring, an open sandwich, a salad with anchovies, vegetable gratin, and sautéed kidney), is attractively displayed on a board. When it is a meal, although everything is laid out on the table all at once, guests follow the traditional order of bread, butter, and herring first; cold fish, cold cuts, and vegetable salad second; followed by hot dishes (such as herring au gratin, filled omelets, meat balls, etc.); and then finished with cheese. Middle Eastern mezze (meze) can be said to resemble the buffet on some level; it is an assortment of food to be enjoyed at guests’ discretion and traditionally is served on a special table called the raki table. However, the practice of meze significantly differs from that of buffet or Smörgåsbord in that the emphasis of meze is on the consumption of alcohol (raki is a Turkish, anise-scented spirit), and the food is enjoyed (at least originally) in order to alleviate the strong taste of raki. The buffet is today carried out in different venues, while its main advantages remain the same: namely, that guests can choose what they want, often as much as they want. Buffets also require fewer servers than a sit-down service since the former incorporates more self-service elements. Moreover, the display at a buffet can enforce a specific theme of a venue or an event. Each venue makes use of these advantages with its own different emphasis. Among various types of restaurants, one might say that buffets are most commonly seen at Chinese and Indian restaurants. It is also a popular type of service for brunch. In some restaurants, buffet and à la carte services are carried out simultaneously, increasing guests’ choice even more. Restaurant buffets attract guests through their wide range of choice. Guests can sample as many dishes as they wish by controlling the portion
A woman enjoying an Indian lunch buffet. © Shaileshnanal | Dreamstime.com.
Buffet size of each item, which it is not possible to do in à la carte service. Allowing guests to sample is a good way for a restaurant to advertise, since guests who liked little bits of what they experienced are likely to return either again for a buffet, or for a more formal sit-down meal, for a different kind of experience. The buffet is today most commonly enjoyed at school or company cafeterias. Having a large component of self-service, buffets can be managed with less staff than table service and are therefore appealing to those who have to feed a large number of people with a limited amount of time and funds. Since cafeterias tend to feed a large number of people, it is important to have options catering to specific needs such as a low-fat diet, vegetarianism, and religious restrictions. Cafeterias once had a reputation of serving unhealthy, not so fresh food, but these days, they are often part of a corporate effort to make their employees healthier and more fit, and better options are increasingly available. A movement to purchase from local growers is also a recent development, improving both the relationship between the company/school and the local people and the freshness of the food at buffet. The buffet is also often enjoyed at a catered event such as a wedding reception, corporate holiday party, or birthday party. Anything that can be served as an hors d’oeuvre is appropriate for this type of service. In addition, since this type of buffet meal is often consumed sitting down at a table enabling the use of plate and silverware, the choice is wider. The buffet table may quite practically contain anything that can be served in a meal—salad, roasted meat, warm vegetables or gratins, and even soup. While it might be more convenient to have roasted meat pre-sliced, or soup already portioned in cups in order to make the flow of customers smoother, the most important thing may be to keep the food looking fresh. A major advantage of a buffet meal over a sit-down kind of meal is that a buffet allows the guests to eat in the order or at the speed they prefer, when they please, which also increases the number of patrons a meal can accommodate. That means, in turn, that the food consistently needs to be fresh and kept at appropriate temperatures over extended periods of time. The fact that a buffet was once thought of as a display at a restaurant entrance, not necessarily for gustatory consumption, or a table for displaying silverware, should remind one of the importance of the visual aspect of a buffet table. For this reason, a tray half-empty is often exchanged with a whole tray, or refilled, and similar care is taken to ensure that the whole table remains visually appetizing at all times throughout the service. While using a mirror or a marble slab as a plate might be an attractive idea, it might not be practical to carry those around whenever refilling is necessary. Using inserts is one solution, or, smaller plates may be grouped into clusters in order to facilitate refilling and also to avoid leaving food exposed and left out for too long. On an economical note, some manuals recommend that more expensive items such as shrimp and oyster be placed at the end of the buffet table, the expectation being that guests tend to pick more food and fill up their plates at the beginning of the table.
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Further Reading: Casas, Penelope. Tapas: The Little Dishes of Spain. Revised Edition. New York: Knopf, 2007; Gisslen, Wayne. Le Cordon Bleu Professional Cooking. 5th ed. New York: Wiley, 2002; Hazelton, Nika Standen. Classic Scandinavian Cooking. New York: Scribner, 1987; The Culinary Institute of America. Garde Manger: The Art and Craft of the Cold Kitchen. 2nd ed. New York: Wiley, 2004.
Chika M. Jenkins
C Cake and Candles Today a cake with candles is the most widespread and popular symbol of a birthday celebration for a child and also often for an adult, especially in the United States. It takes pride of place in many other Western countries, too, although it is more likely to be part of the festivities for a child’s birthday than for an adult’s. Cakes, colored decorations, and candles all have long histories, but their confluence as a birthday celebration symbol is more recent. The meaning of the term cake evolved from very early times when a cake was a small diskshaped object, to be held in the hand for eating. Originally it was baked on a griddle and, later, in an oven. English cookbooks from the eighteenth century give recipes for “cakes” that we might now call cookies (from the Dutch). Large cakes that required many hours of baking time were called great cakes and, until appropriate baking pans were devised at the end of the nineteenth century, small leavened cakes, actually baked in cups, were called cup cakes. Cakes have been used for centuries as dramatic centerpieces of important events and, by the fifteenth century in Europe, huge cakes, leavened with ale yeast or distilled spirits and composed primarily of dried fruits and nuts, were being created for notable occasions. With the development by French and Italian pastry cooks in the 1500s of other means—eggs beaten
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with sugar—to leaven batters using wheat flour, the character of cakes began to change. But, as the expansion of world trade in the eighteenth century made fruit and nuts from the Mediterranean and spices from Asia more easily available, great cakes continued to be popular, particularly in England. At the time America was being colonized and through the eighteenth century, great cakes, known in the United States today in their much smaller versions as fruit cakes, were still appearing as symbols of the prestige, wealth, and importance of an individual or an event. But after the American Revolution, instead of simply reprinting English cookbooks such as those by Hannah Glasse or Mrs. E. Smith, Americans gradually began to produce their own. Lighter and more porous-textured cakes became possible due to a variety of factors: the availability of recipes for egg-and-butter-leavened pound cakes, the invention of iceboxes, and, especially, the introduction of cast iron stoves in the early nineteenth century. Although chemical leavens such as potash, pearlash, and hartshorn had been used for some centuries, particularly in Germanic and Dutch areas, they were not satisfactory for more delicately flavored baked goods. By the mid-1800s, the search was on in the United States for a flavorless leaven and eventually, after saleratus, cream of tartar, and bicarbonate of soda (all termed yeast powders) were developed for baking, two pharmacists in Indiana persisted in the search and devised the first baking powder. In 1889, other researchers figured out how to make double-acting baking powder, a boon to bakers everywhere. At the end of the nineteenth century, there was a push to invent and profit from new technologies. Improvements were made in refrigeration; the use of gas and electricity to heat ovens became controlled by thermostats; measurements and baking pan sizes and shapes were standardized; new tools were created for whipping eggs and mixing and beating batters. These advances in technologies made it possible for cooks at home to create an extravagant array of cake shapes, sizes, and flavors. By the early years of the twentieth century, home cooks could produce pound cakes, angel food, and sponge cakes, as well as the new layer cakes made possible by temperature-controlled ovens—white, gold, spice, chocolate, or devil’s food cakes, and many variations of these, all embellished with a dazzling array of fillings and frostings. The terms, icing and frosting, are thought to have grown out of the original finish for fruit cakes, which, after being baked, were briefly returned to the oven with a light coating of beaten egg white sprinkled with sugar that crystallized and sparkled so it looked like ice or frost. Many of these new cakes appeared in the U.S. South, where home bakers took great pride in their ability to turn out a cake fantasy for a community event or a birthday party. These efforts reached a new high in the 1920s but even greater advances were to come at mid-century. Chiffon cakes, promoted by General Mills in 1948, caught on quickly in the post–World War II years, prepared cake mixes entered the picture a year or two later, and other time-savers like canned frostings and products such as
Cake and Candles Dream Whip and Cool Whip made baking a cake of any size and frosting it into an eye-popping fantasy relatively quick and easy. The second-place winner of the 1966 Pillsbury Bake-Off, a “Tunnel of Fudge Cake,” created such a demand for bundt pans that manufacturers couldn’t keep up; bundt cakes remain popular today. An important quality for a celebratory cake is that it be dramatic in appearance, because of its size, its color, or its decorations. Birthday cakes, like traditional wedding cakes, may be formed in layered tiers, but even in such cases, the differences between the two are immediately visible. A birthday cake, though it may be heavily embellished with frosting and decorations like a wedding cake, is rarely all-white; bright colors are often used; there often are words or messages on it; and, last but not least, a birthday cake must have candles. The use of color to enhance the appearance of food has a long history. Some historians posit that Arab traders first encountered it along the Silk Road in China, from Taoists who believed that ingesting gold and cinnabar (red mercuric sulfide) would lead to immortality. Other historians theorize that Arabs may have borrowed from early Greek ideas on alchemy and that Arabs expected the substitution of gold- or red-colored foods to also promise immortality. Some historians believe that Arab conquerors introduced the use of color into Spain and from there it spread through Europe. Others believe that French and English Crusaders encountered the practice during their long sojourns in Mediterranean areas and took it with them when they returned to their home countries in the eleventh and twelfth centuries. The presentation of brightly colored foods, not limited to red and gold, produced excitement and admiration at the great banquets of English and French courts of the sixteenth century and after, and, eventually, in the homes of the more affluent.
Eleanor Roosevelt cuts her birthday cake in the Hotel Roosevelt at a dinner held under the auspices of the American Association of the United Nations, 1954. Library of Congress.
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So popular was the practice that it was brought to America by English colonists. Long before then, of course, saffron or egg yolks had been used for gilding foods, and various plants, some as harmless as spinach and some less benign like alkanet, were being used as colorants. Recipes for food colorants continued to appear in early English and American cookbooks through the nineteenth century. Besides colorants, other early contributions of the Arabs to the contemporary celebration cake are gum paste and marzipan. The small, sweetflavored, colored, hard decorations (letters, numbers, candle holders, flowers, leaves, and myriad other fanciful objects) that are available in stores everywhere now (and mostly manufactured overseas) are still formed from gum paste, which was being used in the Middle East when the crusaders were there. Marzipan, a sweet paste composed primarily of sugar and almonds, was also being used and is still much used today by commercial and home bakers. The crucial element of gum paste and marzipan is sugar. Sugar was introduced into the Mediterranean region from Indonesia via India by Arab traders before the twelfth century, and from the Mediterranean the use of sugar spread relatively rapidly throughout Europe. By the early twentieth century, our contemporary form of cake had become realizable due to technological advances in equipment (temperature-controlled stoves, mechanical beaters, standardized measuring devices and pans) and ingredients (chemical leavens, refined sugar in granular and powdered form, finely milled flour made possible by the new roller mills), and creative home bakers were able to employ all the available technology to create luscious layered cakes in a fantasy of flavors, colors, and decorations. Highly decorated cakes were being promoted in cookbooks, and cake decorating sets and cake recipe pamphlets were being given away with flour purchases as a promotional effort by flour-milling companies. Candles, the other almost essential component of a birthday or celebration cake, go far back in time as symbols for the significance of an occasion. The use of fire, or the flames of burning oil or candles, has contributed to the celebratory, mystical, religious, or awe-inspiring character of many important rituals of human society since prehistoric times. Candles, in particular, also have been used to measure time or to signify its passage. Small tapers still have that latter purpose today in some religious observances, for instance, among Lutherans for Advent, and among Jews for Hanukkah. The Moravians use very small tapers in their Christmas Eve ceremonies, and Germans have a tradition of illuminating Christmas trees with miniature candles. Candles were being used with birthday cakes in Germany by the eighteenth century, judging by a letter from Johann von Goethe to a friend about a celebration for his 50th birthday in 1799, given by a princely admirer. It describes the “torte” with 50 flaming candles and comments that such a cake would be more appropriate for a child’s birthday observance. It is difficult to find any other written accounts of birthday cakes, with or without candles, until the latter part of the nineteenth century in the
Cake and Candles United States, when an occasional mention of a birthday cake for a child occurs in literature. In published women’s diaries from the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, if an entry noted that it was their birthday and sometimes mentioned a gift or gifts received on that day, there is no mention of any kind of other festivity such as a party or cake. But by the early twentieth century, cookbooks, either by well-known writers or produced by community organizations, sometimes included recipes for birthday cakes. By mid-century, after the Great Depression and World War II, a perceptible shift was occurring. Since then there has been an explosion of ways to celebrate birthdays not only for children but also for adults, and today no birthday celebration for a person of any age seems to be complete without a birthday cake. These celebrations have acquired certain rituals: the singing of the “Happy Birthday” song to the honoree who is expected, after making a secret wish, to attempt a serious effort at blowing out all the candles on the cake, regardless of the number, with one breath. Myth has it that this will guarantee the realization of the wish. Unlike for a wedding cake, there does not appear to be any universal tradition designating who should cut the cake or the order in which it should be apportioned. But a family or other celebratory group may make its own rules over time, thus establishing a tradition to be faithfully observed. Other rituals develop around the determination of who, in a family or friendship group, provides the celebratory cake, whether from a commercial bakery or a home kitchen. The birthday cake tradition has proliferated around the world, except in those areas where individuals’ birth dates may not be of importance, or where an individual’s saint’s day may be celebrated instead. Of course, some birthdays may be more significant than others, and a birthday cake may reflect that. For example, in the United States a 21st, a 50th, or a 75th birthday can be particularly significant. For a girl in the Latino community, the 15th birthday is cause for a special celebration called la quinceanera. Today an entire industry has grown up around the making of birthday cakes by ambitious home bakers, with specially shaped pans, extensive batteries of cake decorating tools, other supplies and equipment, gum paste decorations of every shape and color, instruction books and videos, schools and classes, as well as beautifully shaped and colored candles both large and small. Commercial bakeries offer for sale an almost infinite variety of fanciful birthday cakes. Further Reading: Cherkasky, Shirley. “The Birthday Cake: Its Evolution from a Rite of the Elite to the Right of Everyone.” In Food and Celebration: From Fasting to Feasting. Edited by Patricia Lysaght. Ljubljana, Slovenia: ZRC Publishing, 2002, pp. 215–224; Cherkasky, Shirley. “The Mediterranean’s Colourful Contributions to Contemporary American Confectionary.” Mediterranean Food: Concepts and Trends. Edited by Patricia Lysaght. Zagreb, Croatia: Biblioteka Nova Etnografija, 2006, pp. 221–233; Davidson, Alan. The Oxford Companion to Food. Oxford: Oxford
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University Press, 1999, pp. 123–124; Jernow, Liza. “Birthdays.” Edited by Andrew Smith. The Oxford Encyclopedia of Food and Drink in America, Vol. 1. New York: Oxford University Press, 2004, 98–100.
Shirley Cherkasky
Catering At present, there is no single definition of the term catering. Internationally the term is used to refer to food service in hospitals or large institutions, including airlines, but in the United States the word encompasses a range of other options: banquets are offered in hotels and resorts, private clubs, restaurants, and by contract food services in corporations and institutions; catering departments operate within hotels, corporations, and hospitals; so-called eventeur companies create large-scale special events held in a range of facilities, including dedicated catering hall venues, private spaces rented for gatherings, in parks, under tents, at the beach. The range of business concepts described as catering services began to expand at the end of the twentieth century. There are independent service businesses that offer customized parties served in homes. Specialty food stores, supermarkets, individual caterers, and delis deliver preprepared platters to offices or the home. Because so many businesses offer different forms and styles of food and service, it is difficult to assess the real size, total value, and economic contribution of this part of the food industry. Even the ancillary businesses, which provide goods and services used by caterers and prepared food businesses, can overlap with businesses that sell preprepared food directly to consumers. The business of catering is difficult to define, in part because of the varied interpretations used to describe a range of services, and in part because of the varied ways government and industry associations have collected data to identify this work. In medieval western Europe, meals for hunting parties and travelers were often prepared in one location and then moved to another location, where people set up temporary kitchens to finish and serve the meal. In current parlance, this would be called off-premise catering. Among royalty and the well-to-do, the birth of the first-born son, a marriage, a burial, were all events that called for gathering, for feasting, for menus out of the ordinary, and, in some cases, for extraordinary spectacles. These events could be defined as on-premise catering, where foods are prepared at or adjacent to the location where they are to be served. Through most recorded history, cooking was a part of women’s daily chores, or was at least supervised by women, and family health depended on the skills of the cook. However, cooking for banquets, feasts, and, later, for restaurants, was transformed into a man’s commercial field. While food in homes was often grown, processed, cooked, and served by women, women’s
Catering commercial roles in the food industry were limited by gender, race, and class status. While some women established boarding houses, which were acceptable enterprises when it came out of genteel necessity, there was lingering doubt about the moral character of those women who served food to the public. In the finest hotels, few women were cooking and none were serving. During the nineteenth century, if working people organized celebratory events, they might hire a hall or a beer garden, local tavern, or religious or community center for their events. People contributed pot luck, or some excellent home cook might have run the kitchen. Small bakeries or individuals would provide the breads and cakes: the term for individuals who provide part of the meal in today’s parlance would be subcontractors. After Emancipation, African American men and women worked in the kitchens of hotels, on the Pullman railroad cars, and in restaurants. Some opened their own specialty businesses, baking, and catering services, but they rarely had the financial support to increase the size of their businesses beyond their own individual or family’s capacity to produce. Other ethnic minorities and immigrant workers also participated in commercial food preparation and service, and in the first half of the twentieth century more casual restaurants, lunch counters, and tea shops opened to serve more working people. The variety of opportunities to work in the food industry increased. As the economy boomed after World War II, more restaurants, restaurant chains, and public catering hall facilities opened specifically to accommodate special events, providing on-premise catering services, now available to a broader population. Then, in the 1960s, as the women’s movement progressed, more women returned to the labor market. High profile industries such as fashion, entertainment, sports, and publishing were among the first to respond to this social change, which directly impacted catering. These industries needed food and beverages for longer work hours, off-site locations, cocktail parties, and the like. There had to be finger foods, foods that are easy to eat while standing up (i.e., foods that are not messy and won’t drip and that don’t require the use of cutlery). The desire for unusual foods, and the creative opportunities for unique décor and presentation, presented increasing options for catering businesses. As the demand for creative events extended to fund-raising for arts and cultural organizations, and then to corporate entertaining, the events were moved out beyond hotels and private homes into museums, public gardens, and historical mansions. The inventive companies capitalized on the increasing sophistication of clients, the expanding economy, and the increasing availability of a global food supply. As more educated women moved into the labor market, they left a void in the traditional functions of homemakers. Fewer women were home to make dinner, to entertain a husband’s business associates, or to coordinate community events. Independent catering companies started to fill this need as well.
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At the end of the twentieth century, gender roles, class boundaries, racial prejudices, and attitudes toward food work were changing throughout American society. The stereotypes of those who served and those who cooked—women primarily in home kitchens creating cuisine de la femme, and men, as chefs, in restaurants making cuisine gastronomique—were challenged when well-educated food professionals seized the opportunities presented by the societal changes to step into someone else’s home kitchen and create personal-service businesses. In the 1970s and 1980s women’s changing work roles caused some to shed their so-called second shift domestic responsibilities. In addition to large corporate entertaining and social events, many women hired caterers for family meals and private events when they no longer had the time or the interest to prepare food themselves. While minority and immigrant women took on much of this domestic burden, no agency has collected information about this so-called female economy work, about the services and products that began in response to the social changes and challenges of the 1980s, or about what specialty food businesses and professional cooking meant for women entrepreneurs. Women who wanted to cook professionally in restaurants in the 1980s faced barriers to their professional advancement and difficulties gaining financial support for their own businesses. The choice for any educated woman to work in commercial food service was considered nontraditional. But as opportunities were opening for women in business, the professions, academia, and government, some women sought entrepreneurship in the food industry. Some chose to create their own work structures and environments, to explore different foods and different client relationships than were possible in more traditional hospitality settings. New ideas for customized services, such as businesses providing so-called home meal replacements, were germinating. The plethora of prepared foods, sauces, and condiments available in every supermarket today emerged in response to the needs of families who had less time on their hands to cook. Professional cooking, outside restaurant kitchens, continues to offer employment attractive to students training in culinary schools. The catering services of the late twentieth century crossed class boundaries, supported and challenged women’s traditional and professional roles, and offered a fascinating insight into some of our society’s changing cultural markers: family feeding, support of the arts, women’s conferences, and various ritual and celebratory events. How we eat, what and where we eat, and who feeds us now, began to change rapidly at the end of the twentieth century. Further Reading: Halvorsen, Francis. Catering Like a Pro. New York: John Wiley & Sons, 1995; Lawrence, Elizabeth. The Complete Caterer: A Practical Guide to the Craft and Business of Catering. New York: Doubleday, 1987; Vivaldo, Denise. How to Start a Home-Based Catering Business. 1993. 5th ed. Guilford, CT: Globe Pequot, 2005.
Carol G. Durst-Wertheim
Celtic Feasting
Celtic Feasting The Celts were a warrior race who spread across Europe from 1200 B.C. and eventually settled in fortified hill forts, which became towns, and in fortified homesteads or villages with outlying fields, where they cultivated crops. What we know about the Celtic dietary habits comes in part from archeological studies, including the study of bones and of remnants of human life, as found in these homesteads and in the contents of the graves. Much of the evidence for Celtic eating habits and feasting comes from classical writers such as the Egyptian-Greek writer Athenaeus (active ca. A.D. 200), who obtained his information from the accounts of the Syrian historian and traveler, Poseidonius (ca. 135–51 B.C.). He had visited Gaul and obviously seen some Gallic customs first-hand. Other evidence comes from the Celtic legends and mythological tales, especially those that have survived in Ireland. Food was plentiful in summer, and preservation methods ensured sufficient food throughout the winter. Grain, for example, was stored in pits, lined with clay or wickerwork, and sealed with clay lids. These pits could be opened and resealed to take out what grain was required. Meat was coated with honey, and then smoked or dried, as was fish from the sea, lakes, and rivers. The basic food was probably pottage, made from boiled grain or ground peas and beans. Tollund Man, a body found in a bog in Jutland, Denmark, dated to the second century B.C may have been a ritual sacrifice. He had eaten a pottage, which included seeds of fat hen. This plant, often found on Celtic sites, is rich in iron and calcium and may have served as a main vegetable as its leaves can be cooked like spinach. Other foods included charlock, black bindweed, silverweed, dandelion, nettles, and ransoms, a form of wild onion. Though considered weeds today, they provided food in the Celtic world. Wild seasonable fruits, such as strawberries, bilberries, and crab apples, and wild vegetables like parsnips and carrots added variety. The vegetables were thinner and tougher than their modern counterparts; but they could be softened being pounded with a mortar and pestle. Nuts included chestnuts, hazelnuts, beechnuts, and walnuts. Cultivated foods included peas, beans, and lentils. Bread was made from a variety of grains: emmer, einkorn and spelt wheats, rye, barley, and millet. The grains were pounded on a saddle quern, a flattish stone so called because it had achieved a saddle shape by having the grain rolled across it with a long stone. In the later Iron Age the grains were ground by women and slaves in a rotary quern, often taking two grindings. As the flour contained grit from the grinding, it had to be sieved through wicker baskets or cloth. But the ground-down teeth found in skeletal remains show that the method was not very successful. Dairy foods were particularly important and are particularly mentioned in feasts, and it was this that divided the Celts from the Romans and Greeks of the classical world. The Romans did not like milk and preferred olive oil
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to butter. The Elder Pliny (A.D. 23–79), a prolific writer on natural history, stated that the Celtic barbarians have lived off milk for centuries but they do not know the blessings of cheese. In stating this he did the Celts an injustice because cheese could be made from the milk of cows, sheep, and goats. Cheese was well known in Ireland. “The Vision of Mac Conglinne,” a poem written in the twelfth century A.D. but believed to be part of an earlier tradition, refers to a fort that is described in culinary terms including outworks of thick custards, a bridge of butter, threshold sides of cheese curds, smooth pillars of old cheese, and beams of yellow cheese. Columella, a Roman writer who wrote a book on agriculture, De Re Rustica in the first century A.D., said that because nomadic tribes had no corn and sheep provided their diet, the Celtic tribe of the Gaetae were called milk drinkers. Pliny said that butter for the Celts was the choicest food and that the more butter the Celts ate, the wealthier they were. Cow’s milk was appreciated but sheep’s milk gave a richer butter. Milk supplies decreased during the winter, but in Ireland and Scotland the problem was overcome by putting butter into wooden casks that were then buried in bogs. Casks containing butter, some as much as 40 pounds, have been recorded. There are historians who believe that some of the material found in these casks was adipocere, a waxy material formed from animal fat, but the other casks contain material that has a pale yellow color and a grainy consistency, which would seem to be butter. Meat was essential: beef, lamb, mutton, pork, and goat meat. According to Poseidonius ordinary meals were taken by the Celts sitting on dried grass with the meals served on low tables, loaded with bread and meat. The Celts ate cleanly but in a leonine fashion, biting off chunks of meat from the joints held in their hands. They also used a small dagger to cut hard pieces of meat from the bone. Those Celts who lived near rivers or the sea ate fish, often baked with cumin, salt, and vinegar (presumably weak ale or wine). Diodorus Siculus (active 60–39 B.C.), a Greek historian, said the Celts sat on wolf skins, forming a circle with the bravest warriors sitting in the middle, served by the youngest children, but this custom seems to have been for ordinary meals. The Celts loved feasting. According to Irish legends there were four main festivals in the Celtic year. Probably similar feast days were held in other parts of the Celtic world. Imbolc (February 1) was a festival dedicated to fertility, marking the renewal of spring and the coming of a ewe’s first milk. It was dedicated to the god Brigit, later christianized as St Bridget. Beltain (May 1), linked to the Celtic god Belenos, was a fire-cleansing festival. Fires were lit or renewed in houses and lighted in the fields so that cattle could walk through them and be cleansed. Grass and rush bedding was burned, so that household tasks started afresh. This was the best way to stop infection as pests were burned with the straw. Lughnasa (August 1), dedicated to the god Lugh (Ireland) or Lugnos (Gaul), lasted for almost 40 days. This, as might be expected, was the greatest festival for it was the time when crops were harvested and food and drink were available in abundance.
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A woodcut of an Irish banquet from John Derrick’s “Image of Ireland,” 1581. © North Wind/North Wind Picture Archives—All rights reserved.
The last festival of the year, although it was the first in the Celtic calendar, was Samain (November 1), a sober and dangerous time, marking the end of the old year and invoking the dead, who could become visible to the human world. The Christian church transmuted it to All Souls’ Day (November 2) when it was propitious to remember deceased relatives and friends. This tradition still continues through much of Catholic Europe. At feasts, plenty of meat was eaten and beer and wine was drunk. The story of Lludd and Llefelys in the Welsh Mabinogion mentions a year’s provision of food and drink for a feast, although this was taken by a supernatural being who packed it into a huge basket to carry it away. The Irish tales, however, provide the best evidence available for descriptions of Celtic feasting. The amount of food gathered for a feast could be prodigious. There was a social purpose to the feasting. Feasts were highly structured, social gatherings where hierarchy of status and its public affirmation could be tested. There was a pattern in the seating. Warriors sat in a circle, with the host sitting beside the most important man, a king, a noble or a famous warrior. Others sat round the circle in accordance with their importance. Behind each man might be his shield man and his spearman whose duty was to guard their lord. Strangers were invited to feasts, but their hosts waited until after the meal to ask them who they were and what they wanted. This tradition was often abused by Celtic enemies, when for example, King Mithradates VI of Pontus invited 60 Celtic chieftains to meet him at Pergamum for a feast, but then slaughtered them as they ate. Even
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so, this tradition was basic to Celts and one that seems to have continued throughout the following centuries. According to Poseidonius and the Irish tales, one of the main purposes of a feast was to allow Celtic warriors to boast of and exhibit their prowess. The greatest warriors had the best cuts of boiled or roast meat, but the paramount warrior laid claim to the champion’s portion that is the thigh or hindquarters of a boar. If another man claimed it and thus impugned the honor of the first man, both warriors could fight in single combat, often to the death. In the tale of Bricriu’s Feast, an Ulster Cycle tale, Bricriu, known as Poison-tongue, made a feast for the men of Ulster and their chieftain, Conchobar mac Nessa. Preparations for this took a year. For this feast he built a house at Dun Rudraige in which to serve it. The feast was to be massive, and food included five score (100) cakes of wheat cooked in honey. In giving this feast, Bricriu intended to set the men of Ulster at odds, making it likely for them to fight each other to the death. Although King Conchobar knew what Bricriu intended, the Ulstermen had to accept the invitation to his hospitality or run the risk of being thought cowards. For his devious purpose, Bricriu provided a seven-year old boar fed on fresh milk and fine meal in springtime, curds and sweet milk in summer, nuts and wheat in autumn, beef and broth in winter. The resulting fight and difficulties connected with the contest over the champion’s portion extended beyond Bricriu’s house until eventually Cu Chulainn was accepted as champion. Archaeological evidence confirms the literary tradition, as bones of a pig’s thigh have been found in graves in Britain and Gaul indicating a grave of a Celtic warrior. A second purpose in the feasting was to continue the tradition of single combat where men had to accept a challenge and fight each other, often to the death. Many Irish heroes were challenged during the course of a feast, over the claim to the thigh portion of the particular meat being served, and had to accept otherwise they might be branded as a coward by a satirist. A man could also pledge his life for gold, silver, and some jars of wine. He took the pledges and then handed them to his kinsmen and friends to accept the gifts. For this he had to be sacrificed and pay the price. He lay down on his shield and resigned himself to having his throat cut with a sword in order that the gifts would be valid. During the feasts nothing was lacking to ensure that the heroes got drunk and merry. The Irish tale of The Intoxication of the Ulstermen describes how, on the feast of Samain, the tribal King Conchobar gave a feast at the stronghold of Emain Macha. This included a hundred casks of every kind of ale, which led to the indulgers leading a furious ride through Ireland leveling every hill, clearing every forest, cutting the roots of great trees, and drying up every river. There are few wilder descriptions in literature of this drunken ride, but allowing for the hyperbole, both this and the other tales indicate that if food and drink were available the Celts indulged themselves to excess. This also was part of the jockeying for position in the
Celtic Feasting social structure where a feast had been the occasion for young warriors to attest their prowess. Beer drinking was part of this social activity and so it was drunk in great quantities. The Celts normally drank beer, presumably barley or a wheaten beer mixed with honey, which was probably mead, although Diodorus Siculus commented that they drank water with which they had cleansed honeycombs. Poseidonius noted that the Celts drank from a common cup, drinking a little at a time but rather frequently. Diodorus said that the Gauls who normally drank beer became addicted to wine when it was imported into the country, but drinking it unmixed and without moderation, as he said, “by reason of their craving, when they are drunken they fall into a stupor or a state of madness. Consequently, many of the Italian traders, induced by the love of money which characterises them, believe that the love of wine of these Gauls is their own salvation. . . . they receive in return for one jar of wine a slave, a servant in exchange for a drink” (History 5.26). He added that the Celtic fulsome moustaches are so long that they act as a kind of strainer. Poseidonius also said that the wine is unadulterated although sometimes a little water could be added. In fairness, Ammianus Marcellinus, a fourth-century A.D. historian, reported that Cicero said in an aside, when defending Fonteius in 121 B.C., that the Gauls did mix wine with water, but once they had thought wine was poison. He added that the Gauls were “a race fond of wine, and disposed to numerous drinks resembling wine.” Some, when drunk, rushed around in “aimless revels.” Literary evidence of this love of wine is again confirmed by archaeological finds. A burial of a noblewoman found in a tomb at Vix, near Mont Lassons (France) and dated to the sixth century B.C., contained an Etruscan flagon and Attic cups, apparently used in wine drinking ceremonies. In pride of place was a huge bronze krater, a 5-foot-4-inch-high vessel used for wine, often in the Greek symposium, obviously imported from Greece or Southern Italy. Given its size it would probably have been conveyed to Gaul in pieces and assembled on site, possibly to enhance Celtic feasts. A burial at Hochdorf in Baden-Württemberg (Germany) reveals that Celtic aristocracy had suitable equipment to indulge in feasting on a grand scale. The richly endowed burial chamber included a cauldron, which could contain up to 110 gallons of honey beer or mead. The site also revealed two u-shaped trenches containing a large amount of pure hulled barley, which was probably deliberately germinated as if there was a brewing establishment there. A tomb at Apremont in France also contained a huge cauldron together with drinking cups. Finds at sites in central and southern Gaul, indicate that consumption of beer or wine was on a heroic scale. A tomb at Lexden (England) contained 17 amphorae, some which had brought wine from Pompeii. One held 4.8 gallons. The site of Beuvray (France) has produced vast quantities of amphorae, most imported from Italy, which indicates the prodigious amount of wine consumed by the Celts. At the Sheepen site adjoining the pre-Roman site of Camulodunum (Colchester, England) pieces of amphorae
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revealed that wine was imported from at least 19 different sources, including Italy, the Iberian Peninsula, southern Gaul and Rhodes. Chieftains were expected to entertain their followers to great feasts. Poseidonius commented on the feasting habits of the Avernian leader, Louernius, father of Bituis, who was dethroned by the Romans. He held a great feast lasting many days for his followers set in a large square enclosure, one and a half miles each way. Within this he prepared a vast quantity of food so that for many days all who wished could enter. Attendants would serve the food and expensive drink from vast vats without a break. A bard who arrived late was required to run behind the chieftain’s chariot but was thrown a bag of gold for his attempts to keep up. He rewarded the chieftain with a song that extolled that even the tracks of the chariot gave gold and largess to mankind. This was obviously part of Louernius’ attempt to indicate both his power and an example of conspicuous consumption on the grandest scale. In Galicia, which was also settled by the Celts, Ariamnes gave a feast, which was said to have lasted a year, held in temporary halls throughout the country to which even travelers were invited. Entertainment was important. Satirists were allowed great license being able to insult or make fun of the warriors’ foibles. It was one way of inciting men into single combat or perform other deeds. Bards were hired to entertain the guests but mainly to extol the feats of the heroes. Boasting was inevitably part of the entertainment, hence the fights which broke out during the feasting. In the tale of Mac Datho’s Pig the warriors of Ulster were boasting about their achievements and which of them should have the honor of carving the pig. One of the warriors, Cet, claimed it but Conall the Victorious approached him and claimed the pig for he had never been a day without slaying a Connachtman or a night without plundering, nor had he ever slept without the head of a Connachtman under his knee. Cet agreed that Conall was a better warrior than he but that if his brother Anluan was present he would match Conall contest for contest and that it was a shame that he was not there that night. But he was, said Conall, drawing the head of Anluan from his belt and throwing it at Cet so that blood flowed over him. So Cet had to leave the pig and allow the men of Ulster to carve the pig and suck up the total meat so that only the skin and membrane remained. Further Reading: Alcock, Joan P. Food in the Ancient World. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2006; Biel, Jorg. Der Keltenfürst von Hochdorf. Stuttgart, Germany: Konrad Theiss, 1985; Brothwell, D., and P. Brothwell. Food in Antiquity: A Survey of the Diet of Early Peoples. New York: Praeger, 1969; Cross, Tom Peete, and Clark Harris Slover, eds. Ancient Irish Tales. New York: Barnes and Noble Book, (1936) reprinted 1996; Cunliffe, Barry. The Celtic Word. London: Constable, 1992; Cunliffe, Barry. The Ancient Celts. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press, 1997; Gantz, Jeffrey. Early Irish Myths and Sagas. Harmsworth, United Kingdom: Penguin, 1981; Jackson, Kenneth Hurlstone. The Oldest Irish Tradition: A Window on the Iron Age. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1964; James, Simon. Exploring the World of the Celts. London and New York: Thames and Hudson, 1993; Jones, Gwyn, and Thomas Jones, trans. The Mabinogion.
Chafing Dish London: Dent and Sons, 1974; Kruta, V., O. Frey, B. Raftery, and M. Stabo, eds. The Celts. New York: Rizzoli, 1991; Nelson, Max. The Barbarian’s Beverage: A History of Beer in Ancient Europe. New York: Routledge, 2005; Powell, T.G.E. The Celts. London and New York: Thames and Hudson, 1958; Raftery, B.: Pagan Celtic Ireland: The Enigma of the Irish Iron Age. London and New York: Thames and Hudson, 1994; Rankin, H. D. Celts and the Classical World. London: Croom Helm, 1987; Rees, Alwyn, and Brinley Rees. Celtic Heritage: Ancient Traditions in Ireland and Wales. London: Thames and Hudson, 1961; Reynolds, Peter J. Ancient Farming. Aylesbury, Great Britain: Shire Publications, 1987; Ross, Anne. The Pagan Celts. London: Batsford Ltd., 1986; Stead, Ian, J. B. Bourke, and Don Brothwell, eds. Lindow Man: The Body in the Bog. London: British Museum Press, 1986.
Joan P. Alcock
Chafing Dish The chafing dish (from the French, chaufer, meaning “to warm”) is an ingenious device for cooking or keeping foods hot away from the stove (or in earlier times, the fireplace). It can be as simple as a skillet on a tripod over hot coals or as elaborate as a carved gold or silver stand holding a heat source such as an alcohol lamp or candle and topped by a covered double vessel in which the food in the top bowl is gently warmed by simmering water in the bowl underneath. Elegant chafing dishes were imported from Europe and used for entertaining in the American colonies well before the Revolutionary War, but chafing dish suppers, by that name, became popular in the United States at the end of the nineteenth century and again in the 1950s and 1960s. The chafing dish makes so much sense as a method of keeping food hot that as a method of serving, it has existed since Roman times and possibly before— and not just in the so-called Old World. The concept of chafing dishes was being used in the Western Hemisphere before the European conquest. In 1520, Bernal Diaz who was traveling with Cortez describes a meal in the Aztec capital of Tenochtitlan in which the more than 300 dishes served were placed “on small low clay braziers so that they would not get cold.” In the North American colonies, the name chafing dish was used for either a rustic brazier of coals used in the kitchen or outdoors as an auxiliary cooking appliance or the ornate warming device used for serving. The rustic form was recommended for preserving strawberries by Amelia Simmons in her 1796 American Cookery, the first cookbook written in America by an American. In The Virginia House-wife, Mary Randolph also recommends a chafing dish for making preserves. However, the more elegant version of the chafing dish is the inspiration for the chafing dish party or supper. In Onehundred Recipes for the Chafing Dish published by the Gorham Silver Company in 1894, Herbert M. Kinsley (chef of the restaurants Holland House in New York and Kinsley’s in Chicago) suggests that the use of the chafing dish
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for entertaining coincides with periods of peace and prosperity such as the 1720s and his own period, the 1890s, when “life in America shows a fuller expression of beauty, refinement and artistic development.” From the 1890s through the first decade of the twentieth century, chafing dish entertaining was considered the height of sophistication in the United States. Big city restaurants served special late-night chafing dish suppers, chafing dish specialties starred at high society events, and chafing dish lunch and dinner Cookbooks Inspired by the Concept clubs formed across the country. of Chafing Dish Suppers Chafing dishes added a touch Good Things from a Chafing Dish by Thomas J. Murrey (Providence, RI: of class to Sunday night suppers of Livermore & Knight for Gorham, 1890) Welsh Rarebit or Creamed Chipped Beef as America struggled through What One Can Do with a Chafing Dish by Henriette L. Sawtelle (New York: H. L. Stilwell & Co., 1889) the Depression and World War II and returned to the social scene in Cookery with a Chafing Dish by Thomas J. Murrey (New York: Frederick the 1950s and 1960s as America A. Stokes Company, 1891) prospered. Women had returned The Chafing Dish Supper by Christine Terhune Herrick (New York: John from wartime jobs to a kitchen Ireland, 1894; Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1896) without servants and chafing dish Chafing Dish Recipes by Gesine Lemcke (New York: Appleton, 1896) entertaining was an efficient way The Bachelor and the Chafing Dish by Deshler Welch (New York: F. Tento achieve the informal yet elegant nyson Neely, 1895) style of the times. Recipes such as Beef Stroganoff, Sukiyaki, SwedChafing Dish Possibilities by Fannie Farmer (Boston: Little, Brown & Co., 1898) ish Meatballs, Chop Suey, Steak Diane, Chicken à la King, and The Gorham Chafing Dish Book (New York: Gorham Manufacturing desserts such as Cherries Jubilee, Company, 1899) Crepes Suzette, and Bananas FosSalads, Sandwiches, and Chafing Dish Dainties by Jane McKensie Hill ter were chafing dish favorites. (Boston: Little, Brown & Co., 1899) The Peerless Cookbook: New and revised edition. With Recipes for Chafing Dish by Mary J. Lincoln (Boston: Little, Brown & Co., 1901) Louis’ Salads and Chafing Dishes by Louis Muckensturm (Boston: H. M. Caldwell, 1906) 365 Chafing Dish Recipes (Philadelphia: George W. Jacobs & Company, 1912) How to Use a Chafing Dish by Mrs. S. T. Rorer (Philadelphia: Arnold & Co., 1894) Salads, Sandwiches, and Chafing Dish Recipes by Marion H Neil (Philadelphia: David McKay, 1916) All these extolled the virtues of the chafing dish but none more than The Cult of the Chafing Dish by Frank Schloesser, who dedicated his book “to the only Woman who could turn me from Bachelordom” and declared in the first chapter that “every bachelor has a wife of some sort. Mine is a Chafing Dish; and I desire to sing her praises” (London: Gay and Bird, 1905).
Further Reading: Coe, Sophie D. America’s First Cuisines. Austin: University of Texas Press, 1994; Kinsley, H. M. One Hundred Recipes for the Chafing Dish. New York: Arno Press, 1973 [Reprint of the 1894 edition. Introduction and Suggested Recipes by Louis Szathmáry]; Lovegren, Sylvia. Fashionable Food: Seven Decades of Food Fads. New York: Macmillan, 1995; Simmons, Amelia. American Cookery. Greens Farms, CT: Silverleaf Press, 1984 [Recreation of the 1796 edition published in Hartford, CT by Hudson & Goodwin. Introduction and Updated Recipes by Iris Ihde Frey]; Randolph, Mary. The Virginia Housewife. Columbia: University of South
Champagne Carolina Press, 1984 [Facsimile of the 1824 edition with additional material from the 1825 and 1828 editions. Notes and Commentaries by Karen Hess].
Joanne Lamb Hayes
Champagne The word champagne evokes images of gaiety and celebration; however, the term champagne may only be used for sparkling wines that are made in a region approximately 90 miles to the northeast of Paris. Other sparkling wines are made in Spain, Germany, Italy, California, and New York State, but these wines are said to be made in the Champagne-style (exact language varies with the country of origin). Champagne is produced in four main areas (or departments) of the Champagne region in France: the Vallee de la Marne, Montagne de Reims, Cote des Blancs, and the Aube, although the departments of Aisne, Seine-etMarne, Coteaux des Sezannais, and Haute Marne contain a smaller number of vineyards. Three varieties of grapes are used to make champagne: Pinot Noir, Pinot Meunier, and Chardonnay. Each grape contributes special characteristics that influence the style of resulting champagne. Pinot Noir adds strength and body to a wine, along with red fruit aromas; Pinot Meunier provides fragrance, spiciness, and roundness; and Chardonnay modulates with finesse floral and mineral overtones. Champagne begins as a still wine that lacks the carbon dioxide to make it sparkling. The still wine is then blended with other wines (sometimes from other vintages) and a liqueur de tirage (solution of sugar, yeast, and old wine) and then set aside for a second fermentation; these two steps are considered to be the most influential in determining the style of the individual champagne house. Champagne is available in 10 different bottle sizes, ranging from one-quarter bottle (187 ml) to the gargantuan Nebuchadnezzar (15 liters, or 20 standard 750 ml bottles). In great years, a wine will be specified as vintage; otherwise Champagne is NV, or non-vintage. Champagnes differ according to dryness (or conversely, sweetness). From driest to sweetest are the following categories: Extra Brut, Brut, Extra Dry, Sec, Demi-Sec, and Doux; note that Brut and Extra Brut are drier than Extra Dry. Because different Champagnes exhibit different qualities, they are considered to have different styles: light and delicate, light to medium, medium, medium to full, and full and rich. They have also been grouped as so-called families, such as those with body, spirit, heart, and soul: Those with body are matched with heavier foods such as foie gras, stews, and poultry; Those with spirit are lighter and go well as an aperitif, or with light fish or shellfish or light chilled or frozen desserts; Champagnes with heart can pair with lamb, warm desserts, piquant (but not spicy) sauces, and gratins;
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Huge wicker baskets filled with bottles of champagne in a wine cellar in France, while a man and two U.S. Army nurses talk to the proprietor of the winery. Library of Congress.
Champagnes with soul are considered to be so special, it is encouraged that they be appreciated alone. Champagne service begins with proper chilling. Champagne bottles are of a thicker glass than still-wine bottles, and require additional time (20 to 40 minutes) in a bucket filled with ice and water (desired temperature is 43 to 48 degrees Fahrenheit). After adequate chilling, the foil around the top of the bottle can be removed, and, while keeping one hand on the top of the cork, the wire can be removed or left on, and with a cloth napkin, the cork gently released. The goal is not to make a loud noise or pop, which allows carbon dioxide (and bubbles) to escape. Once the bottle has been carefully opened, the napkin should be used to wipe the neck of the bottle, before pouring. Champagne is drunk slowly, and therefore, each pour is relatively small. The glass used for champagne service should be elongated so as to augment the passage of bubbles upward in the glass and to strengthen the aromas. Tulip-shaped or fluted glasses are considered most complimentary to the enjoyment of champagne. An appropriate amount of champagne comes to approximately one-inch in from the bottom of a champagne glass. Pouring seconds should be carefully executed, so there is only a sip or two left. This way, the champagne in the glass will stay chilled. Two quaint stories surrounding the coupe or saucer-shaped glass have evolved according to which the glass was modeled after or cup-shape of
Cheese Course, History of Marie-Antoinette’s or Helen of Troy’s breasts. Sadly, the coupe does not enhance the flavor of champagne, as it allows the bubbles to dissipate. Champagne might be considered a global symbol for celebration, as it is used to inaugurate a newly built ship’s launching, is poured over winning sports teams, and is even used at the end the Grand Prix. Coronations, inaugurations, and parties of any size and scale feature champagne. A wedding toast is seldom made without a glass of champagne, and champagne is ordered at restaurants for any number of celebratory reasons. Historically, champagne has been present at momentous occasions since the year A.D. 496, when Clovis, the King of the Franks, was converted to Christianity, and was anointed with champagne. French kings were crowned in Reims, a city in the middle of the Champagne region, between 898 and 1825, and these celebrations included copious amounts of the sparkling champagne wine. The Frenchman Jean-Loup Chretien celebrated his landing after a trip on the Soviet space station with champagne. Champagne has even found its way to the top of Annapurna and Everest, carried up by mountain climbers wishing to celebrate their accomplishments. Somber occasions have also been marked with champagne: Philip of Orleans drank the “wine of kings” prior to meeting with the Revolutionary Tribunal in 1793, knowing his fate was sealed. Further Reading: Edwards, Michael. The Champagne Companion. Toronto: Quintet Publishing, 1999; MacNeil, K. The Wine Bible. New York: Workman Publishing, 2001; Vu d’ici et Benoit de La Brosse. “The Wines of Champagne: From Lifestyle to Wine Styles.” New York: Vignerons et Maisons de Champagne, Champagne Wines Information Bureau, 1998; http://www.champagne.fr. “An Unusual Wine: A Special Wine for Celebration”; http://www.intowine. com. “Celebrating Champagne: The Region”; http://www.intowine.com. “Celebrating Champagne: How to Serve Champagne”; Zraley, K. Windows on the World Complete Wine Course 2006 edition. New York: Sterling Publishing Co., 2005.
Deborah Winders
Cheese Course, History of The cheese course, which consists of one cheese or a selection of complimentary cheeses, is typically served at the end of dinner, before, after, or in place of a sweet dessert. It has an established place in Western European dining, and it is growing in popularity in the United States, both at dinner parties and in restaurants. At private homes, guests usually help themselves to cheese from a communal platter. In restaurants, diners receive their own plates with individually sized portions of cheese, usually selected from a cheese cart that is wheeled to the table at the conclusion of the meal. Bread, crackers, nuts, dried and preserved fruits, honey, and pickled vegetables often accompany the cheese course, and wine is the standard beverage.
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The origins of the contemporary European cheese course can be traced back to Ancient Greek and Roman banquets. For ancient farmers and soldiers on campaign, for whom meat was scarce, cheese might count as the main meal of the day, along with grains, relish, and vegetables, but for the wealthy, cheese would be just one part of a larger, leisurely dinner. Cheese could be served before the main meal as part of the appetizer course, after the meal with dessert, or during the drinking party, which concluded the dinner. The Greeks believed that cheese helped stimulate guests’ thirst for wine. Many desserts were made with cheese, so cheese would make an appearance in one form or other at the end of a banquet. Just like most refined and cultured things from the classical period, cheese suffered in the Middle Ages and was later rediscovered and championed in the Renaissance. In the Middle Ages cheese remained a dietary staple in some areas, like the north, and for the poor. For the elite, however, cheese—and most dairy products—was regarded with suspicion, chiefly for religious and health reasons. It was the Humanists around 1500 who elevated cheese as a mark of connoisseurship, and by the mid-sixteenth century in Italy, cheese was a regular item at banquets, a term which referred to the elaborate final course of a dinner party. At these banquets, cheese was often sculpted into elaborate shapes, like towers and castles; banquets aimed to impress with spectacle. Physicians in the early modern period recommended that cheese be eaten at the end of the meal to close the stomach and ensure safe digestion. As the historian Ken Albala hypothesizes, this purported salutary practice may be the origin of the contemporary European custom—and growing American trend—of ending a meal with cheese. Increased cheese
Gruyère cheese production in Switzerland, illustration for a reference book on natural sciences, France, 1909. The Art Archive/Private Collection/ Marc Charmet.
Cheese Course, History of consumption during this period also marks the end of medieval cooking. By the eighteenth century, the richness of dairy products was preferred over the heavy meats and exotic spices of the Middle Ages. Modern European cooking had begun. Modern science confirms the healthful benefits of eating cheese after a meal. Cheese, especially if consumed after something sweet, can help prevent tooth decay and even reverse the early stages of tooth decay. The calcium in cheese keeps teeth strong, and the protein and fat protect tooth enamel from the harmful acids produced from eating sugars. Furthermore, eating cheese produces saliva, which can also retard decay. Whatever the reason for concluding a meal with cheese, a cheese course had become so entrenched in Continental dining by the early nineteenth century that Brillat-Savarin declared that “a dinner which ends without cheese is like a beautiful woman with only one eye.” Britain, on the other hand, did not necessarily share the French enthusiasm for cheese. Upper-class Victorians eschewed eating cheese at the end of the meal, claiming that its consumption undesirably reflected working-class eating habits and that cheese was hard to digest. Proper young Victorian ladies were further cautioned to abstain from cheese, as well as game and savories, because it tainted their breath and made them less desirable to men. Despite their reservations about cheese, the Victorians invented a specialized cheese knife that had two small points at the tip, like a fork, and was used to spear a chunk of cheese and transport it to one’s plate (never directly into one’s mouth). These knives are still common in Britain, where the cheese course has regained fashion. The Victorians were not the first to create specialized utensils or specific rules for eating a cheese course. At Renaissance banquets where making an impression was paramount, there were decorative knives for cutting, serving, and eating cheese, especially Parmesan, which was very popular. These utensils were just as much about practicality as they were about declaring one’s wealth, class, and taste. The French today have rules about the proper way to cut cheese. Guests should cut a wedge, like a slice of cake, from a triangular chunk of cheese, so that no single guest hogs the desired center part of the cheese. In America, there are fewer prescriptions today about the proper way to serve a cheese course. A host can select cheeses depending on the wine being served with dinner (a cheese course is a traditional way to finish the last of the wine before moving on to a sweet dessert) or by a wine specifically chosen to go with the cheese course. It should be noted that not all wines go with all cheeses. There can be a theme to the selection (e.g., all American cheeses) or a particular goal (e.g., stimulate dinner conversation, compliment the main meal, or aid digestion). A cheese course can also be served before the meal, as is traditionally done in the United States, along with a cocktail or aperitif. A cocktail can even be drunk with a cheese course served at the end of the meal, in place of wine, and a cheese course can star as the main meal itself. Despite there being a large variety of specialized
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cheese knives on the market today, any small knife that can cut hard cheese or spread a soft one will do. There are no set rules, but it is best to serve no more than five cheeses to avoid overwhelming the palate. In countries like Britain, France, Italy, and Spain, however, with their longstanding culinary traditions, there tends to be an established way to conclude a meal with cheese. In France, a single, regional cheese will be featured, along with wine from that area. For example, in Alsace, a hearty meal of choucroute (cabbage and sausages) ends with a wedge of Munster cheese and a local Riesling or Gewürztraminer. In Britain, a festive meal is not complete without the classic pairing of Stilton and port. The contemporary conception of the cheese course is very Western, but the cheese course has a history in Asia as well, a continent not known for dairy products. In China, the bon vivant Zhang Dai, wrote nostalgically of his hedonistic life in Nanjing after the fall of the Ming (late 1500s, early 1600s) when he ate, among other things, cheese infused with orchid blossoms. There are other accounts in early modern China of eating cheese as its own course. As a more contemporary example, Zahidul Hakim, a cheesemonger in New York City, used to eat a simple cheese, made by his mother, as a separate course at home in Bangladesh. Just as in Europe, cheese can be considered a delicacy and good for health. Further Reading: Albala, Ken. The Banquet: Dining in the Great Courts of Renaissance Europe. Urbana and Chicago: University of Illinois Press, 2007; Dalby, Andrew, and Sally Grainger. The Classical Cookbook. Los Angeles: J. Paul Getty Museum, 1996; Tarlov, Richard, and Janet Tarlov. “Discover the Pleasures of a Cheese Course.” Fine Cooking 25 (1998): 54–59; Visser, Margaret. The Rituals of Dinner: The Origins, Evolution, Eccentricities and Meaning of Table Manners. New York: Grove Weidenfeld, 1991.
Diana Pittet
Childhood in South India The richness of cultural histories and symbolic rituals is threaded through south Indian celebrations of life, whether it is the birth of a baby, naming ceremony, first meal, birthday, puberty, marriage, or the observance of an anniversary. Celebrating every stage in life of a newborn is a big part of Indian Hindu culture. The manner in which these occasions are celebrated may differ from region to region, but sharing the joy of each milestone in life, however small, is a great source of happiness. And all celebrations, regardless of the occasion, have one thing in common—food. These ancient customs have stood the test of time in spite of changed lifestyles from extended families to nuclear families. Celebrations begin even before a baby is born. A pregnant mother is pampered with gifts of sweets, new clothes, and jewelry during certain stages of pregnancy. A woman’s first pregnancy, and the imminence of her
Childhood in South India giving birth to the next link in the family chain, is celebrated in various ceremonies in India. In Southwestern India, among Kerala Hindu Nayars the ceremony is called Puliyoonu. The expectant mother’s brother ceremoniously feeds her puli, a type of sour soup made with five kinds of sour fruits from a spoon made with a jackfruit leaf. After the mother-to-be drinks the puli, her father and husband present her with new clothes. The event is celebrated with a feast. The birth of a baby, the link that perpetuates the family, is indeed an occasion for celebration. Small packets of sweets are distributed to the entire community to announce the birth of a newborn. Two weeks later the baby is placed in the cradle for the first time, and again it is an occasion to rejoice. An array of sweets is displayed in trays under a cradle decorated with flowers, and the new mother places the baby in the cradle. She rocks the cradle to the accompaniment of songs. On the 28th day after a birth (the end of the first lunar month) a ceremony, Irupathettu, is celebrated. The baby is given its name, its first piece of jewelry, its first meal of sweet porridge, and even its first chance to wear eye makeup. The mother sits on the floor, facing east, with the baby on her lap. The baby is then fed a small spoonful of a freshly prepared herbal concoction called vayambu, which is believed to stimulate good digestion. Then the baby is fed a sweet porridge of kora (millet) or dried raw-plantain powder cooked with milk and a touch of sugar. Finger millet is considered easily digestible, high in protein, and babies are fed small quantities, once a day, from the time they are one month old. Indians have a tremendous fascination for jewelry. Traditional jewelry pieces at this ceremony include an aranjanam (a gold chain for the midriff ) and vala and thala (gold bangles for arms and ankles). A black glass bangle is also included to ward off the evil eye. In some families, the baby’s father or maternal uncle whispers the baby’s name three times in his or her ears. Others wait to name the baby until the ceremony of feeding the first meal of rice (see below). A sumptuous vegetarian feast follows the ceremonies. In the past, Irupathettu was also the time for ear piercing and adorning the baby with his or her first set of earrings. Chooroonu, the occasion when rice is fed to the baby for the first time, is celebrated six months after birth. An astrologer is consulted to select an auspicious day for the ceremony. The baby is bathed, dressed in festive clothes, and taken to the temple. There, the baby is seated on the lap of his or her uncle or father. After offering special prayers for the baby, the priest ladles out a serving of paal paayasam (rice pudding that has been offered at the temple) onto a banana leaf. The baby is fed this paayasam. On this day, the baby also gets his or her first necklace. Needless to say, a sumptuous vegetarian feast follows this ceremony, to which extended family members are invited. It is not just the major events in one’s life that get celebrated; even the small milestones are celebrated. When a baby starts crawling on its knees it is again an occasion for celebration. In most old south Indian homes the
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threshold to each room is covered with a smooth and slightly elevated wooden piece called an ummarappadi. When a baby starts crawling and climbs over this wooden piece to enter the next room, this event is celebrated by showering the baby with tiny, sweet rice dumplings. As the poor, confused child starts crying, the adults laugh and pick the child up from the floor, all the while enjoying the little dumplings. In some communities when the baby has its first tooth, the paternal aunt makes these dumplings, makes the baby sit on a decorated low ummarappadi, and the dumplings are showered on the head. Every pirannal, or birthday, is observed with special prayers at the temple, followed by a sumptuous feast; the first birthday is observed with more ceremony. Prayers are offered at the temple, and several guests are invited to the house for a festive meal. A banana leaf laden with a festive meal is placed in front of a lighted lamp as an offering to the Hindu god Ganapathi, destroyer of all obstacles. Mothers consider it a sacred duty to serve rice to children on their birthdays. They stand behind their son or daughter and serve rice on a banana leaf while praying for the long life, welfare, and happiness of the child. By the time the child is three years old Vidyarambham, which literally translates to “propitious beginning of education,” is the celebration of both reading and writing. Children are initiated into the world of letters at the temple. They are seated on the lap of their uncle or father, and the adult writes the auspicious words HARI SRI on the child’s little tongue with the gold ring of one of their relatives, while praying for the goddess of learning to bless him or her with the skills for reading and writing. Then they hold the children’s little fingers and help the child write the same words in raw rice spread in front of them. Despite the differences in the styles and forms of celebrations observed by different regions in India, there is an underlying similarity in how they celebrate a new life with age-old rituals and sumptuous feasts. Further Reading: Day, Francis. The Land of the Perumals; or Cochin: Its Past and Its Present. New Delhi and Madras: Asia Educational Services, 1990 [first published in 1863]; Fawcett, F. Nayars of Malabar. New Delhi and Madras: Asia Educational Services, 1990 [reprinted from 1901 edition]; Menon, C. Achyuta. The Cochin State Manual. Government of Cochin, 1911; Playne, Somerset, and J. W. Bond, comp., and Arnold Wright, ed. Southern India: Its History, People, and Industrial Resources. Reprint. New Delhi and Chennai: Asia Educational Services, 2004 (first published by Foreign and Colonial Compiling and Publishing Co., London, 1914–1915).
Ammini Ramachandran
Children’s Birthday Parties Children’s birthday parties commemorate the anniversary of the child’s day of birth and are celebrated in many cultures around the world. Most
Children’s Birthday Parties birthday celebrants are treated specially on their birthday and the day’s celebrations generally include a party with friends and family, decorations, gifts, activities, and food. The widespread celebration of birthdays was begun by the Mithras cult, which is believed to have originated in Persia, and whose practices were spread across Europe by the soldiers of the Roman Empire. The modernday children’s birthday party tradition began over two hundred years ago in Germany with the Kinderfest (in German, Kinder means “children” and Fest means “festival”). Children’s birthdays were celebrated simply with sweet cakes decorated with candles. By the early twentieth century this tradition had spread to many Western cultures, where children’s birthdays began to include a gathering of the child’s family and friends for a party that extended beyond the immediate family. The commercialization of children’s birthday parties in the United States began in the 1900s and soon developed into the modern type of celebration we know today. Birthday guests receive written invitations by mail or given out by hand. Participants are expected to bring wrapped gifts to their friend’s home, and often leave the party with party favors or goody bags filled with candy, cookies, and small, inexpensive toys. The party room is often decorated with balloons, streamers, and banners. Depending on the age group, simple games such as “pin-the-tail on the donkey,” musical chairs, or charades may be played. Common birthday party foods are pizza, hot dogs, potato chips, and punch or soda. However, the most important part
Mona Grimm celebrates her second birthday in Buffalo, New York, 1943. Library of Congress.
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of the modern-day Western birthday party is the birthday cake, generally a layer cake with rich fillings, creamy frosting, and colorful decorations. Birthday cakes are also often accompanied by ice cream. The birthday child’s name is often written, along with a birthday wish, in frosting on top of the cake. This type of cake was first popularized in women’s magazines in the early twentieth century. Birthday parties in the mid-twentieth-century United States developed into more extravagant events, sometimes involving themes such as sports, animals, or characters from popular children’s books. Matching room decorations, games, and cakes might be purchased to create a theme party. In the late twentieth century, venues such as McDonald’s and Chuck E. Cheese restaurants began to offer parties outside the home. At these events children eat, drink, and play, with minimal set-up time or clean up for parents. Today, children’s birthday celebrations in middle- to upper-class families commonly take place in bowling alleys, gymnasiums (some with basketball, gymnastics, or rock climbing), skating rinks, swimming clubs, cooking schools, arts and crafts stores, or movie theaters, and often include hired entertainments such as musicians, disc-jockeys, magicians, ponies and petting zoos, face painters, puppet shows, and costumed characters made popular by children’s films and television shows. Surprise parties are another popular form of celebration. The birthday celebrant’s friends and family secretly plan a party, and then bring the child to a location where everyone is already gathered, ready to celebrate. Birthday celebrations have developed in different ways throughout the world. In Brazil, for instance, children tug on the ear of the birthday child to bring luck. An egg broken on the head of the birthday child is a symbol of new life. In Russia, children receive a double-crusted pie instead of a cake, with their name carved decoratively into the top crust. Popular Russian birthday food is pirozhki, a dumpling filled with beef, hard cooked eggs, potatoes, or cheese. Party favors are pinned to a clothesline. In Mexico, the tradition of piñatas is still popular. Blindfolded children use a stick to hit a papier-mâché animal or figure filled with candies and small toys. When the piñata is finally broken open, the goodies fall to the ground and the children rush in to gather them. Younger children enjoy pull-string piñatas that are equipped with multiple strings hanging from them. Each child pulls a string until the piñata finally breaks open. Piñatas are also very popular in many parts of the United States. Celebrating children’s birthdays with lavish parties is by no means a universal phenomenon. Many African countries and some Middle Eastern countries do not mark birthdays except at certain times of life in rites of passage. In Asian countries such as China, Japan, Korea, and Vietnam, birthdays are celebrated on the lunar New Year. At the New Year everyone considers him- or herself one year older. In China, actual birthdays are celebrated minimally, with long wheat noodles symbolizing long life, and boiled eggs to bring luck. In some countries birthdays are religious
Children’s Birthday Parties occasions. On specific significant birthdays in Japan, children are dressed in their best traditional clothes and taken to the Shinto shrine to be blessed. In Sri Lanka, children also go to the temple and offer traditional foods to the gods. In India, the birthday child is also taken to the temple and is marked with a black dot on the forehead by the priest to show that he or she has received a birthday blessing. A child’s ears are pierced on either their third or fifth birthday, which is believed to endow their spirits with health and wealth. Many cultures celebrate specific birthdays as coming-of-age ceremonies or to mark a state of semi-independence of the young adult. In some cultures a child’s first birthday is considered especially important; in Hawaii, a child’s first birthday is often celebrated with a luau. The family will throw an elaborate party with some traditional Hawaiian foods, live entertainment, and dancing late into the night. Honoring the first birthday in many cultures is a remnant of times preceding the development of modern medicine when infant mortality rates were much higher, and it was less common for a child to actually reach its first birthday. In Judaism, the 13th birthday (for boys) or the 12th birthday (for girls) is celebrated with a Bar Mitzvah (for boys) or a Bat Mitzvah (for girls). Modern day Bar and Bat Mitzvahs are often celebrated with elaborate parties marking the birthday child’s spiritual maturity and coming of age. In Latin American countries and communities in the United States, a girl’s 15th birthday is honored with a la quinceanera party, a celebration that marks a girl’s entry into womanhood with religious rituals and a grand ball that resembles a wedding reception. At these parties, the celebrant dances with her father and other boys for the first time. In the United States and Canada, it is common for girls to celebrate their 16th birthday with a sweet sixteen party, and affluent families in Australia, England, Ireland, and the United States sometimes celebrate a girl’s 18th birthday with a debutante ball—also referred to as a coming-out-party— premiering the young woman into society. This practice began in England as an opportunity to present young ladies into society, indicating that they had reached a marriageable age. In spite of the differences between birthday celebrations worldwide, the global spread of fast food restaurants like McDonald’s that often serve as birthday party venues, and the popularization of American birthday parties in films and other media have contributed to the spread of Americanstyle birthday parties around the world. Children in many countries now celebrate birthdays at franchises of these same restaurants or at home with Western-style birthday cakes, foods, and entertainment. Further Reading: Dennis, Matthew. Encyclopedia of Holidays and Celebrations: A Country-by-Country Guide. Facts on File Library of World History. New York: Facts on File, 2006; Wallace, Paula S. The World of Birthdays. Milwaukee, WI: Gareth Stevens Publishing, 2003.
Tamara V. Bigelow
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Chinese Banquets A Chinese banquet presents a convivial atmosphere, but its structures approach a Japanese tea ceremony in their formality and precision. The guest list, the greetings, the menu, the chef, the drinks, the toasts, and even the leave-taking follow strict conventions. The host plans the event and all of its components to achieve specific social goals. Guests are expected to know the rules and follow the lead of their host; when they do, a shared, warm experience may result. When they do not, intentionally or through inexperience, tensions may arise that last beyond the final farewells. Over two thousand years of imperial culture, banquets emerged as a sophisticated, ritualized art, with gorgeous tableware and ever more elaborate dishes, showcasing the vast resources of the Chinese empire. By the twelfth century of the common era, a rising class of merchants were holding their own grand feasts, and the taste for banqueting has only spread since then. For ordinary people in China, who rarely had enough to eat, let alone access to remarkable cuisine, an invitation to a banquet provided a treasured opportunity to enjoy renowned delicacies cooked by professional chefs. Today, people around the world can hope to be invited to a Chinese banquet, due to the wide dispersal of Chinese emigrants, along with their cuisine and their far-flung social networks.
A nineteenth-century Chinese painting of a marriage feast. The Art Archive/Victoria and Albert Museum London/Eileen Tweedy.
Chinese Banquets Banquets are held for many reasons, to celebrate a holiday, a joyous family event, or the visit of an honored guest. Whatever the occasion, the banquet is a crucial part of a culture of social relationships, framed by the linked ideas of guanxi and ganqing, or social networks and the personal sentiment which strengthens those networks. Hosting a banquet can help cement ties with a local official, for instance, or with a business executive visiting from Beijing. Because these social relationships may work to circumvent stated government policies against favoritism, official documents frequently disparage banqueting as linked to corruption. But corruption is not the point. Banquet hosts do not coldly calculate the return on their investment; they are sharing food as a way to share values and build community. Both generosity and ambition can play a role in determining who is invited to a banquet. The guest list is organized from top to bottom, from guests of honor to guests as appreciative audience. In earlier eras, invitations arrived on formal red paper and included the full guest list. When the appointed hour comes, the guests arrive on time. Their hosts may applaud the entrance of the guests of honor; the appropriate response is to applaud back and wait to be shown where to sit. Seating arrangements are planned as deliberately as the guest list. The most honored guest sits to the right of the host, facing the door. At a large banquet, each table of guests has a host representative, to take on the serving responsibilities of the host and to honor the guests. Tables usually seat 8, 10, or 12 people. The banquet formally begins with the host saying a few words of welcome and making the first toast. The main guest responds with a short speech and a corresponding toast to the host. During the course of the meal, both sides will continue to make toasts. Drinking plays an important role at banquets and has historically been a particularly gendered part of the event. Male hosts and guests drink hard liquor together, toasting each other and emptying their glasses if the toaster calls out “gan bei.” To toast, lift your glass with both hands, catch someone’s eye, smile, and drink together. Toasts may thus be made from person to person, or with the whole group, but drinking hard liquor without toasting is offensive, as is filling your glass without first filling the glasses of those around you. Generally, the observant host refills a guest’s glass as soon as it is empty. Not drinking when appropriate may also be taken as an insult, so Western men are advised to apologize and blame an allergy or medication if they choose not to participate in the drinking. The obligation to keep up with other drinkers may be challenging, especially as men sometimes use drinking as a social but distinctly competitive game. Women will not be pressed to drink and are not expected to drink heavily; they may, however, find themselves handicapped in their business or official duties by this exclusion from the crucial social drinking. In recent years, some Chinese women have been keeping up with the drinking at banquets, to earn the respect of their male colleagues and be treated as equals. After the initial toast, the host starts the meal by raising his or her chopsticks to indicate to the assembled guests that they should do likewise. The
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host serves choice tidbits to the guest of honor and may offer the guest the first taste of every new dish that is brought to the table. Today’s Chinese banquet usually consists of 10 to 12 courses, not the 300 courses of a Han dynasty extravaganza. The first course is composed of cold appetizers and may come in the form of “stars around the moon,” with a delicacy such as abalone in the center, encircled by four or five other cold dishes such as sausages, liver, cut vegetables, olives, and nuts. This may be followed by a selection of hot appetizers, such as dumplings or spring rolls. Then come a succession of main courses, including special dishes to communicate the importance of the banquet. An ordinary banquet will have at least eight main dishes composed of seafood, poultry, and pork or beef. Banquet specialties vary across China’s broad regions, so that northerners might include Peking duck and sweet and sour fish; the Cantonese might have Jade Chicken (sautéed chicken strips sculpted with greens and ginger) or deep-fried prawns; the Fujianese might have stir-fried jellyfish and kidney; and Sichuan banquets might include stewed beef with hot bean sauce. Aside from these regional specialties, an elaborate banquet usually also features some very expensive ingredients such as shark’s fin, bird’s nest, sea cucumber, or monkey head mushrooms. A very grand banquet will have even more of these prestigious dishes. Some high-status ingredients like bear’s paw or shark’s fin appear much less often today, due to concerns about endangered species. The sequence and composition of the courses at a sophisticated banquet reveal the art of the chef and the knowledge of the host. Each element of the meal can be a reference to a classical menu; or the menu as a whole can resonate with some celebrated culinary triumph. Food is eaten with enthusiasm rather than stiff elegance. If you empty your plate or bowl, your host will assume you are still hungry and offer you more. You may say “wo chi bao le” to indicate politely that you are full. Unlike an ordinary meal, where a primary rule is not to waste even a grain of rice, at a banquet you are not bound to clean your plate; the leftover food shows that the meal was satisfying and honors the host’s wealth and generosity. A good guest eats steadily, not taking too much of any one dish and leaving room for the later courses. Refusing to try each new dish is impolite as it breaks the bond of sociability. The conversation during the meal is not as scripted as the menu, but it does follow a certain protocol. The hosts apologize repeatedly for the meal’s inadequacy, while the guests rave about the meal’s extravagance and magnificence. The food itself is a constant topic, as diners discuss the chef’s origins and training, tease out each dish’s ingredients, and make comparisons to other meals they have enjoyed. Such banter remains on a light and lively level throughout the meal. Not wanting to offend, guests rarely touch on politics or raise cultural comparisons. Similarly, no one will mention business out loud, although the participants’ official roles are present in everyone’s minds. Alliances and assurances made at a Chinese banquet are no less real for having been unspoken.
Chinese New Year The last main course is a simple one, usually of rice or noodles. The custom is to eat lightly from this course, to show that you were already sated by the more elaborate dishes which came before. After a final dish of fresh fruit, the main guest thanks the host on behalf of the assembled guests. The host may say a few final words in response, or may simply stand up to signal the end of the banquet. The guests say their goodbyes quickly, while the host remains to pay the bill. The main guest may offer once or twice to pay but should accept the host’s refusal and leave promptly. The bill for the banquet is never split between the host and the guest of honor. The proper way to repay one’s host is to invite him to a similar banquet at a later date, though in the culture of guanxi and ganqing, there have always been many ways to show one’s appreciation and affection after a wonderful banquet. Further Reading: Farquhar, Judith. Appetites: Food and Sex in Postsocialist China. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2002; Fletcher, Nichola. “Chinese Banquets: An ancient food culture and a Chinese New Year feast.” In Charlemagne’s Tablecloth: A piquant history of feasting. New York: St. Martin’s Press, 2005; Newman, Jacqueline M. “Banquets: Feasts for Every Occasion,” Flavor & Fortune Winter Volume: 2000 Issue: 7(4). Available online at http://www.flavorandfortune. com/dataaccess/article.php?ID=257; Newman, Jacqueline M. Food Culture in China. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2004; Yang, Mayfair Mei-hui. Gifts, Favors, and Banquets: The Art of Social Relationships in China. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1994; Yutopians Chinese Banquet Page. http://www. yutopian.com/cooking/banquets.
Erica J. Peters
Chinese New Year Usually falling during January or February of the Western calendar year, Chinese New Year starts with the first new moon of the New Year and ends on the full moon 15 days later. It is celebrated by Chinese around the globe and is considered the most important holiday of the year. Many entertainments, celebrations, and religious activities occur during this period, through which the common themes of auspicious beginnings, superstition, and Confucian values of hierarchy and community responsibility occur. Superstition and symbolism are also important to most activities, behaviors, and routines during this time. As with the solar calendar New Year, the Chinese celebrate their own New Year’s Eve. Extended family will often reunite at home or at a restaurant to share a meal and close out the old year together. The time leading up to New Year’s Eve is spent cleaning the house, repairing or replacing broken objects, settling debts, washing old clothes, and buying new clothes if they can be afforded. Cleaning is done because it is believed that any dust or dirt left lying about might fly into someone’s eye and blind him, while the other activities are associated with preparing for a completely fresh start for the
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New Year. This time is also considered to be magical, with ghosts and spirits lurking about that have to be defended against or appeased with protective symbols, visits to temples, and incense burning. Not as common today, it was once a New Year’s Eve tradition to tell children stories of the “bitter moon,” referred to as such because of the difficulty of this period for many of China’s poor. (In order to pay debts, households would find themselves having to sell their valuables or even their children, but it was believed that money given away during the bitter moon would be returned during the New Year.) These stories, similar to fairy tales, would usually emphasize values such as family unity, sacrifice, and selfless contribution. On New Year’s Day in Chinese cities and in Chinatowns around the world, lion dances scare away bad spirits or troubles of the old year and welcome the new year, bringing good luck to all. Colorful acrobatics, loud cymbals, gongs, pipes, and drums, and the accompanying firecrackers make for a very festive scene. Aside from delighting onlookers, firecrackers are also meant to keep evil spirits away and humor the immortals with lively noises. In the evening, fireworks are usually scheduled and start off the New Year with a literal bang. Lion dances are not the only entertainment, though. Chinese New Year’s parades are events to look forward to. Whether on the
Dragon performers in the Chinese New Year parade, celebrating Year of the Rat, Los Angeles, 2008. Jose Gil/Shutterstock.
Chinese New Year Champs Elysees of Paris, Orchard Road of Singapore, or Canal Street in New York, the Chinese New Year parade is a sight to behold. San Francisco’s Chinese New Year parade is one of the most famous parades in the world, complete with floats, marching bands, stilt-walkers, a 201-foot Golden Dragon, Chinese acrobats, and an appearance by that year’s Miss Chinatown USA. It is not until the sixth day of the New Year that the Chinese go out to visit friends. Like all other aspects of the New Year, the practice of these visits, referred to as bainian is a highly ritualized affair, reflective of the Confucian values imbedded in the culture. Younger Chinese visit the homes of their elders to pay their respects. Students visit their teachers, employees visit their employers, younger brothers bring their families to their older brothers’ homes, and so on. Each household will also have a Tray of Togetherness, a round, shallow lacquered box. The inside is divided into segments, with a circular segment in the middle. Traditionally there are a total of eight compartments, each of which was filled with a special food item of significance to the New Year season; sweet dried fruits such as candied melon, lychee nuts, kumquats, longan, and coconut are interspersed with dyed red melon seeds, lotus seeds, and salty peanuts. Each food represents something to hope for in the New Year: health, family, prosperity, happiness, fertility, filialness, and longevity. Upon arrival, tea, holiday foods, and all the foods on the tray are always offered to the guests. The visitors, in turn, always come bearing gifts. The gifts usually consist of sweet items such as tins of biscuits or candies because sweetness is also associated with good things. Hong bao, literally “red packets,” or envelopes filled with cash, are also exchanged. Chinese children look forward to this time of year as only married adults give out hong bao, and at every home the child visits, he or she can expect to leave with a windfall of red envelopes. Red is considered lucky, and not only do many wear red during the course of the New Year, but gifts are wrapped in red paper and lucky money is contained in red envelopes. The 15th and last day of Chinese New Year is traditionally marked by a parade of lanterns. The origin of the festival stems from a legend, one version of which has it that the Jade Emperor in Heaven was so angry at a town for killing his favorite goose that he decided to destroy it with a storm of fire. Upon learning of his plans, a fairy sympathetic to the townspeople advised them to light lanterns the evening of the planned storm. The townsfolk acted accordingly, and for the Jade Emperor watching from the Heavens, it looked as if the village was ablaze. The townspeople had evaded the Jade Emperor’s wrath and from that day forth, people celebrated the anniversary of their deliverance by carrying lanterns through the streets on the first full moon of the year. The lanterns come in various shapes and colors, and are made out of different kinds of materials. They provide a colorful backdrop for lion dances, dragon dances, and fireworks that accompany the lantern parade. Modern festivals are no less spectacular. Elaborate lanterns (usually lit with electric bulbs) created in the shapes of horses, birds, dragons, and other
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animals delight onlookers crowded on both sides of streets and avenues closed off for the procession. In northern China, lanterns carved from ice are not uncommon. The sheer scale and wattage of the event in major cities such as Taipei would surely appease any pyrotechnically inclined immortal and is a fittingly grand ending to the holiday. Further Reading: Bredon, Juliet. Chinese New Year Festivals: A Picturesque Monograph of the Rites, Ceremonies and Observances in Relation thereto. Shanghai: Kelly and Walsh, 1930; Bredon, Juliet, and Igor Mitrophanow. The Moon Year; A Record of Chinese Customs and Festivals. New York: Paragon Book Reprint Corp., 1966; Lai, Kuan Fook. The Hennessy Book of Chinese Festivals. Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia: Heinemann Asia, 1984; Newman, Jacqueline. Food and Culture in China. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2004; Jin, Hailin, Xuefei Bai, and Yoanzhi He. The Traditional Chinese Festivals and Tales. (Chinese-English edition) Chongqing: Chongqing Publishing House, 2001.
Karen Lau Taylor
Chocolate Chocolate today is so much a part of our everyday lives, whether in the form of the candy bar, specialty grand cru bonbons, or exquisitely crafted dessert pastries, that we soon forget the many transformations that this product has undergone to arrive at its present place on the table. The cacao tree is one of the domesticated plants used by native peoples in pre-Conquest Mesoamerica that has spread to the fields and kitchens of the Old World and then circled back to the factories and kitchens of the New. In the United States, where hot chocolate has become a mass-market, marshmallowladen drink for children, it is difficult to envision the beverage as a luxury or exotic delicacy limited to the top strata of European society in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Yet in an even earlier time and place, chocolate was not only the drink of Aztec and Mayan elite but also a form of currency and a means of exchange, in which large sacks of cacao beans were used for taxes or tribute. The difference between cacao—the bean and commodity—and chocolate—the processed product—is important to our understanding of this luxury drink turned popular food. In 1753 the Swedish naturalist Linnaeus gave the plant its binomial scientific name, Theobroma cacao: theobroma from the Greek means “food of the gods,” while cacao is a loan word from the Mixe-Zoquean family. Conventionally, the term cacao is used to refer to the plant, the almond-shaped beans encased in the multi-hued pod, and all its raw materials before processing. In the next stage, whether in liquid or solid form, the beans become chocolate—a word that went through a process of linguistic hybridization, similar to the creolization of the drink itself. While the derivation and etymology of the term chocolate from cacahuatl in the Nahuatl language may be in dispute, the word nonetheless refers to the
Chocolate cold, bitter, water-based beverage of the native Aztecs that the Spaniards learned to drink hot and sweetened with cane sugar. With some exceptions in American and British usage, the term cocoa refers to the defatted powder after separating cacao butter from the cacao solids. This process, invented by the Dutchman Conrad Van Houten in 1828, thereafter revolutionized chocolate preparation. The harvesting and initial treatment of the beans—cutting cacao pods from the cacao tree with machetes, fermenting the seeds with their surrounding pulp, drying and packing the beans for storage and shipment—have changed very little over the last few centuries. While there have been few improvements in the basic methods of processing cacao beans into nibs or kernels, a lot has changed in the preparation and consumption of chocolate. Over the past five centuries, food rituals, the roles of eating and cooking in gender relations, hospitality, and social exchange have changed markedly. Chocolate currently plays an important and symbolic role in everyday food routines, subtle variations of life, and quotidian performances with respect to gift-giving and entertaining. MESOAMERICAN ORIGINS The early history of cacao and chocolate culture is rather obscure because Spanish conquistadors and Catholic missionaries in Latin America were intent on destroying native religious and social systems along with the relics, written and engraved, that held the secrets to the beans’ use. Archaeologists have tried to piece together evidence of the domestication, cultivation, processing, and level of trading of cacao prior to the Spanish Conquest through pottery remains (or chards), Mayan hieroglyphics, art work, and artifacts. Identification of the place of origin of the cultivated species of Theobroma cacao is hotly contested, obscured by the question of whether socalled wild plants of the species have been found in Mesoamerica, the area that in pre-Conquest times included the southern part of Mexico, Belize, Guatemala, and portions of El Salvador and Honduras. While there are many scholars who accept the existence of wild Theobroma cacao in Mesoamerica, others claim it was either domesticated in South America and then taken to that region, or first taken there in wild form and then domesticated. According to anthropologists Sophie and Michael Coe, authors of the definitive work on the subject, the fact that no pre-Columbian inhabitant of South America used the plant for anything beyond making a wine from the white pulp surrounding the seeds, and using that same pulp as a nibble, would seem a convincing argument against a South American origin and subsequent transportation to Mesoamerica. The first European encounter with cacao took place on August 15, 1502, when Columbus, on his fourth and final voyage, came upon a great Mayan trading canoe with cacao beans in its cargo on the island of Guanaja, some 30 miles north of the Honduran mainland. Later in 1517 Hernán Cortés
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Detail of a Diego Rivera mural of Native Mexicans harvesting cocoa, 1951. © Banco de Mexico Trust. Schalkwijk/Art Resource, NY.
encountered Moctezuma II, the Aztec ruler, for whom chocolate occupied not only an enviable place at his table but required careful attention to its preparation. Chocolate, however, did not originate with the Aztecs, as most books on the subject would have us believe, but with the remarkable Maya and their distant predecessors, the Olmecs, in the humid lowlands of the Mexican Gulf Coast around 1500 B.C. Based on evidence from historical linguistics more than archaeology, scholars believe the Olmecs first domesticated the plant in the favorable environment of the humid tropical rain forest. A DRINK IN MAYA AND AZTEC RITUALS In the Classic Maya period, from A.D. 250 to the ninth century, written evidence for the use of cacao survives in the form of so-called cacao glyphs and hieroglyphs on elegantly painted or carved vessels that accompanied the elite in their tombs and graves. Chocolate drinks played a very important role in Maya rituals and banquets as well as in betrothal and marriage ceremonies, much the same way as champagne serves today in our own culture. One of the things people did at such festivities was to “drink chocolate together” (known as chokola’j). Pre-Conquest chocolate was not a single concoction to be drunk but a vast and complex array of drinks, gruels, porridges, and probably solid substances, to all of which could be added a wide variety of flavorings. The drink existed in two forms: one for ordinary consumption, the other offered to the gods. The basic Aztec method of preparing chocolate was about the same as that prevalent among the Maya of the Yucatán, the only difference being that it seems to have been drunk cool rather than hot. A description of this drink written by a man known to scholars as the Anonymous Conqueror, or Gentleman of Cortés, is as follows: These seeds which are called almonds or cacao are ground and made into powder, and other small seeds are ground, and this powder is put into certain basins with a point, and then they put water on it and mix it with a spoon. And after having mixed it very well, they change it from one basin
Chocolate to another, so that a foam is raised which they put in a vessel made for the purpose. And when they wish to drink it, they mix it with certain small spoons of gold or silver or wood, and drink it, and drinking it one must open one’s mouth, because being foam one must give it room to subside, and go down bit by bit. This drink is the healthiest thing, and the greatest sustenance of anything you could drink in the world, because he who drinks a cup of this liquid, no matter how far he walks, can go a whole day without eating anything else. (Anonymous Conqueror 1556: 306a, in Coe and Coe 86–87)
The pouring from one vessel or jar to another was essential to produce a “froth” on the drink which was caused by the fats or “butter” in the grilled and ground cacao nibs. Much like the Maya, the Aztecs varied the preparation of chocolate with flavorings, spices, and other ingredients such as maize; the ground seed of the ceiba or silk-cotton tree; dried and ground chili peppers; dried and ground flowers with vanilla; achiote (annatto) seed, which was used for its bright red color; allspice; the sapote seed; and as a sweetener, honey or sap from the heart of the maguey plant. The drink was generally confined to the elite—the royal house, lords and nobility, longdistance merchants, and warriors. At banquets and the more ordinary meals of the elite, chocolate was never sipped or drunk during the repast but served at the end, in hemispherical bowls of polychrome ceramic, painted or lacquered calabash gourds, or even gold. Cacao had not only economic and gastronomic value among the Aztecs but also deep symbolic meaning. The cacao tree was part of the four directions of their cosmology—being the Tree of the South, the direction of the Land of the Dead, associated with the color red, the color of blood—and the cacao pod was used in rituals as a symbol for the human heart torn out in sacrifice. Sir Eric Thompson, the most influential Mayanist of the twentieth century, suggested that this might be due to the vague resemblance in shape between the two, but a more likely explanation is that both were repositories of precious liquids: blood and chocolate. The question of whether chocolate had mind-altering effects remains unanswered. The biologist John West mentions that since pre-Columbian times the Zapotec Indians of Oaxaca have added the dried aromatic flowers of Quararibea funebris to a chocolate drink called tejate, used to treat anxiety, fever, and coughs. INTRODUCTION IN EUROPE At the time of the Conquest, the Spaniards did not like the chocolate drink of the Aztecs, as they found it to taste bitter. In time, with the crossfertilization of cultural elements between the Amerindian and Spanish cultures, chocolate was absorbed into the colonial cuisine of New Spain and eventually transplanted to Old Spain with a number of notable transformations. The drink was taken hot and regularly sweetened with cane sugar, and Old World spices such as cinnamon, anise seed, and black pepper were substituted for native Mesoamerican flavorings. The vogue of chocolate is,
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therefore, complicit with sugar. Both were processed products of plants cultivated in European tropical colonies through African slave labor. Regardless of how and when chocolate actually was introduced to the Iberian Peninsula (some say with Cortés around 1528), with Spain’s monopoly on cacao production and trade in the New World, chocolate remained an exclusively Spanish phenomenon for the next century. There is general agreement that the drink became acclimatized in the Spanish court during the first half of the seventeenth century, where it was appreciated as a kind of status symbol and a standard feature of Spanish courtly style. Before the days of Versailles, Madrid was the trend-setter for the rest of aristocratic Europe, and eventually chocolate’s secret spread to other European countries, through marriages between the royals or via Catholic friars as they traveled between monasteries. Schivelbusch (91) attributes the marriage of the Hapsburg princess Anna of Austria to Louis XIII in 1615 for bringing chocolate to the French court for she had grown up in Madrid. West (111), on the other hand, writes that French interest in the American novelty was cemented in 1660 when Marie-Thérèse of Spain married Louis XIV. Thus the true story and date of chocolate’s introduction to France, as well as other countries, must be left to lore. Some say chocolate’s introduction to France came through the region of the southwest (Bayonne) and was associated with Sephardic Jews. THE CATHOLIC, SOUTHERN COUNTERPART TO COFFEE Over the course of three centuries, chocolate was to conquer Europe, and with the new demand for the drink, cultivation of cacao spread to the colonies. In The Tastes of Paradise, Schivelbusch refers to chocolate as the Catholic, southern European counterpart to coffee, which was a Protestant, northern drink. Its great nutritional value made it such a significant commodity in the Catholic world. “On the principle that liquids do not break fasts (liquidum non frangit jejunum), chocolate could serve as a nutritional substitute during fasting periods, and naturally this made it more or less [a] vital beverage in Catholic Spain and Italy” (87). In 1569 Pope Pius V unleashed the controversy within the Church of whether chocolate should be considered a drink, which would not break a fast, or a food, which would break a fast. What may have begun, then, as a clerical fasting drink, became a fashionable secular beverage. The chocolate breakfast or morning chocolate, drunk not at the breakfast table, but ideally in the boudoir, in bed if possible, was the custom of the aristocracy in the ancien régime. Breakfast, in this case, did not start off a workday but rather marked the start of a day of carefully cultivated idleness. Breakfast chocolate had very little in common with the breakfast coffee of the bourgeoisie, not only because the drinks were quite different but because the etiquettes were as well. “Whereas the middle-class family sat erect at the breakfast table, with a sense of disciplined propriety,
Chocolate the essence of the chocolate ritual was fluid, lazy, languid motion. If coffee virtually shook drinkers awake for the workday that lay ahead, chocolate was meant to create an intermediate state between lying down and sitting up” (Schivelbusch 91). The idle class’s morning-long awakening and studied leisure over chocolate are represented in many European paintings of the time: Pietro Longhi’s La cioccolata del mattino (Venetian, 1775–1780, Museo Correr, Venice) depicts an informal and relaxed scene of breakfast participants, including the abbé and gallant, around the bed of the mistress of the house as chocolate charms the conversation; Jean-Baptiste (le Vieux) Charpentier’s La famille du duc de Penthièvre, ou La tasse de chocolat (French, 1768, Châteaux de Versailles et de Trianon) reflects the tastes and manners of French society of the Louis XV epoch; and Jean-Etienne Liotard’s most famous painting, Das Schokoladenmädchen or La Belle Chocolatière (Swiss, 1743–1745, “Alte Meister” Gallery in Dresden), is a pastel portrait reputedly of Anna Baltouf, which was later used as the trademark of the American firm, Baker’s Chocolate. The theme of the cup of chocolate was also taken up by French artists Edgar Degas and Pierre-Auguste Renoir. The association of chocolate with eroticism was a popular motif of Rococo paintings. According to an old but perhaps unfounded belief, chocolate was an aphrodisiac and quite the opposite of coffee. Coffee gave to the mind what it took from the body, whereas chocolate was considered to do the reverse, nourishing the body and one’s potency. “It represented the Baroque, Catholic acknowledgment of corporeal being as against Protestant asceticism” (Schivelbusch 1992, p. 92). The letters of Mme de Sévigné (1626–1696) captured the popular vision at the time that the drink contributed to feminine health and happiness; and chocolate was deemed to have medicinal value as a remedy for numerous ailments. FEEDING DESIRE Before the early modern period, the social drinks of Europe had all been alcoholic. Increased contact and direct trade with Asia, Africa, and Arabia, along with the so-called discovery of the Americas, meant that Europeans became introduced to tea, coffee, and drinking chocolate. The popularity of chocolate as a social and exotic beverage in the seventeenth century gave rise to the chocolate parlor or chocolate house. This was the meeting place for an odd mixture of aristocracy and the demimonde; they were thoroughly anti-puritanical and perhaps even bordello-like places. The chocolate house contrasted with the coffeehouse with its bourgeois and puritanical character where guests sat at a table, and the innkeeper served coffee out of a jug with drinking bowls initially without handles. This calm scene contrasted with behavior at a tavern where alcohol was served but was also different from the chocolate parlor with its higher-class clientele and decidedly more expensive beverage. London’s first chocolate house opened in 1657, run by a Frenchman. Similar to the coffeehouses, which had been established a few
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Men and women drinking chocolate in a Leipzig coffeehouse, eighteenth century. Library of Congress.
years earlier, chocolate houses increased in number and became centers of political, economic, and social debate for the wealthy and powerful. A great variety of new utensils and containers were developed in which to serve these new drinks, first for great households or high society and thereafter for the popular market. The response of silversmiths, potters, and other artisans to the demand created by these new beverages can be seen in the exquisite creation of silver, gold, pewter, and porcelain objects. Chocolate pots (chocolatières) and services emerged, similar to tea and coffee services, but with slight decorative or functional changes. They had swizzle sticks (moulinets in French) to whip the heavy chocolate. The grooved wooden beater for the production of the much-prized foam must have been introduced from Spain to Mesoamerica during the sixteenth century, and the Spanish molinillo later became important in chocolate preparation in Europe and America. Chocolate drinks were made by combining hot water with a dried cacao mass, which came in the form of cakes, rolls, or bricks. The water and cacoa mass were then beaten together. A special jug or chocolate pot was created, fitted with a lid pierced in the middle to hold the handle of the swizzle stick, making the drink easier to mix. NEW FORMS AND PATTERNS OF CHOCOLATE CONSUMPTION Expansion of chocolate to the masses was accomplished in the nineteenth century, largely through changes in chocolate processing and
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mechanization as a result of the Industrial Revolution. The advent in 1828 of hydraulic presses to extract cacao butter from the cacao mass allowed for the development of cocoa powder for use in making hot chocolate. Hot chocolate could then be made by just adding hot water or hot milk to the soluble powder. Hence solid and liquid chocolate were no longer the same. With this transformation, chocolate pots and services pretty much disappeared from use, so that today they can command astronomical prices. As chocolate became easier, faster, and less expensive to produce, the product penetrated into the daily life of the middle and working classes, in altered form (i.e., cocoa powder and manufactured chocolate bars), and it lost its class identity. Chocolate The Evolution of the Chocolate Bar soon became a nutritious mornA number of important dates in the evolution and popularization ing drink highly recommended by of chocolate and the manufactured chocolate bar include the doctors for children. For example, following: the French cocoa brand Banania 1765—The first chocolate mill was established by John Hannon on the (better known today for its use of Neponset River in Dorchester, Massachusetts, using water power to promotional images that were degrind beans (West 115). Hannon is credited with getting chocolate rogatory of people of color, much production started in North America and founding the company that like that of Aunt Jemima for panlater became Baker’s Chocolate (incorporated in 1895). cake mix or Uncle Ben for rice) 1828—Conrad Van Houten developed a way of mechanically extracting was a popular breakfast drink conmost of the fat from the cacao mass or cacao liquor, thus creating sumed throughout France and its cacao butter, which can be used for soap products, and rock cocoa, which can be ground into powder. colonies and promoted by French advertising posters in the early twen1831—John Cadbury, a Quaker, begins manufacturing drinking chocotieth century. late and cocoa in the United Kingdom. He launched a business empire in the chocolate trade that has dominated this food line in Britain Throughout much of the last and the Commonwealth for over 200 years. century, chocolate remained largely static. Although the products did 1875—The world’s first milk chocolate is created by adding milk to dark chocolate. not change, marketing became increasingly more important. In 1879—The Swiss Rodolphe Lindt added the conching stage to the the 1980s, brands like Valrhona in grinding process. By agitating the ground cacao mass for a period of one to three days in a sloshing-and-kneading apparatus called a France began to create chocolate conche (inspired by the Mesoamerican metate, or concave grindmade from selected high-quality ing stone), a much smoother, finer, and more aromatic chocolate is beans and regions in an attempt to produced. Conched chocolate proved to be much easier for use in emphasize their local character (or baking. gout de terroir). Around the same 1894—The American company Hershey makes the first mass-produced, time, Lindt of Switzerland launched affordable chocolate bar. a 70 percent cocoa content choco1913—The first filled chocolates appear, thus paving the way for fancy late bar that was the first superganaches, bonbons, and couverture chocolates. market brand to promote cocoa 1930s—Famous candy bars, such as the Mars Bar and Kit Kat, are percentage. Thus began the new invented. Other varieties and brands of chocolate products soon folinterest in creating chocolate from lowed as chocolate candies became an inexpensive daily snack and single-estate beans and cacao varilater an energy source and army ration in war time. etals (e.g., forestero, trinitario, criollo),
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as well as labeling specialty chocolate bars for eating or baking with the source of the bean and the percentage of cacao. FROM THE LOCAL TO THE GLOBAL In the history of tropical commodities, it is frequently emphasized how people produce what they do not consume and consume what they do not produce, thus pointing to the disconnect between producers, consumers, and product. The history of chocolate production provides exceptions to this. In Mexico, the land of chocolate’s origin, cultural transformations and culinary inventions have led to the popularity and use of chocolate as a flavoring in savory dishes, including moles. Yet the cacao and chocolate adventure is not limited to the New World or Europe. In the seventeenth century cacao seedlings spread westward from Acapulco to Manila, where cocoa became a traditional food. From the Philippines, it spread to the Dutch East Indies, Java, and Sumatra. Countries in Africa, Asia, and the Pacific are now cacao producers. Today families in the Philippines grow several trees in their yards and use the beans to make chocolate disks for home consumption or for sale in local markets. These disks are the foundation for hot drinks or for champorado, a delicious dessert and breakfast dish consisting of warm sticky-rice sweetened with sugar and flavored with chocolate. The methods used for preparing cacao at home are identical to those used by the Spanish in sixteenth-century Mexico. Beans are roasted in a wok over a wood or gas fire until the shells can be removed. They are then rolled and crushed lightly with a wooden roller or glass bottle and finally winnowed on a rattan tray to separate the shells from the nibs, or bean fragments. Everything is utilized in the process: the shells are fed to chickens, the pods to pigs or goats, and the nibs are ground in a corn mill to make a warm paste that is punched into two-inch disks with a metal cutter and placed on a banana leaf to cool (West 109). Chocolate has entered seasonal festivities with both religious and secular significance. At Easter, chocolate bunnies and eggs symbolize fertility in keeping with the Christian Lenten and agricultural calendars. St. Valentine’s Day on February 14 has become a contemporary chocolate-centered celebration in the United States, although we do not know when this custom developed. Valentine’s season is a period of peak chocolate sales and chocolate advertising, with some specialty chocolates costing as much as $2,000 a pound. The custom has spread elsewhere, such as Japan, where it has become a business obligation for women to present gifts of candy to their male colleagues. In the search for excellence, chocolate gifts are becoming more expensive, trendy, and sought after, and the gifting of chocolate is closely associated with class. According to Mary Killen, who parses upper-crust etiquette in her advice column in the British magazine The Spectator, the sort of chocolate people bring as house presents when going for the weekend to an old-family country house is a litmus test of social class. She writes: “There is a fashion for Quality Streets,” referring to a low-rent chocolate
Chopsticks assortment available in every gas station in Britain, but buying an expensive collection from Fortnum and Mason looks as if you tried too hard. Chocolate has come full circle as a new luxury commodity with buyers separated by class and status. Consumption of chocolate is increasing in the West, and new chocolate products are on the market. Much like wine, and to a lesser extent coffee, chocolate has become a cherished product—with tastings pairing chocolate varieties (dark, bittersweet, semi-sweet, and milk chocolate) with wine or port, while new empirical research seeks to discover and cultivate the best cacao beans for processing into the finest, exclusivederivation chocolates. Further Reading: Bachollet, Raymond, Jean-Barthélemi Debost, Anne-Claude Lelieur, and Marie-Christine Peyrière. NégriPub: l’image des Noirs dans la publicité. Paris: Éditions Somogy, 1992; Bourgaux, Albert. Quatre Siècles d’histoire du cacao et du chocolat. Bruxelles: Office International du Cacao et du Chocolat, 1935; Coe, Sophie D., and Michael D. Coe. The True History of Chocolate. London: Thames & Hudson, 1996; Doutre-Roussel, Chloé. The Chocolate Connoisseur: For Everyone with a Passion for Chocolate. New York: Jeremy P. Tarcher/Penguin, 2006; Mintz, Sidney W. Sweetness and Power: The Place of Sugar in Modern History. New York: Penguin Books, 1985; Presilla, Maricel E. The New Taste of Chocolate: A Cultural and Natural History of Cacao with Recipes. Berkeley, CA: Ten Speed Press, 2001; Scharffenberger, John, Robert Steinberg, Ann Krueger Spivak, and Susie Heller. The Essence of Chocolate: Recipes for Baking and Cooking with Fine Chocolate. New York: Hyperion, 2006; Schivelbusch, Wolfgang. Tastes of Paradise: A Social History of Spices, Stimulants, and Intoxicants. Translated from the German by David Jacobson. New York: Pantheon Books, 1992; Terrio, Susan J. Crafting the Culture and History of French Chocolate. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2000; West, John A. “A Brief History and Botany of Cacao.” In Chilies to Chocolate: Food the Americas Gave the World, edited by Nelson Foster and Linda S. Cordell. Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 1992, pp. 105–121; Yall, Sarah. “Classism Still Vexing British,” New York Times News Service, Deseret Morning News, April 27, 2007.
Ellen M. Schnepel
Chopsticks Chopsticks originated roughly five thousand years ago in China, when people began using paired sticks to lift hot pieces of food out of the cooking pot. From the Han period at least (200 B.C.), chopsticks as we know them became part of Chinese high culture. Like the writing brushes they resemble, the simple utensils symbolized a move from warrior values toward more humanistic ideals. Knives would no longer be needed or welcomed during the meal, as the food had been cut into small pieces by the cook. Instead, meals would become opportunities for conversation and for the development and display of formal manners.
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As Chinese ascendancy spread across East Asia, so too did the use of chopsticks (kuàizi in Mandarin, hashi in Japanese, jeotgarak in Korean, and dua in Vietnamese). For these Han-influenced cultures, chopsticks became a marker of civilization. One explanation for why chopsticks became so prevalent within some cultures, while remaining unknown to others, is that chopsticks form one element of a unified food system. Just as two chopsticks are needed to pick up a morsel of food, a small rice bowl is also needed, held close to the mouth. Chopsticks are for food served with rice, but not just any rice. The grains need to have particular qualities: sticky, but not so glutinous as to demand the use of fingers. Chopsticks differ somewhat from country to country. Japanese chopsticks are shorter, lacquered, with pointed tips; Korean ones are medium length and often made of metal; and Chinese and Vietnamese chopsticks are longer, often made of un-lacquered wood or bamboo, and taper to blunt ends. How one uses chopsticks also differs somewhat from country to country, although some broad rules apply generally. The key to manipulating chopsticks is to move only the upper one, using it to pinch the food against the lower one, which stays still. In this way a diner can dexterously procure a morsel from a common serving bowl, dip it into a shared sauce bowl, and bring it to an individual’s bowl. A pair of chopsticks may also be used to break off a bit from a large, tender portion of food, or to sweep rice or noodles into one’s mouth. Chopsticks always operate as two parts of a whole. Like scissors, when they are at rest, they are kept together, lying parallel to each other. If one chopstick falls to the floor, etiquette says one should get a new pair. When eating as part of a group, chopsticks are used to pick food from communal bowls, placed within everyone’s reach. To avoid collisions and improprieties, diners should exercise great alertness to each other’s intentions: they should plan out their own motions with care, while being prepared to make sudden adjustments to avoid any unexpected mid-air encounter. They should also select their morsel quickly and elegantly: one’s chopsticks may not hover above the table, nor poke around a dish, nor spear a morsel of food. Chopsticks are used for certain gestures, such as when the host invites guests to start eating, or when guests hold them up flat to thank the host for a delicious meal. Aside from those specific customs, however, chopsticks should not be used for gesticulating or pointing. Chopsticks should not be used to pass food from one pair of chopsticks to another, or should not be stuck upright in a bowl. Both of these resemble funeral customs and are thus distasteful at a meal. In China, Japan, and Vietnam, chopsticks serve to push rice into the mouth from a bowl held right below or at the lips. In Korea, however, the rice bowl should not leave the table, and people often eat their rice with a spoon. In Chinese, Japanese, and Vietnamese etiquette, people may take food from the common dishes with their chopsticks reversed, to avoid
Christmas putting the eating end into the shared food. In Korea, however, the chopsticks may not be turned around—the thicker ends are viewed as unsanitary, having touched one’s fingers. In all of these cultures, chopsticks ideally have only touched the piece the diner has selected, which virtually eliminates any chance of contamination whether or not the chopsticks are turned around. Still, some hosts provide special serving chopsticks to get around the difficulty. Even within a single country, not everyone agrees on chopstick etiquette. One question is where to put the chopsticks after eating. Some say the chopsticks should be placed across the rice bowl, parallel to each other and parallel to one’s body. Others insist they should never lie on the rice bowl, but only on a chopsticks rest, perpendicular to one’s body. Still others say they belong on the table, parallel to one’s body, with the tips to the left. The best chopsticks advice for those being entertained is to wait for others to start before you do, watch carefully, and do your best to follow your hosts’ example. Further Reading: Hashi-San. Chopsticks: An Owner’s Manual. Berkeley, CA: Conari Press, 1991; “Chopsticks.” Origins Of Chinese Food Culture. Illustrated by Fu Chunjiang, and translated by Qiu Yao Hong. Singapore: Asiapac Books, 2003.
Erica J. Peters
Christmas The Christmas season conjures all sorts of images of holiday feasting, from the “visions of sugarplums” immortalized in Clement Moore’s 1823 poem, “The Night before Christmas,” to the great roast turkey that formed the centerpiece of the Cratchit family dinner in Charles Dickens’s A Christmas Carol. Steaming plum puddings, gingerbread men, eggnog, candy canes, and cookies all have honored places in the culinary lore of Christmas, and the contemporary Christmas-keeper often assumes that Christmas is the most traditional, joyous, and family-oriented holiday. Yet much of the history of Christmas celebrations is a complex story involving religious conflict and class struggles, a far cry from the benign domesticity of popular imagination. In centuries past, assuming that one’s religious scruples allowed the celebration of Christmas, the question was what form should those entertainments take. TO CELEBRATE OR NOT? Part of the reason why Christmas got off to a rocky start was that early Christians were unsure of when Christ was born; different Church leaders suggested dates in every month of the year. The first linkage of Christmas to December 25 traces to 336, when a Roman Church calendar made that date a Nativity Feast. The Catholic Church may have chosen this early winter
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date to coincide with the pre-existing pagan holidays of either Saturnalia or dies natalis invicte solis (the birth of the conquering sun). The former was celebrated in mid-December, whereas the latter marked the winter solstice, which fell on December 25 according to the Julian calendar. Saturnalia was a beloved Roman holiday, marked by feasting on sweetmeats and pork and drinking much wine, as well as public spectacles, gambling, and ribald behavior. As the Roman Empire evolved from a pagan to a Christian state in the third and fourth centuries, these December holidays morphed from pagan to Christian observance. Christmas has been a season of feasting since the early Middle Ages. In 567, the Council of Tours proclaimed the period from Christmas to Epiphany (January 6) a feasting season, giving rise to the Twelve Days of Christmas. Twelfth Night continues to mark the end of the Christmas season in many places, particularly those with a strong Catholic heritage. Others see New Year’s as the endpoint of the season, although early December feasts such as those of Saints Nicholas (celebrated by the Dutch on December 6) and Lucia (celebrated by the Swedes on December 13), move the Christmas season forward. By the millennium, European rulers declared Christmas a season of peace on earth; King Ethelred of England (991–1061) promulgated laws that all Christian men temporarily lay down arms during the Christmas holidays, and Christmas truces have been a recurring battlefield intermission. The Christmas season came at the end of the agricultural year, coinciding with the final task of slaughtering animals that could not “overwinter” and salting their meat to last until the spring. Slaughtering generally started in November and continued until the weather made it impossible to keep animals in pasture, often stretching until Christmas. Fresh meat, often the last of the season, was plentiful on the great feudal estates that formed the core of medieval society. Moreover, rents from tenant farmers often became due, with the peasantry delivering barnyard animals or crops in payment for the right to cultivate part of the lord’s land for themselves. Lords of the manor would host great feasts during the season, or otherwise supply food and drink to their vassals and tenant farmers. The exact form and distribution of foodstuffs could vary depending on one’s social status, and the food exchanges helped cement bonds of interdependence and reinforced the hierarchical nature of medieval society. The scale of the medieval Christmas feast in England was impressive, at least if one was hosted by a great lord. Henry III feted more than 1,000 knights and peers in 1252; to help the king, the archbishop of York provided 600 fat oxen and significant funds to defray the cost. Richard II, infamous for the extravagance of his court, required the daily slaughter of 26 oxen, 300 sheep, and numberless fowl to feed an estimated 10,000 retainers during the Christmas season, with 300 servers employed to keep the food and drink flowing. Among the most famous English medieval dishes associated with Christmas was brawn, the roasted head and shoulders of wild boar: the dish was seasonal and signaled the end of the hunting season; by the sixteenth century, the forests had been depleted of wild boar, so that domesticated boar was substituted
Christmas as a requisite for the elite Christmas dinner. Those lower on the social scale did not dine as elegantly, although they did receive food gifts at Christmas: fourteenth-century records indicate a hearty meal provided to tenant farmers consisting of white bread (an elite form of the staple normally available only to the well-to-do), fresh beef and bacon with mustard, chicken pottage, cheese, and ale—as much as could be drunk on Christmas day. This bottomless tankard of ale sheds light on another aspect of the Christmas season, which was the licentious behavior and drunkenness that was accepted as part of the holiday. While more traditional tournaments, pageants, and jousts were part of royal holiday entertainments, great tolerance also was shown for extraordinary behavior that otherwise would have destroyed the fabric of medieval society. Cross-dressing, bizarrely costumed pageants, and the deliberate inversion of the accepted order were all part of the medieval English Christmas. Boy Bishops and Lords of Misrule, the temporary appointment of youths and social inferiors to positions of mock authority for the holiday season, could be found through the realm in wellto-do churches and households, demanding boons, often sweets and drink, from the established Church and political authorities. More ominous were mummers, roving bands of disguised men who could knock at one’s door, barge into the home, and perform a brief dance or offer a small present; in exchange, mummers expected food and drink or other valuables. At the end of the Twelve Days of Christmas, exhausted from the constant partying, everyone was supposed to return to their traditional roles, although pockets of social disorder sometimes lingered. Medieval English Christmas was often more secular and vulgar than religious and spiritual.
Christmas merriment in an old English manor, 1500s. © North Wind/North Wind Picture Archives—All rights reserved.
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Religious strife brought on by the Reformation interrupted the celebration of Christmas in many Protestant countries. In the Puritans’ zeal to stamp out all traces of Catholicism, the public celebration of Christmas was declared illegal during the English civil wars; similarly, the Massachusetts Bay Colony outlawed Christmas celebrations between 1659 and 1681, and New Amsterdamers were forbidden to gather in public with candy, drink, and other eatables on St. Nicholas’s Day. Christmas maintained its vibrancy in Catholic countries and among Protestant denominations such as the Anglicans. In America, however, Puritans, Quakers, Calvinists, Presbyterians, and Congregationalists were likely to ignore the Christmas season through the mid- to late nineteenth century because of its “popish” connotations. Foodstuffs that were once common but are now associated almost exclusively with the Christmas feast, mincemeat pies and plum puddings, were particularly suspect when served at Christmas: the rich, spiced concoctions were thought to symbolize the gifts of the Magi to the Christ Child. Popular lore holds that the Puritans made unsuccessful efforts to suppress them as holiday fare because of their evocations. By the nineteenth century, American cookery writers such as Sarah Josepha Hale condemned excessive indulgence in mincemeats and plum puddings on physiological, not theological, grounds. She felt the mixtures impeded digestion and urged concerned housewives to limit consumption to the Thanksgiving and Christmas holidays. Those who celebrated Christmas, however, did so with gusto. English cookbook author Robert May, in his Accomplish’t Cook (1685), lists a bill of fare for Christmas as celebrated “before HospitalWigilia, Polish Christmas Feast ity left this Nation.” May lists Despite the social and political upheaval in Poland in recent two courses of dishes desgenerations, or perhaps because of it, the Polish celebration of tined for the aristocratic table Boze Narodzenie (Christmas) is essentially unchanged from a that boggle the imagination. century ago. In this overwhelmingly Catholic nation, the holiday In the first course were some is preceded by the four-week liturgical season of Advent. Christ20 dishes, including oysters, the mas parties and get-togethers, making and sharing snacks and obligatory collar of brawn, a sweets, would be socially odd and religiously offensive. “grand Sallet,” roast swan, minced This spirit of anticipation culminates on the day before Christpies, a kid with pudding in his mas with a dawn-to-dusk fast. Last-minute preparations include belly, a turkey roasted and stuck setting the table with a spotless white tablecloth over a scatterwith cloves, and two large capons, ing of hay, to symbolize the holy, sinless Christ Child placed in a one larded. The second course manger. When the first star is spotted in the sky, the festivities of was a similarly dizzying kaleiWigilia (from the same Latin root as the English word vigil ) begin. The evening meal is the centerpiece of Wigilia. Traditionally doscope, including a swan pie, it’s shared only with family. The exception is an extra place set dishes of anchovies, mushrooms at the table for the unexpected guest—a stranger or someone and “cavieate,” a standing tart of with no family of their own. This custom hearkens to the Gospel puff pastry with preserved fruits, accounts of Jesus’ parents, looking for lodgings in Bethlehem dried meats’ [calves’] tongues, before the child was born. In some families, the empty setting jellies, and dishes of exotic, imhonors deceased or faraway loved ones. ported oranges and lemons.
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American tables likewise Before the meal, the head of the family offers a prayer of groaned with domestic and wild thanksgiving. Special wafers of unleavened bread, called oplatek, fowl, game, meat pies, oysters, preare broken and shared around the table, a sign of family unity, served vegetables, and sweets; the harmony, and forgiveness. It’s a deeply emotional ritual, as famdiaries of William Byrd II, the govily members wish each other peace and blessings for the year ernor of Virginia, describes guests ahead. sitting down to Christmas dinner in The Wigilia dinner is a simple but ample feast. No meat is 1709 of “turkey and chine [meat, served. A typical menu includes fish, especially pickled herring possibly pork, attached to the and carp. (It’s said that the bones of the carp, carefully removed, backbone of an animal], roast apresemble a cross, a hammer, and nails, foreshadowing Christ’s crucifixion.) The red beet soup barszcz (borscht) may be served ples and wine, tongue and udder,” with sour cream. Kapusta (sauerkraut) is made with dried mushas well as other meats and searooms. For kutia, a favorite dessert, cooked wheat and poppy food. The dinner was preceded by seeds are sweetened with honey and studded with fruit and nuts. a hunt, and outdoor noisy revelAlso found are boiled potatoes, noodles with a poppy seed sauce, ries. In the context of the Southand fruit compote of dried plums and apples. ern plantation, such raucous partying largely was innocent; in FURTHER READING the cities, however, especially as Hughes, Melissa. “Polish Christmas Traditions.” Senior News & Views. urbanization and industrializaDec. 2003, p. 4. tion began to take hold, ChristKlos-Sokol, Laura. Shortcuts to Poland. Warsaw: International Publishing mas entertainments took on a Service, 2005. more sinister cast. In cities such Knab, Sophie Hodorowitz, and Mary Ann Knab. Polish Customs, Tradias New York and Philadelphia, tions, and Folklore. New York: Hippocrene Books, 1996. the old habit of mumming conKrysa, Czeslaw Michal, S.T.L. A Polish Christmas Eve: Traditions And tinued to be practiced, but now Recipes, Decorations And Song. Lewiston, NY: CWB Press, 2003. the participants were underemployed gangs of youths roamNowakowski, Jacek, and Marlene Perrin, eds. Polish Touches: Recipes and Traditions. Iowa City, IA: Penfield Press, 1996. ing the streets and demanding “Christmas cheer,” that is, food, Strybel, Robert. “Polish Christmas Game (or Quiz).” Polish News. [ondrink, and money, from intimiline], Dec. 2005. dated middle-class householders. Strybel, Robert. “Recipes.” Polish American Journal [online]. January 15, Gunfire, public drunkenness, and 2007. http://www.polamjournal.com/Library/Recipes/recipes.html. parades with ghoulish, crossdressing characters were common Christine Venzon in small villages and larger towns alike, but they often verged out of control in anonymous urban settings. These public disturbances led many who held no theological objection to Christmas to question whether the traditional community holiday was antiquated and ill-suited to the modern world. Adding to the objectionable nature of the holiday was the perceived profligacy of the upper classes at Christmas. Evening collations with pyramids of candied fruits piled high, sweet cakes, great bowls of punch, and cold platters of meats refreshed well-to-do Philadelphians at holiday balls in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, much to the consternation of those who saw immoral waste in the giddy atmosphere.
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CHRISTMAS AS A FAMILY HOLIDAY The Victorian focus on the family rescued Christmas from extinction, although it changed the nature of Christmas from a public festival in which all classes mixed, often with topsy-turvy social inversions, to one celebrated in the bosom of the home and with friends. Dickens’s A Christmas Carol (1843) provided the model for the Christmas celebration in the second half of the nineteenth century, and the images he drew still resonate nostalgically. One of Dickens’s legacies was his prescription of the family dinner as a central component of Christmas. Complete with a single, glorious roast bird, either the goose in the Dream of Christmas Present or the turkey of Ebenezer Scrooge’s real life gift to the Cratchit family, Dickens created an appealing meal affordable by most without reliance on the charity of a feudal lord. Mashed potatoes, gravy, sage-and-onion stuffing, and applesauce, all crowned by a perfectly boiled plum pudding, became standard fare for Christmas dinner in Anglophone lands. Within a few years of the publication of A Christmas Carol, cookery writers in America began recommending Christmas menus that had, at their core, the Dickens formula. For those with limited means, turkey would be the only meat offered and a special treat. Cheaper versions of the spice-heavy plum puddings were created so that virtually everyone could partake of this dish that had moved from regular fare to its status as a Christmas icon: indeed, many recipes now were denominated “Christmas plum pudding.” For those with heavier purses, copious banquets reminiscent of the bountiful meals of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries still held sway. It was not uncommon for midlate nineteenth century cookbooks to recommend multiple meat or poultry dishes, although the turkey, sometimes described as of “uncommon size,” now traditionally formed the centerpiece, supported by poultry pies, boiled ham, roast pig, roast or braised beef, or smaller game birds. The essence of Christmas dinner, however, was turkey, potatoes with gravy, cranberry or apple sauce, and mince pies, and sharing in this menu was part of what it meant to be an American: from the public kitchens feeding immigrants on Ellis Island to prisons and soup kitchens, newspapers diligently reported that all of the downtrodden were given a charitable Christmas dinner composed of these elements. By the late nineteenth century, chic hostesses and fashionable restaurants were moving away from strict homage to the Dickensian meal, although it would remain popular in cookery books geared to middle- and working-class households through much of the twentieth century. For the well-heeled, a very self-conscious evocation of a romanticized medieval feast, complete with pageantry, became an alternative Christmas tradition. As part of the neo-Gothic revival, nineteenth-century antiquarian writers explored English customs from the medieval and baroque periods, which were then popularized in the burgeoning national presses. American magazines such as St. Nicholas gave detailed instructions for creating a medieval-style celebration, complete with costumes and even
Christmas recommendations to find a compliant dog to nap beneath the dining table in homage to the Middle Ages. Elite cookbook authors recommended a “noble roast of venison” in lieu of the turkey, and by the early twentieth century, virtually any meat was considered appropriate as the centerpiece of Christmas dinner. Menus for Christmas dinner shrank by the early twentieth century, as dietary concerns and the decline of domestic help in all but the wealthiest homes changed the way most people ate. To compensate for the less abundant choices on the table, Christmas dinners became an opportunity to fashion foods into edible totems. Cookbooks boasted fanciful dishes in the red and green colors emblematic of the holiday, sporting recipes for grape salad with guava jelly; tomato aspic with green pepper rings; redand-green frosted cakes; and even grapefruit wreaths, in which grapefruit shells were filled with sweetened and sherried orange and grapefruit segments. The edges of the grapefruit shells were coated with green-tinted sugar; maraschino cherries dotted the center to form poinsettias; and silver dragées were placed on the sugared edge to emulate mercury glass ornaments. Another elaborate creation was the Christmas pear salad, a favorite of the Fannie Farmer cookbooks. It involved cutting a pear into an evergreen shape, coating it with green mayonnaise, inserting slivered almond “candles,” and placing cream cheese cubes at the base; when painted with ribbons of food coloring, the cubes looked like wrapped presents under the tree. TRADITIONAL CHRISTMAS FOODS AND DRINK Once Christmas was reestablished as a common holiday, certain traditional foods that otherwise were falling from fashion became associated nostalgically with the Christmas season. Most of these seasonal treats are baked goods and confections, echoing the abundant use of costly sugar during the Christmas season in late medieval and baroque kitchens. Already mentioned is the plum pudding ( plum meaning virtually any dried fruit, not the fresh fruits of the prunus genus). Although recipes varied greatly over the centuries, plum pudding generally was an elaborate concoction of candied or dried fruits, especially raisins, figs, or currants; animal fat, usually suet; spices and sweeteners; eggs; bread crumbs; flour; and some form of alcohol that was gently boiled in a pudding cloth. Plum puddings were served flambéed with liquor. Traditionally garnished with sprigs of holly and marched into the dining hall with great fanfare, the dish preceded the boar’s head in a late medieval meal. It moved to the dessert course in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, with the increasing segregation of sweet from savory dishes. Plum pudding continued its distinctive place in the Christmas repertory, notwithstanding American cookery writer Eliza Leslie’s claim in her 1857 New Cookery Book that the “foolish” custom of setting plum puddings ablaze was dying out. Fashionable ladies’ magazines such as Harper’s Bazaar kept the blazing plum pudding alive in the early twentieth century as a
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spectacular dish to parade into a darkened dining room, and the flaming dish still appears on restaurant Christmas menus. Another food common from medieval times through the nineteenth century was mincemeat. Like the plum pudding, its composition changed, but traditionally it was comprised of bits of finely chopped fish or meat (often leftover or from the tongue, other organs, or even the “scraggy neck”), suet, chopPreparing Plum Pudding ped nuts and apples, dried fruits, Preparation for this time-intensive undertaking begins several spices, and sweeteners that were weeks before Christmas. One custom says that plum pudding is baked in individual pastries or prepared on “Stir-Up Sunday,” one week before the start of the larger pies for sharing. In the earAdvent season. Named for a prayer in the Anglican Church that liest recipe collections, minceasks that the faith of the people be “stirred up,” Stir-Up Sunday meats were listed among the tradition dictates that each family member take a turn tossing in meat pastries; like plum puda handful of ingredients, stirring the pudding batter clockwise, ding, the dish began its miand making a wish. gration to the dessert course Once mixed, the batter is placed in a covered ceramic or tin pudding mould and gently steamed in a water bath for by the eighteenth cen tury. several hours. The steam melts the fat in the beef suet and Among the earliest Christmas causes the flour particles to expand creating a dense, cake-like menus published in America, consistency. Mrs. Crowen’s American Lady’s Once prepared, plum pudding is often aged for several Cookery Book (1847) preweeks and then served drenched with brandy and ignited as the scribed among the desserts grand culmination of the Christmas feast. It is frequently accom“two very large and ornamenpanied by hard sauce, a sweet topping of whipped butter, citrus tal mince pies, one sufficiently zest, liquor, and confectioners sugar that melts into the warm large that each of the compudding on contact. pany may be helped from it, Various legends surround the preparation and decoration of in token of common interest.” the plum pudding. A branch of holly adorning the dessert is beBy the early twentieth century, lieved to ward off witches. Decorative holly branches might be saved from one season to the next to light the fire for steaming all vestiges of meat largely had the next year’s plum pudding. been dropped from the recipes, Modern recipes may suggest placing a coin or trinket into the leading to the renaming of the batter before the plum pudding is steamed, which is supposed to pies “mince.” afford good luck to the guest who finds it in his or her portion. Fruitcakes originated no later than the Middle Ages as FURTHER READING fruited breads, slightly leavened Crump, William D. The Christmas Encyclopedia. 2nd edition. Jefferson, by barm, the yeasty by-product NC, and London: McFarland & Company, 2006. of fermenting malt liquors. Old Gulevich, Tanya. Encyclopedia of Christmas & New Years Celebrations: variations on this theme include Over 240 Alphabetically Arranged Entries Covering Christmas, New the panettone and stollen, enYear’s, and Related Days of Observance. 2nd edition. Detroit, MI: riched yeasted breads speckled Omnigraphics, 2003. with dried or candied fruits. Rombauer, Irma von Starkloff, Marion Rombauer Becker, and Ethan By the eighteenth century, the Becker. Joy of Cooking. New York: Simon & Schuster, 2007. new technique of texturizing cakes by the lengthy beating of T. W. Barritt eggs, butter, and sugar spread:
Christmas Martha Washington’s cookery notebook contains a “great cake” recipe with candied and dried fruits, spices, and spirits, and by the nineteenth century, cookbooks abounded with recipes for such cakes, which might be called “Christmas,” “Twelfth Night,” “Great,” “Wedding,” or “Bride’s” cake. The labor involved (recipes often called for 30 minutes to an hour of beating) and the great quantities often used meant that these cakes were prepared for celebratory occasions when large numbers of guests would be present. They often were iced and decorated, and some recipes called for molasses to darken the cake, resembling the modern fruit cake. By the 1830s, recipes denominated fruit cake began to appear. The sugar and alcohol in the cakes gave them a long shelf life, one that has resulted in the urban legend that fruit cakes are passed from generation to generation. Gingerbread is another treat with origins at least as far back as the Middle Ages; late fourteenth-century English manuscripts offer several recipes for unleavened mixtures of ground ginger, honey, and breadcrumbs, often colored with saunders to give a warm reddish brown tone to the confection, while in Germany and Switzerland, Lebkuchen and Läckerli, heavily spiced honey wafers, were pressed into ornate molds to form intricate confections. Gingerbreads were made for a variety of holidays, including Christmas; legend credits Elizabeth I with bestowing highly decorated gingerbread men on courtiers, although gingerbread figures had been made earlier on the continent and their production eventually became the prerogative of Nuremburg’s Lebkuchen Baker’s Guild, as well as a highly protected product for French bakers in Paris, Reims, and Dijon. In particular, German immigrants to America brought recipes for these cookies, although most homemade varieties were plain cookies until the later nineteenth century, when cheaper molds and cutters made articulated shapes affordable for the average home. Molasses often substituted for more expensive honey in cookie recipes in colonial areas under British control. Cookies made with molasses resulted in a crisper cookie than those made with honey. Gingerbread men, decorated with royal icing, continue to be used as ornaments on Christmas trees, a modern holdover from the nineteenth-century custom of decorating trees with candies and small edibles. Gingerbread houses are thought to be German in origin and may have either reflected or inspired the folk tale of Hansel and Gretel. The gingerbread house is a lingering expression of the medieval subtlety, a food sculpture designed to entertain elite diners between courses. Constructed of stiff gingerbread and decorated with sugar, candies, and other edibles, the houses form a centerpiece that is consumed at the end of the holiday season. Once the province of highly skilled pastry makers and still the subject of competition among bakers, simplified versions have become a parent-child activity or the focus of holiday craft parties. In addition to gingerbreads, there is a tremendous range of Christmas cookies. Traditional Christmas cookies are flavored with spices: English jumbles (anise or caraway), Dutch Speculaas and German Spekulatius and Pfeffernüsse (mixed spices), Springerle (anise), and the “Christmas cookie,”
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Santa Claus on a rooftop carrying a decorated Christmas tree, 1860s. © North Wind/North Wind Picture Archives— All rights reserved.
likely of Dutch origins, first identified in Amelia Simmon’s 1796 American Cookery (coriander seed). But as chocolate and vanilla came to dominate pastry-making in the later nineteenth century, so too, did these flavors join the pantheon of Christmas cookies. By the 1960s, cookies of virtually any description were baked for the holiday. The custom of “cookie exchanges” was first documented in 1963 in the Betty Crocker’s Cooky Book, in which housewives brought dozens of cookies to a party early in the holiday season, swapped cookies with the other guests, and enjoyed coffee and a sampling of the baked confections. The idea rapidly took hold, with ladies’ and cookery magazines promoting the parties as part of the neighborly celebration of Christmas. Sugarplums, small candied seeds and nuts, have been served as part of well-to-do dinners and banquets since the late Middle Ages; in the nineteenth century, they were associated with Christmas in the popular imagination through works of art such as Moore’s Christmas poem and the 1892 ballet The Nutcracker, with its Sugar Plum Fairy. Moreover, small candies held in little baskets or paper cones were among the earliest and most popular decorations for Christmas trees. The trees originated as table-top ornaments and became popular during the nineteenth century, although they quickly outgrew their table size to become the full height trees popular now. The earliest versions of these hard sugar candies were small, white, and came in a variety of flavors. In the twentieth century, the familiar peppermint-flavored red or green-striped disks or canes were perfected. Popular lore reports that these stick candies originated in Germany in the seventeenth century as the brainchild of a choirmaster determined to amuse his young charges with little shepherd’s crooks during long services. The story is charming but dubious due to the high cost of sugar and laborious steps needed to refine sugar at that time; indeed, through the first half of the twentieth century, even after refined, inexpensive sugar was widely available,
Christmas candy canes remained a handmade confection distributed locally. Only in the 1950s, when a mechanical process was invented for their manufacture, did candy canes turn into a common Christmas treat. On a grander scale, elaborate sugar sculptures designed for Christmas graced wealthy tables well into the nineteenth century. Whether made of pure sugar or marzipan, these sugar works could be architectural centerpieces, such as the church dome illustrated in the December 1858 issue of Godey’s Lady’s Book describing “Christmas for the Rich” or smaller figures placed atop of Twelfth Night Cakes, especially in England. These large cakes were often sent as gifts and formed a decorative focus of the Christmas table, to be consumed at the end of the holiday season, much in the nature of the German-inspired gingerbread houses that have proved more popular in the United States. Another illusion food is the French bûche de noël, a sponge cake that is rolled, iced, and decorated to look like a snow-covered yule log. Meringue mushrooms, marzipan leaves and acorns, and other forest flora garnish the striated buttercream frosted that evokes the bark of an oak tree. Two drinks are uniquely prepared at Christmas, and both have a long and murky history. Wassail likely originates in Anglo-Saxon and pagan observances and was related to health and fertility rites deemed auspicious around the winter solstice or shortly thereafter. Offerings were made to gods by pouring libations (spiced wine, ciders, or ales, often with toasted bread, cakes, or roasted apples added to the mix) at the bases of fruit trees to insure an abundant crop the following year. The term wassail is Old English for “your health,” and the beverage was gulped from great bowls that were passed among the participants. The tradition continues in rural England, although there is little evidence of it in colonial America, where rum punches and harder liquors were preferred holiday drinks. Eggnogs (called in earlier times syllabubs and possets) are rich, dairybased alcoholic drinks that date back hundreds of years and take various forms: milk or cream is combined with spirits, cider, or ale. Sometimes whipped egg whites would be folded in, and the mixture frequently was garnished with fresh nutmeg, an especially popular spice in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Eggnogs were essential Christmas morning refreshments, especially in the antebellum South, where the plantation master mixed the nog himself to be brought to guests still in bed. Soldiers’ diaries from the Civil War describe drinking eggnogs on Christmas morning before rising, while in the North, revelers parading in the streets demanded the highly alcoholic drink from homeowners and shopkeepers. The origin of the term eggnog is debated; it may be a contraction of egg and grog, or it may refer to the noggin, a wooden cup in which the egg-based drink was served in colonial America. Further Reading: Hadfield, Miles, and John Hadfield. The Twelve Days of Christmas. London: Cassell, 1961; Hammond, P. W. Food and Feast in Medieval England. Phoenix Mill, Gloucestershire, England, and Dover, NH: Alan Sutton Publishing, 1993; Henisch, Bridget Ann. Cakes and Characters: An English Christmas
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Tradition. London: Prospect Books, 1984; Kaufman, Cathy. “The Ideal Christmas Dinner.” Gastronomica 4:4 (2004), 17–25; Kaufman, Cathy. “Christmas.” In The Oxford Encyclopedia of Food and Drink in America. Edited by Andrew F. Smith. Volume 1, pp. 246–250. New York: Oxford University Press, 2004; Miles, Clement A. Christmas Customs and Traditions: Their History and Significance. New York: Dover Publications, 1976 [republication of Christmas in Ritual and Tradition, Christian and Pagan, 1912]; Nissenbaum, Stephen. The Battle for Christmas. New York: Alfred A. Knopf House, 1996; Olver, Lynn, ed. Food Timeline. http:// www.foodtimeline.org/christmasfood.html [an excellent Web site with many links and bibliographic information]; Rodgers, Rick. Christmas 101: Celebrate the Holiday Season From Christmas to New Year’s. New York: Broadway Books, 1999; Shoemaker, Alfred L. Christmas in Pennsylvania: A Folk-Cultural Study. Kutztown, PA: Pennsylvania Folklife Society, 1959; Snyder, Phillip V., and Roy Coggin. The Christmas Tree Book: The History of the Christmas Tree and Antique Christmas Tree Ornaments. Harmondsworth, England, and New York: Penguin, 1977; Turgeon, Charlotte. Cooking for Christmas. New York: Oxford University Press, 1950; Weaver, William Woys, and Jeremy Orabona. The Christmas Cook: Three Centuries of American Yuletide Sweets. New York: HarperPerennial, 1990.
Cathy K. Kaufman
Civil War SOUTHERN HOSPITALITY Southern hospitality set the American standard for entertaining during the middle of the nineteenth century. It was born of necessity in the South where sweeping distances between plantations produced few travelers and left the intervening countryside bereft of the small villages, taverns, inns, and other so-called public houses that dotted the New England landscape. While the North had grown in the number of towns and eating establishments found along its entangled by-ways during the nineteenth century, the South had developed largely as a series of county seats— populated only on so-called court days and anchoring a widespread network of largely self-sufficient plantations. Few accommodations appeared anywhere in the South except in large cities like Charleston or New Orleans, or along the most heavily used commercial lines of travel. Frederick Law Olmstead traveling in the South in the 1850s noted that during a six-month journey he had come upon public accommodations less than once a week. It was a generally recognized custom in the South that a traveler might ask for lodging at any private home happened upon as nightfall approached. There was often a considerable gap between the expectation of hospitality and its reality, however. Some Northern travelers found Southern homeowners standoffish or rude, and their fare wretched. Southerners deeply resented such representations. Part of the problem arose from inaccurate Northern expectations that hospitality meant receiving and entertaining guests
Civil War without remuneration, and they were repelled by forthright demands for payment. Southerners saw hospitality as the kindness extended to a complete stranger with regard to food and shelter (much like that expected of a tavern or inn keeper), and they had no compunction about declaring an exact price expected of an approaching traveler who suddenly appeared uninvited at their door. Many reports of inhospitable Southern homeowners can be regarded as mere misunderstandings of this sort, but as the secession crisis loomed larger at least some Southerners vowed to show any Yankee who approached seeking hospitality just how paltry the situation could be. One of the best newspaper sketch artists of the Civil War period was William Waud, a Northerner. Waud worked for Leslie’s Illustrated Magazine and proved particularly adept at ingratiating himself with the social elite of South Carolina during the antebellum period. Because of his paper’s generally uncommitted stance on secession, and its balanced coverage of the war thereafter, wherever Waud traveled he found individuals to be cooperative and helpful. The paper’s owner, Frank Leslie, instructed Waud to use the utmost care in making his sketches and to avoid giving any indication of political sympathies toward one side or the other when staying in a Southern household. Waud noted that he usually received hospitality free of charge if the household was one of means; or that he was asked to pay only a token charge of just one dollar for which he was furnished with supper, lodging, breakfast, and fodder for his horse. Travelers from the South, especially those of “quality,” may have been treated differently below the Mason-Dixon Line than those from other sections of the country. Southerner travelers commonly reported warm receptions, which always found “room for one more” in even the humblest abodes, and gracious hostesses, who seemed to be able to repeat the miracle of loaves and fishes for any number of unexpected guests. Certainly, what elevated the concept of Southern hospitality to its exalted status was the repeated report of lavish presentations and courtesies extended to invited guests, distant relations, and sudden visitors, who presented formal letters of introduction to prominent plantation owners. Such guests were a grade above the itinerant traveler and could anticipate a fine room, the assistance of servants or slaves in preparing their dress, luxuriant presentations of abundant food and drink, and the free use of the plantation’s amenities such as the use of a horse or a carriage, access to the library, and freedom among the gardens and grounds. Period letters and journals often described a daily regimen of multicourse meals that in other sections of the country would normally be reserved for holiday feasts or special occasions. One breakfast description from the late antebellum period included cornbread, buckwheat cakes, boiled chicken, bacon, eggs, hominy, fish (both fresh and pickled), oyster casserole, and beefsteak all served at a single sitting. An equally impressive dinner began with a rich soup and continued with a saddle of mutton, ham, beef, turkey, duck, eggs with greens, potatoes, beets, and hominy. Afterwards champagne was circulated followed by desserts including plum pudding,
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tarts, ice cream, preserves, and brandied fruits. In the late evening figs, raisins, and almonds were made available along with wine, port, or Madeira; brandy and cigars for the men in the drawing room; and sweet treats specifically reserved for the ladies in the parlor. The threat of war and the opening of hostilities in 1861, of course, brought about many shortages in the South, and it effectively and quickly impoverished the plantations. A poor system of transportation prevented the Confederacy’s small resources from being effectively distributed throughout the South. Furthermore, the blockade of Southern ports ordered by President Lincoln caused great hardship with respect to the finer luxuries normally stocked on the plantation. Nonetheless, the dedication to traditional hospitality seemingly survived, if with a limited palette of amenities. At the commencement of the war, virtually all of the South’s most fertile land was devoted to agriculture. The North, which relied so much on industrialization, might thereby be seen to have been at a disadvantage with regard to food but the reverse was true. Northern and Midwestern farmers increased their planting to support the war effort putting into production a great deal of virgin land. The Homestead Act was quickly passed in 1862, granting free land to anyone willing to plant it. This virgin soil produced impressive yields, unlike the over-farmed Southern soil. As the war progressed and was continually fought on Southern soil, Southern crops were destroyed. Cornelia Peake McDonald, a Southern diarist, described a visit by federal troops. She reported that they pulled up the potatoes and did not stop after getting enough for dinner, but continued, amid roars of laughter and defiant looks, to pull them till all were lying on the ground to wither in the sun. The destruction of the spuds, which were no larger than peas, seemed so wanton that she was provoked beyond enduring. The war placed the institution of hospitality under a siege equally as violent as any that occurred on the field of battle. The hard hand of war drove many Southern families to flee from the Yankees as they occupied increasingly larger portions of the South. It has been estimated that up to 200,000 Southerners, mostly refugees, were on the move during the war years. White refugees often took their slaves with them to keep them from the hands of the Federals. Many refugees looked to family, relations, and friends to provide hospitality and a safe haven. The states of the trans-Mississippi west like Texas and Arkansas seemed the safest, but riding herd on dozens of slaves through unfamiliar territory was difficult with a Federal army on your heels offering immediate freedom to your bondsmen. Dense crowds of people thronged the streets moving their meager belongings in carriages, carts, wheelbarrows, or piled high on the backs of slaves. Every sort of man, woman, or child made their way to the railway cars, or trudged down the dusty roads away from the advancing Federal lines. Economic shortages, strained agricultural productivity, and social upheaval beset civilians in various forms. Like brave soldiers themselves, many civilians managed to stand apart from the war and cope with its vagaries
Civil War while trying to preserve some semblance of their social order, standard of living, and values. Thus, even though the war might rage at their very doorsteps, the civilians lived through it and in spite of it. As the war dragged on from months into years, Southern soldiers undertook the “terrible necessity” of depriving friendly families of most of their stock of food in order to feed the army. Yet, some soldiers voluntarily cut cord wood, helped with harvesting the garden patch, repaired farm machinery, or toiled at any other farm work in repayment for the willing donation of food. A favorite ploy of Southern soldiers was to linger about the house of an unsuspecting farm family until they were at supper, “and then modestly approach and knock at the door.” This procedure almost always resulted in an invitation to dinner as “honored guests.” Such hospitality was even extended to a Federal soldier, who wrote in his diary, “I succeeded in getting a meal from a lusty colored woman who lived in a small cabin; gave her fifty cents and had a fine meal of fresh pork, sweet potatoes, and pones.” HOLIDAY FEASTING During the prewar period, holidays like the Fourth of July, New Year, and Christmas were marked by feasting. In New England, the feasting and drinking that characterized the celebration of the Christmas season was thought sinful. But some attitudes began to change when Queen Victoria and Prince Albert began to celebrate the holiday in the 1840s and made such observances fashionable. Nonetheless, it was not until 1856 that Christmas was recognized as a legal holiday in Massachusetts, where it had once been legally prohibited. In the South, Christmas was a particularly important part of the social season and was celebrated with balls, hunts, and extended visits. The first three states to make Christmas a legal holiday were in the South, and by 1865 more than two dozen Southern jurisdictions observed it as a legal holiday. Holiday guests on remote Southern plantations at Christmas time usually came for an entire week. One plantation mistress noted that some of her neighbors had 30 and sometimes 40 guests in the house “all the holiday.” Preparations for such extravaganzas commenced weeks in advance of the arrival of any guests and would have been impossible without a staff of reliable and efficient servants or slaves. The mistress, anticipating the extension of the household, would stockpile puddings, fruitcakes, and preserves; bed linens, towels, and napkins; and sufficient attire for herself and her family to satisfy the social scene throughout the holiday. Christmas Eve day might feature a hunt for pheasant or blue-winged teal. That night the Yule log was brought in and springs of holly might be thrown into the fire to ward off evil spirits. Cinnamon-soaked apples were hung from a string from which the children were to try to secure them with a hands-free bite. Successful youngsters were rewarded with the entire apple. Finally, the children hung their stockings from the mantel before retiring hoping to find them filled with surprises the next morning.
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Slaves, working under the supervision of the plantation mistress, were hard pressed during the preparations for such a holiday; and they were kept busy picking up after guests, clearing and cleaning, making additional meals, and doing added laundry. Nonetheless, in all but the meanest plantation houses, slaves were generally given extra holiday rations of rice, sugar, coffee, tobacco, and other treats at holiday time. They, in return, sometimes presented the mistress with items that they had raised in their own little farm patches, handmade baskets, or carved wooden items like candlesticks or animal figures. While the length of the holiday period given to slaves varied, even the harshest masters seemingly allowed their slaves at least a three-day holiday at Christmas time. The planter’s family usually supplied an ox and other provisions to their slaves for these festivities. Slaveowners often passed out bolts of fabric known as yardage to their slaves on the day after Christmas. From these slaves were to fashion a new set of clothes. Some slaves bartered with other members of the black community or with members of the white household for castoff clothing so that they might be better attired for evening festivities among the slave cabins. Slaves often decorated the slave quarters with natural materials such as greenery, gourds, shells, and persimmons, and many slave communities brought in their own Yule log. Slave children were entertained with storytelling, music, singing, dancing, and sweet treats. NORTHERN CORDIALITY Nearly all Americans in the nineteenth century ate their meals at home or in the homes of their hosts. Regardless of the menu, home-cooked dinners were heavy meals filled with meat, potatoes, eggs, and vegetables. All these might be fried in butter, lard, or bacon grease. Moreover, Northern families tended to eat quickly. The only leisurely portion of the daily meal coming at noon when fathers returned home from their shops or lay down in the fields for a short nap. Otherwise, Northerners generally bolted their food as if on a schedule. There was often little ceremony associated with family eating beyond a rigid adherence to what was widely called “manners.” Families that indulged themselves at the table generally ate light meals composed of cold cuts of meat, potato salads, and fresh fruit. Vegetables were rarely eaten without first being cooked or combined into salads or relishes. After washing the supper dishes the family, and any guests, settled down to a quiet evening of reading, music, or an occasional table game. Schoolwork was usual for the children; the newspaper for father; and letter writing for mother. Reading aloud to the group from a novel was a popular activity. Board and card games were just becoming popular at midcentury, and there was a seemingly overwhelming necessity that such games have a moral or educational purpose. Boarders, most of whom were unrelated to the family by blood, might join in these activities, and neighbors might stop by for a chat. Few Northern families were so liberal as to spend
Civil War any part of their evening among the servants. These would gather in the kitchen or in their own living quarters. Saturday evenings often found families entertaining friends at home. Visitors might share a meal followed by many of the same diversions pursued on a weekday evening. These weekend gatherings called for the hosts to follow the period’s rather unforgiving rules of etiquette, and middle-class families attempting to move up the social ladder were sometimes pretentious in their manner. High tea often became a late-afternoon or earlyevening alternative to the fashionable dinner for middle-class families. Upper-class households in the North and Midwest were as fully capable as any Southern plantation of putting forth an extravaganza. The formal dinner party was a highly ritualized event appropriately begun in the late evening. Etiquette demanded that guests be no more than 15 minutes late. Everyone assembled in the drawing room, and the host told each gentleman which lady to escort down to dinner. Couples were not seated together and made conversation with others. Since the guests did not stay over night, these fashionable late dinners were largely restricted to urban communities and were somewhat unsuited to country life, where visitors would have to travel large distances in the dark to get home. In rural areas eating a meal in public—outside the immediate family— was an unusual event. Public dining was offered only in taverns or ordinaries with the exception of community outdoor dinners on special occasions such as the Fourth of July. Travelers were forced by circumstances to take their meals at taverns and inns. While local men also frequented these establishments to drink, they generally did not eat there unless the establishment had been catered for a dance, a party, or a ball. Meals at these establishments were not brought out on demand, but were served only during specified times. A British visitor to America complained, “At each house there are regular hours for breakfast, dinner and supper and if a traveler arrives somewhat before the appointed time for any one of them, it is in vain to call for a separate meal for himself; he must wait patiently until the appointed hour, and then sit down with the other guests that may happen to be in the house.” The food served in taverns could be considered home cooking. It was unpretentious and very much in the style of the Northeast region. Both food quality and portion size varied greatly from establishment to establishment and seems to have been generally considered parsimonious and unremarkable unless it was very bad. After eating at a tavern in Massachusetts, author Nathaniel Hawthorne remarked that the meal included no meat and was about the worst he had ever had to eat. Some offerings were incredibly meager. Hawthorne recalled seeing a group of young college students being served what was typically a children’s breakfast of bread and milk, with a huge common washbowl of milk and a platter of bread in the center of the table, and a bowl and spoon set for each guest. Other meals were reported as being quite substantial. A full-scale New England breakfast at one inn reportedly included ham, beef, sausages, pork, bread, butter, boiled potatoes, pies, coffee, and cider.
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By the time of the Civil War, many taverns in the North had been replaced by hotels offering guests breakfast and supper as well as a room. One of the unique features of nineteenth-century urbanization was the appearance of commercial hotels. Among the first luxury hotels was the Astor House of New York City and the Tremont House of Boston. The latter was considered by many to be the best hotel in the country at the time. Its 170 rooms featured door locks, a wash basin, and a pitcher of water. A free cake of soap was given to each guest. There were eight indoor toilets and bathrooms distributed throughout the building. The Tremont had a highly trained staff that included the first bell-boys and 24-hour hotel desk-clerks. The hotel was noted for the fine French cuisine to be found in its restaurant. Good food soon became a common feature in major hotels and urban dwellers flocked to hotel restaurants just to eat or entertain friends. Hotels became a gathering place for men of politics and business, and the lobbies, salons, and dining areas became places of public and private business. In response a growing number of city restaurants began to serve midday meals to businessmen in an attempt to compete with the high quality cooking found in the hotels. Delmonico’s was soon recognized by the New York elite for its culinary excellence, and the upper classes flocked to eat there. The Union
Illustration by Thomas Nast of Abraham Lincoln in Willard’s Hotel in Washington, on the eve of his inauguration, 1861. Library of Congress.
Civil War Oyster House restaurant opened its doors in Boston at a time when the nation was seemingly in the throws of a raw shellfish craze. In addition to oysters, clams and scallops were served in season. The owners of the Union Oyster House installed a semi-circular oyster bar where the fabled Senator Daniel Webster was a regular customer. One of the best-known hotels was Willard’s Hotel in Washington, D.C., which served during the Civil War as a meeting place of politicians, generals, and presidents. Abraham Lincoln first came to Willard’s as a congressman in 1849 to attend a meeting of the supporters of President Zachary Taylor, and he stayed there rather than at a rented house prior to his own inauguration in 1861. The First Family occupied Parlor No. 6, a pricey corner suite of rooms on the second floor, and they entertained persons of importance in the Willard’s fine set of public rooms and parlors. The bill for the 10-day stay was more than $770 (U.S. dollars). Lincoln departed from Willard’s for his inauguration and returned there afterwards for a celebratory luncheon consisting of mock turtle soup, corned beef and cabbage, parsley potatoes, and blackberry pie. While president, he conducted official business at Willard’s many times, and he entertained visitors in Willard’s wide variety of suites and public rooms. Hundreds of officers and men were engaged in the day-to-day duty of providing food for the troops. The overall responsibility fell to the Subsistence Department in Washington, headed by a commissary general who contracted for the various types of rations with private manufacturers or packers. The foodstuffs were then apportioned to the respective army commissaries, and by them, in turn, to the corps, brigade, and regimental commissaries. They were then distributed to the troops. The government rations distributed to the troops varied slightly with the season and the availability of local supply. Nonetheless, a complete list of all the possibilities is short. These included hardtack, coffee, sugar, soft bread, flour, rice, cornmeal, dried peas, dried beans, desiccated vegetables or dried fruits, fresh or dried potatoes (called chips), salt pork, bacon or ham, pickled beef (called salt horse), fresh meat, and occasionally onions, molasses, salt, pepper, and vinegar. With only a rudimentary understanding of balanced nutrition, it is a wonder that any soldier survived the war on such a diet. However, the standard ration provided a daily average of over 3,000 calories, heavy in carbohydrates and fats, but providing few vitamins or complete proteins. There were two standard rations in the federal army. One was the camp ration, and the other was the campaign or marching ration. The camp ration tended to be more diverse, and for one soldier in the federal army consisted of meat (1¼ lbs. of salted or fresh beef, or 3/4 lb. of pork or bacon); and bread (1 lb., 6 oz. of soft bread or flour, or 1 lb. of hardtack, or 1¼ lbs. of cornmeal). He also received approximately 1½ ounces of dried vegetables, rice, dried potatoes, peas, or beans. Fresh potatoes were to be had, but fresh vegetables were rare and allotted in only very small quantities. Salt and pepper were allowed in minuscule quantities. About1/2
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ounce of vinegar was provided for each man daily to help prevent scurvy. About the same amount of molasses was allowed when available. The marching ration consisted of 1 lb., or 8 crackers, of hard bread; 3/4 lb. of salt pork, or 1¼ lbs. of fresh meat; sugar, coffee, and salt. The beans, rice, and so on, were not issued to the soldier when on the march, as he could not carry them. When fresh meat was not available the enlisted men were provided with a basic preserved meat ration of pork—boiled ham, salt pork, or bacon being most common. The vitamin deficiencies and the lack of protein in the rations of the common soldier could have been devastating. An unrelieved diet of cornmeal and salt pork, while sufficient in calories, would ultimately produce such diseases as scurvy and pellagra. Fresh meats will provide protein but cannot afford sufficient protein to make up the deficit alone. Both beans and cornmeal are high protein sources but are individually incomplete in amino acids; yet, in combination they are complementary and provide all the essentials needed to sustain health. Rice and peas are another complementary pair with similar characteristics. In offering these pairs among a small variety of foodstuffs, the government unwittingly supplied a nearly complete diet to its soldiers, yet the unresolved question of a lack of essential vitamins had serious health consequences that cost many lives. With respect to camp cooking, Johnny Reb and Billy Yank found themselves in surprisingly similar situations. Each soldier was obliged to use only the limited array of cookware that he could carry. A coffee boiler of some sort was considered a necessity, and any utensil that could serve as a frying pan became indispensable. A particularly common cookware solution was to unsolder the seam between the two halves of an extra canteen acquired from the battlefield. Each half served as a tolerable lightweight frying pan or plate and could be carried strapped over the canteen. Tin cans with wire handles served as tolerable coffee boilers. As with the soldiers of most wars, Civil War soldiers quickly adopted any serviceable device that proved light to carry and easy to replace. Further Reading: Haskell, E. F. Civil War Cooking: The Housekeeper’s Encyclopedia. Mendocino, CA: R. L. Shep, 1992; McIntosh, Elaine N. American Food Habits in Historical Perspective. Westport, CT: Greenwood / Praeger Press, 1995; Mitchell, Patricia B. Cooking for the Cause. Chatham, VA: Sims-Mitchell House, 1988; Root, Waverly, and Richard de Rouchemont. Eating in America: A History. New York: William Morrow, 1976; Spaulding, Lily May, and John Spaulding, eds. Civil War Recipes: Recipes from the Pages of Godey’s Lady’s Book. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 1999; Swartwelder, A. C. “This Invaluable Beverage: The Recollections of Dr. A. C. Swartwelder.” Civil War Times Illustrated. October, 1975, pp. 10–11; Trager, James. The Food Chronology. New York: Henry Holt, 1995; Volo, Dorothy Denneen, and James M. Volo. Daily Life in Civil War America. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1998; Volo, Dorothy Denneen and James M. Volo. The Antebellum Period. Westport, CT: Greenwood
Cocktails Press, 2004; Williams, Susan. Food in the United States, 1820s-1890. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2006.
James M. Volo
Cocktails A cocktail is a drink made up of an alcoholic beverage mixed with other alcoholic beverages and/or fruit juices or sodas. At a cocktail party these drinks are the main attraction, supplemented by hors d’oeurves and lots of so-called cocktail chatter. The story of the cocktail and the parties that were designed around it begins with the discovery of the new world, and the introduction of sugar. The sugarcane that Christopher Columbus introduced sparked quite a trade between the colonies and the West Indies. Sugarcane was a hot commodity. American colonists found many uses for the spice, but one of their favorites was to use the molasses left over from sugar production to make rum. The first still was erected on Staten Island in 1640 to make gin. The colonists were also drinking imported wines, Madeira, port, sherry, champagne, and brandy. Locally, they started to make cider from the native apples. In 1698, a Scottish distiller named William Laird began to distill brandy from hard apple cider, making America’s first branded native spirit, Applejack (apple brandy.) People have been combining alcohol with other liquids for centuries. The Ancient Romans mixed wine with honey, herbs, and spices, and the Elizabethans mixed beer with eggs and spices. The British Navy drank grog in the seventeenth century. Grog, water and rum, was popular during long voyages at sea, to get the sailors to drink water, and in particular, water that was stale. The drink is dated to 1655, the year Jamaica was invaded by the navy, and instead of loading up with beer and wine at port, it was rum that was available. Grog got its name from Vice Admiral William Penn (father of the founder of Pennsylvania), who was known for wearing a black waterproof cloak made of grogam, and hence nicknamed, “Old Grog.” A Sling, circa 1675, added one more ingredient and was comprised of one half water and one half rum, with sugar to taste. Punches were quite elaborate in comparison. Dated to the end of the seventeenth century, punch was most likely a mix made by English sailors and merchants who experimented with the Indian spices discovered during their travels. The word punch comes from the Hindi word, panch meaning “five.” A traditional punch is made from five ingredients: liquor, sugar, citrus juice, tea (or other spice), and water. According to historian Dave Wondrich, it was in the late 1700s and early 1800s, somewhere in the commercial and legislative triangle of Albany, Boston, and New York, that rumblings of the cocktail began. In 1806 the New York publication, Balance and Columbian Repository answered a
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reader’s query asking about a new word, cocktail. The publication responded by defining the word: “Cocktail is a stimulating liquor composed of spirits of any kind, sugar, water and bitters—it is vulgarly called bittered sling.” This statement is considered the official birth to the cocktail as printed on May 13, 1806. Although the true origin of the word cocktail is unknown, there have certainly been some fun theories like that of tavern-keeper Betsey Flanagan, who supposedly served drinks to French soldiers in 1779 garnished with feathers she had plucked from a neighbor’s rooster. The soldiers then toasted her by shouting, “Vive le cocktail!” Or, H. L. Mencken’s citing of a more plausible theory in his The American Language, “The word comes from the French coquetier, an egg cup, and was first used in New Orleans soon after 1800.” This makes reference to the once favored notion that the cocktail stems from the drinks served by Antoine Amedee Peychaud, a New Orleans pharmacist who sold drinks out of his Royal Street apothecary using the French coquetiers and featured his famed Peychaud Bitters. And thus, overtime, the French word was simply mutated into a Creole or American pronunciation of cocktail. A theory now rendered implausible because further research proves that Peychaud was not born until 1803. Wondrich claims that the best explanation for the term comes from the world of horse racing. A horse that was of mixed-breed was known as a cock-tail. Therefore, it would not be too much of a leap to assume that the drinking set of the time would also be the sporting set attending races. Also, in a literal adaptation, cocktails were a “mixing” of ingredients. By the 1820s the roster of cocktails had grown to include the Apple Toddy (apple brandy, baked apple, sugar, hot water), Gin Cocktail (gin, gum syrup, bitters, Curacoa), and Mint Julep (brandy or rum, mint, sugar). The ice plow was invented in 1830 and gave the “cocktail” its life force. Bartenders of the time were professionals and specialists who apprenticed to learn their craft, which now included the hand carving and shaving of ice. They served their concoctions in the finest social setting, the hotel bar. America was growing up and becoming sophisticated, and the cocktail became the liquid resemblance of sophistication. In 1862 a major milestone was achieved in the life of the cocktail. A bartender named Jerry Thomas wrote the first cocktail book, How to Mix Drinks or The Bon Vivant’s Companion. Thomas, who was dubbed the “Professor, ” had traveled extensively and compiled a list of 230 drink recipes. He followed up with a second edition of his book, and his writings were soon followed by those of other talented barmen of the day. These books documented the evolution of the cocktail and listed new recipes and ingredients, as well as new improvements in bar-ware, and standards of bar service. The golden age of the American drink and bar culture had arrived. Many of the cocktails that we celebrate today come from the late 1800s: the Alexander, the Champagne Cocktail, the Grasshopper, the Fizz, the Gimlet, the Highball, the Manhattan, the Martini, the Old-Fashioned, the Sour, the Stinger, and the Sazerac. Each one of these cocktails has a least
Cocktails one story of origin but one thing is certain: these cocktails are the classics, from which all others are derived. After the Civil War the decline of the cocktail began as the Temperance Movement came into being. In 1893 the Anti-Saloon League was formed giving strength to the movement. As author Gary Regan writes in his book The Joy of Mixology, “By 1910 almost half the people in the United States were living in ‘dry’ states or towns, and after America declared war on Germany in 1917, distillation of beverage alcohol was made illegal so that the grape and grain would be eaten rather than sipped.” On January 17, 1920, the Eighteenth Amendment and the Volstead Act formally commenced and Prohibition went into effect. If the so-called morally sound were concerned that Americans were drinking too much before 1920, they could not imagine the thirsty trove they had just awoken. With the dry legislation barely in effect the landscape of drinking culture had already adapted the rules. On January 18, 1920, the 50–50 Club opened in Manhattan. The 50–50 Club was soon followed by other clubs called speakeasies, like the Cotton Club, the Hi Hat, and the 21 Club. Drinkers were sent in a hush behind closed doors where they intermingled as never before. Women, who were previously shut out of the saloons and men’s clubs, were standing cocktail to cocktail with men of all standings. Much can be written about the 13-year experiment of Prohibition, but what was important about this time, in relation to the cocktail, was the decline in popularity of the profession of bartending. Many of these professionals had gone off to war and the ones remaining were now jobless. Although cocktails were somewhat readily available at the nicer speakeasies, no self-respecting man, especially a family man, would continue to work in the now marred industry. The more passionate and astute bartenders found themselves leaving the country and exporting with them the American craft of the cocktail. They left the States and headed to lush hot spots like Cuba, London, Paris, and Venice. One example was Harry Craddock. A steadfast New York bartender, Craddock had worked at the Hoffman House and Holland House—two of the finest hotel bars of the Golden Era. Overseas he was employed at the American Bar in the Savoy Hotel in London. From behind the mahogany bar of this new venture Craddock helped usher in a new era of cocktails by using the foreign ingredients and exotic liquors that were native to Europe. Many were the standard pre-Prohibition cocktails from the American bar, but there was also a list of some 280 “perfected” cocktails that feature the new European mixtures. Franklin D. Roosevelt was elected in 1932 and within the first years he was in office the Eighteenth Amendment was repealed (December 5, 1933). President Roosevelt was known for having an afternoon Martini and was the first to popularize adding olive brine to his gin and vermouth. Unfortunately, although most Americans had never stopped drinking, Prohibition had left a terrible scar in the culinary traditions of drink culture.
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The professional bartender was a thing of the past. Many of their methods were lost to the men at war or to men who had long since found a new way to make ends meet. The 13-year dry spell fostered a new breed of unSome of the most popular cocktails are: educated drinkers with naive thirst. The two cocktails that made it Old Fashioned out of Prohibition with the least 2.5 oz bourbon or rye whiskey amount of damage were the simple and strong Martini and Man1 sugar cube hattan. 2 dashes Angostura Bitters Throughout the 1930s and Few drops of water 1940s, the embattled cocktail persevered. It was ever the symCombine, add ice, and garnish with an orange peel. bol for elegance and seduction. The cocktail was a leading lady in Tom Collins Hollywood, featured in the hands 2 oz dry gin of celebrities such as Humphrey Bogart and Bette Davis. The cock3.75 oz freshly squeezed lemon juice tail was the ultimate heroine to 3.75 oz simple syrup Hemingway and Fitzgerald, and Combine, shake, and strain over ice. Top with club soda and garnish was serenaded by the likes of Cole with a lemon wedge and cherry. Porter and Duke Ellington. Supper clubs, including the Brown Derby, Manhattan El Morroco, Sardi’s, and the Stork 2 oz rye whiskey Club, had also emerged, and it was in these sophisticated haunts that 1 oz sweet vermouth the Martini, Daiquiri, and Side 1 dash Angostura Bitters Car reigned supreme. Combine and stir with ice, strain into a chilled glass, and garnish with a During Prohibition, Americherry, or lemon peel. cans traveled to get a drink. From those travels came a fascination Martini with tropical and Polynesian-style 2.5 oz dry gin drinks. In 1934, an enterprising young gent named Ernest Beau0.5 oz dry vermouth mont-Gantt opened a bar and 1 dash orange bitters restaurant called Don the BeachCombine and stir with ice, strain into a chilled glass, and garnish with comber, located in Hollywood. It lemon twist. was an exclusive and expensive affair that was frequented by a Margarita celebrity set that included Char2 oz tequila lie Chaplin, Groucho Marx, and Howard Hughes. Not long after, a 1 oz Cointreau man named Victor Bergeron, who 3.75 oz freshly squeezed lime juice was inspired by Don’s, reinvented Combine and shake with ice, strain into a salt-rimmed glass with fresh his existing bar called Hinkyice, and garnish with a lime wedge. Dinks located just outside of
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Oakland, California, and called it Cosmopolitan Trader Vic’s. These two landmark 1.5 oz citron vodka bars shepherded in an entirely new genre of drinks and a new 0.5 oz Cointreau sub-culture. The Mai Tai, Scor1 oz cranberry juice pion Bowl, and Zombie are a few 0.25 oz freshly squeezed lime juice from this era, as well as glimpses Combine and shake with ice, strain into a chilled glass, and garnish with of the Tequila-based cocktail, the an orange peel. Margarita. As America settled into the 1950s, the Martini was still the favorite tipple, but the landscape had changed. The clear, odorless, Russian spirit, vodka, had stealthily maneuvered its way into the beloved Martini. The instantly fashionable spirit was the base of the cocktails of the day: the Bloody Mary, the Moscow Mule, and the Screwdriver. The 1960s and 1970s were dismal years for the cocktail. America was involved in the Vietnam War abroad and an idealistic counter-culture war raged at home. The only real drink that was hanging around in the 1960s was the Vodka Martini and that was mostly due to the film endorsement of James Bond. The youth of the time did not want to embody anything that was associated with the generation before them. Cocktails were out and drugs were in. If the cocktails of that era are any indication, those Americans who were drinking seemed to be drinking to get drunk, as the cocktails— Cape Codder, Harvey Wallbanger, Rusty Nail, and Tequilla Sunrise—are extremely potent. In the 1980s there seemed to be a collective ideal change among many of the innovators in the food and beverage world. No longer satisfied with the prepackaged, canned, and engineered ingredients, a shift was occurring to fresh, local ingredients and high-quality produce, with fewer additives. In the kitchen, chefs were going back to basics, using classic methods to reinvigorate the culinary world. In 1987, a legendary restaurateur, Joe Baum, opened the Promenade Bar in the newly restored Rainbow Room in New York City. Baum had a vision of creating an old-style bar that mattered, where drinks were classic and made to perfection. His goal was to use only fresh and natural ingredients, not pre-made mixes, and he hired bartender Dale Degroff to realize that vision. Thanks to the grand bar in the Rainbow Room, Dale Degroff began the restoration of the cocktail to its former glory. Another resounding moment for the cocktail came in the early 1990s when, thanks to the resurgence of classics like the Martini, a new cocktail appeared on the scene, the Cosmopolitan. All of a sudden the pink blend was everywhere! The Cosmopolitan became the mediator that got America drinking cocktails again. It also helped that it was the official mascot for Carrie Bradshaw and the Sex in the City generation. Now, patrons could walk into almost any bar, lounge, or restaurant, and expect to find a cocktail list: a list that usually included a variety of classics, and, more importantly,
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new house cocktails. Innovation and artistry had finally made their way back to the bar and into the cocktail. Further Reading: Baime, A. J. Big Shots: The Men Behind the Booze. New York: New American Library/ Penguin Books, 2003; Baker, Charles H., Jr. The Gentleman’s Companion. New York: The Derrydale Press, 1939; Conrad, Barnaby, III. The Martini. San Francisco: Chronicle Books, 1995; Coulombe, Charles A. Rum: The Epic Story of the Drink that Conquered the World. New York: Citadel Press Books / Kensington Publishing, 2004; Craddock, Harry. The Savoy Cocktail Book. London: Pavillion Books, 1930, 1999 [updated edition]; DeGroff, Dale. The Craft of the Cocktail. New York: Clarkson Potter Publishers/Random House, 2002; Esquire’s Handbook for Hosts. New York: Grosset & Dunlap Publishers, 1949; Grimes, William. Straight Up OR On the Rocks: A Cultural History of American Drink. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1993; Haigh, Ted. Vintage Spirits & Forgotten Cocktails. Gloucester, MA: Quarry Books, 2004; Lanza, Joseph. The Cocktail: The Influence of Spirits on the American Psyche. New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1995; “Mixellany.” Mixologist: The Journal of the American Cocktail, Volume One, 2005. Jared Brown. http://www.mixellany.com; “Mixellany.” Mixologist: The Journal of the American Cocktail, Volume Two, 2006. Jared Brown. http://www.mixellany. com; Regan, Gary. The Joy of Mixology. New York: Clarkson Potter Publishers/ Random House, 2003; Steed, Tobias, and Ben Reed. Hollywood Cocktails. Minocqua, WI: Willow Creek Press, 1999; Thomas, Jerry. The Bartender’s Guide: How to Mix Drinks, or the Bon Vivant’s Companion. New Day Publishing, 1862 [reprinted 2004]; Wondrich, David. Esquire Drinks: An Opinionated & Irreverent Guide to Drinking. New York: Sterling Publishing, 2003.
RECOMMENDED WEB SITES http://www.cocktailchronicles.com http://www.cocktaildb.com http://www.cocktailtimes.com http://www.drinkboy.com http://www.lairdandcompany.com http://www.martinirepublic.com
Christy Pope and Chad Solomon
Coffeehouses in London Coffeehouses emerged in the major cities of Western Europe after 1650 as venues for the consumption of the newly introduced beverages coffee, tea, and chocolate. They proved hugely popular and by 1700 there were more than 500 such establishments in London alone. Ostensibly based on those of the Moslem Middle East from whence coffee had come—many of the early London houses had Eastern-sounding names such as The Turk’s Head and The Sultanese—they also followed in the mold of taverns, being places where men from a wide section of society could meet, drink, and conduct business.
Coffeehouses in London However, coffeehouses quickly developed their own atmosphere and functions that were in many ways in stark contrast to those of taverns. Coffee had brought with it from the East a reputation for promoting calm, rational, intellectual debate and was believed to stimulate mental activity and heighten perceptions. It was also believed to be good for one’s health. Concerns about healthy living were associated with the increasingly important middle-class virtue of respectability. In addition, drinking coffee was fashionable because of its exotic origins and because royalty, for example, the court of Louis IX of France, were among the earliest Western consumers of coffee. As a result, participating in coffeehouse society strongly appealed to urban middle-class males—clerks, merchants, businessmen, and the like— who were in need of a venue to display the respectability that drinking coffee conferred but who were also interested in being fashionable without spending a lot of money. Coffeehouses were popular with the literati, intellectuals, artists, and philosophers as a place for serious and enlightening discussion. Noted diarist Samuel Pepys recorded many visits to various coffeehouses around London. A poem of the time referred to them as “penny universities”; places where for the price of a cup of coffee, a man could immerse himself in discussions of current developments in art, literature, and thought. The decor attempted to reflect this intellectual bent. Coffeehouses were often pleasantly furnished with bookshelves and framed pictures, and were generally clean and bright compared to the dark and dirty taverns. The “Rules and Orders of the Coffee Houses” set down in 1674 encouraged “brisk” conversation but forbade arguments—whoever started a conversation had to buy a “round” of coffee. Such behavior was also in stark contrast to taverns where the authorities regularly intervened to keep the peace. Indeed, the clientele themselves may have seen their coffeehouses as a sort of Utopia—democratic institutions, peopled by intelligent men discussing matters of great significance, subject to their own rules. Presumably, it was this sort of thinking that in 1672 led Charles II to issue a proclamation attempting to close coffeehouses on the grounds that they were a breeding ground for sedition. Public outcry meant that it was never enforced. Although coffee was the most important drink served at the houses, tea and chocolate were also available and apart from a brief dabble with temperance before 1690, so too was alcohol. Originally coffee was served black without sugar although flavorings such as honey, cloves, cinnamon, and spearmint were available at extra cost. However, sugar and milk quickly became popular since arguably these “softening agents” are a natural addition to the bitter liquid. After the turn of the eighteenth century, the character of coffeehouses began to change. Eloquent intellectual discourse gave way to a greater focus on conducting business, and on exchanging news and gossip. Groups of men with similar business interests, or similar professional or political
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An engraving showing the interior of Jonathan’s Coffee House in London, a place frequented by dealers in stocks, public and other shares. Library of Congress.
affiliations met at particular houses and it was there that votes were cast, stocks and bonds sold, and lobby groups created. Those interested in insuring shipping ventures met at Lloyd’s Coffee House in London; pooling their resources, they set up an insurance exchange. London stockbrokers frequented Jonathan’s, and there they would meet with their clients, as did lawyers and even doctors at their coffeehouse of choice. A coffeehouse was the place to read the latest newspapers and broadsheets (some even produced their own), and in the case of a particularly newsworthy event, runners would do the rounds of a city’s coffeehouses spreading the details. But by 1730, many coffeehouses, particularly those in London, were no longer recognizable as such. Some had turned into taverns or chop houses, as the proprietors found that the serving of food and alcohol was the most profitable part of their business. Others began to demand subscriptions to restrict clientele and emerged as the gentlemens’ clubs so popular in London in the nineteenth century. Still others emerged as business institutions;
Coffee Klatches the insurance firm Lloyds of London, still in business today, is an example of this. Although these evolutionary processes were longer and slower elsewhere, almost everywhere in northern Europe the importance of the coffeehouse began to wane by the end of the eighteenth century. Further Reading: Burnett, John. Liquid Pleasures: A Social History of Drinks in Modern Britain. London: Routledge, 1999; Cowan, Brian. The Social Life of Coffee: The Emergence of the British Coffeehouse. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2005; Ellis, Markman. The Coffee House: A Cultural History. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2004; Smith, Woodruff, D. “From Coffeehouse to Parlour: The Consumption of Coffee, Tea, and Sugar in North-western Europe in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries.” In Consuming Habits: Drugs in History and Anthropology. Edited by Jordan Goodman, Paul E. Lovejoy, and Andrew Sherratt. London and New York: Routledge, 1995, 148–164.
Kirsten Taylor
Coffee Klatches The phrase coffee klatch is an Americanized version of the longstanding German tradition known as the Kaffeeklatsch. Kaffee is the German word for coffee, and the word Klatsch implies a type of casual conversation or discussion, often gossipy in nature. The two words together describe the banter and chitchat that occurs when drinking coffee in a communal setting. Coffee klatches may be routine or impromptu, often serving as a break or respite from the day’s work and activities. In Germany it was customary for families to gather over freshly brewed coffee and homemade or storebought cake on Sunday afternoons, another occasion for a coffee klatch. The evolution of the coffee klatch as social event is rooted in the German coffeehouse culture of the mid-seventeenth century. It was essentially a central meeting place where upper-class men could read newspapers and discuss current news in politics, society, commerce, and the arts. Although women relished coffee, strict cultural mores deemed it inappropriate and unacceptable for females to appear in such public settings. Early coffee activities in the eighteenth century were modeled after the aristocratic salon, a fixture for philosophical, religious, economic, and later, scientific discussions. A well-to-do hostess could oversee such conversations within the realm of her own home, tastefully outfitted with coffee brewing
The newly designed Starbucks cup is seen at a Starbucks location in California, 2008. Starbucks Corp. said its fiscal second-quarter profit fell 28 percent in 2008 as U.S. consumers responded to rising food and gas prices by making fewer latte runs. AP/Wide World Photo.
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apparatus and serving accouterments. As coffee became more affordable for the middle class, a comparable female coffee drinking culture began to emerge in the household. Such meetings were dubbed Kaffeekränzchen, or “little coffee circles” (from “Caffé-Cränzigen,” circa 1715), small informally organized women’s clubs that met daily or weekly to play a lively game of cards, share word of local news, and consume their fill of coffee. The first coffee klatches were reputedly held by wives of high-ranking city officials who would call upon friends after fulfilling their obligatory care-taking duties. A woman who took part in these social occasions came to be called a Kaffeeschwester, literally, a “coffee sister,” one who was notably fond of taking coffee in combination with a generous serving of gossip or scandal. Some sources suggest that coffee klatch was coined by husbands who, expressing their inherent displeasure of being excluded from the inner female coffee sanctum, used the term as a disparaging reference to their coffee-drinking wives. In the postwar baby boom years of American suburbia, the coffee klatch served as a means for the stay-at-home mother and nonworking married woman to build relationships and communicate with other women, thus easing the sense of isolation for some. The term may have returned along with GIs formerly stationed in Europe. German immigrants seeking the familiar continued to practice the custom by inviting their newfound neighbors. By today’s definition, coffee klatch participants are wide-ranging from what once was the exclusive domain of the housewife. They can be single and married parent(s), career professionals, childcare workers, blue-collar workers, artists, retirees. College students schedule so-called coffee klatches as time to meet with their professors. Coffee klatch sites have expanded from the kitchen and dining room table to the contemporary coffeehouse, where laptop computers are de rigueur. The Internet has become an online vehicle for electronic coffee klatches. For many, the beverage of choice remains coffee in its various guises. Traditional coffee klatch fare has expanded from coffee cake, streuseltopped babka, and cinnamon-spiced apple Kuchen (cake), and fruit tarts, to hearty muffins, jumbo-sized cookies, and savory offerings such as upscale sandwiches and salads. While the coffee can be virtual via the internet or steaming in-hand, caffeinated or not, and the discussion face-to-face or live on screen or cell phone, the coffee klatch continues to pay homage to its age-old legacy of fostering conversation and conviviality over coffee. Further Reading: Ellis, Markman. The Coffee House: A Cultural History. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 2004; Jacob, Heinrich Eduard. Coffee: The Epic of a Commodity. New York: The Viking Press, 1935; “The Internet in a Cup.” The Economist. December 18, 2004. http://www.economist.com/world/europe. cfm; Pendergrast, Mark. Uncommon Grounds: The History of Coffee and How It Transformed Our World. New York: Basic Books, 1999; Steinberger, Regina. Der bitter-süße Wohlgeschmack: zur Geschichte von Kaffee, Tee, Schokolade und Tabak.
Colonial America Städtisches Museum Göttingen, 1994, pp. 63–65; Ukers, William H. All About Coffee. New York: The Tea & Coffee Trade Journal Company, 1935.
Suzanne C. Weltman
Colonial America Entertaining among the gentry and middle class in the American Colonies was an elegant theatrical performance characterized by strict protocol, elaborate table settings, and lavish, multi-course meals. The home was the center of most activities and the act of dining was an important ritual and a primary means of social interaction among colonists. Colonial entertaining was influenced by fashionable European trends, growing consumerism, and perceptions of social status and cultural identity. The Colonial period in American history encompassed the years 1607 to 1776 and began with the settlement of Jamestown, the first English colony in Virginia. The period concluded with the signing of the Declaration of Independence and the start of the American Revolution. The 13 British colonies included New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Maryland, Georgia, Connecticut, Rhode Island, and Delaware. For the social elite, the act of entertaining was a means to showcase good breeding, intellect, wealth, and prosperity. The dining room was the well-provisioned theater in which conversation and debate occurred. Wellto-do colonists benefited from the agricultural bounty of the New World, and with significant household support from the African slave system, they could afford to present elaborate entertainments for their guests. However, as the relationship between Great Britain and the colonies began to deteriorate, entertaining practices would shift as colonists assumed a new identity as citizens of the United States of America. THE FIRST SETTLERS The earliest settlers of the New World had limited means and few opportunities to entertain. Their focus was on sustenance and survival. When 144 settlers and sailors comprising the Virginia Company landed in May 1607 on what was to be named Jamestown Island, their goal was entrepreneurial. The group had received a charter the previous year by King James I to establish the first permanent English settlement in North America, primarily to take advantage of the abundant natural resources in the region. Jamestown settlers were poorly equipped to manage in the wilderness. They faced disease, hunger, and attacks from hostile natives. The settlement might have failed if not for the establishment of tobacco farming, which generated regular income.
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Dutch colonists also sought the promise of prosperity. Henry Hudson’s exploration of the New York state region in 1609 on behalf of the Dutch East India Company led to the establishment of New Netherland and multiple Dutch settlements including Manhattan Island, which was called New Amsterdam. The Dutch experienced financial success with farming and the fur trade and built comfortable middle-class homes. They brought with them a variety of family-based traditions and holiday celebrations that made use of agricultural resources and established a foundation for hospitality and entertaining practices that emerged in the colonies. A well-provisioned afternoon tea table satisfied the Dutch fondness for sweet treats. Saint Nicholas Eve was celebrated as a children’s holiday prior to the feast day of December 6th, and featured a variety of special breads and baked goods. Sappaen was a single-dish recipe of bread or cornmeal and milk shared with guests that was similar to corn mush recipes prepared by Native Americans. Many travelers journeyed to the New World seeking religious freedom. A group of 102 English Puritans, now referred to as Pilgrims, arrived in Massachusetts in 1620 and established the Plymouth Colony. The Plymouth colonists encountered great hardships in building a community but persevered in shaping a new life that allowed them to worship according to their own beliefs. They traveled with simple functional items to manage a household such as kitchen tools, books, clothing, bedding, and farming devices. Their religious beliefs prohibited most types of celebration and entertainment. They did not follow the traditional ecclesiastical calendar and Easter and Christmas were forbidden, but they did observe an annual secular autumn harvest celebration, as well as a holy day of thanksgiving. A harvest celebration held by the Plymouth colonists in the autumn of 1621 marked one of the earliest forms of communal hospitality in the New World. The Plymouth colonists invited the native Wampanoag people and their leader Massasoit, and for three days the two communities feasted together. Roasted and boiled dishes were likely served, and venison and wildfowl are mentioned in a single eyewitness account by colonist Edward Winslow. The celebration is now referred to as The First Thanksgiving. By the year 1666, the English had taken control of New Amsterdam from the Dutch, renamed it New York, and established political control over the region. The inhabitants of the American colonies now reflected a diverse set of cultures including British, Dutch and Swedish, German, French, Native American, and African. The strongest cultural connections existed with Great Britain. Colonists were English subjects. They tended to emulate English customs and practices in entertaining and social activity and were now enjoying an improved quality of life. A CONSUMER ECONOMY At the start of the eighteenth century, consumerism was on the rise. Industrialization and mass production in Europe and the expansion of trade
Colonial America routes now offered a greater selection of lower-priced household goods and exotic foodstuffs to colonial homes. Meanwhile, three clear social classes were emerging. The lower class included whites who did not own land, sailors, apprentices, indentured servants, and African slaves. The lower class had little money and few utensils or cooking equipment. Meals were prepared in single pots, and included soups, stews, and porridges. Meat was costly, and usually used to supplement a one-pot meal. Meals were served in trenchers—flat, shallow wooden bowls—and eaten with a knife or spoon. The middle class was comprised of farmers, merchants, artisans, and shopkeepers. Meals were prepared by slaves, or the woman of the house. The upper class or gentry were wealthy, educated land owners, merchants, and professionals such as doctors and lawyers. For both the middle class and gentry, behavior, manners, and possessions were visible signals of wealth and social status. The gentry were near the top of the social structure and image was important. Their stature in the community was demonstrated, in part, by their ability to set an abundant dinner table of meats and desserts. They were well-supported by household staff and slaves who were experienced in food preparation and service. The elite, such as community leaders and government officials, served the highest quality foods. Their meals were influenced by French trends and culinary practices, and they employed large household staffs and professionally trained cooks. British style was enormously popular among the gentry and American colonists were emulating their British counterparts in all manners of lifestyle from fashion, to etiquette, to entertaining. Cooking methods mirrored traditional English techniques. Colonists snapped up English-made goods as symbols of social status. Reputation was measured by prosperity, and entertaining offered an ideal opportunity to design and stage a public performance for one’s peers that showcased all the trappings of wealth. Home entertaining focused on dining made good sense in colonial society. The home was the center of activity for the family, and much of the household activity revolved around the kitchen. While the lower class ate meals and performed most activities in the kitchen, the wealthy were expanding their homes and adding dining rooms to serve as a distinct and separate venue for entertaining. Mass production of matching sets of dining chairs began to encourage the move towards dining as an important social event. Table design evolved from the traditional square or rectangular tables, to round or oval tables offering greater intimacy among guests. Most landowners lived a good distance from their neighbors or relatives, so it was a common practice for wealthier families to travel and visit relatives on Sundays. Dining as entertainment took on added importance as one of the few events that allowed for interaction among individuals beyond weekly religious services. As the practice increased, mass-produced tableware gained in popularity, and merchants and purchasing agents moved to meet the
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demand. The broader availability of decorative tableware and accessories in the Colonies allowed for a style of entertaining at home previously unimagined. In earlier times, colonists carried their own portable utensil to an engagement. Now, a proper host provided a guest with a full place setting, often consisting of multiple utensils, plates, glassware, soup bowls, and serving items. Forks were used increasingly as wealthy colonists looked to enhance their table settings. The amount and quality of serving utensils all contributed to perceptions of social standing. The inventory lists found in upper-class colonial homes illustrate just how important tableware was in terms of household possessions. The inventory records at Gunston Hall Plantation in Mason Neck, Virginia, document huge collections of silver ware, ceramics, glassware, and specialized serving vessels. Inventories show multiple items for the service of the main meal; china plates, soup bowls, serving vessels such as chafing dishes and plate warmers, bowls, and tureens. Documentation lists multiple sets of cutlery; knives, forks, spoons, and soup spoons, as well as carving utensils, often with precious material used to construct handles and finely crafted storage cases. The more extravagant families owned specialty items, such as butter boats, bread baskets, cruets, salt forms, and mustard pots, as well as plate baskets for bringing clean plates to the table and removing dirty ones. There are listings of customized dessert items such as custard cups, pudding dishes, tart forms, fruit forms, dessert glasses, jelly glasses, and pyramid salvers to display sweets in a dramatic tiered presentation. As new food products became available to colonists, craftsmen developed unique vessels and containers to serve those products. According to records kept at the home of George Washington in Mount Vernon, Virginia, orders for luxury tableware were often placed on an annual basis. Washington spent 40 years acquiring silver, ceramic, and glass tableware for the frequent entertaining that occurred at Mount Vernon. Correspondence and invoices from purchasing agents abroad show that Washington was intimately involved in selecting the patterns, materials, and designs that decorated his table. Early in his military career, Washington began a lifelong acquisition of tableware to support the social and entertaining needs of a proper gentleman. From the time he was a young man, until the start of the American Revolution, Washington retained a purchasing agent in London. Large orders were typical of the future first president and individual items were often customized with the Washington family crest. In 1759, Washington married Martha Dandridge Custis, a widow with a large family fortune. Their combined holdings made them one of the wealthiest couples in the colonies, and their dining table reflected that fact. Mr. and Mrs. Washington were the first Colonial Americans to purchase the stylish Wedgwood pattern of cream-colored Queen’s Ware and spent more than 30 years building a collection of highly desirable blue-and-whitepatterned Chinese porcelain.
Colonial America
FRENCH STYLE SERVICE Sophisticated eighteenth-century households choreographed the dining ritual with service à la française, or French-style service, which outlined the hierarchy of specific entrees and assured balance and symmetry in the placement of dishes at the dinner table. The practice originated in medieval times and was adopted throughout Europe. Status-conscious Colonists carefully followed the tenets of service à la française, which prescribed that between two and four courses should be offered to guests, with an even number of dishes placed symmetrically around a centerpiece entree, such as a large cut of meat. One dish would always be balanced with another on the opposite side of the table. Service à la française offered a hierarchy for class-conscious colonists. Menu items were divided into classes, with minor dishes surrounding dishes considered of a higher caliber. The number of guests dictated the number of foods served. As the number of guests at the table increased, the number and variety of foods presented increased as well. DOMESTIC MANUALS Colonial women of privilege took particular pride in setting an impressive table and sought out advice on how best to do so. Fashionable hostesses relied on cookbooks and domestic manuals published in England to guide their menus and social entertaining. The Compleat Housewife, or Accomplished Gentlewoman’s Companion, by Mrs. E. Smith, first published in England, offered the mistress of the house a comprehensive manual for elegant cuisine, proper table settings, and household operations. The Compleat Housewife had already been through several printings in England when an abridged edition was printed in Williamsburg, Virginia, in 1742 by William Parks. Parks based his version on the fifth edition of the London work originally published in 1727 and eliminated recipes containing ingredients that could not be found in Virginia. The publication achieved a modest level of success in the colonies. A review of The Compleat Housewife illustrates the level of detail followed and complicated techniques used by ambitious colonial hostesses. The 18th edition of The Compleat Housewife contained more than 700 recipes, including a new section on “foreign cookery” to appeal to readers who were fond of the French style of cooking. A first-person preface written by Mrs. Smith described how cookery had become an art, and she noted that the content of her book was based on her 30 years of experience. She provided a monthly “bill of fare” for every season of the year, each including more than 30 menu items. There was a heavy emphasis on all types of meat preparation, a staple in the colonial diet. A section on “Terms of Art for Carving” reinforced the ceremonial importance of carving skills properly demonstrated by the host at the dining table.
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Four illustrated diagrams offered directions for balanced and symmetrical placement of food at the table. Mrs. Smith recommended that the first course of a Summer Menu begin with a venison pasty—or savory meat pie—at the center of the table, flanked by a soup and fish dish and a serving of mutton. On one side of the grouping was placed an orange pudding and a dish of tongue and cauliflower. On the other side a white fricassee and a dish of bacon and beans were strategically placed. This is followed by an equally detailed second course, with a main dish at the center of the table, surrounded by secondary dishes of meat, poultry, and vegetables. A dessert course was also recommended, perhaps with a pyramid display of confections, encircled by jellies, fruits, and nuts. Other domestic manuals attempted to rival Mrs. Smith. The Art of Cookery Made Plain and Easy by Mrs. Hannah Glasse was published in England in 1747 and eventually made its way to the colonies. While the first American edition was published in Alexandria, Virginia, in 1805, George Washington had already purchased an edition published in 1771, and Thomas Jefferson was reported to own a copy as well. Mrs. Glasse also suggested a monthly bill of fare, offered direction on the order that dishes were to be placed on the table, and provided some innovative recipes for ice cream. THE MIDDAY MEAL The colonial midday meal was the focal point of entertaining. Dinner was the main meal of the day and was served around two or three o’clock in the afternoon. With food and conversation, it could last for several hours. The food was set out in symmetrical displays before guests were allowed to enter the dining room. Typically, the woman of the household presided over the meal. She was seated at the head or top of the table, although some historians suggest this was the spot reserved for the master of the house. Serving dishes remained in place and plates were passed to those guests seated nearest each dish of food. The commencement of the meal was an established ritual. The woman of the house initiated the first course by serving those nearest her. The gentleman seated at the foot of the table did the same. Guests at the center of the table served the dishes closest to them. Following the first course, a servant would remove the dishes and crumb the table, in preparation for a second course. In some households, dessert was placed on the table, or set as a separate buffet. Following desert, the dishes and tablecloth were removed. Dishes of nuts, sweetmeats, fruit, and wine were placed on the bare table. At the close of the meal, women would recess to the parlor for tea and men might continue to drink and then join the ladies for tea. During the winter season, dinner would begin with soup. When guests had consumed their soup, the tureen was cleared from the table, and was replaced by a dish called a remove, which was either a serving of meat or fish. The menu could offer up to five varieties of meat, including ham, roast
Colonial America beef, veal, venison, or leg of lamb. Domestic fowl—chicken, duck, goose, and turkey—were served as a supplement to the primary meat dish, and fish, seafood, and game were offered in season. Colonial cuisine reflected the ingredients and resources of a fertile and abundant new land. The estates of wealthy landowners were self-sufficient, with vegetable gardens, food crops, and livestock in plenty to provide for the table. Pork was widely available and was preserved for long periods by salting, pickling, and smoking. Venison, bear, and buffalo were available, and maritime communities had easy access to oysters, clams, and codfish. Corn and rice were important food crops. New importation routes had cut the price of sugar and made it available to more colonists. Chocolate was imported, but consumed primarily by the wealthy who could afford it. For beverages, wealthy colonists imported canary claret, Madeira, port, and sherry. Madeira and port were fortified with brandy, which preserved alcoholic beverages during long trips across the Atlantic. East India Madeira was considered the finest available on the market. Rum was served in punches and toddies. Tea imported from China was hugely popular in England, and the habit was fully embraced in the American colonies, with regular shipments arriving from British trading companies. SOCIAL GRACES Mastery of the social graces was expected of the wealthy, and entertaining provided a showcase for those well-practiced in good breeding. Good manners reflected the personal capital of the upper echelon, with fine clothing, elegant dining habits, and possessions. Wealthy colonists learned to perform table rituals with precision, as they knew the host or hostess was the focal point of an event. In “Rules of Civility” a young George Washington copied down a lengthy list of rules for behavior he’d found in a Jesuit textbook. Of the 110 rules noted by Washington, 18 directed a proper gentleman in manners, conversation, and behavior at the dinner table. These were skills that would serve Washington well throughout a long career in public service. Washington’s rules advised against eating with one’s mouth full or blowing on hot broth in the presence of guests. He noted procedures for serving meat to guests, the proper use of utensils, offering toasts, and the importance of good posture while eating. Above all, Washington directed himself to always maintain a cheerful demeanor at the table. The art of conversation was highly valued. Dining was one of the few circumstances that allowed colonists the opportunity to share personal experiences and family news or discuss opposing viewpoints and debate the issues of the day. As tensions mounted between the colonies and Great Britain over issues of taxation, conversation would likely turn to the injustice of the Townsend Act and Stamp Act or the horror of the event dubbed the Boston Massacre.
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COLONIAL DANCE Dancing was a leading form of public entertainment. Dance required precision and grace and provided gentry with another showcase to present well-honed personal skills and abilities to influential members of the community. Dances were held in public halls, and the wealthy hosted private balls in their homes. Dancing served a very practical function in colonial society as one of the few public events that brought men and women together to socialize. Through this ritual, friendships were made, leading to courtship and marriage. Organized dance allowed gentlemen and women to show off their natural grace. Gentility was considered a highly desirable trait among status-conscious colonists. The most adept performers could customize standard dance forms, showing off a higher level of creativity and skill. Dancing was so popular in colonial society that many books were published and handmade collections were gathered documenting key steps. Signature dances included the French Minuet, for two partners, used for ceremonial events. The English Country Dance was a group dance piece for multiple couples. The Cotillion was commonly performed in a square of four couples and eventually inspired the American Square Dance in the western territories. Musical accompaniment was typically provided by a single violinist but could include several musicians for larger functions. TAVERNS AND PUBLIC HOUSES For city dwellers and travelers, taverns and public houses offered opportunities for interaction with friends and associates and served an important function in urban life.Taverns provided overnight accommodations, food, entertainment, formal dinners, and musical performances. The clientele was mixed in terms of social rank and could include the middle and lower class. While they were typically the domain of male customers, several notable women were the proprietors of large enterprises, including Christiana Campbell and Jane Vobe, who did business in Virginia’s capital city of Williamsburg. The tavern culture emphasized stimulating conversation. Gossip, news, and issues of the day were often discussed, and local newspapers might be read aloud. Some offered scholarly lectures, musical entertainment, lessons in fencing, or even the chance to view unusual animals. The finest tavern keepers built reputations for excellent fare and would be asked to plan and implement celebratory dinners hosted by affluent male patrons wishing to entertain honored guests. Many taverns were the site of intense political activity. The Green Dragon Tavern in Boston served as the meeting place for the revolutionary group the Sons of Liberty. City Tavern in Philadelphia was a large establishment that included five levels, a bar room, coffee rooms, a dining room, and a ball room. With its close proximity to Carpenters’ Hall and the Pennsylvania State House—now known as Independence Hall—City Tavern was
Colonial America frequented by the political leaders of the day from John Adams to George Washington. Fraunces Tavern—first known as the Queen’s Head Tavern— was a center for food, drink, and commerce in the city of New York. Owner Samuel Fraunces hosted New York members of the Sons of Liberty, and several political events took place there. Fraunces Tavern gained a permanent place in history, when on December 4, 1783, General George Washington hosted a farewell dinner in the tavern Long Room for the officers under his command during the Revolutionary War. HOLIDAYS Holiday entertaining relied on traditional customs but was also influenced by trends in table settings and social aspirations. The rhythm of daily life coincided with the agricultural calendar and colonists recognized four holidays that marked religious observances and paralleled the seasons of the year. Lady Day, the British name for the Christian Feast of the Annunciation of the Virgin Mary, occurred during spring on March 25. With the arrival of summer, June 24 was celebrated as Midsummer. During autumn, on September 29 colonists marked Michaelmas, the feast of St. Michael the Archangel. December 25 was the winter celebration of Christmas. In the Tidewater region of Virginia, where colonists were members of the Anglican Church, the Christmas season was one of great feasting and enjoyment, but the holiday was not universally celebrated in the colonies. Christmas had been legally banned by the Puritan society in Massachusetts in 1659. In Virginia, seasonal agricultural chores were winding down in late December and the 12 days of the Christmas season offered numerous opportunities for entertaining and community fellowship. The slaughter season was underway and fresh meat was plentiful for celebrations. Wedding feasts were often held during the last week of December to coincide with the presence of friends and family already gathered for the holidays. In addition to Christmas Day and New Year’s Day, the final celebration of the season, Twelfth Night on January 6, featured games and revelry, a rich, decadent cake, and a competition among guests for designation as King and Queen of the celebration in the subsequent year. Holiday tables also followed the rules of symmetry and balance that were so important in colonial society. Special emphasis was put on the artistry of the dessert table, with the wealthy creating elaborate decorations and displays out of sugar, pastry, and marzipan. Multi-tiered presentations of fruit and sweets were favored. Family heirloom figurines made of porcelain, marble, or wax might appear on the holiday dessert table annually. SOCIAL CHANGE ON THE EVE OF THE REVOLUTION From late 1773 to autumn of 1774, a series of events and political actions would converge to eventually change the consumption habits of
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colonists, influence entertaining practices, and begin to shape a new national identity separate from Great Britain. Taxes imposed by the British on items ranging from paper to tea had infuriated colonists who protested “taxation without representation” and promptly organized a boycott of British goods. The monarchy eventually repealed most of the taxes but retained a tax on tea. Colonists organized a boycott of tea imported by Great Britain. On December 16, 1773, in the ultimate act of defiance, 50 rebels dressed as Mohawk Indians boarded three British ships stocked with tea and dumped its contents into Boston Harbor. The British retaliated by closing the port, a move colonists described as “The Intolerable Acts.” Reacting to the closing of Boston Harbor, colonial leaders convened in Philadelphia between September 5 and October 26, 1774, as delegates of the First Continental Congress. The 55 delegates voted on September 27, 1774, to adopt a resolution that banned the import of goods from Great Britain, ceased the export of goods to Britain, and established the Continental Association to enforce the new boycott within the colonies. British commercial goods, once a coveted tool of entertaining and a symbol of social standing with wealthy colonists, had now become the leverage in a heated political confrontation that would shortly lead to the American Revolution. Further Reading: Brookhiser, Richard, ed. Rules of Civility. Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press, 2003; Curtain, Kathleen, and Sandra L. Oliver and Plimoth Plantation, Inc. Giving Thanks: Thanksgiving Recipes and History, from Pilgrims to Pumpkin Pie. New York: Clarkson Potter, 2005; Donavan, Mary, and Amy Hatrak, Frances Mills, and Elizabeth Shull. The Thirteen Colonies Cookbook. Montclair, NJ: Montclair Historical Society, 1982; Garrett, Wendell, ed. George Washington’s Mount Vernon. New York: The Monacelli Press, 1998; Hendrickson, Charles Cyril, and Kate Van Winkle Keller. Dances of Colonial America [Online, September 18, 2001]. The Colonial Music Institute Web Site http://www. colonialmusic.org; McWilliams, James E. A Revolution in Eating: How the Quest for Food Shaped America. New York: Columbia University Press, 2005; Oliver, Libby Hodges, and Mary Miley Theobald. Williamsburg Christmas. New York: Harry N. Abrams, 1999; Rose, Peter G., ed. The Sensible Cook: Dutch Foodways in the Old and the New World. Syracuse: Syracuse University Press, 1998; Salinger, Sharon V. Taverns and Drinking in Early America. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 2002.
T. W. Barritt
Colonial Mexico In 1519, when Hernán Cortés anchored his ships off the coast of what is now Mexico, near present-day Veracruz, he and his men relished the thought of fresh food and water after leaving Cuba with cassava bread, salt pork, and olive oil in their larder. The Spanish had been in the New World
Colonial Mexico for several years by that time and were becoming familiar with the indigenous foodstuffs available on the ground: corn, beans, squash, chilies, and various fruits. After the conquest of Mexico, the Spanish created the Viceroyalty of New Spain and the influx of Spanish culture and its mixing with native Indian cultures began in earnest. Three different facets of colonial Mexican culture influenced dining and entertaining: the office of the viceroy (vice king) with its splendor; the haciendas or large ranches or farms; and the convents and nunneries, where well-bred young women learned to cook, generally from Spanish nuns influenced by the culinary knowledge of other nuns belonging to the convents founded by St. Teresa of Avila. In the beginning were the Aztec foods described by Fray Bernardino de Sahagún—“pots with chilies, tomatoes and smashed pumpkin seeds called pipian, birds, fish, frogs, tadpoles, ants with wings and maguey worms, grasshoppers and shrimp; fruits such as plums, zapotes, and anonas, tree roots, batatas, green leaves, mazamorres and thick beverages made from chili and honey”—that the Spanish merged with their pork, oil, onions, garlic, wheat, sugar, beef, citrus fruits, and wine to create a veritable mestizaje (mixture) of a diet, including influences from 800 years of Arab rule of the Iberian peninsula. The medieval atmosphere of the Spanish court still prevailed. And thus there were the foods served by Hernán Cortés at a sumptuous and widely cited banquet to celebrate the downfall of the great Aztec city of Tenochtitlán, where the hosts served hogs and wine, as well as copious
Mexican women making tortillas, 1800s. © North Wind / North Wind Picture Archives—All rights reserved.
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stews, salads, and roasted meats of all types, including young steers roasted and stuffed with various poultry and preserved pork like chorizo and bacon. Animal heads adorned the tables and roasted birds arrived at the table bearing silver or gold beaks and silver feet. In 1538, Cortés as the Marquis of the Valley of Oaxaca played host again, this time to the first viceroy, Don Antonio de Mendoza. According to chronicler Bernal Díaz del Castillo, the banquet was inferior in no way to the banquets of the Spanish court, which the conquerors were trying to emulate in the viceregal palaces, the haciendas, and convents of New Spain. Cortés’s feast included the following dishes to celebrate the signing of a treaty between Spain and France: olives, cheese, turnips, garbanzo beans, numerous birds, and meats—and especially the native American bird, the turkey—salads, radishes, turnovers, cakes, and dishes in casseroles. There were also gold and silver cups filled with red and white wines, chocolate drinks and Spanish sherry, accompanied by a multitude of delicacies including pepitoria, royal torte, and escabeche. Sweets ended the meals and included marzipans, almonds, confites, citron, and various fruits. Dining in the seventeenth century was baroque, after the style predominant in Spain. Table settings began to take on some elements of the native culture. For a banquet in 1669 for the viceroy count of Montezuma, the table was set with medium-quality earthenware pottery, jugs, and pitchers made in Guadalajara, glasses from China, caldrons with feet and lids made of silver, tablecloths, and napkins. Heavy silverware marked each guest’s place and Indian servants watched to make sure that guests did not pocket their silver when leaving. Usually, though, everyone drank to excess and so the problem of theft was miniscule.
Natives shelling corn, Guadalajara, Mexico, 1903. Library of Congress.
Colonial Mexico The convents of Mexico, the first established as early as 1540 in Mexico City, provided a number of the sweets and other dishes that embellished the colonial Mexican tables and viceregal banquets. One of the legendary dishes is the famous mole poblana. Many legends attempt to explain this dish, a symbol of mestizaje of the Mexican kitchen. One myth has it that in 1680 Dominican nuns in Puebla created the dish in honor of the current viceroy, Tomás Antonio de la Cerda y Aragón. Except for the nuns in the convents, very few women could read or write, and so the passage of recipes from woman to woman was even more crucial as the cuisine of Mexico evolved. The role of the convents cannot be overemphasized. The nuns trained many of the young Indian and mestizo girls who became cooks for affluent families and stayed with these families for a lifetime. Because so few cookbooks were published in Spain—John C. Super maintains that there were probably no more than eight cookbooks published in Spain in the first 350 years after the printing press was invented— the transmission of cooking knowledge from person to person was vitally important for the households, palaces, and ecclesiastical institutions of colonial Mexico. Diego Granado’s cookbook, Libro del arte de cocina, published in 1614, was one of the first cookbooks used in Mexican kitchens. This book contained a large number of Italian-inspired recipes and thus Italian food influenced Mexican cooking and dining far more than French food did. On the haciendas, the liturgical calendar of the Church also influenced the celebrations and the choice of foodstuffs served at meals. Family feasting followed the calendar of saints’ days, weddings, baptisms, birthdays, engagements, la quinceanera (coming-of-age parties for 15-year-old girls), funerals, and just plain Sunday dinners. A typical family feast might include a light soup to begin with, followed by a “dry soup” or sopa seca consisting of rice, tortillas, or pasta, then a stew-like entrée. Meat came next, often roasted, served with various side dishes and sauces. Ending the feast, desserts and candy appeared on the table, accompanied by tea or coffee if available. Tableware often came from Mexican potters and the silverware from Mexico’s own silver mines. Further Reading: Ayala T., Roberto Arturo. Cocina Mexicana de los siglos XVI al XIX. El rescate de la cocina colonial con ingredientes originales, pero fáciles de conseguir. México: Editorial Libra SA de CV, 2001; Díaz del Castillo, Bernal Historia verdadera de la conquista de la Nueva España. México: Nueva Mundo. 1943; Pilcher, Jeffrey M. Que Vivan los Tamales: Food and the Making of Mexican Identity. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1998; Pinedo, Encarnación. Encarnación’s Kitchen: Mexican Recipes from Nineteenth-Century California. Edited and translated by Dan Strehl. With an essay by Victor Valle. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2003; Valle, Victor M., and Mary Lou Valle. Recipe of Memory: Five Generations of Mexican Cuisine. New York: New Press, 1995.
Cynthia D. Bertelsen
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Cookbooks, History of “The government of a family bears a Lilliputian resemblance to the government of a nation,” Mary Randolph wrote in her book, The Virginia Housewife (1824). Cooking is part of that governance. Before writing and literacy became common, and in cultures relying on oral tradition, the first “cookbooks” existed in the form of word-of-mouth instructions passed from mother to daughter, father to son, across generations and within work groups similar to guilds, one person to another. Later, after literacy took hold, early cookery manuscripts often appeared in the form of scrolls, but also in codex format or just in shredded fragments. De Honesta Voluptate, the first printed cookbook, compiled by Vatican librarian Bartolomeo Sacchi di Piadena, called Platina, led the way in 1475 for all those that followed. Cookbooks reflect many things, and not necessarily what people actually ate: • • • • • • • • • •
Family size Societal changes Literacy and mathematical skills Technological changes Women’s roles and accepted behavior Ingredients available locally Ingredients acquired through trade Upper-class values Middle-class and lower-class imitations of upper classes Tradition
Three major stages in the historical development of cookbooks can be determined. Within each stage are a number of sub-stages and trends. Until the nineteenth century, most cookbooks were written by men, with a few exceptions like Hannah Woolley’s The Queen-Like Closet (1670). The male cookbook authors wrote for the maîtres d’hotel of the large, wealthy households and palaces they managed for kings and queens, powerful noble families, and high-ranking church officials. Cookbooks served primarily as aides memoires for these cooks, a sort of archive to pass down necessary information about ingredients and techniques for carrying out large banquets, as well as every day menus. An anonymous Italian manuscript cookbook dating to the end of the fifteenth century, The Neapolitan Recipe Collection (Cuoco Napoltetano), contains a number of opulent banquet menus. An example of the recipe collections, or so-called courtly dining guides, produced for the managers of large noble, royal, and ecclesiastical households, The Neapolitan Recipe Collection is representative of many of the books produced by such writers. These recipe collections were for use by the master / head of the household in instructing the cooks. In the earliest manuscripts, cooking times, ingredient quantities, and number of servings were not mentioned. Later, especially in the Italian manuscripts emerging in the late fifteenth century,
Cookbooks, History of
Frontispiece of Le Patissier Royal Parisien, an 1815 cookbook by Marie Antonin Carême. The Art Archive.
authors began to include this information, albeit sporadically. Early cookery books show many commonalities, not at all surprising considering the copying and borrowing that occurred constantly. Compilers organized these books in various ways, usually by ingredient or part of the meal, as in many early cookbooks as well as modern cookbooks. Some early cookbooks were organized alphabetically by the name of the recipe. And sometimes there were no names for the recipes. Much is missing because the commonest dishes and procedures were so well known that no one thought that they needed to be recorded or mentioned. A case in point are vegetables and fruits, which are shown in abundance in paintings of various periods, but are often lacking in the recipe collections. Illustrated cookbooks came into vogue in the 1700s. The second stage of cookbook development came in the form of household management books written by men and women for housewives, with a very rigid and rule-encrusted, prescriptive tone. In England, in one of the first cookbooks to address women’s cooking, Thomas Dawson’s The Good Huswifes Jewell (1585) was written not just for nobility planning banquets but for gentlewomen in charge of day-to-day household tasks. Other early examples of this trend include French chef Menon’s La cuisinière bourgeoise (1746), and Traité historique et pratique de la cuisine Ou le cuisinier instruit (2 vol., 1758). Isabella Beeton’s The Book of Household Management (1861)—an encyclopedic 1,112 pages—contained detailed chapters on ingredients and how to prepare a variety of different dishes. The book also included information about medicine, legal terms, and the like.
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Later, as women’s literacy increased, and the Industrial Revolution held sway, women began to write cookbooks meant for women’s use in smaller, less affluent households. Within the trend lie several subgroups of cookbooks: (1) charitable or community cookbooks to raise money for the Civil War soldiers, (2) promotional or advertising cookbooks printed by companies seeking to sell food products or kitchen wares, and (3) publications from the cooking school, home economics, and domestic science movement, including health and nutrition topics. This trend is most apparent in the United States, which had less of a tradition of wealthy households festooned with servants. Because of the move westward, many women no longer could access the oral tradition of recipes being passed down from mother to daughter and so family manuscript cookbooks became important. And published cookbooks took on a greater role in educating women about household management and cooking because their family members were not there to teach them. Reprints of numerous books and the many editions issued for various works speak to the popularity and usefulness of these books to women across America. Charitable or community cookbooks, a uniquely American invention, began during the Civil War years as women sought to contribute to the war effort. The first charitable American cookbook, A Poetical-Cook Book (1864), edited by Maria J. Moss, was dedicated to the Philadelphia Sanitary Fair of 1864. By the end of the twentieth century, thousands of these books had been published by churches, civic groups, women’s groups, political groups, and others. A few of the most popular of the twentieth-century books were Charleston Receipts (1950), which went through 32 printings and raised over one million dollars, and River Road Recipes: The Textbook of Louisiana Cuisine (1959) boasted 72 printings. Cookbooks developed by food and kitchen equipment companies appeared as food processing and technological advances changed the landscape of the kitchen. The Washburn Crosby Company (now General Mills) produced the Gold Medal Flour Cook Book in 1903, and it was the Washburn Company that created Betty Crocker, the mythical ideal American housewife. Not to be outdone, the Pillsbury Company created Ann Pillsbury in the mid 1940s and published numerous books using her “personality,” including 55 Favorite Ann Pillsbury Cake Recipes (1952). Flour was just one product among many (e.g., raisins, oil, baking powder, canned milk, molasses, chocolate, and, of course, Jell-O) for which cookbooks and booklets appeared. Representatives of the cooking school, home economics, domestic science movement included Sarah Tyson Rorer’s Mrs. Rorer’s Philadelphia Cook Book (1886), Mrs. Rorer’s New Cook Book, a Manual of Housekeeping (1902), Mrs. Rorer’s Key to Simple Cookery (1917), among several titles; Mrs. D. A. (Mary) Lincoln’s Mrs. Lincoln’s Boston Cook Book (1884); and Fannie Merritt Farmer’s Boston Cooking School Cook Book (1896). While training women in home economics and USDA extension, the movement also spawned the academic discipline that became the study of human nutrition.
Cookbooks, History of
Marion Rombauer Becker looks over the 1951 edition of The Joy of Cooking with her mother, Irma Rombauer, at left. This mother and daughter team has co-authored this edition of The Joy of Cooking. AP/ Wide World Photo.
The USDA published dozens of small cookbooks, bulletins really, with such titles as Home Canning of Fruits and Vegetables (1929), Money-Saving Main Dishes (1955), and Aunt Sammy’s Radio Recipes (1927). The perennial bestseller, Joy of Cooking, was born out of this era. Originally self-published in 1931, Joy has been revised seven times and reprinted many times. Each revision mirrors changes in the American food scene. Health and nutrition began to take on a more important role in cookbooks, reflecting the progress of science in the medical and health fields that began in the years surrounding the Civil War. Dr. Susana Dodds published Hygienic Cookery: Health in the Household in 1883, and many of the fresh food issues she addressed were still being debated at the beginning of the twenty-first century. Another book, Science in the Kitchen (1892), by Mrs. E. E. Kellogg, the wife of Dr. John Harvey Kellogg of Battle Creek, Michigan, tackled the questions of defining a healthy diet. The vegetarianism and health concerns that molded many works of the nineteenth century continued to influence many twentieth- and twenty-first century cookbook authors. Countless numbers of diet cookbooks weighed down the shelves in bookstores, testifying to the American obsession with weight loss, diet, nutrition, and healthy eating. Nutritionist Adelle Davis published a number of books, including Let’s Cook it Right (1947). Her work influenced the 1960s hippie counterculture, which drew attention to the deficiencies in the American diet. In 1973, the American Heart Association produced the American Heart Association Cookbook, a book that continued to be revised and used for several decades. Anna Thomas wrote her farseeing book The Vegetarian Epicure (1972), in which the recipes overcome some of the tasteless recipes of Ellen Buchman Ewald’s Recipes for a Small Planet (1973), which sprouted from Frances Moore Lappé’s Diet for a Small Planet (1971). Laurel’s Kitchen: A Handbook for Vegetarian Cookery & Nutrition (1976), by Laurel Robertson et al., was developed in Berkeley, California, out of concern for correct nutrition and was one of the first books to address vegetarian nutrition in a practical, tasteful, and accessible way. Deborah Madison published numerous books on vegetarianism, including Vegetarian Cooking for Everyone (1997) and The Greens Cookbook (2001).
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Berkeley, California, also gave birth to another nutrition-related movement. Emerging from its vegetarian antecedents, the eat-local movement essentially began with Alice Waters at her Berkeley, California, restaurant, Chez Panisse. The Chez Panisse Menu Cookbook (1982) and Chez Panisse Vegetables (1996) heralded a new preoccupation with fresh food grown locally. English food writer Elizabeth David’s French Provincial Cooking (1960) impressed Alice Waters so much that she decided to try to cook food that she saw on the cover of David’s book. Beginning around the turn of the twenty-first century, scores of cookbooks about farmers markets appeared, including Fresh from the Farmers’ Market: Year-Round Recipes for the Pick of the Crop (1997), by Janet Fletcher with an introduction by Alice Waters; Local Flavors: Cooking and Eating from America’s Farmers’ Markets (2002), by Deborah Madison; and Pillsbury’s Farmer’s Market Cookbook by Pillsbury (2000), written by Jackie Sheehan. In tandem with the growing interest in whole foods, the publication of ethnic cookbooks took off with classics like Julia Child’s Mastering the Art of French Cooking (1961), Diana Kennedy’s The Cuisines of Mexico (1972), Elizabeth Lambert Ortiz’s The Book of Latin American Cooking (1979), Marcella Hazan’s The Classic Italian Cook Book (1976) and More Classic Italian Cooking (1978), Julie Sahni’s Classic Indian Cooking (1980), Claudia Roden’s A Book of Middle Eastern Food (1980), and Penelope Casas’s The Foods and Wines of Spain (1983). These works anticipated the burgeoning American interest in other food cultures that began with the groundbreaking Time-Life “Foods of the World” series (1968–1976). Feeding into the local foods and ethnic cuisine trends, numerous cookbooks began to appear, written by chefs who owned restaurants, starred in cooking shows on television, or both. Early examples of these works include Jacques Pepin’s The Art of Cooking (1987); André Soltner’s The Lutece Cookbook (1980); Wolfgang Puck’s The Wolfgang Puck Cookbook—Recipes From Spago, Chinois And Points East And West (1986); Charlie Trotter’s Charlie Trotter’s (1994); and Thomas Keller’s The French Laundry (1999). Most of the chefs advocated using only the freshest ingredients, following the example of Alice Waters. The phenomenon of TV cooking shows produced an onslaught of cookbooks by TV food show stars such as Rachael Ray’s 30-Minute Meals (1999) and Classic 30-Minute Meals: The All-Occasion Cookbook (2006); Mario Batali’s Simple Italian Food (1998), Mario Batali Holiday Food (2000), The Babbo Cookbook (2002), and Molto Italiano: Simple Italian Recipes (2005); and Paula Deen’s Paula Deen & Friends: Living It Up, Southern Style (2005). Other trends in cookbook publishing in the United States included an increase in personalized memoir cookbooks and cookbooks based on single appliances, ingredients, or specific meals. Michael Lee West’s Consuming Passions: A Food-Obsessed Life (1999), Colette Rossant’s Memoirs of a Lost Egypt: A Memoir with Recipes (1999), and Marlena de Blasi’s A Thousand Days in Venice (2002) provide recipes alongside stories and insights into cultures and private lives. Not Your Mother’s Slow Cooker Cookbook by Beth
Cookbooks, Tools for Entertaining Hensperger and Julie Kaufmann (2005), One Potato, Two Potato 300 Recipes From Simple To Elegant by Roy Finamore and Molly Stevens (2001), and Simple Italian Sandwiches Recipes: From America’s Favorite Panini Bar by Jennifer and Jason Denton (2006) illustrate the shift to detailed and specific cookbooks. Further Reading: Arndt, Alice, ed. Culinary Biographies. Houston, TX: YES Press, 2006; Capatti, Alberto, and Massimo Montanari. Italian Cuisine: A Cultural History. New York: Columbia University Press, 2003; Fisher, Carol. The American Cookbook: A History. Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Company, 2006; Fordyce, Eleanor. “Cookbooks of the 1800s.” In Dining in America: 1850–1900. Edited by Kathyrn Grover. pp. 84–113. Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 1987; Gold, Carol. Danish Cookbooks: Domesticity & National Identity, 1616–1901. Seattle: University of Washington Press, 2007; Lowenstein, Eleanor. Bibliography of American Cookery Books, 1742–1860. Worcester, MA: American Antiquarian Society, 1972; Rodinson, Maxime. “Studies in Arabic Manuscripts Related to Cookery.” In Maxime Rodinson et al. Medieval Arab Cookery: Essays and Translations. Totnes, Devon: Prospect Books, 2006, 91–164.; Root, Waverly, and Richard de Rochement. Eating in America: A History. Hopewell, NJ: Ecco Press, 1994; Schenone, Laura. A Thousand Years Over a Hot Stove: A History of American Women Told Through Food, Recipes, and Remembrances. New York: W. W. Norton, 2003; Scully, Terence. The Art of Cookery in the Middle Ages. Woodbridge, England: Boydell Press, 1995; Shapiro, Laura. Perfection Salad: Women and Cooking at the Turn of the Century. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1986; Theophano, Janet. Eat My Words: Reading Women’s Lives Through the Cookbooks They Wrote. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2002; Wheaton, Barbara Ketcham. Savoring the Past: The French Kitchen and Table from 1300 to 1789. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1983.
Cynthia D. Bertelsen
Cookbooks, Tools for Entertaining The cookbook has existed as a separate genre for over 500 years—as long as any other type of printed book. But until the nineteenth century, a relatively small number of cookbooks were printed, and their use as handbooks or guides for entertaining is a more recent phenomenon. Some of the first truly popular printed cookbooks were sold during the eighteenth century in multiple editions in Britain and America. Eliza Smith’s Compleat Housewife: or Accomplish’d Gentlewoman’s Companion first appeared in London in 1727, and Hannah Glasse’s The Art of Cookery Made Plain and Simple was first published in 1747. Amelia Simmons’s American Cookery (1796), the first cookbook written by an American, was an instruction manual for the cooking duties required of domestic life in the new republic. Like its predecessors, it focused not on entertaining, but on the day-to-day routine of preparing food for a household.
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In the nineteenth century, numerous regional American cookbooks appeared, such as Mrs. Mary Randolph’s The Virginia Housewife: or Methodical Cook (1824), Sarah Rutledge’s Carolina Housewife (1847), and Susan Harris Coleman Hosmer’s Nantucket Receipts (1874). The domestic economy movement in the nineteenth century aimed to encourage the preparation of nutritious food in the home under sanitary conditions. The purchasing power of the growing American middle classes created markets for many different domestic economy cookbooks, such as Lydia Maria Child’s American Frugal Housewife (1829); Sarah Josepha Hale’s The Good Housekeeper, or The Way to Live Well and To Be Well While We Live (1839); and Catharine Beecher’s works A Treatise on Domestic Economy (1841), The Domestic Receipt Book (1846), and The American Woman’s Home (1869; co-authored with her sister, the novelist Harriet Beecher Stowe). Early attempts at authoritative reference works such as the first cookery encyclopedia, The Cook’s Own Book (1836), were also published. In each of these works, a single chapter or section might consider table settings, service patterns, or domestic entertaining, if such subjects were considered at all. In Britain, Mrs. Isabella Beeton’s bestselling Book of Household Management (1861), a comprehensive manual for the middle-class household, treated entertaining as one of several components to the successful managing of a household. The growth of cooking schools toward the end of the nineteenth century also helped spread new recipes and professional cooking techniques to American homes. Fannie Farmer’s famous Boston CookingSchool Cook Book (1896) was initially used as the school’s textbook but was widely adopted outside the school for domestic use. A unique perspective on managing the domestic household is contained in two books written by free African American servants: Robert Roberts’s The House Servant’s Directory, or A Monitor for Private Families (1827) and Tunis Campbell’s Hotel Keepers, Head Waiters and Housekeeper’s Guide (1848). By the late nineteenth century, as print culture in all genres expanded in format and quantity, a literature of entertaining began to develop. Mary F. Henderson’s Practical Cooking and Dinner Giving. A Treatise Containing Practical Instructions in Cooking; in the Combination and Serving of Dishes; and in Fashionable Modes of Entertaining at Breakfast, Lunch, and Dinner (1876) is possibly the first true manual for dinner parties and domestic entertainment. It was popular enough to undergo at least 10 reprintings, the last as late as 1904. Fashionable restaurants in America’s urban centers also began to publish their own cookbooks, a trend that continues unabated today in the age of the celebrity chef. The first, The Epicurean (1894), included bills of fare, recipes, and service instructions from Delmonico’s Restaurant, the epicenter of Gilded Age dining in New York City, and was authored by its chef, Charles Ranhofer. Many of these now-classic works have been reprinted over the years, often as contemporary photo-facsimiles, and are available through out-of-print
Cookbooks, Tools for Entertaining and antiquarian booksellers. Original copies are increasingly sought after by collectors. In the twentieth century, the numerous changes in how Americans ate are reflected in their cookbooks. Specialized cookbooks and guides for hosting a cocktail party (with a heavy emphasis on hors d’oeuvres recipes), and for the dinner party became widely available. Thomas Bullock’s The Ideal Bartender (1917) and Harry Craddock’s majestic art deco The Savoy Cocktail Book (1930) are two of the most notable early manuals in mixology, providing comprehensive collections of newly developed recipes for cocktail parties. As processed and packaged foods gained wide acceptance and use, titles like Poppy Cannon’s The Can Opener Cookbook (1952) and its several successor volumes became widespread. Other popular cookbooks in this period used different proportions of canned or processed foods to fresh ingredients, depending upon their author’s viewpoint and the cookbook’s aims. By mid-century, the dinner party became an established middle-class norm, and manuals for party-giving for all occasions, for chafing dish cookery for group parties, and for entertaining for specific targeted audiences all were published in large quantities. Titles such as Margot Finletter Mitchell’s The Busy Girl’s Cookbook: Easy Recipes and Simple Directions for Good Meals and Small Parties (1953) and Esquire’s Handbook for Hosts (1949 and many successive editions) were addressed to singles and served as stylish social etiquette books in addition to their collections of recipes. James Beard had the first cooking show on American television, teaching America how to enjoy complex recipes and share them at home. Gourmet magazine, first published in 1941, initially targeted an exclusively male audience interested in the arcana of complex recipes but quickly was adopted by a wider demographic of home cooks. The tremendous success of numerous editions of Irma Rombauer’s The Joy of Cooking (1931) and Betty Crocker’s Picture Cook Book (1950) established benchmarks for cooking basic family meals and more elaborate productions for entertaining guests. The publication in 1961 of Julia Child’s Mastering the Art of French Cooking had a significant impact on changing the way middle-class Americans thought about food. Not only did Child’s book bring a new awareness to the subtleties of French cuisine (at a time when the Kennedys famously hired the first French chef in the White House), but the recipes, many of them complex and focused on using fresh ingredients, allowed home cooks to demonstrate to their friends and neighbors their sophistication in the mastery of complex recipes and techniques. Similarly, Elizabeth David’s works, beginning with Mediterranean Food (1950), helped change the way the British thought about food and ate in the postwar years. Martha Stewart’s breakthrough book Entertaining (1982), a direct successor to earlier mid-century efforts, emphasized the totality of domestic entertainment, of which cooking was one part. Complexity and simplicity are equally appreciated, with an emphasis on the host’s creating an “authentic” experience for his or her guests. For Stewart, it is as important to
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know how and when to serve a good basic omelet as it is a delicate, complex soufflé. As travel outside the United States increased in the postwar years, so too did Americans’ interest and appreciation of world cuisines. French food in the 1960s, Thai food in the 1970s, Japanese and California cuisine in the 1980s, and Pacific Rim or “fusion” cuisine in the 1990s all influenced home cooks through their popularity in restaurants. The 1990s trend of purchasing professional kitchen appliances for the home, whether for use or for show, shows how we look to restaurants and the professional culinary industry, and their cookbooks, as our main guide for domestic entertaining. Today, with an increased interest in organic, natural, and locally produced foods, the future of entertaining and the enjoyment of good food and company is certainly secure, if ever changing, and the attendant cookbooks we use continue to reflect popular tastes and interests. Further Reading: Brown, Eleanor Parker. Culinary Americana: Cookbooks Published in the Cities and Towns of the United States of America During the Years From 1860 Through 1960. Newcastle DE: Oak Knoll Press, 1999; Feeding America: Historic Cookbook Project at Michigan State University. http://digital.lib.msu. edu/projects/cookbooks/; Hess, John L., and Karen Hess. The Taste of America. Columbia: University of South Carolina Press, 1989; Lovegren, Sylvia. Fashionable Food: Seven Decades of Food Fads. New York: Macmillan, 1995.
Jeffrey Makala
Cordials and Liqueurs Although today we think of these sweet alcohol-based after-dinner drinks as merely a pleasant way to conclude a formal meal, the name cordial reveals their true origin. These were first invented as medicinal drinks meant to soothe the heart (cor in Latin, also the root of cardiac in English). The logic was that alcohol was considered the vital essence of wine, itself a substance that nourishes the blood, hence the name aqua vitae or “water of life.” Combined with sweetness, considered to be hot and moist in terms of humoral physiology, and various herbal or fruit extracts, cordials were intended to be a medicinal corrective to the labors of the day as well as the meal itself. The fact that they have manifest ability to “lighten the spirits,” so to speak, was taken as concrete evidence that they do in fact thin the thick and gluey humors that traverse through the body, taxing the heart and causing heavy pensiveness in the mind and sluggishness in the limbs. A cordial is thus good for the heart—and should be distinguished from other originally medicinal drinks such as the aperitif—which scours and opens the body’s passages readying it for a meal to come, or the digestif, which is meant to strengthen the digestive heat of the stomach, and cause it to corregate and better “concoct” the stomach’s contents, which is why digestifs are bitter.
Cordials and Liqueurs Europeans began distilling these medicines some time in the Middle Ages, and we know that figures like Roger Bacon and Raymond Lull experimented with various forms of alcohol in an effort to discover a longevity drug. By the era of print, recipes for these drinks were published and well known. Hieronymus Braunschweig’s book on distillation is among the earliest of these. Other alchemists such as Walter Ryff composed complex cordial recipes. Such recipes are also contained in a handbook written by the Swiss botanist Conrad Gessner under the pseudonym Euonymus Philiatrus in the mid-sixteenth century. For example he offers a recipe for a rose water (meant as a cordial, not a baking ingredient) that soothes the heart and liver and is excellent for inflammations (roses being cold humorally). This is essentially the ancestor of rosolio, still popular in Italy. Contemporary cookbooks containing menus and banqueting guides provide evidence that “waters” such as these came out with the last course of fruits and sweets, though whether they were taken medicinally or merely for pleasure cannot be known. Gessner’s comments suggest that it is for both: “Aqua ardens, or aqua vitae, is extracted from wine, among us from the lees, so much of which is sold by common folk, and from which they practically make a meal.” The drink he is speaking of we would today call grappa or marc. But he also discusses other ingredients macerated in the wine and then distilled: cinnamon, sage, absinthe, gentian, iris, and even juniper, which he believes gives the most pleasing aroma. The latter is the ancestor of gin. Other recipes include several dozen ingredients—one has cloves, nutmeg, ginger, coriander, galangal, long pepper, juniper, orange, sage, basil, rosemary, mint, lettuce, laurel, pimpernel, gentian, elder, white rose, spikenard, lignum aloes, cardoons, cinnamon, absinthe, as well as fruits, and plenty of sugar. Later distillers would not be so open with their “secret recipes.” Few of the modern manufacturers of cordials mention their medicinal origins, but they do frequently point out their monastic roots, though monks would have been creating these for the sake of health rather than pleasure, presumably. The legends surrounding the origin of many cordials must be considered just that, though there may be a grain of truth in some of the stories. Chartreuse is named for a monastic order, as is Benedictine. The latter is said to have been invented in 1510 by Brother Bernardo Vincelli in the Abbey of Fécamp in Normandy and includes some 27 herbs and spices, not unlike Gessner’s recipe at all. Chartreuse, the lurid green or sweeter yellow cordial from which we get the name for the color, is said to contain 130 herbs and traces its origin to an alchemical manuscript bequeathed to the Carthusian monastery at Vauvert in 1605. The cordial later made its way to the headquarters at Voiron where production on a large scale commenced. Manufacture underwent various vicissitudes over the years, especially when the monks were expelled from France, but Chartreuse is still made today. Although precisely defining a liqueur today is difficult, in general it refers to a sweet dessert beverage with an alcohol content of about 25 to 30 percent, that is, twice as much as wine, but not as much as straight spirits, which are about 35 to 50 percent (or 70 to 100 proof ). But there are
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stronger and weaker liqueurs as well. The leading manufacturers of liqueurs continue to be French and Italian, though the Dutch Bols (since 1575) and DeKuyper companies have long had lines of flavored schnapps, and the German Jägermeister from Wolfenbüttel has an ardent following (Jägermeister is technically a digestif, as are the Italian artichoke-based Cynar, and the mentholated Fernet, a dark bitter brooding herbal concoction). Below is a sampling of the range and variety of better-known choices, which excludes aperitifs like Vermouth, Campari, and Pimm’s. New flavors are of course being introduced every day, far beyond the now fairly staid peppermint and root beer. There are a number of herb- and spice-based liqueurs that can be considered direct descendants of the original cordials. These include the cloying yellow Italian drinks Strega and Galliano. Darker and more redolent of herbs are two Eastern European liqueurs: Unicum from Hungary, Becherovka from the Czech Republic—both technically bitters rather than cordials. Although the impalatable Goldschlager and Goldwasser with flecks of actual gold may seem a modern novelty, it does in fact vaguely replicate the centuries-old aurum potabile, or drinkable gold, a longevity drug often flavored with cinnamon. With more noble pedigrees are the various liqueurs based on anise. These range from the sweet French anisette and Italian sambuca which also includes elder, to the more potent pastis, Greek ouzo and Turkish raki as well as the whole range of absinthes. The latter, although often drunk sweetened and cut with water, is not an after dinner drink, but an aperitif— but it does have roots extending back hundreds of years. Made with wormwood absinthe gained notoriety in fin de siècle France among artists, poets, and other louche types, until it was banned in most of Europe in the twentieth century. It is, however, enjoying a resurgence today. Liqueurs have also historically been based on nuts, nocino being traditionally made by steeping green walnuts in alcohol. There are commercial varieties of these drinks nowadays. Other nut-based liqueurs include amaretto, which most people believe is flavored with almond, but is actually made with apricot kernels or bitter almonds. The Amaretto di Saronno company claims that their formula dates back to 1525 and was given to artist Bernardino Luini by his grateful model turned lover. Frangelico is a similar liqueur based on hazelnuts, with pretensions to monastic origins. Fruit bases are far more common among liqueurs. The grandest of these are without doubt those based on orange, with Grand Marnier clearly outstanding, Cointreau following behind, and various others generically called Triple Sec, suitable only for mixed drinks. Curaçao is made from a Caribbean orange peel (laraha), cultivated on the island of the same name, and colored brightly for reasons that are elusive. Chambord is a raspberry liqueur with a distinctive orb-shaped bottle said to date back to 1685 when Louis XIV visited the Chateau de Chambord in the Loire Valley. Similar to this is cassis, based on black currant, often mixed with champagne to make a kir royale. Other fruit liqueurs include the Italian limoncello based on lemons and maraschino based on sour cherries, though there are a number
Cruise Ships of other cherry liqueurs such as Cherry Heering. Sloe gin, not a gin despite the name, is based on a type of plum. Midori is a more recent invention based on green melon. Liqueurs may also have other flavorings. Some are merely sweetened versions of popular spirits, such as Drambuie, which mixes Scotch whisky with flavors of heather honey and spices. It is said to have been concocted first by Bonny Prince Charley, who, while in exile on the Isle of Skye, shared the recipe with his protectors. Southern Comfort is a bourbon-based drink with peach, orange, and other flavorings. Kahlua, likewise is a coffeebased liqueur with hints of coconut and other tropical aromas, and so too Tia Maria and Starbucks have their own coffee liqueurs. There are also a wide range of cream-based liqueurs like Bailey’s Irish Cream and its many imitators; the Dutch advocaat, which is something like egg nog; as well as chocolate liqueurs promoted by confectionery manufacturers, like Godiva. Recently even fine tobacco has been distilled into a liquor, named Perique. Browsing the liquor store shelf one will find many strange new flavors: sour razzmatazz, pomegranate for those interested in antioxidants, as well as some truly remarkable offerings such as organic lavender- and tea-flavored liqueurs. What tomorrow will offer one can only guess. Further Reading: Forbes, R. J. Short History of the Art of Distillation from the Beginnings up to the Death of Cellier Blumenthal. Leiden, The Netherlands: Brill, 1997; Walton, Stuart. The New Guide to Spirits and Liqueurs. London: Lorenz Books, 2000; Walton, Stuart. The Complete Guide to Cocktails and Drinks. London: Lorenz Books, 2003.
Ken Albala
Cruise Ships In the nascent days of ocean travel during the early 1800s, sailing ships, also known as packets, provided a means for human transportation and mail delivery between New York and Liverpool. Typically there were fewer than 25 paying travelers per ship, with a much larger working crew. The journey could take an average of a month, sometimes more, depending on the weather and wind. It was a very long trip for seasick passengers who were unable to concentrate on reading or writing. To pass the time they played games such as charades or card games, listened to lectures, or sang songs. All of these pastimes were passenger generated. Shipboard life was centered in a large room known as the saloon. All dining and activity took place in this one room. Although the constant rolling of the ship kept attendance in the saloon to a minimum, those who were able to get out of bed found that meals, at least at the beginning of the voyage, were fresh and filling. Dinner regularly consisted of three simple courses and was served with little ceremony. There was no such thing as room service at this time. Meal service was abandoned altogether during a storm.
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Just as the sailing ships were reaching their peak in speed, a developing technology was about to replace them. This was the harnessing of steam, which was the Industrial Age’s most significant form of energy. By the mid1840s not only could the mail get to its destination in a timely fashion but so could people get to theirs. For several years transatlantic travel, for the most part, was still not very comfortable. When Charles Dickens was a passenger on an early steamship, the Cunard Line’s Britannia, he found his stateroom to be “an utterly impracticable, thoroughly hopeless and profoundly preposterous box.” The food in the Britannia’s communal dining saloon was carelessly prepared and not very fresh. This contrasted greatly with another early Cunard steamship, the Columbia. The Columbia’s food was delicious and varied, and was served with care on fine porcelain. Guests devised all of their own amusements. With musicales, dances, backgammon, and deck games such as shuffleboard and nine pins, the passengers managed to stave off the boredom of a two-week long voyage. As the years went on, cuisine and service greatly improved aboard ship. As early as 1851 a passenger on a Collins Line vessel could count on meals designed to delight the palate and fill the stomach. A standard dinner menu consisted of green turtle soup, roasts in sauce, fresh fish, fresh fruits and vegetables, and numerous desserts. Meals were served as they were in the past, in communal dining rooms at two long tables and with mingling among all types of people. If they were able to do so, some passengers attempted to change their clothes for dinner as they would do on land, but given the tight quarters in their cabins this was difficult to accomplish. Fresh flowers decorated the tables, and the dining room service became more polished. When all was well, passengers looked forward to eating every three hours or so. When the seas became rough, however, everyone retreated to their rooms. Meals were sparsely attended during a storm. In an attempt to keep plates and glasses from sliding away, three inch strips of wood were placed across each place setting in the dining saloon. The lack of room service did not matter much to seasick passengers. The ship that is widely considered to be the first modern liner, the Oceanic, was launched in 1870. Along with the new technology it used, there was an increased level of service for most passengers. Certainly more attention was paid to the cuisine in what had become known as the cabin classes. By this time great waves of emigration to the United States were beginning. Many, if not most, immigrants were unable to afford cabin class. The cheapest fare gave them a small space in the steerage section of the ship. They were expected to supply their own provisions, although low-quality food from the ship’s kitchen was sometimes available. Thus began an era in which sharp distinctions between rich and poor were drawn on the high seas, as it always had been on land. By the turn of the century, a new kind of ship was being built. Huge in size and running on turbine engines, these fast ocean liners put the steamships of the nineteenth century into the history books. Concurrent with
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these developments was an even greater emphasis on cabin-class comfort and amusement. Ships were being designed with gymnasiums, swimming pools, winter gardens, smoking rooms, card rooms, and libraries. Not only were there tables seating no more than 10 people in the first-class dining rooms, but there was usually at least one other restaurant or café aboard the ship. In the early 1900s and pre–World War I it was customary for wealthy travelers to dress for dinner in their more spacious cabins. Part of the firstclass dining room ritual was to scrutinize each woman’s gown as she made her entrance. As a result, the dresses were glamorous and eye-catching, and became part of the entertainment in the dining room. The food was carefully prepared and served, and indulgence was the order of the day. Tea time and room service evolved over time, along with the tradition of having bouillon at 11 A.M. Luxurious trips on ocean liners before World War II were universally accepted as the province of the elite. The amenities of first class and the other cabin classes made the trip much more bearable, and by the 1920s even the “tourist” (formerly Normandie steerage) passengers traveled in a It is interesting to note that the ship, which was named for the modicum of comfort. province of Normandy (in French, la Normandie), carried neither The decades between the two a le nor la before her name. Although it was maritime custom to World Wars were golden years for refer to any ship as a she, the French Journal of the Merchant the great transatlantic ocean liners. Marine was opposed to the idea of giving a la to the new ship. “All Along with existing passenger ships ships,” it wrote, “no matter what their names may be, are massuch as the Mauretania and Berenculine in France. In spite of all the official circulars and all the garia, there was a proliferation grammarians of France, never can we be forced to say anything but Le Normandie.” As a compromise, neither gender term was of new vessels. The Ile de France, attached, and Normandie became the ship’s name. the Bremen, and the Europa, all The ship’s technical design was the marvel of its day with its launched in the late 1920s, set new unique hull shape, its method of propulsion, and its distinctive standards for luxury and speed. bow. It was the glamorous and magnificent interior, however, Cunard’s super-liner Queen Mary that drew the most attention. The ship was the epitome of art was in the final stages of developdeco design. This style was developed primarily in France bement. But the one which would tween 1910 and 1925 as a reaction to the art nouveau moveeclipse them all in every way was ment and was used for years afterward throughout the world. the French Line’s 1935 masterInstead of stylized glass flower lamp shades for the light fixpiece, the great ship Normandie. tures in the first class salle á manger, for example, there would Normandie was never inbe 12 simple but elegant cascading “light fountains” illuminated tended as a ship for the general from within. These stunning structures, designed by artist René Lalique, stood in two straight rows of six each on either side of public. Most of its passenger cabins the room. Vertical hanging lamp fixtures and crystal columns of were identified as first class, with light attached to the walls filled the immense, windowless room far fewer in the tourist and third with glorious radiance. The design elements employed throughclasses. Captains of industry, movout the ship would show the world just how luxurious and soers and shakers in the worlds of phisticated ocean travel could be, and no expense was spared business and politics, persons of in showcasing the French aesthetic at its very best. great wealth, imagined royalty, and
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real royalty were its target clientele. Such deluxe surroundings would be an appropriate setting for their journeys, taking them to their destinations in a style most suited to their unique needs. It was said that the French built a beautiful hotel and put a ship around it. Those who sailed on Normandie certainly must have found that to be true. A first-class guest on Normandie never lacked for activities and small adventures during the four days of the crossing. Comfortable deck chairs were situated on the Promenade and Sun Decks for reading, relaxing, or spotting passing celebrities, and there were also plenty of group deck sports such as Ping-Pong tournaments and shuffleboard. Bridge, backgammon, chess, and many other board games were always available. A guest could take all manner of lessons from swimming to boxing to fencing. There were shooting galleries on the Promenade and Boat Decks, and movies were shown throughout the day in Normandie’s theater. Wireless-telephone and radiogram services were available if needed or desired. The most popular activity by far was partaking of the continuous meal service. Beginning at 8 A.M., breakfast could be taken in the dining room or in the privacy of one’s stateroom. At 11 A.M. dining service personnel would tour the ship with carts bearing beef bouillon, sandwiches, and cookies. This would take care of a guest’s hunger until lunch service began at 12:30 P.M. Although Normandie was a French ship, traditional British tea time was rigorously observed at 4 P.M. with the serving of ice cream, cakes, sandwiches, and tea. The same red-jacketed stewards who delivered the 11 A.M. snack delivered afternoon tea to all parts of the ship. The dining room opened for dinner at 7:30 P.M. First-class guests wore formal dress during dinner for most of the voyage, and watching sumptuously gowned women and tail-coated men descend the grand staircase was an important part of the dining room ritual. Dinner was the most highly anticipated repast of the day. It was served by a small army of waiters and prepared with meticulous care by Chef Gaston Magrin and his well-trained galley crew. The meal would customarily begin with soup, where no less than five soups were offered every evening. The fish and meat courses followed. A favorite of Normandie’s guests was Le Caneton à L’Orange. It would be the only item listed in capitals and qualified as a Specialité Regionale. Fine French wines were generously poured, a boon to post-Prohibition era, wine-starved Americans. Mineral waters and other non-alcoholic drinks were also available. Not to be neglected was the cold table. All manner of salads had their place here, as did poached salmon, turkey with cranberry sauce, and hams from five different sources. A chef stood by to carve each roast. This abundance of riches was arranged and served in the most attractive and tempting style imaginable. It was truly a delight to the eyes as well as the palate. All selections were chosen by the guest but served by the waiter. The grand finale of every dinner service was dessert. Here was the pastry chef’s moment of glory, an opportunity to display his talents. Ice cream
Cruise Ships was a trendy favorite. Vanilla was the favored flavor and was served in a coupe, or saucer-shaped glass, along with a dessert sauce, perhaps black cherries soaked in brandy. With a staff eager to meet one’s every wish, a dining service second to none, and a setting of unusual beauty and grace, Normandie was the French Line’s star. Normandie was only in service for four years, but those four years were enchanting, exciting, and exhilarating. With the onset of World War II, the era of the great ocean liners and the lifestyles they represented was effectively finished. After the war ended in 1945, however, some ocean-going passenger vessels were back in business. Until the commercial airplane successfully made the first non-stop transatlantic flight in 1959, ship travel was still the principal mode of transportation from one continent to the other. The advent of the jet age made leisurely ocean voyages obsolete. Reorganization and redefinition of ocean travel was the order of the day. Today’s large-scale cruises are meant for rest and relaxation, or for adventure and excitement, or a combination of many elements. Casino gambling, art auctions, lectures, and cruise line–organized activities abound. One can do everything and one can do nothing. It is entirely up to the passenger. Most cruise lines produce Broadway-style extravaganzas, and for late night dining there is always a bountiful buffet. Entertainment is not confined to the ship as many people choose to dine and sight-see in port. Others remain on board and have their meals in the dining room or in their cabins. Cruise ships have added interesting restaurants, sometimes for a supplement, in addition to the traditional dining room experience. Dining as entertainment has appeared once again, a throwback to the days of fine dining on the great ships of the past, although one is not usually expected to dress for dinner. The meal service on contemporary cruise ships is no longer slanted toward first class or any other class as these distinctions, for the most part, no longer exist. Guests have their choice as to where and when they’d like to dine. There is something for everyone. Fish, fowl, beef, and vegetarian options are always on the menu. Menus change every day, as they did in the days of the storied ocean liners, but they do tend to cater to predictable, mainstream tastes. Except for certain luxury cruise lines, where the meals are usually tailored to the individual diner, mass-produced cruise-ship food is tasty but not particularly memorable. On the smaller, more upscale ships the food is prepared and presented with the care more typical of voyages of the 1920s and 1930s. Sometimes the chef will refer to historic menus and create modern versions of classic shipboard cuisine. Dining room personnel aim to please their guests at all times, no matter what the cruise line. The Cunard liner Queen Mary 2 promises somewhat of a return to the legendary past of ocean travel. Other than two of the restaurants, which are for the exclusive use of the highest-end guests, all the other restaurants
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are accessible to the rest of the passengers for a small fee. The Queen Mary 2, in service since 2004, has one staff member for every couple in order to maintain a superior level of service. Dining services are varied and range from in-room meals to the grandest of grand ballroom parties. It is entertainment and dining on the most lavish scale. Further Reading: Ardman, Harvey. Normandie, Her Life and Times. New York: Franklin Watts, 1985, p. 12; Braynard, Frank O., and William H. Miller, Fifty Famous Liners, Vol.1 and Vol. 2. New York: W. W. Norton and Company, 1982 and 1985; Edington, Sarah. The Captain’s Table. London: National Maritime Museum Publishing, 2005, p. 80; Fox, Stephen. Transatlantic; Samuel Cunard, Isambard Brunel, and the Great Atlantic Steamships. New York: HarperCollins, 2003; Maddox, Melvin. The Great Liners. New York: Time-Life Books, 1978; Maxtone-Graham, John. The Only Way to Cross. New York: Macmillan Company, 1972; Miller, William H. Jr. The Great Luxury Liners 1927–1954, A Photographic Record. New York: Dover Publications, 1981.
Joanna Barouch
D Day of the Dead Mexico’s famous November 2 celebration, Día de los Muertos or Day of the Dead, is not the same as the North American Halloween, although the festivities associated with Halloween are beginning to make some inroads on the traditional Mexican holiday. Known by a number of other names (Día de Animas, El Día de los Finados, and Día de los Fieles Difuntos), the Day of the Dead has grown over the centuries to be an integral part of Mexico’s national identity. Sugar skulls, vibrant orange marigolds, and elaborate homemade altars heaped high with fruit, bread, and salt sum up what the tourist sees in Mexico during the Day of the Dead festivities. But Mexican poet and diplomat Octavio Paz suggested a very different scenario in his classic work, The Labyrinth of Solitude: “The word death is not pronounced in New York, in Paris, in London, because it burns the lips. The Mexican, in contrast is familiar with death, jokes about it, caresses it, sleeps with it, celebrates it; it is one of his favorite toys and his most steadfast love. True, there is as much fear in his attitude as in that of others, but at least death is not hidden away: he looks at it face to face, with impatience, disdain or irony.” Death, to the forbearers of modern Mexico, was just one step around an endless circle, part of the cycle of creation.
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Each region of Mexico, indeed, each village and town, has its own special way of celebrating the Day of the Dead. In some parts of Mexico, chiefly where Nahua tribal descendents live, festivities actually begin on October 27, when villagers welcome back the spirits of those with no descendents by putting bread and jugs of water outside the house. In some cases, people leave water and bread in the corner of the village church for these souls. On October 28, food is left out for those killed in accidents, murdered, or who died in other violent ways. For the Feast of the Little Angels, the spirits of dead children arrive on the evening of October 31, but must leave by noon on November 1. Once the spirit children leave, church bells ring to welcome back adult spirits on the afternoon of November 1. But the celebrations of Day of the Dead feature certain key elements regardless of the region: attendance at Mass, the construction and display of home altars with their ofrendas or offerings, candlelight vigils (la velación) at families’ graves in the community cemetery, and the now less popular practice of el doble, best described as a form of ritualized begging accompanied by the sound of the incessantly ringing bells of the local parish church. The spirits may return for a short time, to commune and give comfort to the living, but they must not stay or interfere with the lives of the living. The living owe their dead relatives the best of what they can afford to provide, displayed conspicuously on intricate home altars. Determining the connection between modern-day Day of the Dead practices and those of the Aztecs and their predecessors is difficult to accomplish because the Spanish priests who observed Aztec society wrote accounts that must be taken with a grain of salt. Their mission was to convert the Indians to Christianity, not necessarily to record accurate ethnographical accounts. The Aztecs celebrated their dead in a monthlong ritual surrounding the god Mictecacihuatl (“Lady of the Dead”) that took place in July and August. The Little Feast of the Dead, or Feast of Flowers, focused on dead children, while the Great Feast of the Dead, or Fruit Falls, remembered dead adults. The importance of food in the Aztec celebrations, reflected in the offerings included in the elaborate modernday home altars, suggests a harvest and fertility connection. Skull motifs and other mortuary images commonly appeared in pre-Columbian art. Fray Bernardino de Sahagún, a principal Spanish priest-chronicler, related that the Aztecs created anthropomorphic representations of their gods in dough made from amaranth, a grain. The most likely explanation for the origin of Mexico’s Day of the Dead celebrations lies in a fusion of Aztec folk traditions with early Catholic practices. Pope Boniface IV introduced All Saints’ Day in the seventh century and celebrated it in May. In the eighth century, Pope Gregory III moved the date to November 1. By the ninth century, this day was earmarked to celebrate the saints and martyrs of the Western Church. In the eleventh century, Pope Gregory VII gave the day its current shape and by the fourteenth century, it was quite popular, with Spain being particularly partial to it.
Day of the Dead Saint Odilo introduced the concept of All Souls’ Day ( November 2) in Cluny, France, around 1030. By the thirteenth century, the holy day took hold and was designated for the “faithful departed,” or those who died in the bosom of the Church. Many aspects of the celebrations came out of a melding of ancient fertility and harvest rites combined with the rituals of the Catholic Church. European practices date back to the Celts and the Druids, as in Allhallowsmas, when the thin veil lifted and the spirits could return for a short time. Catholic ritual also borrowed from practices surrounding the Egyptian god Osiris. The Roman god Bacchus, essentially Osiris by another name, played a role in forming European traditions surrounding death. Skeletons appeared in European art, particularly as memento mori in the fifteenth century, as in “Death and the Maiden” in Renaissance art, danse macabre, and the oft-quoted phrase Mors omnibus communis (death is common to all). Artists often depicted Death as a woman, as in the case of nineteenth-century Mexican artist José Guadalupe Posada’s “La Catrina,” with her plumed hat and fancy tiny-waisted dress. In Spain, for instance, cemetery visiting was common and dated back to Roman practices of visiting cemeteries and eating what would be called a picnic. St. Augustine frowned on these practices as early as the fourth century. Huesos de santo, breads and sweets in the shape of bones, flourished in Spanish kitchens and markets frequented by the mothers and sisters of the conquistadores, and in the convents as well. By the middle of the eighteenth century in Mexico, the Day of the Dead celebrations resembled today’s practices. Mexicans celebrate the Day of the Dead by preparing sumptuous multilevel altars in their homes to welcome the dead. In the afternoon or the evening, families go to the cemeteries to clean family gravesites, eat a picnic, and spend time together as families (la velación), remembering the dear departed with prayers, stories, flowers symbolizing the shortness of earthly life, pan de muertos ( bread baked in the shape of bones or human shape), candy skulls called calaveras, photographs and mementos, candles (four representing each of the cardinal directions and one for each dead relative), incenselike copal to guide the dead home, and mountains of food and drink. Basic and essential foods for home altars tend to be water, salt, and bread, all highly symbolic in Catholic liturgy and purification ceremonies. Water refreshes the souls, salt purifies them, and bread sustains them. Paper banners ( papel picado) draped over the altars reveal a number of lace-like designs, usually of skulls or other mortuary symbols. Flowers, especially orange marigolds called cempasuchil with their strong odor, help to guide the dead home, as do the odors of their favorite foods and the burning copal. Families often sprinkle marigold petals across the threshold of the house, right up to the home altar created to the honor of the dead. The tianguis, or Day of the Dead markets, bulge with candy skulls and other items on sale.
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Families strive to prepare their dead relatives’ favorite foods, and for deceased males, liquor or cigarettes may stand on the altar next to pots of spicy chicken mole. Popular offerings include mole with turkey, pan de muertos in the shape of humans and even dogs, candied pumpkin, chocolate coffins and skulls, tamales, champurrado (a sweet chocolate drink thickened with corn masa harina and flavored with anise), posole and atole (drinks made from cornmeal), moles, and horchatas (drinks made with seeds). An arco, or arch, often fashioned out of sugar cane, frames the home altar. Fruit of all kinds, particularly oranges and bananas, hang suspended from the arch. Other ofrendas, or offerings, include seasonal produce, such as lemons, corn, tangerines, squash-like chayotes, and yellow tejocotes that taste like plums, along with cinnamon, tortillas, chocolate, corundas (a type of tamale from Michoacán), and peanuts. Wandering groups go from house to house, presenting amusing skits and plays, and singing songs, all similar to the posadas of the Christmas season. The people in the houses offer the revelers food and, sometimes, small amounts of money. Once the spirits leave late on the afternoon of Day of the Saints, November 2, the living may eat the abundant food on the home altars, but not before. Families also send food to friends and neighbors, a practice termed mandando muertos. To make sure that the dead leave, masked mummers, dressed in a manner similar to that in the North American Halloween tradition, take to the streets on the night on November 2, wearing fearfullooking masks and creating frightening noises. At the night-long vigil in the graveyards, the darkness pierced by the fluttering of symbolic candle flames and highlighting the bright yellows and pinks of flowers like those painted by Mexican artist Diego Rivera, the passing of rituals from generation to generation takes place. The Day of the Dead contains elements of conspicuous consumption, but at the same time this feast day pays homage to the fragility and finiteness of life. “Mexican death is the mirror of Mexican life,” wrote Mexican poet /diplomat Octavio Paz.
Day of the Dead celebrations on Olevera Street in Los Angeles, California. Bobby Deal /RealDeal Photo/Shutterstock.
Debutante Balls
Papier-mâché figure for the Day of the Dead celebrations on Olevera Street in Los Angeles, California. Bobby Deal/RealDealPhoto/Shutterstock. Further Reading: Andrade, Mary J. Through the Eyes of the Soul, Day of the Dead in Mexico—Michoacan. 2nd ed. [n.p.]: La Oferta, 1999; Brandes, Stanley. Skulls to the Living, Bread to the Dead: The Day of the Dead in Mexico and Beyond. Malden, MA: Blackwell, 2006; Carmichael, Elizabeth, and Chloë Sayer. The Skeleton at the Feast: The Day of the Dead in Mexico. Austin: University of Texas at Austin, 1992; Fletcher, Nicola. “Feasts for the Dead: Conqueroring Fear.” In Charlemagne’s Tablecloth: A Piquant History of Feasting. New York: St. Martin’s Press, 2004, pp. 210–215; Garciagodoy, Juanita. Digging the Days of the Dead: A Reading of Mexico’s Días de Muertos. Boulder: University Press of Colorado, 2000; Greenleigh, John, and Rosalind Rosoff Beimler. The Days of the Dead: Mexico’s Festival of Communion with the Departed. San Francisco: HarperCollins, 1991; Norget, Kristin. Days of Life, Days of Death: Ritual in the Popular Culture of Oaxaca. New York: Columbia University Press, 2006; Paz, Octavio. “The Day of the Dead.” In The Labyrinth of Solitude: Life and Thought in Mexico. New York: Grove Press, 1961, pp. 47–64; Salvador, R. J. “What Do Mexicans Celebrate on the Day of the Dead?” In J. D. Morgan and P. Laungani, eds. Death and Bereavement in the Americas. Death, Value and Meaning Series, Vol. II. Amityville, NY: Baywood Publishing Co., 2003, pp. 75–76 (Available online at: http://www.public.iastate. edu/~rjsalvad/scmfaq/muertos.html); Santiago, Chiori. El Corazon de la Muerte/ Altars and Offerings for the Days of the Dead. [n.p.]: Heyday Books, 2005.
Cynthia D. Bertelsen
Debutante Balls A debutante ball is a social event that introduces a young woman into society. The word debutante comes from the French, debut, which means, “beginning.”
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The young woman is said to be “coming out” when she is introduced, implying that she is leaving the sheltered world of family life to join a wider society. The tradition of formal presentation of a young woman is rooted in an old English practice where daughters of the aristocracy, who married within a very small circle of elite families, were presented to those of similar social standing when they reached a marriageable age. The practice continues to be associated generally with wealthy and socially prominent families. In England, presentations took place during “The London Season,” which usually coincided with the sitting of Parliament. Generally, it began after Easter and continued until August when the grouse-hunting season started. Families of wealth and position made a mass migration from their country estates to London for “The Season,” to exchange their quiet life of limited entertainment for days of shopping, riding, and visiting; and evenings of theater, dances, and balls. It was regarded as the chance for young men and women of position to mingle and find a marriageable partner. Marriages were more likely to be made on the basis of social connections, eligibility, and finances rather than common interests, compatibility, and love. This theme can be found in novels like Jane Austin’s Mansfield Park, in which Sir Thomas Bertram rebukes his niece for rejecting a suitor, reminding her that as a poor relation, with no property or money, she is fortunate to have received an offer at all. Attendance at Almack’s Assembly Room was a “must” for young women seeking a suitable husband. This was particularly true during the Regency period. Almack’s opened in 1765 and was named for its founder, William Almack. For a subscription fee, men and women of fashion could attend weekly balls with a supper on Wednesday nights during “The Season.” Balls and dances commonly started at 10 P.M. and continued until 3 A.M. Dinner parties included huge numbers of people and often encompassed six or seven courses. Prospective members had to face the Patronesses of Almack’s. The Patronesses arbitrarily decided the social acceptability of anyone desiring to enter Almack’s, and this “seal of approval,” in turn, extended even to London’s highest social circles. Rejection could undermine a debutante’s social standing. Debutantes who chose to make a “coming out” appearance at an Almack’s ball would have their partners selected for them by the Patronesses. Before a young woman could join in the social activities of “The Season,” she had to be presented at court to the queen. This typically took place when she reached 18. Prior to that time the activities of a young woman of social position would be restricted to attendance at school and limited participation in any social functions. While the actual presentation would only take a few minutes, preparations for the event were extensive. There were rigidly prescribed rules for presentation that extended to dress and accessories. Unmarried women were expected to wear a white gown, although soft color over a white background was permitted. The gown had to have a train. The headdress had to have feathers and a tulle veil long enough to reach the train. The number and size of the feathers on a headdress varied with the whim of the monarch. Queen Victoria favored three large feathers.
Debutante Balls Hours were spent learning how to walk wearing a gown with a train that extended three yards. The young woman also had to learn how to execute a full bow, where her knee almost touched the floor, and to rise without losing her balance. She had to back out of the room without tripping on her train, as she was not permitted to turn her back to the queen. Liveried servants were stationed strategically to assist the young woman in making a graceful exit. Those being presented had to be accompanied by an older woman of rank and respectability who had already been presented. For most debutantes, this was her mother but a young woman could be taken under the wing of any socially prominent matron. After the Industrial Revolution, some members of the middle class amassed considerable fortunes. Daughters of successful middle-class families could be presented at court if they could find a sponsor from among the aristocracy. Aristocrats were anxious to make alliances with wealthy entrepreneurs, and the bourgeois wanted acceptance from high society. Sponsorship created a mutually beneficial arrangement. Presentations usually began between 2 and 3 P.M. The young women would sometimes have to wait for hours before their carriages would be permitted to enter St. James Palace where the presentations were made. The young women would then be led to the Gallery where they would have to remain until they were summoned. Title and rank dictated the order in which presentations were made. Queen Elizabeth II abolished the presentation of any woman at court in 1958. Some attempts have been made to keep the tradition alive by organizing parties for the young women, who would otherwise have been presented at court; however, lacking royal sanction the parties have become indistinguishable from other events of the social season. In the United States, the practice of presenting young women can be traced back to 1748, when 59 Philadelphia families held “Dancing Assemblies.” Unable to present their daughters to the court in England, the colonists began their own custom. Debutante balls usually were private affairs held in the family home or a fashionable hotel. By the end of the nineteenth century, however, many affairs had become ostentatious showcases of family wealth, typical of the Gilded Age. Wealth and age were not enough for a young woman to be presented, according to an 1883 etiquette book, The Manners That Win, which stated that a debutante should have graduated from school and have a complete understanding of the rules that govern polite society, should be able to sing or play an instrument gracefully and dance elegantly. By the 1920s the rules governing a debut had somewhat relaxed in reaction to the more modern attitudes of the time. In Etiquette: The Blue Book of Social Usage of 1922, etiquette authority Emily Post described ways, alternative to the ball, that a young woman could be introduced to society. She suggested an afternoon tea with dancing, a small dance, or a small tea without music. Post even included the very modest suggestion that a mother might simply have joint calling cards made. By this time, public balls or cotillions, as they were sometimes called, where young women from prominent families were invited to make their debuts collectively, had generally replaced private debuts.
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After World War II, debutante balls spread to almost every city in the United States, reaching an all-time high in popularity during the Eisenhower years. The sexual revolution and feminist movement of the following decades led many young women to abandon the event. Debutante balls had resurgence during the prosperous 1980s, and by the close of the twentieth century many were sponsored by charitable organizations and linked to fundraising events. While historically, the purpose of presentation was to find a suitable marriage partner, today a debutante is usually presented for her accomplishments and to introduce her to the adult philanthropic world. Debutante balls are held in almost every major city in the United States but tend to be more popular and elaborate in the South. Some cities have multiple balls during the season, which generally runs from November through January. In the North, some families host a private party as an alternative to the formal ball. This “coming out” party can be scheduled any time during the year but is often planned to coincide with the young woman’s birthday. An event such as this differs from a ball in that the event is smaller and the guests are commonly limited to the friends of the young woman. Many formal traditions persist for these events, and there is a particular etiquette for dress. Debutantes are expected to wear white gowns and gloves made from satin or kid leather. The dress should be light, airy, and young. It should never be overly elaborate. If white is unbecoming, the debutante may wear a very pale color gown. Strong colors such as red, dark blue, and black are unacceptable. The debutante’s mother wears a ball dress and gloves as well.
Miss Barbara Hight, chairman of the debutantes’ committee, fitting one of the costumes on Fannie Dial, daughter of the former senator from South Carolina, c. 1920–1932. Library of Congress.
Deepavali, Festival of Lights The debutantes to be presented stand in a receiving line at the beginning of the affair to greet and welcome the guests. It is customary for the debutante to invite a few of her best girl friends to receive with her. These young women wear evening dresses but do not actually stand in the receiving line. With no official duties, they are there merely to share in the celebration. It is customary for family, friends, and business associates to send decorative flowers in the form of bouquets or baskets to the debutante. These floral arrangements are usually displayed near the receiving line. The debutante holds one of the bouquets while she is standing in the line. When it is time to be presented, the debutante is announced and walked around the stage accompanied by her father, who makes the presentation. As the presentation is made, the debutante makes a deep bow or curtsy. This is sometimes called the “St. James’ bow,” harkening back to the court presentations. A male escort then joins the young woman and walks her away. Some debutantes have two escorts. Many balls select and pair the debutantes and their escorts. The debutante goes to supper with her escort. Her most intimate friends and their dinner partners are seated at her table. The debutante tables may be larger than the tables for the other guests in order to accommodate her friends, and they are usually located in the center of the room. After the meal, the debutante has no special responsibilities and is free to enjoy the party. The prom is a modern outgrowth of the debutante ball. Proms began in the elite Northeastern colleges. Middle-class parents admired the poise and composure displayed by debutantes and their escorts at the balls. They began to institute formal dances as a means of showcasing social skills and elegance for their children and celebrating their emergence into society. Further Reading: Marling, Karal Ann. Debutante: Rites and Regalia of American Debdom. Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 2004; Post, Emily. Etiquette: The Blue Book of Social Usage. New York, NY: Funk & Wagnalls, 1922; Tuckerman, Nancy, Nancy Dunnan, and Amy Vanderbilt. The Amy Vanderbilt Complete Book of Etiquette. New York: Doubleday, 1985.
Dorothy Denneen Volo
Deepavali, Festival of Lights Deepavali, the festival of lights, is the most famous of Indian festivals. It is a festival of jubilation and togetherness celebrated by young and old, and rich and poor, throughout India as well as in Indian communities around the world. Innumerable communities with varying customs mingle together to make Deepavali celebrations a very happy occasion for all. The date of Deepavali is based on the Hindu calendar, which has solar years and lunar months. Deepavali always falls either in the months of October or November, just the day before the new moon. During Deepavali celebrations in India, houses are decorated with myriads of little clay lamps. Lamps are placed around the home, in courtyards, and gardens, as well as on
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Deepavali, Festival of Lights
Typical Indian temple roof decor during the Deepavali festival. iCEO/Shutterstock.
rooftops. The glittery light from the lamps creates a festive and fantasy-like atmosphere. A wide assortment of sweets are prepared at home or bought from sweet shops and shared with everyone. The night sky on Deepavali lights up with fireworks streaking up like bolts of lightning, splintering into a million rainbow petals before vanishing in a never-ending dazzle of flashing smoke. Everywhere, there are signs of the renewal of life, and it is common to wear new clothes on the day of the festival. Sweets prepared with various nuts and flours, milk, dried fruits, and fragrant spices, such as saffron and cardamom, are an important aspect of all Deepavali celebrations. In times past, preparations for Deepavali began weeks ahead with the cleaning, roasting, and powdering of rice and lentils in the grindstone; making ghee (clarified butter) at home; and buying fresh oil straight from the press. The irresistible aromas of barfi, peda, jilebi, laddu, mysorepak, and a host of other sweets lingered in the air. Today, sweets are often bought from commercial manufacturers. It is the busiest season for the sweet shops in India. Sweets packaged in beautiful containers are exchanged with friends and neighbors. India is a vibrant land of mythological tales of gods and goddesses, and Deepavali signifies many different things to people from different backgrounds. In north India, Deepavali celebrates Lord Rama’s homecoming after killing the demon king Ravana. In Bengal, the celebration of Kali Puja is an integral aspect of Deepavali. It is believed to be the night to honor departed ancestors, and the lighted lamps are meant to serve as a guide to these departed souls. In Gujarat and neighboring states, the festivities continue for a week. On Dhanteras, the first day, Lakshmi, the goddess of wealth, is worshipped. This day is believed to be auspicious to purchase metals. Often gold or silver are bought or at least one or two new metal utensils.
Dessert Lakshmi, the goddess of wealth and prosperity, is worshipped in the evening with lighting of tiny lamps of clay. For the business communities of Gujarat, Deepavali also marks the beginning of the new financial year. They celebrate New Year on the day after Deepavali. In the southern states of Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, and Kerala, Deepavali celebrates lord Krishna’s triumph over demon king Narakasura. Festivities start very early in the morning with entire households waking up around three in the morning. The first ritual is to wash oneself, applying plenty of oil to the hair, followed by taking an auspicious bath. After the bath, everyone dresses in festive new clothes, and sweets are served first at a sumptuous breakfast. Traditionally a south Indian breakfast is anything but sweet; but on Deepavali, sweets take the center spot. Children run out, with shouts and yells, as each tries to be the first to burst firecrackers. In the state of Maharashtra also, early morning baths with oil and fragrant powders and serving sweets are the traditions of Deepavali. The significance of Deepavali extends beyond Hinduism; it is celebrated by Jains and Sikhs. The foundation of the Golden Temple of Sikhs at Amritsar is believed to have been laid on Deepavali day in 1577. With warmer days turning into a mild winter, the fun-filled Deepavali is celebrated by each community in its own special ways. With more and more Indians migrating to various parts of the world, the number of countries where Deepavali is celebrated keeps increasing. Because it is not a public holiday outside India, Deepavali celebrations often take place on a weekend close to the actual festival. In major cities across the Untied States the festival takes the form of a great fair with vendors selling Indian goods as well as food, cultural performances, and fireworks. The whole area surrounding the festival is often decorated with a spectacular display of lights, tinsel, and garlands. Whatever may be the fables and legends behind the celebrations of Deepavali, and the stark differences in the styles and forms of celebrations observed by different regions, there are common threads that run among the many versions of this festival. Deepavali, no matter where it is celebrated, marks the victory of good over evil. Various gastronomic and aesthetic delights mark all versions of the celebrations. People exchange sweets, wear new clothes, and children rejoice in lighting firecrackers at this festive time. The festival of lights symbolizes a reaffirmation of hope, a renewed commitment to friendship and goodwill. Further Reading: Stutley, James, and Margaret Stutley. Harper’s Dictionary of Hinduism: Its Mythology, Folklore, Philosophy, Literature, and History. San Francisco, CA: Harper & Row, 1984; Flood, Gavin. An Introduction to Hinduism. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1996.
Ammini Ramachandran
Dessert In contemporary usage the term dessert describes a course or meal in which foods of a predominantly sweet character are consumed, or, more generally,
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it describes the sweet foods themselves. Foods called or featured in dessert may include a wide range of preparations: ice creams and sorbets, custards, cakes, pies and tarts, cookies and small pastries, and confections of all types. The word dessert is derived from the Middle French word desservir, “‘to clear the table,” or, more literally, “to un-serve.” The term originally described a course at or near the conclusion of the meal in which fruit, cheeses, and sweet foods were served. Though the term appears to have originated in the late sixteenth century, the consumption of sweets, particularly at the end of formal meals, has a long history. To Romans the dessert course was known as secundae mensae, the Latin translation of the term that the Greeks used before them, deuterai trapezai, “second tables.” And there is evidence of the dessert course going back even further than Classical Greece and Rome, to the eighteenth century B.C., when a Mesopotamian royal banquet, described on an ancient cuneiform tablet, concluded with a course comprised of a selection of fruits, along with sweet pastries filled with fruits and nuts and lavished with honey. This custom of relegating sweet foods to the end of meals belies the fact that desserts have rarely been eaten for nutrition or substance, roles usually fulfilled primarily by grains and meats. Rather, desserts have been eaten as indulgences, eaten for the sake of enjoyment after the essential business of sustenance has been addressed. Being non-essential and often expensive, desserts have historically had a more substantial position in the diets of the rich and privileged than those of the poorer, working classes, for whom sweets were generally rare luxuries. Regardless of class, the preciousness and ostentation inherent to dessert has ensured its association with special occasions for much of human history, from the aforementioned Mesopotamian banquet to the extravagant, multitiered wedding cakes and so-called dessert stations of contemporary wedding celebrations. SWEETENERS In their early development, which is to say the first several millennia of civilization, desserts were predominantly sweetened with honey, the production of which was extensively domesticated by the Egyptians by the third millennium B.C. Though the sweetness of sugar cane had been exploited, particularly in Asia and the Middle East, for millennia, it was not until after the Persians made refinements in the production of solid sugar made from its juice in the seventh century A.D. that an overall shift from honey- to sugar-based desserts would occur. Old recipes and techniques were adapted and expanded, and new sweets appeared. Cane sugar was particularly influential on European desserts, where its introduction led not only to the relatively rapid development of new types of sweets but also to the indoctrination of new customs for enjoying them. With time desserts were freed from the boundaries of formal meals and special occasions, to be enjoyed on a more quotidian basis, not only at the end of the meal but also as snacks and restoratives throughout the day, in some cases becoming the basis of small, secondary meals themselves.
Dessert During the nineteenth century, with the development of beet-derived sugar and further advancements in the refinement of both beet and cane sugars, sugar prices dropped to an unprecedented low with the result that virtually anyone could enjoy sweets, just about any time. EARLY PRACTICES In Ancient Egypt, though poorer citizens had limited access to sweets, which were largely limited to date-based preparations, privileged citizens enjoyed a range of desserts, including sweet breads, fried pastries, and simple sweetmeats. These would have been accompanied or enriched by the gamut of fruits, nuts, seeds, and aromatics available, including figs, dates, grapes and raisins, pomegranates, pine nuts, doum fruit (the product of a native Egyptian palm tree), sesame seeds, and aniseed. The repertoire of sweets enjoyed by affluent citizens of the Greek and Roman empires was similar to that of their Egyptian predecessors. Fruits, nuts, and seeds remained central, both as desserts unto themselves, and as ingredients in breads, pastries, compotes, and sweetmeats. As in Egypt, honey was the preferred sweetener. Dairy products, however, specifically goat- and sheep-milk cheeses, became much more prevalent than in Egypt and were cherished dessert components. As such, cheeses were consumed on their own, adorned with honey and accompanied by nuts and fruits, or incorporated into cakes and fritters. Common fruits and nuts enjoyed for dessert were figs, grapes, apples, medlars (a fruit with Persian origins that is most often enjoyed in a cultivated state of decomposition), myrtle berries (the bluish fruit of the myrtle shrub), walnuts, almonds, chestnuts, and pine nuts. Sesame and poppy seeds were also common dessert ingredients. Cakes were held in special regard by the Greeks, who presented specific cakes as offerings to deities during rituals. Examples include the Athenian cake known as amphiphon, a round cheesecake studded around its circumference with lit candles or torches and presented during a spring ritual to the goddess Artemis, and the Delian honey cake basynias that was decorated with one dried fig and three walnuts and offered to the goddess Iris. In addition to their dessert courses, Greeks also enjoyed sweets at events known as symposion. A range of precious bites would be offered at a symposium, including dried fruits, cheeses, and honeyed cakes. With wine being central to these important all-male social and intellectual gatherings, the accompanying foods were primarily meant to stimulate and prolong drinking, more so than to satiate hunger and impart nutrition. THE MIDDLE AGES Throughout the late Middle Ages, generally the thirteenth through fifteenth centuries, affluent Europeans became increasingly enamored with sweets. Such was the demand for desserts at this time that guilds were formed devoted to the production of special types of sweets. In Paris, specialists in
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cookie making known as oubloyers were acknowledged as early as 1270. And in other parts of Europe, particularly along the Mediterranean, guilds devoted to making various types of candies and confections began to crop up— marzipan makers, nougat specialists, and dragee (sugar-coated confection) experts among them. Though desserts were certainly enjoyed at the end of meals, they were also enjoyed as snacks, particularly in the morning. And at the banquets that served as important social institutions, sweet dishes were interspersed throughout the meal, juxtaposed with the savory courses. Such arrangements were largely the result of the dietary guidelines of the time, which held that every food possessed certain overall qualities or humors and that it was important for one’s health and well-being to achieve humoral balance in their diet. For instance, fruits tended to be classed as moist and cool and thus would be paired with foods considered dry and hot, such as spices, wines, or certain roasted meats. Thus the actual flavors of the food were not as important as their perceived character, so it was that a turnip might be considered a wholly acceptable substitute for a pear in a medieval recipe. It was not until the seventeenth century that the boundaries between sweet and savory were explicitly drawn, and the value of balancing humors gave way to the value of balancing flavors. Despite the increasing popularity of cane sugar during the latter centuries of the Middle Ages, its production remained difficult and costly. As such, it became a symbol of status and power and displays of it became de rigeur at banquets and celebrations. At the height of ostentation were colorful sculptures made out of sugar or marzipan (a paste of almonds and sugar), which were used at banquets as centerpieces, props in the theatrics that accompanied the meal, or as edibles unto themselves. THE AGE OF EXPLORATION During the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, as Europeans developed new trade routes and discovered new lands. A number of consumables were introduced to the European pantry that changed dessert customs, forming many of the sweet dishes and the practices around them that may be observed to this day. Many of these new items came from the New World, including vanilla, pineapple, and chocolate; from Africa, by way of Turkey, came coffee; and from China, tea. Coffee In mainland Europe, where coffee became immensely popular, particularly as a mid-afternoon restorative, it was a matter of course that the owners of cafés (establishments where coffee was consumed) would begin to offer foods to their long-lingering guests. Providing a balancing foil to the bitter beverage and an additional boost of energy to buttress the effects of caffeine, sweet foods were a particularly welcome addition to the café repertoire.
Dessert In bustling Vienna the daily ritual known as Jause explicitly paired coffee with desserts for a mid-afternoon social respite. The practice is still observed today, though mostly on weekends and during holidays. The desserts featured in the Jause, then as now, might include any number of Austrian specialties, including complex layered sponge cakes like the Sachertorte; delicate strudels; crumbly nut-meal cookies; or homey fruit-filled dumplings. Tea Though coffee maintained prominence virtually everywhere else in Europe, in England tea became a favorite in the early eighteenth century (due at least in part to the campaigning of the British East India Company, which imported large quantities of tea and had obvious motives for promoting its consumption). The British generally enjoyed their tea sweetened with sugar and enriched with milk, and soon took to enjoying it alongside sweet foods as well. By the nineteenth century sweet-laden afternoon tea had became a common social custom. As the accepted creation story goes, Anna, the seventh duchess of Bedford requested that her servant bring a pot of tea accompanied by a selection of biscuits and various sweets to her chambers to remedy a “sinking feeling” that she experienced in the afternoon. Perhaps to assuage the guilt of such an indulgence, she began inviting friends to join her in this restorative practice, and thus the afternoon tea began. Still enjoyed today, though much less often, a formal afternoon tea generally includes a freshly brewed pot of tea accompanied by milk, sugar, and a selection of small edibles, often arranged on a tiered tray, with delicate sandwiches occupying the lower tiers and the upper tiers being primarily occupied by fancy cakes and pastries and scones accompanied by sweet jams and clotted cream. Chocolate For centuries after its introduction to Europe, chocolate was consumed primarily in the form of a sweetened beverage. The first shipment of cocoa beans (chocolate in raw form) from the New World arrived in Spain in 1585. From there and from Italy, where it arrived at around the same time, chocolate was gradually introduced to points north. While it was accepted with alacrity here and there (as in the French court of Louis the XIV, a hearty advocate of chocolate), eventually finding tentative use in some soft dessert preparations (e.g., mousses and puddings), chocolate remained only a minor foodstuff until the nineteenth century. In 1828 Conrad Van Houten, a Dutch engineer, introduced a process whereby cocoa butter, the plentiful fat naturally present in cocoa beans, could be extracted from the cocoa mass (ground whole cocoa beans), yielding chocolate that was much more pleasant to eat in solid form and more readily adapted to a range of sweet forms. The process also made it possible to isolate cocoa powder, a product composed almost entirely out of flavorful cocoa solids that would become an important dessert ingredient in its
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Marshmallows Originally, the sweet, sticky juice pressed from the root of the marsh mallow plant was used in Europe for medicinal purposes. Eventually, the French learned to combine it with sugar and whipped egg whites, to form sheets of pate de guimauve, used to embellish small cakes. This innovation was soon picked up by confectioners who found a way to substitute gum arabic for the mallow root sap as it made its way to the United States. In 1884, a book published for retail candy makers listed a recipe for marshmallow drops. In a two-inch-deep, carefully leveled bed of sifted cornstarch, impressions were made with a row of small metal, plaster, or wood forms, where still-warm and fluid marshmallow foam was dropped and left to cool and firm up before being removed and dusted with powdered sugar. By the early twentieth century the idea of toasting marshmallows over a fire was introduced and “marshmallow roasts” became popular entertainment. As electrical power was introduced into homes, it spurred the invention of small appliances and marshmallow toasters were being offered for sale by about 1910. By 1917, cookbook writers were calling for marshmallows as essential ingredients. A suggestion for use in a recipe in a Jiffy-Jell ad was a prediction of the future happy union of marshmallows and Jell-O. To promote their product as a “food,” marshmallow manufacturers began distributing small pamphlets with recipes for marshmallows as ingredients not only in elaborate cakes, fanciful frozen desserts, and ice cream toppings, but also in sauces, sandwiches, and salads using a variety of fruits and vegetables. For those seeking a more exotic menu, a manufacturer’s pamphlet included recipes for desserts from the executive chef of the Royal Hawaiian Hotel in Honolulu. The manufacturers’ inventiveness didn’t stop there. They gave away small printed pamphlets showing how to fashion small party favors, or to use marshmallows with other foods to produce fanciful figures as part of a composed salad, or to decorate a cake. The pairing of marshmallows and sweet potatoes was discovered in the late 1920s, and recipes from that period still appear in cookbooks of today. In 1955 marshmallow manufactures made a great leap forward in efficiency and economy when Alex Doumakes patented a method for extruding the marshmallow foam through a tube into a long rope and then cutting it into uniform pieces. This made possible the now-familiar miniature marshmallows. Other developments followed and now marshmallows can be purchased in a myriad of shapes, colors, and consistencies. Today, the various forms of marshmallow are as popular as ever: for toasting over campfires, for constructing s’mores, for
own right. When, in the 1870s, two Swiss companies, Tobler and Nestle, perfected a method for incorporating milk solids into chocolate, thus creating milk chocolate, the popularity of chocolate as a dessert in its own right was solidified. The nuts and fruits that had constituted the primary flavoring components in desserts for millennia were eventually subsumed by chocolate in all types of desserts, from cakes to custards. BEYOND EUROPE In Japan, desserts generally possess relatively subtle sweetness, and are often made with gel- (usually extracted from seaweed), rice-, or bean-bases, with common flavors being derived from green tea, cherry blossoms, soy beans, and azuki beans (sweet red beans, common in Japanese and Chinese cuisine, particularly sweets). Desserts, generally known as okashi, come in a range of colors tending toward pastel and are often of a precious, jewel-like appearance, presented in delicate paper wrappers and boxes. These are generally enjoyed as snacks or as accompaniments to tea, particularly at the end of a formal meal. In China, desserts are not integral to the traditional daily meal and are most often enjoyed in the course of celebrations or as occasional snacks. Delicate molded pastries known as mooncakes have a venerable position in Autumn Moon Festival celebrations, when they are exchanged among family and friends. Though traditional fillings are lotus or various bean pastes,
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modern mooncakes can be filled topping hot cocoa, for the Thanksgiving table’s mashed sweet with or made out of a limitless range potatoes, or as the main component of confections designed of flavors and ingredients. Pao-pao to be sold as holiday specialties, colored and molded into anifan, “eight treasures,” is a generally mal forms. They also are pantry staples as ingredients in Rice chewy (rather than creamy) rice Krispy Treats, and Fluffernutter sandwiches (filled with peanut pudding enjoyed on special occabutter and Marshmallow Fluff ). sions. The “eight treasures” of note Shirley Cherkasky vary, but traditionally include such items as red dates, candied plums and other fruits, watermelon seeds, almonds, and lotus seeds. In general, sweets found in East Asian cuisines rely heavily on rice, beans, nuts, and fruits, eschewing the cream, butter, and other dairy products that are so central to desserts elsewhere. Indian cuisine boasts a plethora of desserts. These vary regionally but tend toward rather sweet, rich preparations, and are regularly eaten at the end of the meal or as snacks. Common flavorings and ingredients include, but are in no way limited to, condensed milk, mild fresh cheeses, rice, cardamom, cashews, and coconut. In the cuisines of the Middle East and eastern Mediterranean, including those of Greece, Turkey, Lebanon, and Iran, sweets have a long history, dating back in many instances to the earliest civilizations. Baklava is a widely cherished dessert in these regions, probably dating back to the fifteenth century, if not before. Though recipes vary regionally, baklava generally consists of layers of extremely thin dough ( phyllo), interspersed with crushed nuts—often pistachio, almond, or walnut—and saturated with a honey or sugar syrup. Some versions also include flavorings of cinnamon, clove, cardamom, or rose water. Halva is another common sweet with a history going back to the Middles Ages. In its most basic form, halva consists of honey or sugar and ground sesame seeds; today there are also chocolate, pistachio, and coconut versions, to name a few. Sweets are also a cherished component of many Central and South American cuisines. Due to strong Portuguese and Spanish colonial influences, Latin American sweets are often similar to those found in southwestern Europe: the sugar-dusted, deep-fried pastries known as churros, the ubiquitous flan (a baked custard, generally accompanied by liquid caramel), and the much cherished dulce de leche (a rich caramel made from condensed milk) are all examples of such influences. Chocolate, cinnamon, vanilla, and tropical fruits, such as pineapple and mango, are common dessert flavorings. In many regions festive, brightly colored cakes are key components of birthdays, weddings, and other important celebrations. In Mexico, where Day of the Dead (Dìa de los Muertos) celebrations originated and remain particularly significant, a range of sweets are featured in these festivities, including fancifully decorated sugar skulls and pan de muerto ( bread of the dead), a sweet egg-enriched bread, often flavored with anise and orange.
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TECHNOLOGICAL CHANGE Over the course of the last few centuries, dessert production has become easier and more efficient, making sweets less expensive and ephemeral, and more widely available. With the introduction of the gas range in the 1850s, baking cakes, cookies, and pastries became infinitely easier. Electric mixers, developed in the first few decades of the twentieth century, drastically reduced the labor and time involved in mixing batters, creams, and doughs. Refrigerators, home models of which started to become popular in the 1920s, made it possible to make or purchase everything from gelatin desserts to ice creams in advance and to keep them for much longer than had been possible in the past. And the rise of the microwave oven in the 1970s made it not only easier and faster to melt chocolate and butter and heat liquids and sauces, facilitating recipe production and dessert presentation, but they gave rise to a battery of mass-produced, ready-made desserts that required little more preparation than removal from the package and the pressing of a few buttons to serve. New ingredients and additives have also been sources of change. For example, the production of consistent leavened goods such as cakes and breads became much easier beginning in the mid-nineteenth century with the commercial availability of baking powders, followed by the introduction of standardized commercial yeasts around the turn of the century. Further Reading: Amendola, Joseph, and Nicole Rees. Understanding Baking: The Art and Science of Baking. Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons, 2003; Bloom, Carole. The International Dictionary of Desserts, Pastries and Confections. New York: Hearst Books, 1995; Der Haroutunian, Arto. Patisserie of the Eastern Mediterranean. London: Macdonald Orbis Ltd., 1988; Mintz, Sidney. Sweetness and Power: The Place of Sugar in Modern History. New York: Penguin Books, 1985; Morton, Marcia Colman. The Art of Viennese Pastry. New York: Doubleday & Company, 1969; Schinz, Marina. Book of Sweets. New York: Harry N. Abrams, 1994.
Amanda Lynn Clarke
Dim Sum Dim sum is part of the Chinese tradition of xiao chi (snacks) that dates back to the reign of the Sung Dynasty (A.D. 960–1279). Palace chefs invented dishes like minced pheasant, lark tongues, and sweets made from steamed milk and bean paste to appease the palates of royalty and hopefully touch their hearts as well. Dim sum translates as “touch the heart” or “heart’s delight.” During the thirteenth century, Mongol invaders forced the royal court south and the custom of dim sum went along, eventually finding a place to flourish in Canton. Canton was a large port city where foreign nations traded. A temperate climate, a coast that yielded fresh and tropical ingredients, and an abundance of money made Canton a fertile ground for experimentation
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in both food and entertainment. Here street vendors and teahouses sold varieties of dim sum. CONFUCIANISM AND DIM SUM To the philosopher Confucius (551–479 B.C.), the enjoyment of food was one of the things that contributed to the peace and harmony of society. He established culinary standards and proper table etiquette still often considered to be the standard today. The gathering of friends and family for dim sum is a natural extension of his philosophy, in which getting together without food was considered incomplete and improper. HARMONY AND BALANCE Dim sum also adheres to the Chinese concept of balance ( yin and yang) in cuisine that is referred to as fan /t’sai. Fan, or starches and grains, are balanced by meats and vegetables, or t’sai. Each piece of dim sum is supposed to contain the balance of fan / t’sai, with sauces for dipping served on the side. Balance also occurs between foods that are considered hot and those that are cold, and harmony should be achieved between the five flavors— bitter, hot, sour, salty, and sweet. Balance is also obtained by combining the drinking of tea with the eating of dim sum. THE TRADITION OF THE TEAHOUSE Dim sum is traditionally consumed with tea at yum cha, or tea lunch. At first it was considered inappropriate to combine tea with food. In the third century A.D., Hua Tuo, one of the most respected Imperial physicians of ancient times, advised that “eating food and drinking tea at the same time only results in excessive weight gain” (Global Gourmet). Over time, tea’s ability to aid digestion and cleanse the palate became known, and teahouse proprietors began adding a variety of dim sum. In Imperial times in Northern China, the teahouse was the meeting place of gentlemen of leisure who talked and drank tea, accompanied by their caged songbirds, hung on a bamboo rod. A large teahouse could boast of more than 1,000 dim sum varieties. Over time, businessmen would come to visit teahouses to negotiate deals sealed in the relaxed surroundings. Teahouses were also a place for disputes to be settled harmoniously over tea in the presence of a mutually respected arbiter. During the Ming Dynasty (A.D. 1368–1644), the Tea and Horses Bureau was created to monitor tea production. This improvement in tea quality also resulted in an improvement in teahouses. The teahouse was a natural adjunct to the migratory nature of Chinese society. Travelers journeying along the famous Silk Road needed a place to rest, and teahouses along the route accommodated them. Local workers
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would also stop in for conversation, tea, and dim sum, after a hard day toiling in the field. Here the merits of particular dim sum chefs and their culinary prowess would be enthusiastically debated. Dim sum was usually served from midmorning to midafternoon, a tradition that continues today. THE MIGRATION OF DIM SUM Over the years, where Cantonese migrated, dim sum went along. Family and friends would gather to visit, gossip, or do business over tea and dim sum. In the nineteenth century, dim sum migrated to the west along with Chinese immigrants, mostly from Canton, and settled with them on both the East and West coasts of the United States. When the communists came to power in China, many dim sum chefs fled to Hong Kong, and the refinement of the art of dim sum was taken to a new level. DIM SUM TODAY Today, the so-called traditional teahouse may be rare in China, replaced by chains and other institutions. In Canton, dim sum may be seen more as an entire meal. The once quiet, reserved atmosphere of the teahouse has been transformed into a boisterous combination of loud conversation, clattering carts and dishes, and gesticulating waiters. The new place for dim sum “palaces” today is in major cities like Hong Kong, San Francisco, Boston, Toronto, and New York. During the week, dim sum is the domain of students and office workers who catch a quick breakfast, businessmen who drop in for meetings, or the elderly who drop in after exercises. But it is on the weekends that dim sum comes into its own as a sort of Chinese brunch. Entire families (often several generations) or parties of friends gather to consume small plates of dim sum and drink copious amounts of tea as they exchange gossip and catch up on the week’s events. DIM SUM CUSTOMS AND ETIQUETTE Dim sum consists of many small dishes transported on wheeled carts. Women call out the name of each selection, often only in Cantonese, holding out dishes, or lifting covers of steamer baskets to show the contents. Dim sum is eaten family style, and tables are often shared with others. Etiquette mandates how to share dishes: one end of the chopstick is used for taking food from the communal dish, while the other is used to eat. Toothpicks are used to clean particles between the teeth so the distinct flavor of the various dishes comes through. Tea is poured upon seating and is also used to clean out and heat the cups. Whoever is closest to the teapot pours for everyone else first. Teacups don’t have handles because it is believed that if the cup is too hot to hold, the tea is too hot to drink. When the teapot needs refilling, custom mandates
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A variety of dim sum in bamboo steam containers. Hywit Dimyadi /Shutterstock.
putting the lid back on askew. The story behind this custom involves a poor student who hid a bird in his teapot. When the waiter came to refill the pot and lifted the lid, the bird flew away. The student made a loud fuss, claiming it was a very precious bird and that the restaurant owed him compensation. After this, the restaurant—and all others—decided to wait for customers to lift the lid of an empty teapot if a refill was needed. When the teapot or a cup has been refilled, thanks are expressed with a tap of the fingers on the table. This tradition has its origins in the Qing Dynasty when an emperor made incognito visits throughout his empire. Visiting southern China, he switched roles with a companion and went into a teahouse. The disguised emperor would pour tea for his companion, and the companion, concerned about revealing the true identity of the emperor, would tap three fingers on the table in gratitude—one finger representing his bowed head and the other two his prostrate arms. Dim sum items are not chosen all at once but continuously throughout the meal. Savory items are interspersed with sweet ones like dessert. The creations reflect the artistry of the chef and may include steamed shrimp dumplings (har gao), steamed pork and shrimp dumplings (siu mai), spring rolls (cheun gyun), steamed barbecued pork buns (cha siu bau), rice noodle rolls (cheong fun), green pepper stuffed with shrimp ( yern chang chew), and congee ( jook). More exotic dishes include chicken feet ( fung jow) and curried squid (ca lay yao yue). Desserts range from sesame seed balls (gee ma gyun) to egg custard tart (dan tat). Potstickers (guo tie), which are often served, are northern Chinese in origin, and not considered traditional. The cost of dim sum is tallied in one of two ways. Traditionally, empty dishes are stacked on the table and tallied by size and /or color at the end of the meal. But today, a slip of paper often replaces this method, with each dish being recorded on it when served.
DIM SUM AT HOME Today, dim sum has migrated from the teahouse and palace into the home. Premade dim sum can be purchased at many Chinese groceries or large urban
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supermarkets. Entire cookbooks are devoted to dim sum’s myriad forms, allowing it to become a tasty addition to parties, brunch, or everyday meals. Further Reading: Anderson, E. N. Food of China. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1988; Blonder, Ellen Leong. Dim Sum: The Art of Chinese Tea Lunch. New York: Clarkson Potter Publishers, 2002; Global Gourmet. “Hong Kong: Teatime Traditions—Yum Cha and Dim Sum.” http://www.globalgourmet. com /destinations/ hongkong/ hkteatime.html; Grimes, Lulu, food editor, Justine Harding, editor. The Food of China: A Journey for Food Lovers. North Vancouver, BC, Canada: Whitecap Books, 2005; Liley, Vicki. Dim Sum. Boston, MA: Periplus Editions (HK), 1999.
Stephanie Fogel
Dinner Parties Both social entertainment and domestic theater, the dinner party is the act of planning and serving an elaborate meal to invited guests. Performed with the proper flourishes, it can be an act of creative hospitality, an indicator of gender roles, and a demonstration of social status. Throughout history, people have gathered to enjoy special feasts and the pleasures of the table, but the dinner party is considered an event and a jewel in the entertaining repertoire of any host. The host who choreographs a flawless dinner party is admired by guests as a person of good taste and congeniality. The memorable dinner party weaves together several crucial elements—a thoughtfully considered guest list, a theme, cocktails, a menu plan, a visually appealing table and thought-provoking conversation. Home entertaining experts agree on several fundamentals that comprise a successful dinner party. Table décor and place settings should attract the eye, and china, glassware, and utensils should be placed symmetrically on the table. Table linens add a creative dash of color and a floral centerpiece provides a natural accent. Colors and patterns of plates, stemware, and serving pieces can be mixed. Flatware should be set in the order it will be used by guests for each course. Place cards give the host the ability to strategically seat guests and choreograph the dinner conversation. Tradition dictates that a woman guest of honor is seated to the right of the host, while a male guest of honor is seated to the right of the hostess. Food should be served from the left and beverages poured from the right. Nearly all of the rituals associated with the modern dinner party can be found in the earliest evidence of the form. The confluence of food and drink, status, ceremony and social interaction is evident throughout history, mostly as an amusement of the wealthy. While the poor went hungry, the rich had an ample supply of food and all the trappings to enhance the dining experience for themselves and their friends. In Ancient Greece, a social gathering called a symposium was held in both public and domestic settings and frequented by aristocratic males. The
Dinner Parties evening was structured with rules and rituals. Guests reclined on couches that surrounded low tables. They engaged in political dialogue and shared wine and some food, with a distinct emphasis on alcohol consumption. Similarly, in Ancient Rome, the convivium was an event structured around conversation, but the focus was also on dining and collegiality. Citizens of diverse social standing and women participated. The Roman banquet was well-known for its extravagant feasting and exquisite tableware, and dinner menus were sometimes made available in advance of a meal to entice guests. Romans dined together reclining on sets of three couches grouped around a common table. The couches were arranged according to the status of those present at the table, from highest to lowest. Dinners were served in three courses that included extensive appetizers, roasted or grilled meats and desserts, all accompanied by wine. Throughout Europe during the Middle Ages, royal banquets perfected extravagance in food and attire. The aristocracy was the leisure class, and the act of dining grew to become a form of lavish entertainment, where ceremony, exquisite feasting, and social skills were practiced as a rarefied art form. During the Renaissance, classic culinary texts from antiquity were rediscovered and new flavors and tastes were brought to the table transforming menus, along with an increased emphasis on the art of conversation. Sensory pleasures were at the heart of the dinner party, whether the table belonged to the wealthy or the middle class, and for some, the dinner party became a kind of grand artistic canvas. The renowned French pastry chef Antonin Carême pioneered spectacular table décor for the guests of Tallyrand and Emperor Napoleon with his extravagant palladio de patisserie, a dessert tableau that lined the dining table of formal state dinner parties. The rank-conscious Victorian society established the dinner party as a form of class competition, with the upper class hosting meals often on a weekly basis. A social-climbing guest knew he had achieved a level of acceptance in elite circles when he received an invitation to dinner at the home of a wealthy host. Likewise, the reputation of the host was carefully measured according to the comportment of the family, the number of servants, the quality of food, and the finery of the dinner table. The protocol for presenting and serving food at times attained a level of significance equal to the pedigree of important guests. Two distinct forms of service were compulsory throughout European society beginning in the Middle Ages. Service à la française, or French-style service, was established in France among medieval nobility and stressed principles of hierarchy, balance, and symmetry at the dining table. The practice remained popular for several centuries and involved some complicated mathematics and large quantities of food. The meal was presented in three or four courses. The number of dishes served was prescribed by the number of guests. A threecourse dinner for eight could involve more than 20 dishes. Each spread had to be arranged symmetrically and types of food had their own accepted hierarchy. If a plate of vegetables was placed on one side of the table, it had to
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be balanced with a similar plate on the other side of the table. This ensured the appearance of a bountiful table with a wide variety of food that signified the wealth and stature of the host. Affluent, status-conscious Europeans and American Colonists firmly embraced French-style service as central to the dinner party experience but guests complained that the food quickly grew cold as it sat on display. By contrast, service à la russe, or service in the Russian style, came into vogue during the 1880s. Believed to have been introduced to France by the Russian Prince Alexander Kurakin, service in the Russian style dictated that each dish was brought to the table individually retaining its maximum heat and flavor. Service in the Russian style allowed guests to savor and enjoy the appearance and taste of each dish. Over time Russian-style service replaced French-style service as the preferred practice. By the mid-nineteenth century, the dinner party was the domain of the woman of the house, whom the community often judged based on her abilities as a hostess. Noted domestic experts from Isabella Beeton to Catharine Esther Beecher served up extensive advice in domestic manuals for homemakers hoping to establish themselves on the social scene, offering guidance on menus for large parties, etiquette, table settings, and conversation starters. Monthly women’s journals and magazines also delivered a steady stream of suggestions for menus, decorations, and after-dinner amusements such as word games and simple competitions between male and female guests. Dinner party themes, menus, and recipes continue as a mainstay of women’s magazines and cookbooks to this day. Dinner parties were often influenced by current events and reflected the mood of an era. During the Depression of the 1930s, Sunday night suppers, featuring one-dish meals were embraced as an economic form of entertaining in the United States. Throughout wartime austerity, informality, cooperation, and a sense of community were the order of the day. The trend towards informal settings inspired so-called hobo parties where baked beans were served, barbeques, potluck suppers, and neighborhood victory garden suppers. The progressive dinner party spread the work and expense of a multi-course meal among several households. When home entertainment systems were introduced in the 1950s, TV parties were organized around meals prepared in advance and then served to guests during a televised drama. As prosperity returned after the war, dinner party dishes turned fancy and traditional. Classic, time-consuming gourmet entrees like Beef Wellington became the centerpiece of the dinner party, once again reflecting the culinary skills of the hostess. Houseware manufacturers offered sleek and sophisticated products that would enhance the home dinner party, from elegant chafing dishes, to stylish covered casseroles that moved from oven to table with ease. Electronic appliances like waffle irons, sauce pans, and toasters were brought to the tabletop with space-aged features designed to impress and entertain guests. While the starchy protocols of formal dinner parties are still practiced in high society and political circles, the contemporary dinner party is within
Doilies and Coasters reach of most households and can range from formal to casual and even participatory. The primary focus of today’s dinner party is mostly social, but it still borrows from a number of the traditions established by the European elite. In her pivotal book Entertaining, published in 1982, domestic guru Martha Stewart used her experiences as a successful caterer to give the traditional dinner party a neoclassic interpretation. Stewart echoed a sentiment once expressed by Isabella Beeton that a host’s primary responsibility is to make guests comfortable. Stewart also restored the art of fussy food and elaborate table settings to the form, but she argued that rules and regimens were no longer mandatory and that hosts should let dinner parties reflect their individual styles. Stewart still gave detailed attention to the proven fundamentals of a dinner party—lively conversation, creative table settings, flowers, and ambience. But, in redefining the genre for a new era, Entertaining offered a roadmap for a range of variations, including the archetypal formal dinner party for 24, an outdoor omelet brunch for 60, or a casual kitchen salad party for 30 participants. Today, every dinner party experience is as diverse as the personality of its host. With the rise of two-income households and trends suggesting that fewer families are cooking at home, catering is considered an acceptable and convenient method for staging the present-day dinner party. However, there are still many households who treat the home-cooked meal as an occasion for family and friends, and kitchens and family rooms have also become preferred locations for socializing at home. Entertaining experts suggest dinner party themes that reflect the traditional and the trendy, ranging from backyard barbeque, to Spanish paella dinner, to environmentally friendly dinners parties, in which all the dishes are prepared with locally grown produce. Technology offers new options for the time-starved host who can now send customized digital dinner invitations and track RSVPs through services available on the Internet. Some digital programs even calculate the cost of party expenses or the amount of alcohol needed, and allow hosts to create profiles of guest preferences and offer electronic maps and directions to those who must travel a distance to the event. Further Reading: Lovegren, Sylvia. Fashionable Food: Seven Decades of Food Fads. New York: Macmillan, 1995; “Mrs. Beeton’s Book of Household Management.” Available at http://www.mrsbeeton.com; Stewart, Martha, and Elizabeth Hawes. Entertaining. New York: Clarkson N. Potter, 1982; Strong, Roy. Feast, A History of Grand Eating. New York: Harcourt, 2001.
T. W. Barritt
Doilies and Coasters By the middle of the fifteenth century, English dining tables were covered by fine diamond- or damask-patterned white linens, with specific types of
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napkins for diners and a multitude of servers. The rules for the setting of tables were more formally codified in France, in the seventeenth century in the court of Louis XIV, and became even more elaborate until reaching their peak during England’s Victorian era. All that fine linen needed to be protected from stains, so doilies and coasters were invented. While the functions of these two items are similar, their histories are quite different. Doilies, originally known as “doily-napkins,” were created to protect fine linens from staining fruit juices, so they were often used under desserts. This tradition continues to this day (although it is usually seen in the form of paper doilies under baked goods, or on trays to reduce sliding of glasses). The name is derived from D’Oyley—a prosperous seventeenth-century London draper who supplied inexpensive fabrics to be used in place of napkins, when white linen napkins might be stained. His simple swatches of wool were soon embellished with decorative crocheted borders, and later the wool itself was replaced by lace. By the late nineteenth century, doilies and placemats began to appear on bare tables, their linen-protective function redirected to the table itself. Antimacassars may look like doilies, but they were invented to protect upholstery from hair-oils that were popular in the nineteenth century—they were never used on tables. Paper doilies were first created in early nineteenth-century France but didn’t really become popular until after the American Civil War. Benzion Karfiol—a Russian immigrant in New York—imitated seventeenth-century Venetian lace designs on paper, using steel engravings. He became very successful, even though he started by selling his paper doilies from a pushcart on the streets of Brooklyn. Today, die-cut paper doilies have almost completely replaced crocheted or lace doilies, many of which have become treasured heirlooms that are rarely, if ever, used for the purpose for which they were originally intended. While created to serve much the same purpose as doilies (in fact, goblet rounds were lace doilies that were used as coaster), coasters—also known at one time, as casters—are descended from bottle stands used to hold decanters of wines, especially port. These were popular in the eighteenth century, in England and in the American colonies, in fashionable households. They were supposed to make it easier to pass the bottle around the table. Perhaps the earliest coasters were smooth underneath, and could glide across the tablecloth. Indeed, some had wheels, which would explain the name casters. They were made of various materials, some more precious (such as silver or rhinoceros horn) than others. In the nineteenth century, machinestamped metal could be easily plated with silver and, as a result, the varieties of tableware proliferated. Coasters became part of the general excess that was the Victorian table. While one occasionally sees such coasters in use under wine bottles today, the word is usually associated with shallow disks of glass, metal, or plastic that are placed under glasses to prevent the formation of rings on wooden surfaces.
Door County Fish Boil Even more common now are the stamped disks of blotter-like cardboard on which beer glasses are served, which were not created for use in formal dining rooms. Dresden’s Robert Sputh invented these coasters, called Bierdeckel, in 1903, for use in German beer gardens. Wealthy Germans used lids of silver or pewter to keep insects and other outdoor debris from falling into their beer ( hinge-lidded beer steins remain familiar, but simple decorated lids could be used on glasses as well ). Poorer folk had to get by with a bit of felt or other cloth. For them, Herr Sputh’s invention was a major improvement. When the Bierdeckel’s absorbency was discovered, the lids moved from the tops to the bottoms of beer glasses, where they could catch the inevitable over-flows of foam, and they became an omnipresent part of bars and taverns everywhere. Katzcoaster International is the largest manufacturer of beer coasters, producing some 1.4 billion per year. German Bierdeckel are square, with rounded corners, while American beer coasters are generally round. When breweries replaced the original decorations with their brand names and logos, they became souvenirs and collector’s items. Further Reading: De Worde, Wynkyn. The Boke of Keruynge ( The Book of Carving ): With an Introduction, Drawings and Glossary by Peter Brears. East Sussex, England: Southover Press, 2003.
Gary Allen
Door County Fish Boil The narrow 75-mile-long peninsula that pokes northward into Lake Michigan from Wisconsin’s eastern shore, with Green Bay on its left, is known throughout the Midwest as a favorite vacation spot. Small villages dot its shorelines and mention of its name, Door County, usually recalls memories of happy times. It was not always so. In the late 1800s, after extensive logging had removed most of its trees, early settlers turned to fishing to survive, using first oars or sails and then steam to power their fishing boats in the warmer months, and fishing through holes in the ice in both the bay and the lake during the frozen months. Lake trout and whitefish were plentiful until sea lampreys gained access to the Great Lakes through the Saint Lawrence Seaway and preyed on the trout, and few were left by the 1950s. But the whitefish survived and, though fewer in numbers than in the early days due to over-fishing and other factors, they became the basis for a well-entrenched tradition of Door County: originally called a trout boil, now simply called a fish boil. Door County, with its limestone base and its spring weather tempered by more than 250 miles of coastline, also is the cherry-growing area of Wisconsin. Although once first in production of tart red Montmorency cherries in the United States, it has fallen to fourth place as farming and fishing are
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being replaced by tourism; however, whitefish and cherries remain the basic components of the Door County fish boil today. The tradition of “fish on Friday” has a long history throughout Wisconsin, with its large Catholic population observing fast days. In the 1920s, as Prohibition took effect, the state’s many taverns, which had served as informal neighborhood gathering places, began to serve food in order to survive. Some offered free fish fries on Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday nights to draw in customers. When Prohibition ended in 1932, the Friday night fish fry continued to be popular with many of Wisconsin’s residents. Today, restaurants and taverns all over the state offer a multitude of opportunities to “go out for fish” on Friday nights. This includes Door County, but that relatively limited area has an even more well-known and popular way of serving fish, not only on Fridays but also on every other night of the week, especially in the warmer months of the year. It all began in the early 1900s, when Door County fishing boat captains occasionally sponsored a fish boil on the shore for their crew members and families once or twice during a good fishing season. So it’s not surprising that churches and men’s clubs there in the 1930s began to see the fish boil as a potential way to raise funds using cheap and easily available ingredients: whitefish, potatoes, onions, salt, and water, accompanied by coleslaw, rye bread and butter, coffee, and cherry pie for dessert. Many of their members were fishermen and already somewhat familiar with the routine. Men did the “boil”; women made the pies. Tickets were sold to local residents and some of the summer tourists of that time. By the early 1940s, when World War II rationing was having its effect everywhere, some Door County taverns were doing occasional fish boils, usually on Friday or Saturday nights, perhaps to attract a crowd earlier in the evening. But it wasn’t until 1961 that a restaurant in one of the county’s small villages, the Viking Grill in Ellison Bay, began to do traditional fish boils several times a week. That continues to the present day, with the Viking claiming to be the site of “the oldest continuous fish boil in the county.” Today, among the thousands of visitors and summer residents in Door County, going to a fish boil at least once during their time there is an essential part of a successful vacation. It is available in a variety of settings: church grounds, taverns, upscale supper clubs, Formica-tabled restaurants, hotel and inn dining rooms, and in the backyards of local families celebrating occasions such as reunions, birthdays, or anniversaries. The cooking is done outdoors to afford sufficient space for the spectacular “boilover.” The fish may be served on compartmentalized plastic trays at outdoor picnic tables, on attractive china on shaded terraces, in white table-clothed dining rooms, or on paper plates in family backyards. To do a traditional outdoor fish boil, certain pieces of equipment are essential: an extremely large, deep kettle filled with rapidly boiling water and suspended or set in a metal frame over a fiercely burning wood fire to which more wood is added to keep it built up around the base of the kettle. Incredible amounts of salt are added to the water. There are various
Door County Fish Boil theories about the role of the salt but whatever it accomplishes, it does not result in over-salted food. A steel basket that just fits inside the kettle is filled with scrubbed but unpeeled new potatoes, usually with a thin slice removed from each end, and small onions (the onions are optional). The basket is lowered into the boiling water by using a pole thrust through the basket handles and carried by the boil master and his helper. Once boiling resumes and the vegetables have cooked for about 15 minutes, a shallower steel basket containing large chunks of whitefish, cut across the backbone into “steaks,” is lowered into the boiling water on top of the first basket. More salt is added to the water and more wood is stacked around the kettle to build up the fire. Once furious boiling resumes, the fish and vegetables cook for another 7 to 10 minutes. The timing is important and carefully observed. Then the boil master splashes a can of kerosene on the fire and the spectacular boilover results. A column of flame and black smoke erupts skyward and the kettle boils over, carrying off excess fish oils and salt and curbing the fire. First the basket of fish and then of potatoes are lifted out, again with a long pole thrust through their handles, and carried, dripping, to the serving area. The waiting diners line up to be served the fish, potatoes, and onions with melted butter ladled over, lemon slices, coleslaw, bread and butter. Cherry pie and coffee complete the meal. A local Door County family may have its own kettle and baskets, scaled down in size to fit its needs. It may also end the meal with a celebratory dessert like a birthday or anniversary cake. Cherry pie is customary but not obligatory. There are several theories about how the fish boil started in Door County and became such an important part of its life: one suggests that Scandinavian immigrants brought the custom with them from home (unsubstantiated); another allows that it was an easy way to feed the men working in the nineteenth-century logging camps (doubtful); or, more likely, that it was invented by fishermen out in boats who had plenty of water, salt, potatoes, fish, a need for hot food, and a cast iron stove in the cabin. But none of these accounts for how the colorful and exciting “boilover” developed. In the 1970s, “trout kettles” were sold in kitchen equipment sections of department or hardware stores in other parts of Wisconsin. Developed for top-stove cooking and complete with a recipe and detailed directions, the equipment may have produced a relatively tasty dish of fish, potatoes, and onions, but what makes a fish boil so special was missing: the dramatic boilover. Although this equipment apparently did not sell well enough to continue being manufactured, it can be approximated by using a large, deep, straight-sided kettle with a deep steel basket that fits inside it and has a handle that facilitates its removal from the boiling water when necessary. As the fish boil became famous for drawing in crowds, it is understandable that some families, churches and other organizations, or commercial establishments outside the county, especially further south in the state, are now doing their own fish boils. These may use frozen cod instead of freshly caught whitefish, and add carrots to the vegetables, and frequently the boilover is omitted. For anyone who is accustomed to a true Door County
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fish boil, these seem to be poor substitutes and lacking in the special drama and spectacle that gives the real thing such a celebratory ambience. Further Reading: Cherkasky, Shirley. “Fish in the Door Way and Cherries on the Ledges.” In Food from Nature: Attitudes, Strategies and Culinary Practices. Edited by Patricia Lysaght. Uppsala, Sweden: The Royal Gustavus Adolphus Academy for Swedish Folk Culture, 2000, 310–319; Ellis, W. S. “Wisconsin’s Door Peninsula: A Kingdom So Delicious.” National Geographic. Washington, D.C., March 1969, 347–371.
Shirley Cherkasky
Dutch Treat Dutch treat is an outing, usually a meal, often in the form of a date, in which each party pays their own share—in other words, no one is treated at all. Though its precise origins are unknown, Dutch treat is by consensus a relatively late and uniquely American contribution to the centuries-old British sport of mocking the Dutch; and none of these “Dutch” phrases were meant to be flattering. Normally associated with a meal today, the Dutch treat originated as a reference to drink, drawn from the barroom custom of treating first introduced in the mid-nineteenth century by immigrants from rural Ireland. One of the earliest printed references to Dutch treat, in an 1877 New York Times article, testifies to the rapid embrace of treating, as well as the close association of Dutch treat with drink. As the article explains: Treating is a peculiarity of our countrymen. It has been said that an American is no sooner introduced to anybody than he immediately thinks it incumbent upon him to pay for the liquor of his new acquaintance. At an American club men [women were generally unwelcome in or barred from saloons of the period] deem it proper to drink in companies of two and three. To call for any article of an alcoholic nature without having first consulted the appetite of every one present, is thought to be unsocial and singular. . . . It is true there are ways by means of which this sentiment may be got round. But a certain sordid character still hangs to that transaction, which has been dubbed a “Dutch treat.” [italics added] (New York Times, March 18, 1877, 6 )
Exactly when such “sordid transaction” came to be known as Dutch treat is an open question, but it is near certain that by the time the phrase debuted in the New York Times, it had traveled a long way from the rough-andtumble Irish drinking establishments where it first took root. Most likely the phrase was coined decades earlier and spread in parallel with the emergence of treating as a feature of saloon culture. In America’s polyglot metropolises those early Irish immigrants rubbed shoulders with immigrant populations possessing very different habits of public drinking, most notably the Germans, who confined their drinking to beer halls,
Dutch Treat
Dutch Treat club logo. Library of Congress.
where families were welcome and beer was looked upon as a dietary staple rather than an intoxicant. In the world of the German beer hall, treating was frowned upon as spendthrift and improvident; customers preferred to buy their own and drink at their own pace. It’s not hard to imagine the negative reception such customs must have received from the Irish. But to understand how a feature of German beer hall etiquette became known as the Dutch treat, it’s worth noting a few things. First, going all the way back to the fifteenth century, the English had used Dutch to refer to all Germanic peoples. This usage persisted in the New World colonies; and it was thus, for example, that the Germans who settled southeastern Pennsylvania in the late seventeenth and eighteenth centuries came to be known as the Pennsylvania Dutch. Second, one cannot overlook the close resemblance of Dutch to Deutsch (the German word for “German”) and the confusion that such similarity in sound would have engendered. Third, one must consider the historic enmity between the British and the Dutch, dating back to the seventeenth century, when a naval rivalry developed between the two over control of the spice trade. That competition for control of the sea routes to the Spice Islands produced three bitterly fought battles between 1652 and 1674—wars that, among other things, turned New Amsterdam into New York and that linguistically the English have never stopped fighting. Ever since the Anglo-Dutch wars, Dutch has been fixed in the English language as an epithet, connoting all things false, inferior, abnormal, or ungenerous. From the beginning expressions tended to play on Dutch drinking habits. Examples include Dutch courage (alcoholinduced bravery), Dutch bargain (“one made in drink”), and Dutch feast (“a party at which the host gets drunk before the guests do”). Dutch treat is merely an American variation on that well-worn theme. By the time it began appearing in print, Dutch treat (and its cognates) had already ceased carrying much of a sting outside of the Netherlands, where, unsurprisingly, a fondness never developed for such phraseology. In 1934 the Dutch government attempted to address the problem; it ordered
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all its officials to stop using Dutch and use Netherlands instead, whenever possible. Subsequent decades suggest the initiative failed to achieve total compliance. Further Reading: Herbst, Philip H. The Color of Words: An Encyclopedic Dictionary of Ethnic Bias in the United States. Yarmouth, ME: Intercultural Press, 1997; McCrum, Mark. Going Dutch in Beijing: How to Behave Properly When Far Away From Home. New York: Henry Holt and Co., 2008; Mencken, Henry Louis. The American Language: An Inquiry into the Development of English in the United States. New York: A. A. Knopf, 1936; Powers, Madelon. Faces Along the Bar: Lore and Order in the Workingman’s Saloon, 1870–1920. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1999; Rawson, Hugh. Wicked Words: A Treasury of Curses, Put-downs, and Other Formerly Unprintable Terms from Anglo-Saxon Times to the Present. New York: Crown Publishers, 1989; Wasserman, Suzanne. “Home Away from Home.” In Seaport: New York’s History Magazine (April 1995).
Jonathan Milder
E Easter Easter is the annual festival commemorating the resurrection of Jesus Christ and is considered the principal feast of the Christian year. It is a movable feast that is celebrated on the Sunday immediately following the Paschal full moon and can fall anytime between March 22 and April 25. Easter is the culmination of the 40-day penitential season of Lent, which begins on Ash Wednesday and ends at midnight on Holy Saturday, the day before Easter Sunday. The week prior to Easter is known as Holy Week. It begins on Palm Sunday, the Sunday prior to Easter, includes Good Friday, the day of the crucifixion of Christ, and it concludes with Holy Saturday. It is likely that Christian missionaries from the second century A.D., seeking to convert the tribes of northern Europe, noticed that the Christian holiday commemorating the resurrection of Jesus roughly coincided with existing springtime celebrations, which emphasized seasonal rebirth. Christian Easter gradually absorbed many of these traditional symbols of seasonal regeneration. Through the ages, eggs have been viewed as symbols of new life and fertility. Christians later used eggs to symbolize the rebirth of Christ. Many ancient cultures, including the Ancient Egyptians, Persians, and Romans used eggs during their spring festivals. In Medieval Europe it was forbidden to eat
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eggs during Lent. Eggs laid during that time were often boiled or otherwise preserved. Eggs became a mainstay of Easter meals, and a prized Easter gift for children and servants. Many traditions and practices have formed around Easter eggs. Eggs are commonly dyed, painted, and otherwise decorated. Many families today practice the tradition of coloring eggs with commercially produced vegetable dyes. Some incorporate more elaborate techniques and artistic expression by using wax resin and natural dyes made from onionskins, walnut husks, coffee, and other fruit and vegetables. The dyed eggs are displayed on tables, baked into breads, or left for children to discover. Many cultures have highly artistic traditions that involve the decoration of Easter eggs. In Armenia eggs are made hollow by piercing the shell with a needle and blowing out the contents. The resulting hand-blown eggs are decorated with pictures of Christ, Mary, and other religious figures. In Austria, ferns and small plant parts are fastened to eggs while they are boiled. The resulting patterns are striking. The Pennsylvania Dutch traditionally wrapped the pith of the binsegraas, a type of rush, in coils, which were glued to eggs. Scraps of calico cloth were then pasted on the egg. The Polish also used rushes or colorful rug yarn formed into elaborate coils to decorate eggs. Orthodox Christians in the Middle East and Greece painted eggs bright red to symbolize the blood of Christ. Germans gave green eggs on Holy Thursday and decorated trees with hollow eggs. Some of the most beautifully decorated eggs come from Ukrainian traditions. Pysanky is an ancient form of folk art from the Ukraine that consists of decoration of eggs using beeswax and dyes. This art is most popular near Easter time when eggs are created as gifts for family and friends. Hot wax is applied to the egg creating very intricate designs. The egg is then dyed and the process is repeated each time submerging the egg into a different color dye bath. Black is traditionally the last color dye. Once the black dye is dry, the egg is held over and the melted wax is wiped off revealing a beautifully designed multicolored egg. Finally, the egg is sealed with a coating of shellac or varnish. Another Ukrainian egg tradition is the krashanky. Unlike pysanky eggs, krashanky eggs are hard-boiled and intended to be ritually eaten at sunrise on Easter, while pysanky eggs are kept raw, to preserve their fertility magic. Krashanky, which comes from the Ukrainian word meaning color, uses a single color, usually red, to represent the blood shed by Christ, while pysanky eggs are inscribed and dyed with several colors. The most lavish of all Easter eggs are those made by goldsmith Peter Carl Fabergé. In 1833 the Russian Czar Alexander commissioned Fabergé to make a special Easter gift for his wife, Empress Marie. Fabergé made an egg with an outside shell of white enameled platinum, which opened to reveal a smaller golden egg. This smaller egg, in turn, opened to display a golden chicken and a jeweled replica of the Imperial crown. The Empress was so delighted that Alexander ordered Fabergé to design a new egg to be delivered every Easter. Alexander’s son, Nicholas II, continued the tradition. In all, a total of 57 eggs were made.
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In England, Germany, and other countries, children rolled eggs down hills on Easter morning, a game that has been connected to the rolling away of the rock from Jesus Christ’s tomb when he was resurrected. Immigrants brought the custom with them to America. The most famous Easter Egg Roll is held at the White House on the Monday after Easter. Originally, public egg-rolling celebrations were held on the grounds of the Capitol. Newspaper accounts describe children of all ages rolling eggs on the congressional grounds as early as 1872. In 1876, however, Congress passed the Turf Protection Law to prohibit the area from being used for such frivolous activity. In 1878, Rutherford B. Hayes, sensitive to the children who were disappointed by the loss of a place for the egg roll, opened the gates to the South Lawn for the first official White House Easter Egg Roll. The egg rolls have evolved and changed over the years, with different games and amusements becoming popular. Near the end of the nineteenth century, children played “Egg Picking,” “Egg Ball,” “Toss and Catch,” and “Egg Croquet.” Soon the event evolved into a more elaborate affair, with bands, entertainers, and food. President Herbert Hoover’s wife instituted folk and maypole dances to complement the egg rolling but they were not continued for long. At her first Egg Roll in 1933, Eleanor Roosevelt greeted visitors and listeners alike for the first time over the radio and she also introduced more organized games. In 1974 the most famous event of modern Easter Egg Rolls, the egg-rolling race, was introduced with spoons borrowed from the White House kitchen. Other unique activities have included a circus and petting zoo in 1977 and exhibits of antique cars, Broadway shows, and giant balloons in 1981. Egg hunt pits were introduced in 1981. Children could search through straw pits for autographed wooden eggs. It has always been customary for presidents, first ladies, their children, grandchildren, and pets to attend the festivities. Among the most eagerly anticipated guests each year, of course, is the Easter Bunny. The character of the Easter hare, or bunny, comes from antiquity as well. Rabbits and hares are often seen as symbols of springtime, new life, and rebirth, due to their fertile nature. German settlers in America are said to have brought over the tradition of a bunny named Osterhase, who would
Warren Sonnemann holds up a prize Easter basket at the White House Easter egg roll, 1923. Library of Congress.
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visit houses on Easter eve. Children would set out their caps or bonnets, filled with straw. The Osterhase would leave colored eggs in the nests or hide eggs for the children to find. Easter eggs were painted different colors to represent the sunlight of spring. While the Easter bunny is responsible for filling Easter baskets in America, he is not the only one to deliver Easter treats. A cuckoo brings eggs to Swiss children, and Czech children await the arrival of a lark. Other animals responsible for Easter delights are the rooster, stork, or fox. By the 1800s, candies were commonly tucked into the baskets alongside the eggs. Molded chocolate eggs, as well as bunnies, chicks, and lambs, began to appear in the 1870s. Such treats were still relatively expensive, and until the 1890s, chocolates were more likely a gift given by a man to his sweetheart. Candy makers such as Milton Hershey changed everything when, at the turn of the century, he developed a chocolate specifically designed for children’s tastes by adding milk. Hershey also made his chocolate inexpensive, making chocolate more affordable for everyone. The English firm of Cadbury & Company produced their first cream-filled chocolate Easter egg in 1875. Jellybeans first became popular when in 1861 William Schrafft of Boston began advertising his jellybeans as a gift to send to soldiers in the Union Army. Jellybeans quickly grew in popularity and became a standard of the penny candy glass jars featured in general stores. They were scooped into small paper bags and sold by weight, but it wasn’t until the 1930s when jellybeans began to find their way into Easter “nests.” In addition to colored hard-boiled eggs there are a number of other foods associated with Easter. Hot cross buns have been a Lenten and Good Friday tradition for centuries. The hot cross bun is a type of sweet spiced bun made with currants and leavened with yeast. The shape of the cross on the top of the bun is generally made out of icing but it can also be made simply by cutting the shape into the bun itself. In more ancient times, the cross-symbol on top of hot cross buns was made as a representation of the moon for Egyptians and Greeks, and for Romans, as a representation of a full moon and its four quarters. The Christian church reinterpreted the icing cross as a symbol of the crucifixion. In 1361, a monk named Father Thomas Rockcliffe began a tradition of giving hot cross buns to the poor of St. Albans on Good Friday. Protestant England saw the buns as a Catholic tradition and attempted to ban their sale by bakers but the popularity of hot cross buns continued. Elizabeth I passed a law permitting bakeries to sell them, but only during festivals such as Easter, Christmas, and funerals. The first recorded use of the term hot cross bun dates to 1733. In England, street vendors could be heard singing, “Hot cross buns! Hot cross buns! One a penny, two a penny, hot cross buns!,” to advertise their wares. Their songs of several verses remain today as a children’s nursery rhyme. Other cultures serve sweet cakes as well. Kulich, a Russian Easter bread, is a tall and narrow bread made from baba dough, with the addition of extra sugar and candied peel, almonds, raisins, and saffron. The top is iced
Easter and usually decorated with Cyrillic letters standing for the phrase “Christ is risen.” Traditionally, the kulich is taken to be blessed at midnight mass on Holy Saturday. In some families it replaces bread for the entire Holy Week. It is served with paskha, a sweetened confection based on curd cheese. The Greeks and Portuguese serve round, flat loaves marked with a cross and decorated with Easter eggs. In Germany and Austria, an Easter stollen with raisins is baked in twisted or braided strands. Poland’s mazurki are sweet cakes made with honey and filled with nuts and fruit. Roast lamb is a popular Easter Sunday dinner. Corresponding to the Passover lamb and to Christ, the Lamb of God, this dish has become a central symbol of Easter. Ham is another popular Easter dinner, especially in the United States. Pork that was not eaten fresh during the early winter was cured for preservation. The curing and aging of pork took a long time, and the first hams were generally ready around Easter, making them a natural choice for the celebration. In Hungary, a meatloaf made of chopped pork, ham, eggs, bread, and spices crowns the Easter feast. Other symbols of Easter are the chick, whose hatching from the egg is thought to symbolize new life or rebirth and recalls Christ’s emergence from the tomb. Lambs are also symbols of new life and recall Christ as the “Lamb of God.” The rooster represents vigilance and resurrection. It is a reminder of Peter’s threefold denial of Christ, before the cock crowed, on the night Christ was taken into custody. The Easter lily has become the flower most closely associated with the holiday. Easter lilies were brought to the United States in the 1880s and became popular during the closing years of the nineteenth century. Lilies are mentioned in the Bible, and the lily’s white bloom is thought to symbolize the purity of Jesus as well as new life. Some symbols are the product of legend. Dogwoods are closely associated with the crucifixion. The four petals are thought to form a cross and the center of the dogwood flower resembles a crown of thorns. The blood-red spots on the white blossoms of each petal are said to represent drops of Christ’s blood. Legend says that because the dogwood was used for Christ’s cross, it was later cursed by God so that it would never be used as a cross again, which is why dogwoods are small and spindly. The robin is said to have acquired his red breast while Jesus walked to his crucifixion. The bird saw that a hawthorn had pierced Christ’s forehead and flew down to pluck it out. In so doing a drop of Christ’s blood fell upon the bird’s breast, staining it red forever. New clothing or Easter outfits are a traditional part of the Easter celebration. The custom goes back to early Christianity and what was known as white week, a period when newly baptized Christians wore white linen robes for a whole week to symbolize their rebirth and new life. The new Christians were paraded around the countryside, led by a crucifix, to show people that they were starting a new life. Those already baptized wore new clothes in remembrance. In more modern times, many people wore new clothes to Easter services. Afterwards, they would walk around town, a custom that led to the American custom of Easter parades.
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The most famous of these is the Easter Parade along Fifth Avenue in New York City. The tradition dates back to the late 1800s when the social elite would parade down the avenue after attending the services at one of the fashionable Fifth Avenue churches. The less well to do would come to see what new fashions were being featured. Hats became the focus as the fashion trend of the day was towards increasingly ornate headwear. Many ladies tried to outdo each other with hats trimmed with ribbons, lace, flowers, and feathers. Irving Berlin immortalized the Easter bonnet with his 1948 song, Easter Parade. Easter bonnets have their roots in the circle or wreath of leaves and flowers worn to celebrate the coming of spring. The round shape was symbolic of the cycle of the seasons and the return of flowers and plants after the bleakness of winter. Today, anyone can join the Easter Parade down Fifth Avenue, even those without a special bonnet or outfit. The street is closed to traffic for parade participants and people watchers from roughly 10 A.M. until 4 P.M. Pets bedecked with the latest doggy fashions accompany many parade-goers. While hats do not hold the same fashion status today as they once did, some modern Easter bonnets continue to be very flamboyant. Further Reading: Bradshaw, Paul F., and Lawrence A. Hoffman, eds. Passover and Easter: Origin and History to Modern Times: Two Liturgical Traditions, vol. 5. Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press, 2000; Cohen, Hennig, and Tristram Potter Coffin, eds. The Folklore of American Holidays. Detroit, MI: Gale Research Company, 1987; Lord, Priscilla Sawyer, and Daniel J. Foley. Easter Garland: A Vivid Tapestry of Customs, Traditions, Symbolism, Folklore, History, Legend and Story. Detroit, MI: Omnigraphics, 1999.
Dorothy Denneen Volo
Edible Centerpieces An edible centerpiece can be defined as a concoction that is often placed literally in the center of a table. It is designed to be appreciated for its size, cost, rarity, the mysterious nature of its ingredients, the amusement arising from the question of its edibility, or its resemblance to something other than itself. The practice of displaying something that is eye-catching and representative of the host’s ingenuity and wealth has a long history, and one can still find examples and remnants of this old concept in various guises across the world today. HISTORICAL EXAMPLES Herodotus, traveling to Persia in the fifth century B.C., marveled at the region’s extravagant culinary culture and described a meal during which an entire ox and horse were roasted and served at table. Around the sixth century, Persians learned the technique of extracting sugar from cane, and
Edible Centerpieces sculpture made of marzipan and sugar (one shaped like a tree is noted by an eleventh-century traveler) came to be appreciated as a sign of wealth and artistic skill at feasts. These two customs, the presentation of a whole animal and the presentation of a sugar concoction made to look like what it is not, roughly mark the main trends involving edible centerpieces for centuries to come. Guests at medieval and Renaissance feasts were fed different numbers of courses and different types of animals according to their rank. Meat such as beef, swans, and peacocks were reserved for those higher in the social hierarchy. A stunning example of a meat dish, persistently popular throughout the Middle Ages and the Renaissance, is a whole roasted swan (sometimes peacock or pheasant) sewn back in its own plumage with its head still attached and propped up to appear alive. The beak (and comb if it is a peacock) would be gilded, and this marvelous specimen was carried in as it spewed fire out of its beak (thanks to a piece of cloth soaked in alcohol hidden inside its mouth). A special emphasis was put on the skills of carving, as an important component of chivalrous knowledge, and there were various carving manuals written—John Russell’s Boke of Nurture from the second half of the fifteenth century being one of the earliest. In Renaissance Italian courts, men equipped with the skills to execute the increasingly complicated ritual of carving were valued, and they enjoyed a position in the court hierarchy as important as that of a steward. Feasts were typically a part of a bigger occasion (e.g., weddings or coronations), and various entertainments such as plays, music, and jesting were not only provided before and after the feast but also included during it. On a smaller scale, such mealtime entertainments were called subtleties or entremets, and they sometimes included the presentation of edible cups and plates made of sugar. Sugar became more and more available by the time of the Renaissance, and a castle made of sugar housing birds, rabbits, or even pigs was an immensely popular form of mealtime entertainment, combining the passion for live animals and sugar concoctions. Sugar was also made into smaller and very delicate items such as napkins and tablecloths, and hosts showed off their wealth by presenting their guests with rings and rosaries made of sugar. During the English Renaissance, the term banquet had come to mean both a grand feast and the final course of such a meal. Grander homes had a separate building called a banqueting house on their estate, to which guests repaired after their savory courses to enjoy the last sweet course along with the view from the banqueting house (it was often built for this purpose on a spot with optimal views of the surroundings). In Tudor and Stuart times, the final course included an elaborate sugar sculpture, often a replica of a classical statue or of flowers. Consumption of sugar was a sign of wealth, and such sculptures were meant to display the host’s wealth. On a smaller scale, the anonymous author of A Closet for Ladies and Gentle Women (1611) provides instructions for making marzipan shaped like birds or bacon (using
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red saunders as a dye). Cards and nuts were made out of sugar-plate, and all such concoctions flaunted realistic colors and sometimes even employed gold leaf gilding. The use of molds was common, particularly those made of stone, wood, pewter (made by specialists), or plaster (made by cooks themselves). By the Georgian period, the dessert course had come to be considered part of the final course; accordingly, eye-catching concoctions became less elaborate. A centerpiece was still popular in the form of a pyramid of dried sweetmeats surrounded by creams and fruit, all of which were presented among other savory entremets. MODERN APPLICATIONS The concept of the centerpiece (i.e., a concoction more focused on attracting the eye and inspiring wonder than on the ease of consumption, taste, or even edibility) is often incorporated in the practice of the modern buffet. Ice carving has a history going back to the early modern period and is still found today at lavish banquets. The skills involved in the production of an ice sculpture and the difficulty of transportation and securing it in its position often inspire awe and conversation. On a more practical level, a centerpiece in a buffet can be a decoratively cut piece of large fruit, for example, pineapple or melon, studded with crudité on wooden picks, or a large assortment of pâtés, sandwiches or crudité arranged in an attractive manner. Although it might be more appropriate to call it a focal point, a large portion of an item such as a roast or terrine (gross pièce), cut in an attractive way to reveal its moist juicy inside and colorful and copious stuffing, can serve as a centerpiece on a miniature scale. Such display adds conviviality to a buffet, which otherwise focuses on practicality and variety. In modern homes, holiday feasts perhaps best retain the vestige of traditional banquets. Roasted turkey, as served on Thanksgiving and Christmas, acts as a centerpiece. Guests marvel at its size, ask the host about its weight, and the glistering, imposing presence of a giant bird certainly contributes to the festivity of a gathering. As in old banquets, carving is an important and exciting event, trusted to the honored person, who distributes the meat to eagerly anticipating diners. One might say that the tradition of the flamboyant pastry centerpiece, or banquet in the limited sense of the word, has been passed down in the form of pastry competitions that showcase the inventiveness of chefs, and as in old days, the chefs’ ability to quickly and creatively adopt cutting-edge technology, such as silicon molds. Participants in such competitions have to produce sweets to fit several categories; such competitions generally include the creation of a showpiece made of pulled-sugar and another made of chocolate. Examples from recent years’ competitions include a Pegasus in flight, a keyboard, and a giant globe, all made of edible material and sometimes soaring up to five feet. One can find the sprit of experimentation with chocolate, sugar, and technology outside competitions as well. One extreme example is a wedding
Edible Centerpieces gown made entirely of sugar, designed and executed by textile artist Michele Hester. After studying the properties of sugar and recent technologies designed to manipulate it, she concocted a veil, a satin skirt covered with intricate brocade, a bodice with Venetian point lace, complete with pearls, all out of sugar. The sugar gown was displayed on a live model at a Kansas City art gallery in 2004. One might consider this a case in which a centerpiece originally designed to amuse diners walks out of the setting and claims the status of an art piece, which many of those centerpieces from previous centuries were. Cakes at weddings and birthday parties also often flaunt their size, beauty and elaborateness of ornamentation (edible flowers of different colors, sizes, and shapes are often seen and yet never cease to inspire marvel). Cakes are also made to resemble something else than a cake (Louis Vuitton suitcases, three-dimensional cartoon characters, and even stiletto shoes). Caterers and bakers who specialize in baking cakes and pastry tailored to the likings of clients constitute a thriving business today, and bakeries often display their most elaborate concoctions in their windows. Instances of roasted meat being used as a centerpiece can be found in various Middle Eastern traditions, lamb usually being the meat of choice. Ouzi from Lebanon is perhaps the best-known example. A big piece of lamb (shoulder, leg, or sometimes the entire animal) is roasted with a mixture of fragrant spices such as cinnamon, cumin, cardamom, or pepper. A whole lamb is traditionally stuffed with dates, raisins, and nuts. Roasting itself has been a cooperative, communal event, done in a family courtyard or public pit. The Chinese are renowned for their elaborate and abundant banquets, and the perfectly browned, moist duck in the middle of the table might be called a form of centerpiece. The Chinese also boast a long tradition of carving vegetables and fruit into mini sculptures of pagodas, birds, and flowers, among other items. While such creations are often part of a dish, as opposed to standing on their right, they still inspire awe and help draw attention to the displays of food. In a Japanese feast, food is often served in individual lacquer trays or boxes, but bigger items such as whole grilled fish are presented in the middle of the table, in what one might call a centerpiece. While a fish is much smaller than a whole roasted lamb or duck, it is relatively larger than the other items (the lacquer trays and boxes) and its sole presence in the middle of the table as a shared piece still commands attention and adds to the sense of festivity at a shared event among families and friends. Further Reading: Albala, Ken. The Banquet: Dining in the Great Courts of Late Renaissance Europe. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2007; Fletcher, Nichola. Charlemagne’s Table Cloth: A Piquant History of Feasting. New York: St. Martin’s Press, 2004; Freeman, Sarah. Muttons and Oysters: The Victorians and Their Food. London: Victor Gollancz, 1989; Wilson, C. Anne, ed. “Banquetting Stuffe”: the Fare and Social Background of the Tudor and Stuart Banquet. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 1989.
Chika M. Jenkins
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Egypt The Nile valley always yielded enough to feed the country, even when famine was present in other nearby parts of the world. The ancient Egyptians’ basic food and drink, bread and beer, were made from the main crops they grew, wheat and barley; grapes were the other major crop. It has been said that when Rameses went visiting other cities, he took along fifteen hundred sealed jars of wine. There were many types of bread, including pastries and cakes. Since there was no sugar, honey was used as a sweetener by the rich and poor people used dates and fruit juices. Egyptians liked strong-tasting vegetables such as garlic and onions. They thought these were good for their health. They also ate peas and beans, lettuce, cucumbers, and leeks. Vegetables were often served with oil and vinegar dressing. Figs, dates, pomegranates, and grapes were the only fruits that could be grown in the hot climate. The rich could afford to make wine from their grapes. Ordinary people ate fish and poultry. On special occasions they ate sheep, goat, or pig; but there was little grazing land available so meat was expensive and most people ate it only on festive occasions. Egyptians stored their food in jars and granaries. Fish and meat had to be prepared for storage. One method was salting. Another was to hang fish in the sun, which baked them dry. In ordinary families the cooking was done by the housewife, but larger households employed servants to work in the kitchen and a chef—usually a man—to do the cooking. The Egyptians had ovens and knew how to boil, roast, and fry food. There were few kitchen tools: pestles, mortars, and sieves. The Egyptians ate singly or in pairs at small tables with the children sitting on cushions on the floor. Breakfast was not a family meal, but a breaking of the night’s fast in solitude. However, breakfast was not always a meal eaten alone; there are wall pictures in tombs that show people eating their breakfast while having a servant dress their hair. The two main meals were taken early in the day, one at around noon and the other at 4 P.M., after which people did more work, or were entertained by dancers and singers if they were wealthy. While the Egyptians possessed spoons they ate mainly with their fingers, washing them with water after the meal. Wealthy Egyptians did not lack time or money, and they knew how to use these in the most pleasant ways possible. Banquets were given often and were very lavish. First the kitchen staff was given a menu of what would be had that night. Ox were slaughtered, sauces made, vegetables cleaned and made ready to cook, ducks, geese, and other wild fowl plucked and placed on grills. Cups made of gold, silver, alabaster, and painted pottery were taken from cupboards and cleaned. Fruit was piled high in reed baskets, which were covered to keep dust and insects out. Water was put to cool in jars, cones of oil incense were prepared for the heads of the guests, and the house was scrubbed and cleaned from top to bottom. Wine was a very important part of the ancient Egyptian banquet or meal. Temperance was not a virtue in Egypt. Wines were stored in earthen jars, which were bedded on
Egypt
large pallets and each jar was carefully labeled by vintage. Still consumption outran supply, and huge quantities of potent beer where needed to slake the national thirst (Sheraton, Buehr, and McKenna 34). Egyptians loved having a party anytime; preparations for one could take place several times during the week. If there were important guests to be feted, the host would either stand at the entrance to the garden waiting to escort them in or his children would do this job while he sat in a chair in the dining room. Then ritual words of greeting would be murmured, such as “welcome in the name of Horus” or “come feast on bread and beer in my house.” While the host sat on his chair, usually made of inlaid wood and semiprecious stones, the rest of the guests sat on small stools or cross-legged on small pillows on the floor. Men and women usually sat opposite each other on separate sides of the room, but sometimes at banquets they mixed. Servants of wealthy guests accompanied their masters to banquets. At the banquet, they administered to their lord and lady, offering them flower garlands and perfumed cones to wear on their heads. The Egyptians were very fastidious and the cones of perfumed pomade masked offensive smells such as roasted or burnt meat, and body odors. Even the servants were given these cones to wear, while they were working. All kinds of delicious food was served: including roasted ox, grilled duck, dried bean dishes (especially lentils), fish with a spicy sauce, bread, beer, and sometimes as many as 30 different sweet cakes. Music was an important part of a banquet. Sistrums (percussion instruments with small metal disks attached that could be shaken to make music),
An ancient Egyptian depiction of a food offering. © Hartemink | Dreams time.com.
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Guests at a banquet are depicted in these two registers of a wall painting from the Tomb of Nebamun, West Thebes, eighteenth dynasty. Werner Forman/Art Resource, NY.
harps, castanets, and lutes were the major music making instruments. Judging from what is depicted on tomb paintings, these instruments were played usually by beautiful young girls in sheer dresses. People danced to the music. Toward the end of a meal, a small copy of a coffin was carried around the room and shown to the guests as a reminder of their mortality. They were told, “Look on this and then drink and take your pleasure, for when you are dead thus you will be.” The rites surrounding death were as important to the Egyptians as were those surrounding life. The deceased was provided with every necessity and all his favorite foods, dishes, and utensils. The funeral was itself a source of celebration and mourning at the same time. Mourners tore their clothes, ripped their hair, and covered themselves with dirt and ashes. The procession carrying the mummified body to the tomb included all the servants carrying the possessions (Robins 1996, chapter 9) and hired mourners, who were paid to enlarge the entourage and add to the commotion. When Cleopatra was to meet Marc Anthony, she sailed down the Nile dressed as Aphrodite, the goddess of love, in a large boat with silver oars and purple sails. Egyptian food at this time had many subtle influences from the cuisines of Greece and Rome. Dinner was served on the boat in elaborate surroundings. Gold and silver dishes had replaced the more common clay plates of the earlier dynasties. Servant girls danced and sang throughout the dinner, which included as many as one hundred dishes. Some of the
Etiquette Books food served included mussels, oysters, venison, lobsters, and capons cooked in spicy sauces, next came piglets stuffed with quails, whole roasted peacocks and woodcocks, and a never-ending procession of breads, cakes, salads, fruits, and cheeses. Wine and beer were served, although by the time of Cleopatra’s rule wine had become the major beverage of the upper classes, for the Egyptians had perfected the art of winemaking. Bread had also become more refined, as they discovered they could make it lighter with the addition of yeast. This discovery came accidentally when they learned the yeast used in making beer could also be used for raising dough. Cakes were also more elaborate than in earlier dynasties, and they copied the more sophisticated techniques of the Greeks. Further Reading: Berriedale-Johnson, Michelle: The British Museum Cookbook. London: The British Museum, Company, 1998; Bober, Phyllis. Art Culture and Cuisine. Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press, 1999; Darby, William, Paul Ghaliounghi, and Louis Grivetti. Food: The Gift of Osiris. 2 vols. London and New York: Academic Press, 1977; Faulkner, R. O. Ancient Egyptian Book of the Dead. London: British Museum Press, 1985; Montet, Pierre. Life in Egypt in the Days of Ramesses the Great. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press 1981; Robins, Gay. Women in Ancient Egypt. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1996; Sheraton, Mimi, Wendy Buehr, and Tatiana McKenna. The Horizon Cookbook, Volume I and II. New York: Doubleday, 1968; Tannahill, Reay. Food in History. London: Methuen, 1973 [Paladin paperback 1975]; Toussaint-Samat, Maguelonne. A History of Food. Translated by Anthea Bell. Oxford, United Kingdom: Blackwell Publishers, 1992; Van Vliet, Eugenia. Dinners with Famous Women from Cleopatra to Indira Gandhi. New York: IUniverse, 2000.
Eugenia Van Vliet
Etiquette Books Rules of etiquette are codes of behavior that govern society. Every culture has accepted manners, which dictate how one should act in a given situation. The modern notion of etiquette originated in the court of Louis XIV. For example, small signs—known as etiquettes—were posted around Versailles telling visitors to “keep of the grass.” While walking through the gardens, visitors were expected to “keep within the etiquettes.” Over time, the phrase evolved to mean follow the rules in general. Today, many disregard the term thinking that etiquette refers only to the arcane edicts guiding the activities of the elite, such as which fork to use first at a formal party. Etiquette, however, encompasses much more than that. It provides a set of guidelines about how to handle situations that come up in everyday life. It reminds us that we are all members of a group and encourages people to think about how their actions affect others. Despite the fact that rules of etiquette are generally unwritten—and often unspoken—authors throughout history have attempted to codify them in writing. The first known etiquette book was written by the Egyptian
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philosopher, Ptah-hotep, in 2400 B.C. The first American manner guide is credited to George Washington. At the age of 14 Washington transcribed the Rules of Civility & Decent Behaviour In Company and Conversation. Though Washington’s publication is over two hundred years old, the instructions are still surprisingly applicable to today’s world. His book covers basic behaviors, as in rule number five, which directs readers that “if you cough, sneeze, sigh, or yawn, do it not loud but privately; and speak not in your yawning, but put your handkerchief or hand before your face and turn aside.” Ethical tips are also dispensed, such as the one described in rule number 22: “Show not yourself glad at the misfortune of another though he were your enemy.” In 1922 Emily Post wrote Etiquette: In Society, In Business, In Politics, and At Home. This best-selling book changed the way Americans perceive etiquette and established the genre of books that are still published today. With advice on a broad range of topics, Etiquette has been updated and revised 17 times. The current edition has been completely rewritten by Post’s great-granddaughter-in-law, Peggy. Post, a debutante and socialite, was the only daughter of architect Bruce Price. She was educated at home, attended finishing school in New York, married a well-to-do banker, and had two sons. After her marriage ended in divorce, she turned to writing to support herself. She penned newspaper and magazine articles as well as a few travel books and novels before writing her famous etiquette book. The authority on decorum in the United States, Post also wrote numerous newspaper columns, hosted a television show, and spoke often on the radio. In 1946 she founded the Emily Post Institute, which still strives to address the societal concerns of the twenty-first century. Post died at the age of 86, and her relatives have continued to run the institute. Post’s success set the foundation for a whole new category of books. Notable authors writing on the subject after the publication of Etiquette include Amy Vanderbilt, Letitia Baldridge, and Judith “Miss Manners” Martin. While these women each have their own unique style, they argue for the same essential principle: etiquette is important because it improves communication and helps people feel comfortable in social settings. After five years of extensive research, Amy Vanderbilt’s Complete Book of Etiquette ( later re-titled Amy Vanderbilt’s Etiquette), was published in 1952. Considered a standard in the field of etiquette writing, the book is still in print. Vanderbilt, a distant relative of Cornelius Vanderbilt, was educated in New York and Switzerland before attending New York University. She worked in advertising and public relations, as a newspaper journalist, and for several government agencies. The book’s success led to her hosting a television show in the late fifties and radio program in the early sixties. She died at the age of 66 after falling from a window. It is not known whether she committed suicide or became dizzy and fell. Letitia Baldridge’s first project on the topic of manners was to completely revise and update Amy Vanderbilt’s book. Since then she has written
Etiquette Books extensively on the subject and in 2003 published Letitia Baldrige’s Guide to New Manners for New Times. Born in 1926 and educated at Vassar (where she was kicked out of the English department), Baldrige served as the White House social secretary to Jacqueline Kennedy. She worked in public relations in the private sector and was the first woman executive at Tiffany & Co. The first etiquette writer to discuss proper behavior in the workplace, she continues to write and lecture, and commonly makes television appearances. Taking a less formal approach to the subject, columnist Judith Martin has dispensed tongue-in-cheek advice to readers under the pen name “Miss Manners” since 1978. Born in 1938, she is a graduate of Wellesley College. She covered social events at the White House and at embassies and wrote critiques of films and plays before beginning her manners column. Distributed three times a week to over 200 newspapers, her column answers questions sent in by readers. She is praised for providing complex analysis and perspective in her writing, which is filled with wit and humor. She has also authored 11 books on the subject, including the freshly updated Miss Manners’ Guide to Excruciatingly Correct Behavior, which was published in 2005. Since the rules of proper behavior are constantly evolving, books on the subject continue to be published, and bookstores have entire sections devoted to the topic. In addition to the many works in print by Post, Vanderbilt, Baldridge, and Martin, there are many new authors who have written about etiquette. Today’s books usually include discussions of topics Post could never have dreamed of, including information about how to compose and send proper e-mail communications, how to handle family gatherings when the family is made up of step- and half-relatives, and how to behave in a faster, less formal world. Further Reading: Ingram, Leah. The Everything Etiquette Book: A Modern-Day Guide to Good Manners. Avon, MA: Adams Media, 1997; Newton, Deborah. “The History of Etiquette: A Brief History on Etiquette and a Look at Who Today’s Mavens of Manners Are.” Pagewise. 2002. http://www.essortment. com/all/historyofetiq_rizc.htm; Post, Emily. “Etiquette.” New York: Facsimile Edition; Bedford, MA: Applewood Books, 2006? [Originally published by Funk & Wagnalls Company, 1922]; Washington, George. Rules of Civility & Decent Behaviour in Company and Conversation: A Book of Etiquette. Williamsburg, VA: Beaver Press. 1971. http://www.history.org /Almanack / life/manners/rules2.cfm.
Erin G. Marrazzo
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F Fast Food, History of Many American towns have burger and chicken palaces, pizza and sandwich shops, hot dog and taco stands, and fast-food eateries of many descriptions. It can be said that today’s modern American family eats fast food because it is cheap, convenient, and easy to come by. But the prominence of these so-called convenience foods in the American diet is no joking matter. It is commonly thought that modern convenience foods are artificial— lacking somehow in quality and proper nutrition. Moreover, they are thought to undermine traditional family values and speed the decline of family solidarity. Most analysts argue that fast foods reflect the frenzy and lack of personal interaction characteristic of a modern urban industrial society. However, a deeper look at modern foodways begs the question of whether these fast foods are not really modernized versions of older and more traditional foods of convenience. Humans in the so-called state of nature ate easy to come by berries, and they probably consumed most of them on the spot. While there were no drive-thrus, early humans, like Americans today, ate what was convenient.
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THE ANCIENT FAST-FOOD RESTAURANT From the beginning of the first century A.D., there is more compelling evidence that the Romans used both fast foods and convenience restaurants not unlike those we see today. According to archaeologists excavating in Pompeii, a city frozen in time after the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 A.D., the majority of ancient Pompeians consumed many convenience foods and often ate them on-the-run. Researchers initially noticed an unusual lack of tableware, formal dining areas, and kitchen facilities within Pompeian homes—an odd circumstance when the amazing state of preservation in other areas of Pompeian life is taken into account. Instead they found isolated plates here and there, such as in sleeping quarters, along with many small brazier-type ovens (thermospodium). Similar to the microwave ovens, Styrofoam cups and plates, and mini-coffee makers provided in many modern hotel rooms for the convenience of the guests, the thermospodium suggests convenience-style dining rather than any extensive regimen of food preparation. On the other hand, numerous convenience-food restaurants (so-called thermopolia, cauporioe, or tavernae) have been found in Pompeii and other parts of Ancient Rome. It is clear that establishments like these were patronized by the general population of the city. These places can be likened to such present-day favorites as Burger King, Nathan’s Famous, or Pizza Hut. Generally open to the street, each had a large counter with heated receptacles set in the middle from which food or drink would have been served much like a modern steam table in the school cafeteria. The thermopolium (singular of thermopolia) was a sort of service counter that provided hot food and beverages for snacking on the run or for take-out meals to eat at home. The thermopolium was the most common of the three convenience food outlets in Pompeii and the closest in character to a modern fast-food restaurant. The cauporioe, a small sit-down eatery, and the taverna, analogous to a bar, were more like cafés with rooms at the back and benches or couches for serious dining at table. Pompeii’s citizens, like most Romans, ate three meals a day: breakfast ( jentaculum), lunch ( prandium), and an evening meal (cena). Pompeians were seemingly fond of eating on the run and rarely ate lunch at home. The busy Pompeians often consumed their prandium on-site while standing in the thermopolium or outside in the street. Modern urban dwellers would identify with this concept as they hurry off to Sabrett hot dog carts, McDonald’s drive-thru windows, and Starbuck’s coffee houses during their all-too-short lunch breaks. Hundreds of convenience food establishments have been identified in the ruins of Pompeii, many clustered around bathhouses, markets, and waterfront areas. More than 200 thermopolia were located in the ash-inundated area of Pompeii alone. If the evidence at Pompeii can be taken as demonstrative of ancient life styles on the Italian peninsula or in the Mediterranean in general, it can be said that the population of the Roman Empire was no
Fast Food, History of more fond of sit-down family dining or hours of food preparation than many modern Americans. Small establishments might have only one warming “hole” in a short marble or stone counter while other establishments might have half a dozen. The sunken clay jars on one arm of the counter in a typical thermopolium were heated by charcoal and might have contained spiced wines, meat stews, cooked lentils, a ground wheat porridge, or a less expensive hot barley mash. On the other part of the counter were displayed breads, soft and hard cheeses, dates, figs, olives, and other local snacks. Salt was rare and literally worth its weight in gold (used to pay legionaries, from which comes the word salary). Yet seasonings might include opium poppy, dill, coriander, chervil, pepper, mint, cumin, and a naturally salty liquid called garum. Garum may have been as common in ancient Italy as modern condiments are at the selfservice counter. Romans seemingly dumped garum, an oily fish sauce, on nearly everything. It was made by soaking sun-fermented anchovies, alice, acciuga, mackerel, or other fish ( heads, tails, guts, and all) in concentrated sea water. Although the ancients were unaware of it, exposure to the sun during the process increased the vitamin D content. Possibly similar to a thin anchovy paste (even the experts are unsure of its exact recipe), garum was particularly popular, much like soy, taco, or steak sauces today, and it was used in the same manner. It seemingly
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How Fast Food Has Changed Entertaining The availability of large amounts of food—fast and inexpensive—has led to casual, spontaneous entertaining. Americans no longer have to invest a large amount of time, money, and planning in order to invite and feed any number of guests. Burgers and fries: Hamburgers, French fries, and chicken tenders or nuggets are foods that are familiar and well liked by young children. Parents planning to entertain young people often have a choice of picking up the food or entertaining at the fast food restaurant itself. Carl’s Jr., Burger King, and McDonald’s are examples of burger joints that offer to cater parties— including entertainment as well as food and beverages. Hosts of children’s parties can be assured that the guests will be fed and entertained, with no clean up after the guests leave. Pizza: Pizza franchises offer all the fare an American teenager desires, often delivering to the door hot pizza with an endless combination of toppings, often accompanied by garlic bread, soda, salad, mozzarella sticks, or chicken wings. Pizza franchises or independently owned restaurants can adequately cater anything from birthday parties to impromptu gatherings for watching movies or sports; or playing cards or board games. Chicken: Chicken franchises offer packages that are designed to feed large quantities of people. So-called family meals contain side dishes that complete the meal inexpensively. Sandwiches: Submarine sandwiches (also called wedges, hoagies, grinders, or heroes in different parts of the country) have become popular fare for football parties, backyard gatherings, and beach parties. Franchises offer a choice of sandwich platters or large six-foot sandwiches to feed a crowd. Peggyann Rogers Díaz Customers line up outside the first McDonald’s hamburger stand, which was opened in 1948 by brothers Dick and Maurice McDonald in San Bernadino, California. Six years later, a Chicago milkshake mixer salesman named Ray Kroc acquired franchise rights. The world’s No. 1 fast-food chain, McDonald’s has 24,500 restaurants in 115 countries, and 40 million customers a day generating $12.4 billion revenue for 1998. Foreign operations account for nearly 60% of the company’s sales and profits. AP/Wide World Photo.
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added depth to the flavor of food in much the same way that MSG (monosodium glutimate), a modern chemical additive and flavor enhancer, is said to do. Large clay jars, called amphorae, filled with the fishy stuff have been found in ship wrecks scattered across the Mediterranean, suggesting garum’s use as a trade item. Some of these wrecks are reliably dated many hundreds of years apart, attesting to the continued popularity of the sauce. Although simple to make, garum was probably produced commercially, and it came in many types: garum sociorum was the highest quality type; alec was the cheapest kind; oenogarum was mixed with wine; hydrogarum with water; oleogarum with olive oil; and oxygarum with vinegar ( Vehling 286 ). Much of our knowledge of Roman cookery derives from the great cookery book of Marcus Gavius Apicius (first century B.C.) called De Re Coquinaria. Written some time near the time of Julius Caesar (d. 44 B.C.), it is the oldest known surviving cookbook—as old as Imperial Rome itself. Apicius was a culinary expert, and his writings provide modern researchers with information on Roman cuisine. One of the dishes he describes includes putting a variety of ingredients on a flat round base of bread, similar to a present-day pizza. PIZZA Pizza is America’s number one snack food, having eclipsed the hot dog as front-runner at the end of the twentieth century. While pizza as we know it today was a long way off for the Romans, fresh baked bread smeared with olive paste seems to have been a great fast-food favorite at thermopolia. Evidence has been found of flat wheat-spelt cakes that were baked and widely eaten not only in Pompeii but also in nearby Neopolis, the Greek colony that would ultimately become Naples. Also found in Pompeii were shops, complete with marble slabs, flour mills, ovens, and other tools of the trade, which closely resemble those in a conventional pizzeria. Pizza could have been invented by the Phoenicians of Carthage, the Greeks of Sicily, the Italians, or anyone who learned the secret of mixing flour with water and heating it on a hot stone. In one of its many forms, pizza has been a basic part of the human diet since the development of grain growing and harvesting. This earliest form of pizza was a crude bread that was baked beneath the coals of the fire. After cooking, it was seasoned with a variety of different toppings and used instead of plates and utensils to sop up broth or gravies. It is said that the idea of using bread as a plate (a trencher) came from the Greeks who ate flat round bread (plankuntos) baked with an assortment of toppings. It was eaten by the working man and his family because it was a thrifty and convenient food. Pizza has a compelling chronology. At the height of the Persian Empire, it is said that the soldiers of Darius the Great (fifth century B.C.), accustomed to lengthy marches, baked a kind of flat bread upon their shields and then covered it with cheese and dates. Marcus Porcius Cato (second century B.C.), also known as Cato the Elder, wrote the first history of Rome, and he noted the common use of flat rounds of dough baked on stones and dressed with
Fast Food, History of olive oil, herbs, and honey. The Aeneid written by Virgil (first century B.C.), describes the legendary origin of these cakes or circles of bread: “Beneath a shady tree, the hero [Aeneas, leader of the Dardanians, allies of defeated Troy and ancestors of the Romans] spread his table on the turf, with cakes of bread; And, with his chiefs, on forest fruits he fed. . . .Their homely fare dispatched, the hungry band invaded their trenchers next, and soon devoured to mend the scanty meal, their cakes of flour . . .And Aeneas said. . . See, we devour the plates on which we fed.” Tomatoes and tomato-based sauces were unknown to the Romans and would not be imported into Europe until the sixteenth century. For many decades thereafter tomatoes were shunned as poisonous by the English (as indeed the plant is, while the fruit is not). Red-sauce pizza, as we know it, is generally considered to be a product of the seaport city of Naples (then an individual kingdom among the many Italian city-states). Supposedly the poor people of Naples had only flour, olive oil, lard, cheese, and herbs with which to feed their families. They added the New World tomatoes to their yeast dough circles to create the first simple modern pizza. In the fifteenth century, Tavernia Cerrigloi in Naples was a hangout for soldiers, and it is said that they flocked there to feast on the pizza specialty of the house, making it the traditional first commercial home of Italian-style pizza. Although other towns made pizza, all of Italy proclaimed the Neapolitan pies to be the best. Queen Maria Lorena (1752–1814), wife of the King of Naples, Ferdinand IV (1751–1821), had a special oven built in the summer palace of Capodimonte so that her chef could serve pizzas to herself and to her guests. After the unification of Italy (1860), King Umberto I and his wife, Queen Margherita di Savoia, while on holiday in Naples in 1889, called to their residence the most popular of the pizzaioli ( pizza chefs), Raffaele Esposito, to taste his specialties. He prepared three kinds of pizza for the royal couple: one with bacon, cheese, and basil; one with garlic, oil, and tomatoes; and another with mozzarella cheese, basil, and tomatoes (arranged in the colors of the Italian flag). The queen liked the last kind of pizza so much that Esposito named it the “Pizza Margherita” in her honor, and so the type has remained named. Modern American pizza comes in flat-crust New York style, deep-dish Chicago style, and all other styles found elsewhere. Gennaro Lombardi, an Italian immigrant, claimed to have opened the first U.S. pizzeria in 1905 in New York City. This was a walk-up counter on Spring Street. It wasn’t until the early 1930s that he added tables and chairs. Lombardi’s is now known as America’s “Patria della Pizza,” or “home of the pizza.” Chicago-style deepdish pizza (with a flaky crust that rises an inch or more above the plate and surrounds deep piles of toppings) was created by Ike Sewell in 1943 at his bar and grill on the Chicago Loop. His Pizzeria Uno has since become a franchise chain. It wasn’t until the 1950s that Americans really started noticing pizza. Celebrities of Italian origin, such as Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, Jimmy Durante, and baseball star Joe DiMaggio all devoured pizzas. Martin even
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included a reference to it in his popular love song, “That’s Amore!” Today the number of small pizzerias that compete for the American fast-food dollar is astounding, and in many small college towns even bad pizza can take a foothold among the less-than-discriminating student body. Pizza is also the premiere convenience item for home delivery with franchise establishments like Dominos, Pizza Time, and Pizza Hut holding the lion’s share of the delivery business against armies of local pizza delivery outfits. Frozen pizzas were introduced to local grocery stores in 1957. The first was marketed by the Celentano Brothers. Pizza soon became the most popular of all frozen foods. Of all the cheese consumed in the United States, mozzarella makes up 83 percent, used mostly on pizza. Moreover, in 1970 less than 1.2 pounds of mozzarella cheese were used annually per person in the United States. Today more than 10 pounds are consumed per person—an eight-fold annual increase. HOT DOGS There is evidence that the Pompeians also ate cooked sausage on the go and may have sliced it as a bread topping or rolled it in a baked bread circle much like a thick tortilla. Sausage is one of the oldest forms of processed food, having been mentioned in Homer’s Odyssey in the ninth century B.C. Herein even Homer recognized the expediency of food that can be prepared quickly: “As when a man besides a great fire has filled a sausage with fat and blood and turns it this way and that and is very eager to get it quickly roasted.” The Emperor Nero’s (first century A.D.) cook, Gaius, is often credited with popularizing the first pre-cooked sausage—a predecessor of America’s second favorite fast food, the frankfurter or hot dog. He stuffed the long washed intestines of a pig with ground venison and ground beef mixed with ground wheat (filler) and spices, and boiled it altogether in the casing. Hot dogs range in size from big foot-long stadium frankfurters to tiny cocktail-sized Vienna sausages. Also called franks, wieners, and red hots, today’s fast food version of Gaius’s cooked sausage consists of a combination of beef and pork, or all-beef cuts, which are cured, smoked, and cooked together with a filler and spices in a casing. Seasonings—many considered secret recipes—may include coriander, garlic, ground mustard, nutmeg, salt, sugar, and white pepper. Modern processors have generally abandoned the casings made of animal intestine for synthetic ones made of thin edible plastic, and high-quality all-beef, all-natural franks have been made popular by companies such as Hebrew National® that feature fully kosher products. Frankfurters, like Gaius’s sausages, are fully cooked, but they are usually served hot on a soft white-bread bun. A survey of Americans showed that 60 percent preferred to have their franks grilled while only 20 percent preferred boiling. Rotary grills, looking like a series of parallel pipes supporting the slowly turning grilled franks among them, can fascinate both little children and their parents, but their purpose is to keep the franks hot.
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There is a great deal of disagreement concerning the historical development of the modern hot dog. The town of Frankfurt, Germany, claims that the hot dog was created there in 1487 and celebrated the hot dog’s 500th anniversary in 1987. Other Germans credit the making of the modern hot dog to Johann Georg Hehner, a butcher in Coburg, who traveled to Frankfurt to promote his product in the 1600s. In 1852, the butcher’s guild in Frankfurt introduced a spiced and smoked sausage that was packed in a thin casing, and they specifically called it a frankfurter after their hometown. The sausage had a slightly curved shape similar to the popular dachshund, which may have helped to generate the term hot dog. Vienna, Austria, points to the name wiener as evidence of the hot dog’s true heritage. It seems clear that hot dogs came to America with the flood of German immigrants who sold them, along with rolls and sauerkraut, from pushcarts in New York City’s Bowery during the 1860s. Charles Feltman, a German butcher, opened up the first Coney Island hot dog stand in 1867 in Brooklyn. He sold almost 4,000 sausages and rolls during his first year in business and is credited with the idea of the grilled bun. Feltman built a mini-empire at Coney Island with a hotel, beer gardens, restaurants, food stands, and various rides to amuse his customers. At his death in 1910, he left a business worth over one million dollars. St. Louis, Missouri, credits a German street
Undated photo of people enjoying hot dogs at the Greenwich Village Fair in New York City. Library of Congress.
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peddler, Antoine Feuchtwanger, with introducing hot sausages served in a bun to the Midwest in 1889. Nonetheless, it is certain that the hot dog gained its national popularity at the 1893 Chicago World’s Fair. Thousands of visitors to the fair consumed sausages sold there by vendors. In the same year, the sausages became standard fare at many baseball parks. Some historians claim that a bar owner, Chris Von der Ahe, also owner of the St. Louis Browns baseball team, introduced his “red hot” sausages at Sportsman’s Park to complement his already popular beer. Today Americans eat more than 24 million hot dogs in major league ballparks every year—enough to stretch coast-to-coast from Dodgers’ Stadium in Los Angeles (where in 2005 the largest number were sold) to Yankee Stadium in New York (which ranked fourth). By the end of the decade of the nineteenth century, hot dog vendors were selling their wares from carts on many street corners. Students bought up hot dogs at a fabulous pace outside the dorms at several major Eastern universities including Yale, Harvard, Princeton, and Cornell. They liked this form of fast food because it was easy to eat, convenient, and inexpensive. A perusal of university magazines from the period suggests that the term hot dog was well known before 1900. A former employee of Feltman at Coney Island, Nathan Handwerker, started Nathan’s Famous, which now calls itself the world’s largest purveyor of hot dogs both at stands and at supermarkets. Handwerker opened his stand in Coney Island in 1916 near the corner of Surf and Stillwell Avenues and simply called it Nathan’s. He sold his hot dogs for five cents each, and it quickly became a favorite fast-food stop for beach-goers and the staff at nearby Coney Island Hospital. The annual “Nathan’s Famous Fourth of July Hot Dog Eating Contest” has been held at the original Coney Island hot dog stand every Independence Day since 1916 without interruption. In 1936, the Oscar Mayer meat company rolled out the first Wiener mobile, essentially a truck sporting a sculpture of a giant hot dog, as an advertising ploy to increase its supermarket sales. The company’s “I wish I were an Oscar Meyer Wiener” jingle is known to millions of American children and has been translated into countless languages. Hot dog in Spanish is perrito caliente; in French—chien chaud; and in German—heisse Wurst. A first-century Latin-speaking Pompeian might ask for a pastillum botello fartum. The United States Chamber of Commerce officially designated July as National Hot Dog Month in 1957, and the tradition has been going strong ever since. July 20th is National Hot Dog Day, and more than 150 million franks are eaten on that day alone. It is estimated that Americans consume 20 billion hot dogs a year with retail-sales figures from supermarkets near 9 billion individual franks. This works out to between 60 and 70 hot dogs per person every year. Americans typically consume 7 billion hot dogs between Memorial Day and Labor Day. While hot dogs are served in 95 percent of homes in the United States, over 25 percent of the total are consumed elsewhere: 16 percent from street vendors and 9 percent at ballparks. New York
Fast Food, History of City, with its multitude of Sabrett hot dog carts, which appear on almost every corner and in every public park, is America’s leading hot dog–sales city, followed by Los Angeles and the Baltimore–Washington D.C. area. Mustard remains the premiere hot dog condiment, used regularly by 88 percent of all eaters, and sauerkraut (called Liberty cabbage during the two wars with Germany) is the most common vegetable topping. It is said in some regions of the country that no self-respecting person over the age of 12 uses ketchup on a hot dog. Nonetheless, so-called Texas Wieners (chili dogs) are hot dogs served with brown mustard, hot and spicy tomato chili, and diced raw onions. Ironically, chili dogs are more popular in New Jersey than in Texas along with an Italian Dog served with fried onions and green peppers. The Fenway Frank is steamed, as opposed to grilled or boiled, and is a great favorite of Boston Red Sox fans. It is served with ketchup, mustard, pickle relish, piccalilli (a mustard-based vegetable relish), and chopped onions. As a convenience food, the hot dog ranked number one in the United States for almost a century ( being displaced by pizza in the 1990s); and regardless of its European roots or the toppings placed upon it, the hot dog has long been the quintessential symbol of American fast food. In the 1960s under competitive pressure from Japanese auto manufacturers, General Motors (then America’s largest corporation) included the hot dog in its “buy American-made” advertising slogan: “Baseball, Hot Dogs, Apple Pie, and Chevrolet!” BURGERS Vying for the top spot as America’s favorite fast food behind pizza and hot dogs is the third-place hamburger. Hamburgers are all American, and there is no doubt about their lineage. The very first hamburger produced anywhere in the world was introduced in New Haven, Connecticut, by Louis Lassen at a small lunch wagon called Louis Lunch in 1895. Larsen had been selling steak sandwiches on sliced white bread to workers from nearby factories, but he was a very parsimonious business owner. At the end of the day, he collected all the unsold steaks and the scraps from trimming them, and ground them into patties to be cooked on the grill. Today Louis Lunch is a national heritage site owned and operated by third and fourth generation Lassens. Only sliced white bread, cheese, tomato, and onions are allowed on the hamburgers, which (contrary to the name) contain no ham or pork products. White Castle is one of the oldest hamburger chains in the United States, founded in 1921 by Walter Anderson and Billy Ingram in Wichita, Kansas. Unlike the major franchise hamburger outfits, White Castle remains a privately owned company. Their tiny square burgers smothered in steamgrilled onions and individually packaged in a white and blue box (modeled on Chicago’s White Tower) are still fondly known as belly bombs by their fans, who might eat a half dozen of the unique burgers in a single meal.
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White Castle’s “Selling ‘Em by the Sack” slogan had much to do with developing the popularity of the company’s take-out restaurants, and the tiny burgers helped to legitimatize the hamburger as a fast food. Since the food chain concept was new in the 1920s and 1930s, there was no infrastructure to support the company’s outlets. White Castle created its own centralized bakeries, paper products division, and warehouses. It even created a subsidiary that manufactured its own prefabricated White Castle super-structures for assembling outlets on site. In 1949, frozen patties ( provided by Swift and Company) supplanted fresh beef, and five small (and now characteristic) holes were put in the patties to facilitate quick and thorough cooking. In 1933, Ingram bought out the Anderson family, thereafter moving the corporate headquarters to Ohio. In the 1960s, the outlet on Boston Post Road and Allerton Avenue in the Bronx, New York, was the scene of one of the first major civil rights protests in the Northeast. White Castle outlets are not franchised in the United States, and the participants at the time were protesting the parent company’s alleged discriminatory hiring polices. The company figured in a more positive sense in the modern cult classic movie “Harold and Kumar Go to White Castle” (2004) and is referenced multiple times in the Beastie Boys’s album Licensed to Kill. Unlike the “big three” franchise burger purveyors (McDonald’s, Burger King, and Wendy’s), White Castle has also expanded its business into the frozen food market for home preparation of its product. Founder Ray Kroc opened the first McDonald’s fast food restaurant in Des Plaines, Illinois, in 1955, and he began franchising the “golden arches” outlets soon thereafter. The Big Mac, introduced in 1968, was the brainchild of Jim Delligatti, one of Kroc’s earliest franchisees, who by the late 1960s operated a dozen stores in Pittsburgh. Advertising icon Ronald McDonald was an early inspiration. In his first appearance in 1963, the happy clown was portrayed by none other than TV weatherman Willard Scott. Ronald McDonald and the Big Mac made McDonald’s a household word with its “billions served” advertisement slogan serving as evidence of its leadership in this area of fast food. The Happy Meal has been pleasing kids since 1979. The Ronald McDonald Houses are noted for their continued good work with families and children suffering from incurable disease. In 1954, James McLamore and David Edgerton opened their first Burger King restaurant in Miami, Florida. America was introduced to the signature Whopper Sandwich in 1957, and the “have it your way” advertising campaign was an instant sensation. Today the Whopper sandwich is world renowned for its fire-grilled taste and the many ways customers can order it to their liking. The great success of the early restaurants and their expanding menu of items made the Burger King concept a natural for international expansion and franchising. In 1963, a franchise outlet, the first outside the continental United States, was opened in Puerto Rico, and in 1969 the first international “Home of the Whopper” opened in Windsor, Ontario. In the 1960s, Wendy’s founder Dave Thomas was offered a chance to turn around a failing chain of KFC (Kentucky Fried Chicken) restaurants.
Fast Food, History of Working with KFC founder Col. Harland Sanders, Thomas turned four failing stores into million-dollar successes. He thereafter sold his KFC franchises and opened his first Wendy’s in Columbus, Ohio, in 1969. Thomas’s menu included large square hamburgers, thick malt shakes, soup, hot-topped baked potatoes, salad bars, and other unique items that made his franchise outlets stand out from their competitors. Thomas named the restaurant chain after his two-year-old daughter Melinda Lou, whose nickname was Wendy. THE SANDWICH Fourth in the running for favorite American snack food, but coming up fast, is the sandwich. The first recorded sandwich was created by the famous rabbi, Hillel the Elder, who lived during the first century B.C. He started the Passover custom of sandwiching a wine-bound mixture of chopped nuts, apples, spices, and bitter herbs between two matzoh crackers. The filling between the matzohs served as a reminder of the suffering of the Jews before their deliverance from Egypt and represented the mortar used by the Jews in their forced labor of constructing Egyptian buildings. During the Middle Ages, the sandwich took the form of thick blocks of coarse dry bread called trenchers that were used in place of plates. Meats and other foods were piled on top of the bread to be eaten by hand and sometimes with the aid of knives. The trenchers, thick and dry, absorbed the juice, the grease, and the sauces. At the end of the meal, one either ate the trencher or tossed the gravy-soaked bread to the dogs or to less fortunate human beggars. These trenchers were clearly the forerunner of the open-face sandwiches served in diners and restaurants. The term sandwich may refer to John Montague, the Fourth Earl of Sandwich. Montague became First Lord of the Admiralty during the American Revolution and was patron to the explorer Captain James Cook. In 1776, Cook named the Hawaiian Islands after him, calling them the Sandwich Islands. Montague was a hardened gambler and usually gambled for hours at a time at his club, sometimes refusing to get up even for meals. It is said that he ordered his valet to bring him some meat tucked between two pieces of bread. Others at the gambling tables began to order “the same as Sandwich!” According to this story the original modern sandwich was, in fact, a piece of beef-steak between two slices of toasted bread. True or not, the sandwich became very popular in the American diet in the nineteenth century when bakeries started selling pre-sliced bread, making sandwiches very easy to create at home. Sandwiches were a portable meal for workers and school children alike. However, American entrepreneurs rarely leave a simple success alone. Today sandwiches—particularly the so-called “submarine” sandwiches— are big business. The names used to refer to submarine sandwiches are largely regional: wedges, grinders, po’boys, hoagies, subs, and heroes all refer to some form or other of a long roll split down its length and stuffed with goodies. Subway is a franchise fast food restaurant that sells primarily a wide
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variety of these sandwiches packed with salad and fixings. The parent company was founded in 1965 by Fred De Luca and Dr. Peter Buck and is a wholly owned subsidiary of Doctor’s Associates, Inc. ( DAI ). De Luca initially chose a mediocre location for his shop and called it Pete’s Submarines, eventually shortened to Subway. The franchising effort, largely funded by Dr. “Pete” Buck, was remarkably successful, however. In 2000, Subway added seasoned breads and a line of specialty items to its menu. Today the company has over 28,700 franchised units in 87 countries and may be the fastest growing fast-food franchise in the world. Currently, Subway is the third largest franchise fast food chain globally after Yum! Brands ( 34,000 locations) and McDonald’s ( 31,000 locations). The company produces approximately $9 billion in sales every year. In 2007, Forbes magazine named DeLuca number 242 of the 400 richest Americans with a net worth of $1.5 billion. Blimpie is the oldest ( by a few months) fast-food submarine sandwich chain. It is headquartered in Scottsdale, Arizona, and is the third largest sandwich chain in the United States, behind Subway and Quiznos Subs. Three friends from St. Peter’s Prep School in Jersey City, New Jersey (Tony Conza, Peter DeCarlo and Angelo Baldassare) wanted to start a business together. After lunch at a sandwich shop in Point Pleasant, New Jersey, they decided to open their own eatery. After arranging financing and the supply chain they needed to support it, they finally opened Blimpie’s first store in Hoboken, New Jersey, on April 4, 1964. Blimpie currently has nearly 1,600 franchises in the United States. The company is presently owned by Kahala-Cold Stone Corporation. For many years Subway and Blimpie were the only major competitors in the franchise submarine sandwich business. Quiznos Sub specializes in toasted submarine sandwiches. It is the second-largest submarine sandwich shop chain in North America, passing the older and slower-growing Blimpie, but it is still only a fraction of the size of Subway. The first Quiznos Sub outlet opened at 13th and Grant Streets in Denver, Colorado, in 1981. Today there are over 5,000 shops located in the United States, over 300 in Canada, and 100 more scattered in 20 other countries. In recent years, the franchise has changed the face of the submarine business by focusing on hot, toasted sandwiches. This has forced Subway and Blimpie to follow suit and include them in their offerings along with innovations like tortilla wraps. It is impossible to discuss the history of fast food without a brief history of the single most iconic figure in fast-food history. Unlike Ronald McDonald or other fast-food icons, Sanders was an actual person and remained the sole spokesman for Kentucky Fried Chicken until his death at age 90 in 1980. The company adopted the abbreviated form of its name ( KFC ) in 1991. Based in Louisville, Kentucky, KFC is a chain of fast food restaurants known mainly for its fried chicken. The company was founded as Kentucky Fried Chicken by Sanders in 1952 in his gas station in Corbin, Kentucky. Eventually, his local popularity grew, and Sanders moved to a motel and restaurant that seated 142 people. He worked there as the chef. Sanders was made an
Finger Bowls honorary colonel in the Kentucky National Guard by the decree of Governor Ruby Laffon, and he assumed the guise of a nineteenth-century southern gentleman with linen plantation suit and spade beard as an advertising ploy. KFC’s are often coupled with Taco Bell’s, which specialize in Mexican and southwestern fast-food items like tacos, burritos, chilis, and wraps. KFC has been a wholly owned subsidiary of Yum! Brands since 2002. Yum! Brands, Inc., is a Fortune 500 corporation, that operates or licenses KFC, Long John Silver’s, Pizza Hut, Taco Bell, and A&W restaurants. Based in Louisville, Kentucky, it is the world’s largest fast-food restaurant company in terms of overall franchise units—over 34,000 outlets around the world in more than 100 countries and territories. In 2002, Yum!’s global sales totaled almost $10 billion. As can be seen, fast-food has increasingly become big business, if not a new business in the historical sense. Americans find fast and convenience foods desirable, and the expansion of the trade will probably continue into the foreseeable future. Nonetheless, none of these corporate giants can hold a candle to Mom’s PB & J sandwich on processed white bread prepared at home—with love. Further Reading: Jakle, John A., and Keith A. Sculle. Fast Food: Roadside Restaurants in the Automobile Age. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 2002; Schlosser, Eric. Fast Food Nation. New York: Harper Perennial, 2005; Smock, Aaron, Lifestyles Editor. “Pompeii represents thriving pride.” The Vanguard ( University of Southern Alabama), Monday, February 4, 2008; Vehling, Joseph Dommers, ed. Apius: Cookery and Dining in Imperial Rome. New York: Dover Publications, 1977.
James M. Volo
Finger Bowls Finger bowls are small bowls containing a small amount of water. Diners dip their fingers into them and wipe their hands clean with a dry napkin after eating a meal. These bowls have hovered on the brink of obsolescence for over a century. However, some elegant hotels still present them on special occasions. Making one’s ablutions at the dinner table has a long history. The earliest people used no flatware and ate food with their hands. After this, they wiped their hands clean on their own hair, or on the hair of a slave. One of the earliest instruments for wiping was a wad of dough the Spartans called apomagdalie, a mixture cut into small pieces and rolled and kneaded at the table. This practice led to special bread slices used to wipe hands at the table early in the Middle Ages. Once this practice disappeared, diners wiped their hands and mouths on the back of their hand or on their clothing. Beginning at medieval banquets up until the start of the nineteenth century, people dipped napkins into fingerbowls then wiped their mouths and
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chins. Earlier European diners rinsed their mouths with water from fingerbowls and spat it back into the bowl. Gargling was prohibited. This practice ended at the last of the nineteenth century. Once food was no longer eaten with hands, cut into smaller pieces, and placed more neatly into mouths, the need for cleansing diminished. Formal finger bowls are smaller than cereal bowls and may be made of any material. Some are metal, others appeared in plain or etched crystal, Nippon ware, Carnival or Depression glass, Haviland Limoges porcelain, Wedgwood, or cobalt blue glass. After the crumb tray, used to remove crumbs from the table, finger bowls became known as “pleasant pause before starting dessert.” These days they may be used after messy foods such as artichokes, shellfish, corn, asparagus, or any other handheld food. At Western meals around mid-twentieth century, after the crumbing tray, before the formal dessert service, a waiter brought each guest a finger bowl filled with water. The bowl was set on a small lace doily that, in turn, rested on the dessert plate. A dessert fork and spoon rested on each side of the finger bowl. Usually, a slice of lemon, lime, flower petals, mint leaves, even sea shells, or an orchid floated on the surface of tepid water in each half-filled bowl. Once presented, the diner delicately dipped fingertips of one hand, then the other into the water, with no scrubbing. Next, these were delicately dried with a napkin. Diners also delicately blotted their lips to remove any moisture. Once the diner had finished using the finger bowl, he or she lifted it along with its doily to the upper left of the remaining dessert plate. The remaining fork and spoon were placed to the left and right of the plate. If no silverware arrived with the finger bowl, another course should not be expected and the bowl was left in front of the diner. Actually, it takes a very aware diner to spot a finger bowl these days and use it correctly. Because it is so easy for many not to recognize them, there’s a well-rehearsed tale about the guest who picked their finger bowl and sipped from it. The host, wishing to show politeness to the guest, repeated the behavior so as not to embarrass the guest. Currently, finger bowls are rarely used. However, some airlines provide first class passengers with damp, heated wiping cloths immediately before, and sometimes after, meals. Many restaurants use a latter-day form of table self-cleansing by offering prepackaged, moistened paper toweling inside airtight plastic or foil packets. Providing rough, hot cloths for wiping hands and faces is a Chinese custom, and its popularity could revive a similar new cleansing ritual in the West. Further Reading: Visser, Margaret. The Rituals of Dinner: The Origins, Evolution and Eccentricities and Meaning of Table Manners. New York: Grove Weidenfeld, 1991; Von Drachenfels, Suzanne. The Art of the Table: A Complete Guide to Table Setting, Table Manners and Tableware. New York: Simon & Schuster, 2000.
Marty Martindale
Food Network
Food Network The Food Network launched in November 1993 as the first cable channel dedicated entirely to a new kind of programming—food as entertainment. The aim of founder Reese Schoenfeld was to produce shows that combined food with lifestyle and television personalities. The channel was created in partnership with nine cable and communications companies and launched to 6,500,000 subscribers. Television audiences were already used to watching the likes of Julia Child on PBS teaching cooking in a how-to style. The main focus was to learn a new recipe or technique (Julia’s engaging personality was an added bonus). The Food Network reinvented the cooking show, by introducing storylines and theme music, paying greater attention to the look and feel of the sets, and making good use of the editing room. Shows began to entertain audiences and create lifestyles they could either admire from afar or attempt to emulate for themselves. Despite its novel concept, by 1997 the Food Network was reaching only 19 million households. The channel didn’t have the scope they originally hoped for. In late 1997, the E. W. Scripps Company bought control of Food Network from the A. H. Belo Company. Shortly after the change in ownership, Judy Girard was installed as the new Senior Vice President of Content Development for Scripps Networks. With her extensive background in the business of TV, it was hoped the network would expand. From 1997 to 2001 increase in viewership rose at a rate of around 10 million subscribers each year. Between 2001 and 2002, the Food Network gained 17 million additional subscribers for a total of 71 million, making it the fastest-growing ad-supported cable network for that period. Today, over 90 million households tune in to the station and 7 million users log on to the Web site each month. The Food Network is headquartered in New York City and can be seen worldwide in Canada, Australia, Korea, Thailand, Singapore, the Philippines, Monaco, Andorra, Africa, France, and the French-speaking territories in the Caribbean and Polynesia. Scripps is a hybrid media company and owns and operates several cable networks including HGTV, DIY Network, Great American Country, and Fine Living. In addition, Scripps owns several broadcast television stations and newspapers across the country, various interactive media services such as shopzilla.com, and a licensing agency. Early shows on the Food Network modeled the new direction of food television immediately: they were host-based shows delivering food entertainment. At the time of launch, viewers tuned into David Rosengarten and Donna Hanover as co-hosts of Food News & Views. Robin Leach, best known for his work on Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous, was the anchor of the call-in show Robin Leach: Talking Food. Getting Healthy, with former sportscaster Gayle Gardner, was another interview and call-in show.
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A few years into the life of the network, David Rosengarten took on an entire food topic in his show Taste. Mary Sue Milliken and Susan Feniger became the Too Hot Tamales and brought a taste of Mexican cooking to the audience. Ready . . . Set . . . Cook!, hosted by Sissie Biggers, was a 1995 game show where two teams competed against the clock to cook a meal in 20 minutes using specific ingredients. Each team included a member from the audience (who brought the bag of food they had to utilize, at a cost of $10 or less) and a professional chef. The audience would then vote on a winner. This eventually gave way to more sophisticated reality TV shows that make up a large portion of current programming. Emeril Lagasse, now a household name, has been with the network since the beginning, with the shows Emeril & Friends and the Essence of Emeril. His popular show Emeril Live! debuted in 1997 and enjoyed a 10-year run. The introduction of Rachael Ray’s 30 Minute Meals in 2001 was an important turning point for the network. She was a self-trained cook who instantly appealed to viewers with limited time, cooking skills, and budgets— and that proved to be a lot of people. The current line-up of programs categorizes the shows into “In the Kitchen” and “Food Network Nighttime.” The first set airs before 8 P.M. on weekdays and from 7 A.M. to 2 P.M. on weekends. The intention with the “In the Kitchen” block of programming is to convey cooking information. The line-up includes Rachael Ray, Sandra Lee, Ina Garten, Paula Deen, and Giada
Chef Emeril Lagasse acknowledges the audience during a taping of one of his programs for the Food TV Network, 2001. AP/Wide World Photos.
Food Network
Food Network host Rachael Ray holds a copy of her new cookbook, Rachael Ray 30-Minute Meals 2, 2003. AP/ Wide World Photo.
di Laurentiis. This style of programming appeals to the core audience— females in the 25 to 54 year age range. The night programming offers reality and entertainment shows such as Iron Chef America, Throwdown with Bobby Flay, and The Next Food Network Star—a show that cultivates new talent. Nighttime shows, however, appeal more to younger males, which is why the competitive sports-style programs are featured in this time slot. Many of the phrases uttered by the celebrity chefs have become known in the pop culture vernacular, such as Bam! or EVOO. Biography-style programs that profile chefs, in the style that MTV made popular, are also well-liked shows, feeding the audience’s curiosity to go behind the scenes of their favorite programs and learn more personal details of the celebrity chefs. The Food Network audience can’t seem to get enough of one-off specials on food festivals, eating competitions, chocolate sculptures, and wedding cakes, to name just a few categories. The Emmy Awards have been friendly to some of the Food Network stars, in both nominations and wins. Paula Deen, Emeril Lagasse, Michael Chiarello, and Ina Garten are among the lucky ones. In 2003 the Food Network Kitchens launched the first of four cookbooks developed and written by the in-house kitchen team. Recently, the Food Network Kitchens partnered with Kohl’s to bring to the market their own brand of cookware and small appliances. Many of the celebrity chefs and hosts also have their own lines of cookware, food products, and cookbooks. The Food Network Web site, launched in 1997, is currently the most popular food site on the Web. Users can find recipes from all of the shows, read about their favorite stars, and get entertaining ideas. Further Reading: Buford, Bill. “Notes of a Gastronome TV Dinners: The rise of food television.” New Yorker. October 2, 2006, http://newyorker.com/archive/2006/10/ 02/061002fa_fact; Jensen, Elizabeth. “Changing Courses at the Food Network.” The New York Times. December 17, 2007, http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/17/ business/media/17/food.html; Kaufman, Debra. “Food Network Grills, Chills and Thrills.” Television Week. June 4, 2007, Vol. 26 Issue 23, p. 14–14, 1p, 4c, http:// www.tvweek.com/news.2007/06/food_network_grills_chills_and.php; Keeler,
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Janet K. “Food Network, night & day.” St. Petersburg Times. September 13, 2006, http://www.sptimes.com/2006/09/13/Taste /Food_Network_night_.shtml; Marcus, Erica. “Food Network shifts toward gastro-entertainment.” newsday. com. February 11, 2008, http://www.newsday.com/features/food/ny-foodfdcov021308,0,3229646.story.
Liz Tarpy
Fourth of July American Independence Day—also called the Fourth of July—commemorates the 1776 signing of the Declaration of Independence by leaders of the American colonies, an act that signaled the start of the Revolutionary War with Great Britain and the birth of the United States of America. The Fourth of July is both a national celebration of freedom and a summer holiday for outdoor family entertaining. It is the only American holiday where civic celebrations and home entertaining often coincide, and both public and private events are typically marked by patriotic decorations, music, barbeques and outdoor dining, and fireworks.
The Empire State Building is dwarfed by a burst of fireworks, July 4, 1996, during Macy’s 20th annual Independence Day pyrotechnic display along New York’s East River. AP/ Wide World Photos.
Fourth of July John Adams, one of the architects of American independence, predicted the tone and grandeur of future Fourth of July celebrations when he wrote to his wife Abigail in 1776 that the date should be commemorated with parades, bells, bonfires, and illuminations from one end of the continent to the other. The very first celebrations of American independence lacked the variety of events that occur today. Following ratification of the document, public readings of the declaration were held throughout the 13 colonies and were met with cheers. By the time of the first anniversary, certain rituals began to emerge. The first organized civic commemoration of the Fourth of July took place in 1777 in Philadelphia—the birthplace of independence—and was characterized with the ringing of bells, a procession of ships on the river decorated in the national colors of red, white and blue, the firing of 13 canons to symbolize the 13 states, and a lavish dinner for members of Congress. From that point forward, Independence Day celebrations started to occur locally and were commemorated with private banquets and large midafternoon public feasts—often held outdoors—where community residents could gather to offer toasts, eat, reminisce, and debate issues of the day. These dinners were usually ticketed events that followed morning military parades and speeches by public officials. The act of eating together on the nation’s birthday fostered community and a sense of shared national identity. Prior to the American Civil War, many dinners were for men only. Some Fourth of July dinners attracted several hundred to several thousand guests and required elaborate table arrangements to accommodate such large attendance. Enormous quantities of food were required for such numbers and could include grilled or roasted meats, poultry, baked beans, fresh fruits, pies, and cakes. Alcoholic beverages were also served and consumed in abundance to accompany the patriotic toasts which were offered throughout the meal. A variety of foods were associated with American liberty and the annual summer celebration. In the 1796 second edition of American Cookery by Amelia Simmons—considered the first American cookbook—a recipe appeared for “Independence Cake,” which called for 20 pounds of flour, 15 pounds of sugar, 10 pounds of butter, and four dozen eggs. The massive cake was flavored with a quart of brandy and a quart of wine and decorated in gold leaf. The recipe was typical of the celebratory Great Cakes of Britain and was adapted in name to commemorate the spirit of the newly united American colonies. During the nineteenth century, refreshing summer treats, such as ice cream flavored with fresh fruit and lemonade, were served and sold by vendors at outdoor events and quickly became associated with the holiday. Foods considered distinctly American appeared on menus. Turtles were plentiful in early America, and turtle soup was served at Fourth of July dinners because of its association with the bounty of the new nation. Clam soup was also a popular dish at organized events. If community events were an expression of national pride in life and liberty, the Fourth of July home party was an opportunity for more intimate
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socializing. As was the case with many holidays, the nation’s magazine editors would help set the agenda for Fourth of July celebrations and entertaining rituals, and their ideas ran the gamut of decorations, games, and food preparation. Inevitably, the meticulously planned home party would culminate with traditional dancing and fireworks displays. A July 1904 feature story by Marjorie March in the monthly periodical Women’s Home Companion provided detailed instructions for a Fourth of July house party. March suggested that the home be decorated in the national colors with blue and white china, colored lanterns adorning the piazza, red roses presented in blue and white vases, miniature American flag doilies, and individual white cakes in paper boxes tied with blue ribbon and topped with red candied cherries. March offered tips for a parlor game where guests would be challenged to think of words that end in “-nation” and suggested that winners of the contest be awarded prizes of red and white carnations tied with blue ribbon. A separate feature in the same issue recommended that a hostess create a “mock museum” of unusual objects representing great figures in American history and ask guests to match the names of patriots to the objects displayed. As cooking practices and menus became more relaxed and interest in outdoor home entertaining increased, grilled foods such as hot dogs and hamburgers took center stage at Fourth of July gatherings and remain a staple to this day. In 2006, the United States Census Bureau estimated that 150 million hot dogs would be consumed by Americans on the holiday, or in other words, one hot dog for every two people living in the United States. National colors are continually leveraged as an important visual element in Independence Day food and decorating schemes. The American Flag is an icon of the holiday and is proudly displayed from most residential homes on the Fourth. Martha by Mail, the former mail-order merchandise division of Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia, offered an unusually wide selection of patriotic bunting, various-sized American flags, and party favors to decorate an outdoor entertaining space in vintage Americana-style. As healthier eating preferences evolved, Fourth of July menu items reflected the trend. National magazines like Martha Stewart Living and Country Living published annual features and photo spreads on easily prepared, healthful party fare like grilled meats and roasted vegetables, parfaits, sorbets, and lighter summer fruit tarts in red, white, and blue color schemes. At the same time, traditional treats like homemade ice cream and patriotic frosted cupcakes remained enormously popular. Food and beverage companies have embraced the marketing potential inherent in Fourth of July entertaining and use the occasion to attempt to get the attention of consumers in a season when they might be distracted by other leisure activities. Kraft Foods offers an annual product promotion featuring Philadelphia Cream Cheese, Cool Whip, and Jell-O as the key ingredients in a no-bake “Wave Your Flag Cheesecake” using blueberries, strawberries, and red-flavored gelatin to create an image of the American flag in a rectangular cake pan. In 2002, the Distilled Spirits Council of the United States promoted a recipe for Martha Washington’s Rum Punch as an
France ideal libation for the Fourth of July, noting that George Washington operated a distillery at his Mount Vernon, Virginia, home and that Martha was renowned for developing innovative cocktail recipes. The punch recipe calls for three different types of liquor. The Fourth of July is an ideal opportunity for politicians to be highly visible and engage with their constituents at public proceedings. American Presidents beginning with John Adams have a long history of hosting Fourth of July celebrations, from White House receptions to festive family events. In 2004, the George W. Bush White House even published a collection of Independence Day–themed recipes on the White House Web site and suggested staging a Bush administration holiday gathering. Political party faithfuls could prepare dishes ranging from Secretary Snow’s “Land of the Free Cole Slaw” to Secretary Thompson’s “Bratwurst of Liberty.” Although much of the focus on Fourth of July entertaining now centers on the home, the annual Independence Day celebration is still observed with public events that capture the imagination and reflect the collective patriotism of the nation. Most local municipalities sponsor a parade with bands or traditional fife and drum corp. Community fireworks displays are a mainstay and sporting events are increasingly popular. The Macy’s Fireworks extravaganza by the Grucci Company in New York City is broadcast to a national prime-time television audience, and the Boston Pops has presented a free outdoor concert since 1929 on the banks of the Charles River. The New York Philharmonic performs a July 4th concert of American composers as part of its annual “Summertime Classics” series at Avery Fisher Hall. “A Capital Fourth” is the Independence Day Concert held on the lawn of the United States Capital Building in Washington, DC since 1981. All are exuberant and high-spirited occasions that enhance individual family celebrations and foster communal enjoyment of America’s annual birthday gala. Further Reading: Heintze, James R. Fourth of July Celebrations Database. http:// www.american.edu/heintze/fourth.htm; Heintze, James R. The Fourth of July Encyclopedia. Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Company, 2007; Travers, Len.Celebrating the Fourth: Independence Day and the Rites of Nationalism in the Early Republic. Amherst: The University of Massachusetts Press, 1997.
T. W. Barritt
France An overview of French history in terms of festivity and food reveals that this nation fully deserves its exalted culinary reputation. The conviviality and sociability surrounding eating and drinking in this country that straddles the Mediterranean and Northern European worlds have been memorialized not only in the millions of great French meals around the world and in the gastronomic centers of France via restaurants—with the obligatory guidebooks— and cookbooks but also in literature and painting.
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Even before the Roman invasion, the nation then known as Gaul had a rich and multi-layered culinary and celebratory culture due to the Celtic, Phoenician, and Greek cultures already present. Nevertheless, the interaction with the Roman conquerors deepened and transformed an already established culture of eating and entertaining. One result is that the Roman tradition did not disappear as fully in the emerging Kingdom of France, named after the Germanic tribe the Franks, as it did in much of the rest of Europe. Although France would produce perhaps the most famous chef of the medieval period, Guillaume Tirel, known as Taillevent (1310–1395), it would be in the field of literature, especially the work of the immortal Francois Rabelais, that the intimate link between food and festivity in France that had developed over the course of the medieval era was most fully elaborated. In the succeeding age of Louis XIV (1643–1715) and at his palaces of Versailles and Marley, French food and festive culture reached one of its many apogees and defined aristocratic elegance into the nineteenth century. The eighteenth-century Enlightenment, in turn, developed new gastronomical principles that would be elaborated during the French Revolution and after and would take its most concrete form in the modern restaurant. As a result, France has been at the center of the link between food and entertainment in the West and for much of the rest of the world over the last centuries. Indeed, as Priscilla Parkhurst Ferguson has noted, “it is the tour de force of French cuisine to be defined as at once national and cosmopolitan” (3). Even though France already has more competitors in this globalized twenty-first century, it remains a central referent for the link between food and festivity and its meanings. RENAISSANCE FRANCE By 1500 the medieval banquet culture of the French royalty and aristocracy was being infused with the festive culture of the Italian Renaissance and with new foods and beverages from the New World. At the top of the socioeconomic spectrum, palaces and houses began to dedicate specific rooms to eating and festivity rather than having each room serve many functions as was the case in much of the medieval period. Under the influence of Catherine de Medici and the Burgundian court eating became a complex entertainment that included ballet and theater as well as eating and storytelling. At the opposite end of the socioeconomic and spatial spectrum was the peasant hut whose center was the hearth with its fire and pot. This common fire provided heat, cooking, and conviviality for the family. The ordinary meal would consist of gruel and/or soup, and at the time of harvest or holidays, weak wine drawn from the second pressing of the grapes and some sort of boiled beef (the iconic pot au feu). Traditionally, the greatest time of festivity in the ordinary life of the largest segment of the population, the peasantry, was the harvest. This period could stretch from August to October depending on the location and the crop. Tasks were often but not always segregated by gender, with men
France in the fields and women preparing the feast. Long tables were used upon which would be placed the harvest goose. But though the goose was common throughout France, there were regional variations. In the French Alps, along the Rhône, down through the Isère to the Italian border, foods of similar composition to lasagne, polenta, or macaroni were served to farmers and often to Italian workers who came across the border to work. Jokes and comic songs interspersed with eating. Some of the best evidence comes from Francois Rabelais’s Gargantua and Pantugral—that boundless archive of late medieval entertaining and culinary customs that encompasses both the high and the low and the literate and illiterate cultures of French life. Rabelais (c. 1494–1553) provides one of the most extensive portraits of the interrelationship of food and festivity ever penned. In these sprawling novels we are at the intersection of the medieval and Renaissance world and of elite and popular culture. Ironically in an age when French cuisine stagnated—no new innovations appear in cookbooks until the middle of the seventeenth century—we see unprecedented literary creativity on the subjects of cuisine and celebration. France initially lagged as national cuisines, along with national consciousness, began to emerge during the Renaissance. In this sense one can see Rabelais as the “last Gaul.” Rabelais, however, was far from being the only French writer to explore the link between food and festivity. Michel de Montaigne (1533–1592), the inventor of the modern essay; Pierre Ronsard (1524–1585), dubbed “the prince of poets” and the leader of the Pléiade school; and other poets such as Guillaume Bouchet (1513–1594) and François Bérolade de Verville (1556–1626) also copiously covered sociability at the table. Rabelais’ gustatory genius resides in a playful polyphony in which laughter and mirth stimulated by food and drink create new turns-of-phrase and double entendres. Rabelais’s work has been expertly analyzed by Mikhail Bakhtin in one of the greatest literary studies of the twentieth century. In Rabelais the fertility of the French soil and the French imagination are united. In Michel de Montagine’s essays this notion is developed as he often uses the word nourish (nourir in French) to talk about nourishing the stomach and nourishing the mind. Montaigne also placed special emphasis on sociability of the table as key to a great experience: “One should not so much consider what one eats as with whom one eats it . . . There is no dish so sweet to me, and no sauce so appetizing, as those derived from company” (Jeanneret 27–28). Ronsard in his poetry was in awe of Homer and his inventiveness. He sang in praise of being at the dining and drinking table with friends, reciting poetry and having the cup bearer serve drinks. Guillaume Bouchet’s collection Les Serees and Berolade de Vervill’s Le moyen de parvenus take the free-form nature of table talk even further than Rabelais or Ronsard. By the time the great ancient classic text on cuisine and celebration by Athenaeus had been translated into French in 1680, a whole French tradition had evolved that acknowledged, developed, and transcended the symposium and convivium. French literary achievement in this area equaled if not exceeded that of Renaissance Italy.
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By 1500 public drinking establishments had become an established part of French social life. The original term for drinking establishments was tavern (from the Latin taberna), and they had been in existence as Gallo-Roman bas-reliefs show from at least the second century A.D. After 500, the invading Franks restricted tavern use to travelers and residents who bought wine and beer to consume at home. Over the course of the centuries the ban fell into disuse and by the time of Francois Villon (c. 1431–1463), Paris and other cities had developed a lively tavern culture. Villon himself was a rogue poet, who socialized with thieves and prostitutes. The disrepute surrounding taverns is evident in Nicolas Delamare’s eighteenth-century treatise on the Paris police. Taberna, he asserted, originally signified the person who led animals to pagan alters for slaughter, and he felt that tavern owners continued such sacrificial rites with their customers. By the fourteenth century the term cabaret became applied to drinking establishments. Again according to Delamare, the word derived from the traditional custom of putting leaves or cork stoppers ( Latin cobretum) on tavern doors. Unlike taverns, cabarets sold not only wine but also food to be consumed on the premises, thus attracting a wealthier clientele. But cabarets declined in social status with the arrival of cafés in the late seventeenth century. Another term, guinguette, dates from at least the eighteenth century and referred to suburban taverns along the Seine and Marne rivers surrounding Paris. The French Renaissance in terms of court festivity was a period of transition more than innovation. Francis I (1494–1547), the monarch who brought the Renaissance to France in the sixteenth century, assimilated the new style of the Burgundian and Italian courts and patronized a group of painters known as the School of Fontainbleau, who memorialized his court life. Catherine de Medici has traditionally been overrated as far as changing French cuisine is concerned but this powerful queen did play an important role in bringing new forms of splendor to French royal ceremonial. More than ever the royal dinner became a stage for elaborate masked balls, dance, and theatrical events that encompassed not only the great halls but also the emerging classical gardens as venues for pageantry. Catherine carefully directed these events and gave aristocratic women greater prominence than in past reigns. In these ways she provided a transition to the golden age of Louis XIV. In terms of cuisine, however, innovations would occur only with François Pierre (de) La Varenne (1618–1678) and his foundational cookbook for modern French food, Le cuisinier françois (1651). The long reign of Louis XIV ( personal rule 1661 to 1715) put France at the center of royal and aristocratic cuisine. Even after the fall of the monarchy during the French Revolution (1789–1815) France would not fall from the pinnacle of culinary reputation. Louis mobilized the resources of the largest population in Europe to create the epitome of a centralizing monarchial palace, Versailles, and through glory and intimidation focused all eyes upon his activities. Following his example, the aristocratic and bourgeois homes of France, and around Europe, focused much of their energy on food and festivity as the hallmark of culture and power. Although Louis’s meals
France may have numbered in the hundreds and involved elaborate presentations, the cuisine shifted from the ostentatious tang of heavily spiced foods with cinnamon, cloves, mace, and nutmeg, to more subtle seasoning with tarragon and other herbs and pepper. La Varenne perfected the modern white sauce ( béchamel). The goal of his cuisine was to enhance rather than to hide the natural flavors of foods. He also stressed the use of fresh vegetables and paired foie gras with truffles. The development of extensive gardens at Versailles was key not only to cooking but also entertaining. No king before Louis had ritualized meals so fully. He performed by way of his meals, the grand and petit or even tres petit couvert, or public meal, according to time of day and year. In most instances a crowd in hats watched in silence, as he ate without a hat. An entire language evolved concerning who could eat and watch the king while he ate, and these rituals demonstrated who was in or out of favor with the king. His festivities at Versailles became legendary. One of the most dazzling occurred in May 1664 when Louis XIV staged a festival that lasted several days titled the “Pleasures of the Enchanted Isle.” It started with a parade and exhibition of aristocratic warrior horsemanship, and also featured a ballet, and nighttime entertainments around the fountains and pools of Versailles illuminated by fireworks. As a young and athletic king, Louis participated in many of these pageants but naturally became more of a spectator as he aged. Cookbooks proliferated by the end of Louis XIV’s reign and became manuals on how to translate such great entertainments from the court to less exalted locales of aristocratic estates and town houses and bourgeois homes. In 1674, The Art of Fine Entertaining, written by “L.S.R.” appeared. Among the author’s recommendations were directions on the correct placement of candles for evening dinners to create the effect of luxury along with minute details on the proper preparation and presentation of the meal. In his book and others the serving style that would become known as French service (service à la française) emerged. This style of presentation consisted of arranging all the dishes at once in what we would now call buffet style. Guests were allowed to choose from whatever dish they liked. The grand scale of Louis XIV’s dinners and ceremonials was not continued after his death. Both at Versailles and in Paris, the trend was toward more intimate dining. From his youth Louis XV shunned the extravagant ceremonial of his predecessor and desired to eat and rule in more intimate rooms. The regent for Louis XV, the brother of Louis XIV, the Duc d’Orléans also preferred smaller, more intimate suppers and established this custom at his palace in Paris, the Palais Royal. Reflecting this trend the chef of the duke and cookbook author, François Massialot (1660–1733) in his Nouveau cuisinier royal et bourgeois, “The Court and Country Cook” (numerous editions between 1691 and 1734), detailed instructions for “intimate dinners for twelve.” The Palais Royal, an arcaded palace, became a center of cuisine, sociability, and prostitution in the late eighteenth century and remained at the center of Parisian life well into the nineteenth century.
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The move toward greater simplicity and intimacy is also seen in the first cookbook directed at women, La Cuisinière bourgeoise (written by a prolific male cookbook author named Menon). Following its publication in 1746, it remained the most popular cookbook in France for over a century. Scholars concur that these eighteenth-century intimate suppers “sought to banish ritual” and had an “atmosphere . . . of high fashion, flirtation, wit and gossip” (Strong 2l3). On the question of food and entertaining the French Enlightenment divides, as it does so often, between Voltaire and Rousseau. The former reveled as a youth in the intimate suppers during the regency. While alive, Voltaire enjoyed fame as an exalted and iconic writer. Exiled in Switzerland, he saw himself as “the hotel keeper of Europe” and praised luxury in his article on the bon vivant he called Le Mondain (the Mundane). Rousseau, on the other hand, preached that the simple cuisine and festivities of the world’s peasant peoples were far superior to anything civilization had developed because simple cuisine united individuals and communities in authentic food that they had grown and prepared themselves and in festivals that ensured no distinction between the participant and the observer and thus prevented alienation. Where both Voltaire and Rousseau could find common ground was in the numerous cafés of Paris that had become centers of fashionable society and avant-garde politics by the 1750s. Mathurin Roze de Chantoiseau, an inventor, opened the first restaurant in 1766 and hoped thereby not only to make his fortune but also to link the Enlightenment’s desire to ameliorate society through science to a transformation in the daily diet of millions. The French Revolution, which erupted in the spring of 1789, quickly took fraternity as one of its three guiding principles (the other two being liberty and equality). In July 1789, the same month as the fall of the Bastille, the Marquis Charles de Villette proposed that the ideal of fraternity be embodied in collective eating in the streets. Indeed a ‘patriotic meal” eaten by some of the National Assembly occurred during the celebration of the Federation on July 14, 1790 (marking the first anniversary of the Revolution), with the leftovers being distributed to the poor. Similar meals were staged at later revolutionary festivities and were made mandatory in July 1794. Here was the Rousseauian dream of popular festivity incarnate. But within a few months, as the radical republic gave way to the moderate Thermidorians and then the Directory, such measures were abolished. Of great long-term impact was the abolition of the guilds, which freed food and drink sellers to purvey whichever food and drinks they wished. French society in its reaction to the extremes of egalitarian democracy retrieved past traditions and created new institutions. The upper class recreated the private domestic dinner party. Often these dinner parties would have salons attached to them after the fashion of those found in the eighteenth century. After Napoleon gained power, one of the means he used to assert his legitimacy was to hold grand dinners on eight occasions during his rule and to lament that he had not brought back the grand couvert during his days in exile. The most important development of the revolutionary era,
France however, would turn out to be the consolidation of the restaurant as the new main ritual and festive site for eating and the emergence of the modern professional chef, restaurant critic, and gastronomic theorist. By 1830 Paris would be filled with over 3,000 restaurants and would be well on its way to defining the modern restaurant not only for the rest of the world but gradually also for the rest of France. By 1850, however, two-thirds of the nation’s departments still lacked these new sites of consumption and celebration. Many of the restaurants opened after 1789 were staffed from kitchens of the great aristocratic houses of France, and the result was that very quickly a customer, soon to be known as a gastronome, had many choices to eat. This gave rise to a culinary public sphere in which public opinion would evaluate, compare, and rank various eating establishments. The first modern restaurant critic was Alexandre Balthazar Laurent Grimod de La Reynière (1758–1837), who in his Almanach des gourmands collected his reviews of restaurants from the 1790s through the first decade of the nineteenth century. Often he would meet with a group of like-minded gourmets at the Parisian restaurant the Rocher de Cancale that also appears in the novels of Balzac, who immortalized the restaurant in his multi-volume series The Human Comedy. The other great theoretician of cuisine after the revolution was Jean Anthelme Brillat-Savarin (1755–1826). His Physiologie du goût (The Physiology of Taste) reveals his ambition to create a science of gastronomy. Although he wrote on restaurants, they were not as central to his writings as to Grimod’s. Brillat focused instead upon the full range of sensory, gustatory, and sociable experiences surrounding eating. He believed that meals were the key to refined entertaining and believed that the first part of a meal should be devoted to eating and the second part to socializing. Alexandre Dumas made similar observations on the effects of fine dining later in the century: “Wine is the intellectual part of the meal. Meats are merely the material part” (Toussaint-Samat 277). Though neither specifically links eating with the ideals of the French Revolution, they clearly see the table as an ideal expression of liberty, equality, and fraternity. Marie Antoine (Antonin) Carême (1784–1833) created the idea of the modern professional chef even though he worked mostly for royal and upper-class patrons rather than in restaurants. His first great patron was the diplomatic genius Talleyrand. After the fall of Napoleon Carême supervised a banquet for military and diplomatic dignitaries and then worked for the British Prince Regent, later George IV, and then Tsar Alexander I in Saint Petersburg, before returning to Paris, where he was chef to banker James Rothschild. Though he never worked in a restaurant, his influential cookbooks became the staple of chefs’ libraries. He also expressed the democratic wish that all French could share in the joy of a great meal. He saw the simple pot au feu (in essence beef stew) as one of the greatest of French dishes. His complex but refined system of cooking laid the foundation for nineteenth-century French haute cuisine. Though modern in so many ways in both display and service, his presentations pointed to the past more than
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the future. His pièces montées, making large and complex structures out of food in imitation of historic buildings or art works, recalled old regime banquets more than modern meals. ( However his creations are at the foundation of the modern wedding cake, one of which is described in great detail in Gustave Flaubert’s Madame Bovary.) Moreover, Carême continued to serve in the French style (that is, a wide variety of dishes in buffet fashion), rather than in the Russian style (that is, courses served sequentially and hot) that would become the norm at restaurants. The rise of the restaurant was intimately connected to the growing selfconsciousness of the French middle class. One historian of the restaurant has noted that it was at restaurant tables that “the nineteenth century began to define itself; it is à table that business deals are made, ambitions declared, marriages arranged” (Guy 30). Central to festive moments of the upper classes was champagne. Brandy and cigars were also a key element of the ritual of the upper-class restaurant experience as the concluding gestures that accompanied after dinner sociability. While restaurants proliferated first in Paris and then slowly across the country during the nineteenth century, the phenomenal development across the whole of France was the emergence of what I have called the workingclass café. These establishments sold not only the full range of drinks newly available in the post-guild era, they usually also sold lunches and sometimes even rudimentary dinners. Officially labeled retail drink outlets, debit de boissons, these establishments were usually known as marchands de vins (wine shops), cabarets, or cafés. We can best describe them as working-class cafés. They proliferated at an extraordinary rate between 1789 and 1850 rising from approximately 100,000 in 1789 to 350,000 in 1850, during a period when wine consumption had risen much more slowly. Restaurants and cafés had played a role in the French Revolutions of 1789 and 1830 but were much more vital during the Revolution of 1848, which in part developed out of a series of antigovernment banquets in early 1848 and which then got an added lift from Carnival celebrations in March 1848. By 1851 Louis Napoleon Bonaparte, who had been elected president in 1848, saw working-class agitation in cafés as a threat to his bid to become emperor and as a result closed upwards of 50,000 shops after his coup d’etat of December 1851. Even under this draconian regime cafés continued to proliferate and by the time the Second Empire fell in 1870 the number had returned to 1848 levels only to rise to 480,000. What worried much of the French elite during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries was that the rise in the number of cafés paralleled an explosive increase in alcohol, especially wine consumption from 80 liters per capita in the 1830s to 160 liters per capita in the early twentieth century. The great festive holiday for these popular establishments was Bastille Day, July 14, at which they usually hosted balls. They were also extensively used as the venues for working-class weddings as we see in Emile Zola’s novel L’Assomoir, or The Dram Shop. Impressionist painters also focused extensively on working-class cafés. The paintings often portray a sense of alienation, especially in the case of absinthe drinkers in the works of Manet and Degas.
France While the popular classes seemed to become ever more mired in alcohol consumption, the upper and middle classes of France continued to indulge in an ever more complex restaurant culture. By the end of the nineteenth century, International Expositions, especially those of 1867, 1889, and 1900, stimulated the growth of tourism and helped create the modern luxury hotel. After 1900 César Ritz and especially August Escoffier (1846–1935) pioneered the elegant hotel restaurant. Escoffier refined and updated Carême’s cuisine for the railroad and hotel age, helped welcome the growing number of women dining publicly in restaurants (rather than in private cabinets noirs, which were often associated with prostitution). Some of Escoffier’s signature dishes were named after the great actresses and singers of the age Sarah Bernhardt and the Australian Nelly Melba, whose name graces his famous peach desert. The rise of Escoffier also marks the consolidation of a national restaurant culture in France. Born in the southern city of Nice, he had started his career in a restaurant in his home city and then had restaurants on the Riviera, at Cannes and Monte Carlo, before moving up to Paris and then to London. At both the 1889 and 1900 International Expositions in Paris the Third Republic celebrated itself and the growing integration of France into a modern nation state by hosting banquets for all the mayors of the nation—over 21,000 functionaries. At these banquets both Parisian and regional specialties were served. By the 1920s the automobile was starting to transform the gastronomic and celebratory culture of France. National guides to France had emerged from the 1840s but only in the 1920s did a gastronomical guide literature proliferate. By this decade the famous Michelin guides were noting which restaurants were worth a trip or a detour and awarding stars. In this same decade following the carnage of World War I, the Guides Bleues, which had replaced the earlier Guide Joane, also mapped the restaurants of France for the ever-growing number of car owners who viewed gastronomic travel as one of the best ways to appreciate France and to have fun. The greatest monument to gastronomic regionalism to emerge in this decade was the multi volume Le Tour de France gastronomique, written by Curnonsky ( pen name of Maurice Edouard Sailland, 1872–1956) and Marcel Rouff. Although they may have traveled by car, these gastronomes stressed the need to eat food that had been lovingly and slowly cooked and that had to be enjoyed in the same leisurely fashion. But this new sense of national cuisine and the solidarity at the table came not only from Paris but also from the provinces. For example, in 1923 an Association des Gastronomes Regionalistes was founded and held dinners, festivals, and colloquia around the nation. International expositions held in France in the interwar era also celebrated the integration of Parisian and provincial foodways. For example, the leadership of France in food and festivity was trumpeted in the 1923 Salon d’Automne, a celebration of French art and artisanal genius, and the Exposition Universelle 1937, a more subdued replay of the great late nineteenth-century expositions. Initially after World War II the privations inflicted by four long years of occupation created a desire to return to traditional food preparation.
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French restaurateurs were not as creative in their cuisine as the cafés of Saint German des Pres in Paris were. Regulars like Jean Paul Sartre, Simone de Beauvoir, Albert Camus, Juliette Greco, and Boris Vian played an important role in renewing the café’s intellectual culture. One development that did emerge was the transformation of the bistrot from a term for a working-class bar to a term denoting a cozy, authentic, small neighborhood restaurant. The modern bistrot came of age in the 1950s. This same passion for authenticity would lead a group of chefs in the 1950s in eastern France, especially in the region around Lyon to lay the foundations for what was to become known in the 1970s as nouvelle cuisine (this is really the third nouvelle cuisine if you count La Varenne and Carême as the first renewers of French food). In Lyon legendary chef Mother (Mère) Brazier trained Paul Boucuse, and in Vienne restauranteur Fernand Point, considered the father of Nouvelle Cuisine, trained the Troisgros brothers. Moreover, from the early 1950s, the new medium of television played a vital role in renewing home cooking. Chefs such as Raymond Oliver, owner of Le Grand Vefour in the Palais Royal of Paris, became a household fixture as he showed French housewives new recipes and cooking styles. The rise of nouvelle cuisine occurred after the near revolution of 1968 as the French, especially the youth searched for a more informal and healthier way to eat and entertain. In March 1969, H. Gault and C. Millau published Le Nouveau Guide and within three years the term nouvelle cuisine had become a media staple. This new movement utilized the postwar advances in farming, refrigeration, and transportation to ensure a fresher and a more regional range of foods on the table. Improvements in ovens and steamers resulted in meat and vegetables that retained more of their original flavor and that were not overshadowed by the heavy sauces of nineteenth- and early twentieth-century cuisine. Nouvelle cuisine was influences by the cuisines of Japan and China. Moreover, artistic presentation of small portions replaced the large plates favored previously. Some of the bibles of this new cuisine were the works of chef Michel Guérard, including La Grande Cuisine minceur (1976) and La Cuisine gourmande (1978). In general, French eating has become lighter and more discriminating as the country has modernized and moved from an agricultural to an industrial economy, and finally to a service- and information-based economy. With the reduction in manual labor the number of calories needed per day has dropped from an average of 3,000 to 3,500 in 1900 to between 1,700 to 2,000 today. Food now plays a much less prominent role in the average individual and family budget, accounting for only 14 percent of expenses today as compared to more than double that amount (28.6 percent) in 1960. Between 1970 and 2001 the French also increased their consumption of fresh fruit and vegetables and decreased their consumption of bread, meat, and potatoes. Indeed, the French eat more fresh fruit than any other nation in Europe. By 2005 the nouvelle cuisine values of freshness, presentation, and taste topped the list in the qualities the French found most appealing in food. Moreover by 2005 the French drank almost as much AOC wine (the
France rate had more than tripled between 1970 and 2001) as they did the lesser qualities (whose rate of consumption had declined by two thirds). During these same years the French doubled their consumption of sodas and mineral waters and saw an even higher rate of increase for fruit juices. While the foods that the French eat may have evolved over the past 40 years, becoming lighter and more varied, the traditions of sociability at the table have remained largely unchanged. This holds as true in the home as it does in the restaurant. In general when guests come to dinner at a French home they are much more likely to bring flowers than a bottle of wine (a common American gift) because it is assumed that the hosts have already paired the wine with the food. In contrast to the average American household, the French have a much more distinct set of courses involving only one item at a time that is discussed and eaten in a more leisurely and convivial manner. Salad, for example, is a separate course, rather than being served with the main dish. This slow and sociable approach to eating is considered one of the main reasons for the so-called French paradox—that is, the fact that the French have a lower rate of heart disease than Americans even though they eat foods, such as pâtés, high in saturated fats. It is common both at home, at work, and at school for the French to take between one and two hours for lunch. An index of the importance the French government attaches to cuisine and sociability is the fact that numerous studies, such as those of 1973, 1981, 1989, and 1997, have been undertaken to determine how often the French make “gastronomic” meals, go out to restaurants, or have friends and family to dinner. According to the most recent survey (1997), half the population tries a new recipe every year, 29 percent “regularly” try new recipes, and 68 percent go to a “gastronomic” restaurant each year (with 34 percent from time to time). The survey also indicates that the French are twice as likely to go out at night (from time to time) to see their friends—30 percent—than to see their relatives—17 percent. Courtship and marriage rituals also remain intimately tied to food and entertaining. Class differences remain very much in evidence with the working class conducting much of its dating and courting activity in bars and restaurants, and the elite having private parties, known as rallyes, usually at exclusive clubs or rented auditoriums. This custom has emerged only after World War II and is found especially in the most affluent sections of Paris and its suburbs. Such social gatherings usually have a diverse buffet with the most sophisticated snacks offered by French cuisine: choice wines, petits fours, canapés, éclairs, and bite-size caviar and salmon sandwiches, all from the leading gourmet delicatessens (traiteurs) of Paris, such as Lenôtre. As far as weddings are concerned, France has an extremely rich and influential heritage. While peasants often gave herbs as tokens of their love, the custom of presenting diamonds to the beloved, if not the betrothed, is traced back to the fifteenth-century French monarch Charles VII’s gift to his mistress Agnès Sorel. French brides also developed the custom of creating the trousseau, from the French word trousse, meaning “bundle.” A trousseau is a collection of clothes for her marriage stored in a chest or armoire.
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Traditionally in France the wedding veil also serves as the first wrapping for the newborn baby. The tradition of the white wedding dress is traced back to Queen Anne of Brittany, who wed Louis XII in 1499. But the modern custom dates only from the marriage of Eugénie de Montijo to Emperor Napoleon III in 1853. Toasts to the new couple are of course ancient but the ubiquitousness of champagne toasts dates only from the nineteenth century. Rice, as a symbol of fertility, has not always been what has been thrown or given to the newlyweds. In the past wheat has been thrown or bread offered. Not only did French tradition sanction dancing and music after the wedding but also often additional money, food, or drink if the bride was a lot younger than the husband. ( This was done to assuage the young men of the village or neighborhood about losing one of the eligible women to a man outside of their cohort.) Naturally the modern elaborate reception fulfills that function well. Food in early twenty-first century France is becoming as much a fashion and health statement as a marker of festive and sociable exuberance. One of the leading French chefs today, Alain Ducasse, views his dishes as artistic creations, and he has had them trademarked. Owner of 25 restaurants around the world and a score of publications, Ducasse is at the forefront of transforming French cuisine into a global experience. But even with this global reach, he tries to remain true to his native soil. In doing so he is following in the footsteps of recent French intellectuals, such as Claude Levi Strauss and Pierre Bourdieu, who have plumbed the anthropological and sociological depths of the eating experience and its relationship to human thought, sociability, and social distinctiveness. Further Reading: Bakhtin, Mikhail. Rabelais and His World. Trans. Hélène Iswolsky. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1984; Blocker, Jack S. Jr., David M. Fahey, and Ian R. Tyrell, eds. Alcohol and Temperance in Modern History, An International Encyclopedia. Vols. I and II. Santa Barbara, CA, Denver, CO, and Oxford: ABC Clio, 2003; Donnat, Olivier. Les pratiques culturelles des Français. Enquête 1997. Paris: La Documentation française, 1998; Ferguson, Priscilla Parkhurst. Accounting For Taste: The Triumph of French Cuisine. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2004; Flandrin, Jean-Louis, and Massimo Montanari, eds., Food: A Culinary History From Antiquity to the Present. New York: Columbia University Press, 1999; Freedman, Paul. Food: The History of Taste. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2007; Guy, Kolleen M. When Champagne Became French: Wine and the Making of A National Identity. Baltimore and London: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2003; Haine, W. Scott. The World of the Paris Café: Sociability Among the French Working Class, 1789–1914. London: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1996; Holt, Mack P. Alcohol: A Social and Cultural History. Oxford and New York: Berg, 2006; Jeanneret, Michel. A Feast of Words: Table Talk in the Renaissance. Trans. Jeremy Whiteley and Emma Hughes. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1991; Pinçon, Michel, and Monique Pinçon Charlot. Dans les beaux quartiers. Paris: Seuil, 1989; Spang, Rebecca L. The Invention of the Restaurant: Paris and Modern Gastronomic Culture Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2000; Strong, Roy. Feast: A History of Grand Eating. Orlando, FL: Harcourt, 2002; Toussaint-Samat, Maguelonne. A History of Food. Trans.
Funeral Food Anthea Bell. Cambridge MA and Oxford: Blackwell, 1992; Schehr, Lawrence R., and Allen S. Weiss. French Food: On the Table, On the Page, and in French Culture. New York and London: Routledge, 2001; Vreeland, Susan, Luncheon of the Boating Party. New York: Viking, 2007.
W. Scott Haine
Funeral Food FOOD FOR THE DEAD, FOOD FOR THE LIVING Human beings not only eat, they think—and one of the things they think a great deal about is death. The awareness of our own mortality colors our thinking about everything, including food. We sometimes compare life after death to a journey—and many cultures try to provide their dead with everything to make that journey easier or more comfortable. Sometimes the dead are given real food, and sometimes they are given symbolic food. The ancient Egyptians, for example, buried their royal dead with complete entourages (in the form of miniature models) to provide the sort of meals the departed had enjoyed in life: cooks and other servants, kitchens, granaries, farm animals, and so forth. The funerals of Chinese followers of Confucius—who have great veneration for ancestors—feature sacrifices of various kinds: not only rice and other foods, but also symbolic money (specially printed for such occasions), and even symbolic cars, servants, airplanes to provide for the decedents’ needs on their journey to be reunited with their ancestors. In addition to keeping the dead well prepared for their journey into the afterlife, foods were sometimes used to protect them in other ways. Before the eighteenth century, in England and Wales, a sin-eater was called in when someone died. Bread and beer were passed across the corpse, and the sineater consumed them, thereby assuming all the sins of the dearly departed. Some Chinese families bring complete meals to the cemetery. The dishes are spread out, picnic-style, before the tombstone—as if the deceased was still at the family table—then consumed by the family. This tradition is similar to including an empty chair and place setting at holiday meals for recently departed family members. Some cultures believe that the dead can return at certain times of the year and that special foods should be prepared to honor them. In Louisiana, Cajuns celebrate Le Jour des Morts (day of the dead ) by bringing food to the cemetery on November first. The better-known Mexican Dia de los Muertos (Day of the Dead, also known as All-Souls’ Day) is another such occasion. Mexicans spend the day cleaning and decorating graves, and preparing highly decorated sugar skulls, often marked with the names of the dead. They use special black plates, available only at that time of year. Candy skeletons are often saved for years. Likewise, Italian ossi de morti ( bones of the dead ), special hard-baked cookies that resemble sections of femurs, can
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be stored indefinitely. Italian children looked forward to receiving treats from the dead on All-Souls’ Day—usually favi de morti, tiny bean-shaped almond-flavored cakes (ancient Greeks and Romans believed that the souls of the dead resided in fava beans, and the notion survives in this Christian practice). The distribution of Halloween treats, in America, is descended from such Old World traditions. The living have also been concerned about the happiness of the departed for reasons that are not entirely altruistic. A common fear was that the dead, if not properly fed, would come back to haunt the living. Romanians, for example (whose culture has given us many interesting forms of such harassment by the dead ), often brought wine and bread to the graves of their loved ones. Their intention was to keep the corpse well fed, so it would not return to feed on the living. FUNERAL FEASTS After a funeral, most cultures serve a meal that connects the living (with each other and with their society), while providing sustenance for their own journeys home. The most drastic version of a funeral feast involves the practice of endocannibalism. Essentially this refers to the eating of one’s departed loved ones in order to keep their essence in the family. This could be as simple as mixing some of a Yanomamo grandmother’s ashes in the plantain soup that the entire family would consume. Herodotus described a similar conviction among the ancient Scythians, who would have been horrified at the thought of placing their dearly departed in the cold ground— when the guest of honor at a funeral could also provide the main course. Most of us would not dream of such a thing, but only because our funeral feasts reflect different systems of belief. The “celebration of life” (a cliché found in almost every funeral oration)—actually carried out, through eating, after the funeral—is not logical, but psychologically, it is very comforting. The transition from somber reflection to celebration can be dramatic (as, in New Orleans, when the traditional funeral marching band switches from mournful shuffle to exuberant jazzy dancing). The decidedly ungloomy tone of an Irish wake, for example, has more to do with the joy of still being among the living than sadness over the loss of a friend or relative. In a sense, the funeral feast marks the end of the initial shock of loss and the beginning of continued life for the survivors. Rituals, often involving familiar comfort foods, serve to make difficult or emotionally trying events easier to bear for everyone—and funerals are no exception. One such ritual (which seems, itself, to have died out) was the medieval English funeral feast called the arval. The name comes from the Old Norse words arfl and öl, meaning “inheritance” and “ale.” Arvals could, at least for the wealthy, be huge and sumptuous events—though even the poor would get eggs, bread, wine, and, of course, ale. Funeral bread, a kind of spice cake, was always included. It was replaced, from the seventeenth century on, with funeral biscuits—similar to shortbread, and often stamped
Funeral Food with the sentence Dies mortis aeternis vitae natalis est ( The day of death is the birth of eternal life). Funeral biscuits were commonly given to those attending the obsequies. By the early nineteenth century, these were produced in commercial bakeries and came wrapped in paper, printed with appropriate verses, and sealed with black wax. Early Americans continued the tradition of funeral biscuits for a time—usually in the form of a kind of molasses cookie, instead of shortbread. Comfort foods are often brought to bereaved families, to ease the stress of the immediate mourning period (when mourners are not expected to be fussing over such earthly functions as cooking—for themselves or for the many visitors who arrive to console them). Casseroles, like the cheesy scalloped potatoes, are so often brought by Mormons and Midwestern protestants that they are known as funeral potatoes. Indeed, casseroles are uniquely suited for such purposes, as they are filling, familiar, and easily transportable. RELIGIOUS VARIATIONS ON THE FUNERAL FEAST Since our collection of beliefs varies with our religious environments, it is not surprising that the nature of our funeral feasts varies accordingly. Ideally, Jewish funerals take place within 24 hours of death. After the funeral, Jewish families and friends share a meal of consolation (seudat havra-ah) at the home of the deceased. Hard-boiled eggs (symbols of life and eternity because of their roundness) are eaten, as is bread, another symbol of life. Meat is not eaten, because it symbolizes celebration. For seven days after the funeral, mourners “sit shivah” (for the Orthodox, literally sitting on short stools or on the floor). Again, foods (often sweet cakes and such foods as may be eaten without need for a sit-down dinner) are supplied to the immediate family by the family and friends who come to console them. Islamic law also requires that burial occur within one day. Friends and relatives bring food to the immediate family for three days afterwards. Dishes brought are very often made with honey, as it is believed to alleviate the mourners’ grief with its smooth sweetness. The family, in turn, provides only coffee to the visitors. Christians do not have the time restrictions shared by Hebrews and Moslems. Christians begin bringing prepared food and drink to the bereaved family as soon as they get the sad news. It is customary to have a gathering, the night before the funeral, of family and friends of the deceased. Protestants have a viewing, usually at a funeral home. Catholic viewings traditionally include a prayer service called a wake, followed by food and drink. It should be noted that not all religions have prescribed culinary traditions associated with funerals. No special food rituals accompany Buddhist or Shinto funerals. When a Hindu dies, the body is cremated, not buried. While the Hindu mourning period may last from a few days to a year, no food is brought to the grieving family—perhaps because of the complex
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rules governing food in Hinduism (rules that are not based on forbidden ingredients, but on how the food is prepared and who does the cooking). Further Reading: Barber, Paul. Vampires. Burial and Death: Folklore and Reality. New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 1988; Breers, Peter. “Arvals, Wakes and Month’s Minds: Food for Funerals.” In Mason, Laura (ed.). Food and the Rites of Passage. Leeds Symposium on Food History ‘Food and Society’ Series. Devon: Prospect Books, 2002; Davidson, Alan. “Funeral Food.” In Davidson, Alan (ed.). The Oxford Companion to Food. New York: Oxford University Press, 1999; Purvis, Kathleen. “Funeral Food.” In Smith, Andrew (ed.). Food and Drink in America. New York: Oxford University Press, 2004; Rogak, Lisa. Death Warmed Over; Funeral Food, Rituals, and Customs from Around the World. Berkeley, CA: Ten Speed Press, 2004; Sack, Daniel. Whitebread Protestants: Food and Religion in American Culture. New York: Palgrave, 2000; Thursby. Jacqueline S. Funeral Festivals in America: Rituals for the Living Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 2006; Webb, Lois Sinaiko. Multicultural Cookbook of Life-Cycle Celebrations. Phoenix, AZ: Oryx Press, 2000.
Gary Allen
G Garden Party A garden party is a social gathering held in a park or garden. During the late Victorian era it became fashionable to hold elegant and lavish social events in the out-of-doors. While the Victorians were masters of extravagant dining and entertaining, they also celebrated nature and the out-of-doors. The garden party became the perfect solution to the problem of how to experience nature and extravagant dining simultaneously. The practice of the garden party is thought to be an outgrowth of the weekend getaways that were held at the country homes of the upper classes in England and the United States. In the afternoons and early evenings, the grounds would be lit with lanterns and long buffet tables would be set for the guests. These were very festive gatherings, and guests tended to dress up for the occasion. The concept of the garden gathering was so appealing that it came to be used for any type of party. Garden parties have been taking place at Buckingham Palace since 1860 when Queen Victoria instituted her first “breakfast,” which was actually held in the afternoon. Buckingham Palace Garden is the setting for many Royal Garden Parties held by the queen each summer. Contemporary magazines, such as Harper’s Bazaar and Ladies’ Home Journal, often detailed the extravagant society garden parties, or reported
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Members of the British royal family, including King George V and King Edward VIII, gathered around Queen Victoria at a garden party, 1936. Library of Congress.
on the preparations for upcoming events. Such events had to be arranged weeks beforehand, and arrangements had to be prepared in the event of bad weather. The hostess usually sent out her invitations two weeks in advance. Invitations were engraved and printed on a sheet of plain notepaper or one that simply bore the family crest in watermark only. Unless the house was a very large one, which could accommodate a large group of guests, invitations noted that the event was “weather permitting.” Generally, children were not invited to garden parties. It was feared that they would get too excited and interfere with the enjoyment of the adults. If the garden party was to take place in a suburban location, local people were expected to arrive by carriage. If guests were traveling from the city, the invitations would have a card enclosed with the directions plainly given as to the hours of trains, which train or boat to take, and any other instructions necessary for the guests, such as “carriages will meet the arrival of the 3:30 P.M. train from Grand Central.” For those events held on out-ofthe-way country properties, still more explicit directions would be given. When the carriages arrived, guests would be shown to rooms where they could freshen up after their journey. Servants would be available to assist guests and to show them to where the party was to take place. The hostess would receive her guests on the lawn. They would then be free to wander through the grounds. Porches, piazzas, and shaded areas were filled with chairs for guests to sit and chat and enjoy the view. It was not unusual for upholstered furni-
Garden Party
Minister Griscom’s garden party, 1936. Library of Congress.
ture and armchairs to be moved outdoors and intermingled with the wicker chairs and lawn furniture. Often, pieces of stair carpeting were placed in front of the chairs, and Turkish rugs were laid down on the grass to help protect long dresses in case the grass was damp. Every effort was made so that even the elderly and rheumatic could be comfortable and enjoy the party. Often a platform was laid for dancing. A band, offering a variety of music ranging from formal to popular, was essential to any successful garden party. Customarily, a garden party was always held entirely out-of-doors. Often a tent covered the area where the refreshments were served. For smaller affairs, refreshments were sometimes placed inside the house, generally in the dining room. If the hostess planned to serve her menu outdoors, it was important that all her dishes were cold. In the summer of 1882, Harper’s Bazaar suggested salads, cold birds, ham, tongue, pâté de foie gras, cold patties, salmon dressed with a green sauce, jellies, Charlottes (a chilled dessert made from bread or sponge cake, filled with fruit puree or custard), ices, cakes, punch, and champagne as appropriate garden party fare. A cup of hot tea would always be available in the house for those who desired it.
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Fruit was a popular offering. Melons, peaches, grapes, and strawberries were all served throughout the season. Some parties were conducted much like an afternoon high tea and some included hot cakes and hot broiled chicken. Guests were seated at tables in small groups. Every effort was made to preserve the proprieties of a proper dinner. There were no piles of dirty dishes, knives, forks, or spoons visible to spoil the bucolic setting. Servants carried baskets so that anything that needed to be discarded could be quickly hidden from view. Sufficient quantities of glass, china, and plenty of linen napkins were kept ready, so there was no delay in serving the refreshments. The lemonade and punch bowls were continually replenished. Servants in caps and aprons would watch the table, making sure that sufficient clean cups, spoons, plates, wine glasses, and forks were available. Every propriety was followed. When strawberries and cream were served, a small napkin was placed between the saucer and plate, and a dessert spoon and fork were handed with each plate. Claret, champagne, brandy, and soda water were all provided on a separate table for the gentlemen. Although a gentleman could step up to this table and help himself, a servant was always in attendance to remove the wine glasses, tumblers, and goblets as they were used; to replenish the decanters and pitchers as they were emptied; and to supply fresh glasses. Many hosts offered old Madeira, sherry, and port as well. Decanters were also placed on the regular luncheon table, and glasses of wine carried on silver trays were brought by servants to the ladies who were sitting on the piazzas and under the trees. Small thin tumblers were used for the claret and champagne, which were served in silver or glass pitchers. Many hostesses rented the necessary glass, silver, and china from the caterer’s best china rather than risk having their own broken in the rough setting. Amusements were available for younger guests. Archery targets and equipment would be only one of the activities that would be set up in advance so that guests could partake in the sport. Croquet was particularly popular among women, as it required considerable skill but little strength or technique. Men tended to be less passionate about the sport but appreciated its social advantage since both men and women played together. Lawn tennis was another popular sport. Initially, it involved simply patting the ball back and forth without keeping score. Soon, however, players became caught up in the competitive spirit. More active than croquet or archery, tennis was viewed as an excellent exercise for mind and body and had particular appeal to men. By the 1880s it had become the rage in fashionable summer resorts. If there was a lake on the property, boats would be made available and care was taken to be sure that an experienced boatman was on hand. For those less interested in physical activity a card party or a game of checkers could be played under the trees. During the late nineteenth century, public garden parties became popular. These were held on semi-official occasions, such as the laying of a foundation stone for a public building, the birthday of a prominent individual, a Sunday school festival, or an entertainment given to a political official.
Garden Party These affairs were less formal and invitations were somewhat more general, sometimes even being extended by announcement or public notice. Today, garden parties are no longer only for the well-to-do. The modern garden party can be very free-form, or use a special occasion or theme as the basis for the event. They are held in backyards and in public gardens or on the grounds of historic buildings. Even apartment dwellers can host a garden party on their terrace or patio. Many are used to raise funds for community causes, but even more are simply an opportunity for friends and family to celebrate a lovely day in the out-of-doors. There are no rules to dictate foods, music, or activities. Frisbee is more likely than archery. The one constant is bringing a bit of indoor elegance outdoors. Further Reading: Bales, Suzy Frutig. Garden Parties. New York: Clarkson N. Potter, 2003; Snow, Shelley, and Elaine Husband. Gathering in the Garden: Recipes and Ideas for Garden Parties. Sterling, VA: Capital Books, 2003.
Dorothy Denneen Volo
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Entertaining from Ancient Rome to the Super Bowl AN ENCYCLOPEDIA
VOLUME 2: H–Z
Edited by Melitta Weiss Adamson and Francine Segan
GREENWOOD PRESS Westport, Connecticut • London
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Entertaining from Ancient Rome to the Super Bowl : an encyclopedia / edited by Melitta Weiss Adamson and Francine Segan. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978–0–313–33957–8 (set : alk. paper) ISBN 978–0–313–33958–5 (v. 1 : alk. paper) ISBN 978–0–313–33959–2 (v. 2 : alk. paper) 1. Entertaining—History—Encyclopedias. 2. Cookery, International—History— Encyclopedias. 3. Food habits—History—Encyclopedias. I. Adamson, Melitta Weiss. II. Segan, Francine. TX731.E5824 2008 641.3003—dc22 2008030543 British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data is available. Copyright © 2008 by Melitta Weiss Adamson and Francine Segan All rights reserved. No portion of this book may be reproduced, by any process or technique, without the express written consent of the publisher. Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 20080305043 ISBN: 978–0–313–33957–8 (set) 978–0–313–33958–5 (vol. 1) 978–0–313–33959–2 (vol. 2) First published in 2008 Greenwood Press, 88 Post Road West, Westport, CT 06881 An imprint of Greenwood Publishing Group, Inc. www.greenwood.com Printed in the United States of America
The paper used in this book complies with the Permanent Paper Standard issued by the National Information Standards Organization (Z39.48–1984). 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 The publisher has done its best to make sure the instructions and /or recipes in this book are correct. However, users should apply judgment and experience when preparing recipes, especially parents and teachers working with young people. The publisher accepts no responsibility for the outcome of any recipe included in this volume.
Contents
List of Entries
vii
Guide to Related Topics
xi
The Encyclopedia: H–Z
293
Bibliography
551
About the Editors and Contributors
569
Index
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List of Entries
American Frontier Ancient Greece Ancient Rome Anniversary Parties Antipasto Aztec Entertaining Baby Shower Bachelor Party Bar / Bat Mitzvah Barbeque Barn Raising Beer Halls and Beer Gardens Beeton, Isabella Betty Crocker Birthdays Blair House Block Party Book Clubs Books on Entertaining and Dining, History of Brazil Bridal Shower
Brunch Buffet Cake and Candles Catering Celtic Feasting Chafing Dish Champagne Cheese Course, History of Childhood in South India Children’s Birthday Parties Chinese Banquets Chinese New Year Chocolate Chopsticks Christmas Civil War Cocktails Coffeehouses in London Coffee Klatches Colonial America Colonial Mexico Cookbooks, History of
viii
List of Entries
Cookbooks, Tools for Entertaining Cordials and Liqueurs Cruise Ships Day of the Dead Debutante Balls Deepavali, Festival of Lights Dessert Dim Sum Dinner Parties Doilies and Coasters Door County Fish Boil Dutch Treat Easter Edible Centerpieces Egypt Etiquette Books Fast Food, History of Finger Bowls Food Network Fourth of July France Funeral Food Garden Party Halloween Hors d’oeuvres and Canapés Inca India Invitations Italy Japanese Cherry Blossom Festival Juneteenth Kaiseki Ryori Kentucky Derby Kitchen Staff Dress Kwanzaa La Quinceanera Luau Mardi Gras Masquerade
Medieval Mesta, Perle New Year’s Eve Parisian Cafés Party Favors Party Planners Philippine Fiestas Potluck Suppers Progressive Dinner Parties Prohibition Renaissance Rent Parties Restaurants Russian Hospitality Saints’ Days Serving Platters Singles Soul Food St. Patrick’s Day Stewart, Martha Sub-Saharan Africa Sugaring Off Party Super Bowl Parties Table Service, French versus Russian Table Settings Tapas Taverns Tea Tearooms in America Thanksgiving Theme Parties Toasts Tupperware Party Valentine’s Day Wedding Receptions Wine World War II Zakuski
Guide to Related Topics
Accoutrements
Celebrations
Chopsticks Doilies and Coasters Edible Centerpieces Finger Bowls Invitations Kitchen Staff Dress Party Favors Serving Platters Table Settings Toasts
Anniversary Parties Baby Shower Bachelor Party Bar / Bat Mitzvah Birthdays Bridal Shower Children’s Birthdays Debutante Balls Juneteenth Kentucky Derby La Quinceanera Wedding Receptions
Beverages Beer Halls and Beer Gardens Champagne Cocktails Cordials and Liqueurs Prohibition Taverns Tea Tearooms in America Wine
Countries and Customs Brazil Childhood in South India Chinese Banquets Chinese New Year Colonial America Colonial Mexico
x
Guide to Related Topics
Deepavali, Festival of Lights Door County Fish Boil Dutch Treat Egypt France India Italy Japanese Cherry Blossom Festival Kaiseki Ryori Philippine Fiestas Russian Hospitality Sub-Saharan Africa Table Service, French vs. Russian Tea Zakuski
Birthdays Bridal Shower Thanksgiving Wedding Receptions Festivals Deepavali, Festival of Lights Japanese Cherry Blossom Festival Luau Mardi Gras Masquerade Rent Parties Sugaring Off Party Foods
Courses Antipasto Cheese Course, History of Dessert Dim Sum Hors d’oeuvres and Canapés Kaiseki Ryori Potluck Suppers Table Service, French versus Russian Tapas Tea Domestic Occasions Barbeque Barn Raising Blair House Book Clubs Brunch Chafing Dish Coffee Klatches Dinner Parties Funeral Food Garden Party Potluck Suppers Progressive Dinners Tupperware Party
Antipasto Cakes and Candles Cheese Course, History of Chocolate Dim Sum Fast Food, History of Hors d’oeuvres and Canapés Soul Food Tapas Histories American Frontier Ancient Greece Ancient Rome Aztec Entertaining Celtic Feasting Civil War Colonial America Colonial Mexico Cruise Ships Inca India Medieval Prohibition Renaissance World War II Holidays
Families Anniversary Parties Baby Shower Bar / Bat Mitzvah
Chinese New Year Christmas Day of the Dead Easter
Guide to Related Topics Fourth of July Halloween Kwanzaa New Year’s Eve Saints’ Days St. Patrick’s Day Thanksgiving Valentine’s Day Hostesses Beeton, Isabella Mesta, Perle Party Planners Stewart, Martha
Food Network Party Planners Public Places Beer Halls and Beer Gardens Block Party Coffee Houses in London Cruise Ships Dutch Treat Fast Food, History of Parisian Cafés Rent Parties Restaurants Taverns Tearooms in America
Media Betty Crocker Books on Entertaining and Dining, History of Cookbooks, History of Cookbooks, Tools for Entertaining Etiquette Books
Serving Styles Buffet Catering Chafing Dish Potluck Suppers Table Service, French versus Russian
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H Halloween The first guests on Halloween came to us from the world of the supernatural. The night was once called Samhain—Irish Gaelic for summer’s end—and was recorded in sagas written down by medieval monks. Samhain was a magical time for the mythical peoples of ancient Ireland, when fairies and all manner of unimaginable beasts could trespass in the world of men. The Roman Catholic Church eventually placed two feast days on the calendar around Samhain—November 1, All Saints’ Day (also known as All Hallows’, making the night before, October 31, All Hallows’ Eve), and November 2, All Souls’ Day. It was a time to remember the dead, and church bells rang out to remind townspeople to pray. Food was set out for lost loved ones, and lanterns burned in windows to help lonely spirits find their way home for a visit. All Hallows’ was also a time of plenty. At summer’s end the harvest was safely stored and livestock slaughtered, meaning there was time for pleasure and, importantly, there was enough food to share. Throughout the winter holidays, tricks, performances, and masked processions were enacted in exchange for food, drink, or money: All Hallows’ kicked off the season. As Halloween began to take its familiar modern shape, two aspects of the night were already legend—Halloween’s relationship with the supernatural world and its celebration of shared food.
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AN OCCASION FOR ENTERTAINING Beset by factories and congested cities, the world’s first industrial societies came to hunger for the country, for a simpler way of life more connected to nature and to deeper truths. They sought comfort in ancient traditions, and Halloween, as seen by Victorian Americans—quaint, rural, mystical, and demanding a certain amount of innocence, was entrancing. This need to commune with the past dovetailed with a fascination for spiritualism in the United States beginning around 1850 when people flocked to clairvoyants to communicate with the dead. Toss in an explosion of printed media detailing Old World Halloween rites, and this night became the perfect occasion for a party. Since October 31 was imagined as a time when spirits could release the secrets of the future, Halloween diversions focused on fortune telling. Hostesses eagerly adopted the divination games of the British Isles, especially those colorfully depicted in Robert Burns’s 1786 poem “Halloween.” Place two nuts at the fireplace grate, according to Scottish folk belief, and name them for yourself and the one you love. If they burn solidly and turn to ash, your love is true. If they sputter or pop, there’s trouble ahead. Other games included tests and tricks done with cabbages, kale stalks, apples, candlelight, and mirrors. Partygoers took delight in them all. Girls could eat an apple in front of a mirror to try and spy a future mate in the reflection, or peel an apple in one long paring, loft the peel over their shoulder, and divine the initial of their soul mate in the shape it took on the floor. Male guests played the game of the “three luggies” (a luggie is a small bowl with handles), where vessels are filled with symbolic substances— clean water, dirty water, or nothing—and the seekers, blindfolded, choose one to divine their fate. If they choose the bowl of clean water, for example, the player’s future mate will be a maid; if they choose the bowl filled with muddy water, a widow; and if they choose the empty bowl, they will be doomed to eternal bachelorhood. Other games were updated or invented: players tried to take bites from apples suspended on strings in doorways. They carved letters in pumpkins, put on blindfolds, and tried to stick pins in an initial to determine the name of their future mate. They set tiny walnut-shell candle boats In an apt description of an early Halloween night, the Atlanta afloat in a tub of water and preConstitution ran these words, describing the Mayor Hemphill’s dicted the course of their love house: lives using the movements of their As the guests entered the hospitable mansion they were greeted tiny boats as omens. The folklore by all manner of smiling lanterns made of pumpkins, cleverly and food of the British Isles and carved with faces . . . Upon the mantel heads of ivory-white cabIreland served as the thematic bages vied each other with cheeriness. Above the mantel in the centerpiece for Halloween parties wide central hallway were arranged graceful boughs of bright from the Victorian era all the way maple leaves. through the first few decades of ( Atlanta Constitution. November 1, 1892) the twentieth century.
Halloween YOU ARE INVITED!
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This fateful night black magic shall decide Who is doomed to die a maid, who will be a bride. Search your mirror’s depths with anxious stare— Is your lover tall or short, is he dark or fair?
Early Halloween party invitations were designed to foreshadow the fun that was to come. Since —Beatrice Barry. “Halloween, 1917.” ladies were expected to be handy New York Times. October 31, 1917 with crafts, invitations were often hand-drawn and decorated with witches, cats, and pumpkins. A rhyming verse—“Come at the witching hour of eight; And let the fairies read your fate . . .”—could be written on nearly anything—colored paper, cornhusks, or on strips of paper tied around a small pumpkin—then delivered, in secret, to each door. Mystery, intrigue, and darkness were key to Halloween entertainment. The party-giver’s house would likely be lit only by jack-o’-lanterns and candles, with a crackling fire in the kitchen or dining area. Clever hostesses played up the drama: a silent, dark-robed figure might lead guests to a darkened room where they could remove their coats. A hostess might greet partygoers with an old elbow glove filled with sawdust. In the corner—what’s that?!—guests could be startled by a long, tin snake set writhing from the heat of a lamp, or—watch out!—they might brush against a gigantic cobweb made of yarn. Party decorations most often included the foliage and foods associated with a rural Scots or Irish Halloween, combined with the harvest treasures of each American region. Homes were festooned with cabbages and cornstalks,
An old-fashioned Halloween card. © Artanika | Dreamstime.com.
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deep red maple leaves, sprays of wheat, and garlands of apples and popcorn. In Georgia there were accents of tiny, clustered smilax berries and leaves, and in New England, boughs of evergreens. Advice columns of newspapers and magazines suggested decorating tables with yellow chrysanthemums. For the very wealthy, favors could be purchased: in 1894 one could buy gold or silver walnut favors, a stick pin in the shape of a kale stalk, or even a mirror and candelabra set, all symbols of divination used in Old World Halloween rites. Although it was possible to buy pumpkin-headed candy containers as early as 1900, most hostesses created their own decorations. Refreshments were also concocted from the best of seasonal offerings: hot cider, molasses candy, spicy gingerbread. Nuts were served in carvedout fresh cabbages, chicken salad in hollowed-out turnip shells, and brilliant orange jack-o’-lanterns were laden with apples, grapes, and pears. Some hostesses served Scottish scones; others opted for New England–style Indian pudding. Guests occasionally dressed in costumes, and playful hostesses disguised themselves as witches or ghosts to tell fortunes, but the socially savvy young lady likely made her entrance in a specially made gown: “Halloween, perhaps, more than any other fete,” says the Atlanta Constitution on October 28, 1894, “supplies possibilities for picturesque and effective gowns, and the end-of-the-century girl is not the one to let them slip by. . . . A very fashionable wardrobe now owns, along with other dainty evening toilets, a Halloween supper frock, which may be made in any mode, but which . . . should suggest, in some way, night itself. Tints vague and intangible, hinting of darkness or the white cool moon, are preferred.” Late nineteenth-century Halloween parties were intended largely for young adults, and tricks and entertainments were excuses to interlace fingers, brush lips, gather close together in the dark, or bump blindfolded into each other’s arms. On this night, lit by the moon and etched in the glitter of first frost, romance and superstition were stirred together to tantalize. A TWENTIETH-CENTURY HOLIDAY The popularity of American Halloween celebrations that had begun in the later nineteenth century flourished in the early decades of the twentieth. And although a Victorian sensibility and style lingered, a new Halloween celebration was forming in an increasingly diverse and democratic America. Halloween parties grew more boisterous and less formal. Hosts delighted in staging celebrations in barns, empty attics and cellars, even in their kitchens. There were at-home parties hosted by adults for adults, and those hosted by adults for children. There were parties in clubs, hotels, churches, libraries, and on college campuses. There were town-wide extravaganzas, where thousands of celebrants took to the streets in costume and made a little noise. And there were private, elite gatherings where society icons the likes of the Vanderbilts or Hearsts would inaugurate the winter social
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season with a Halloween dinner “We opened all our house—as we knew the cellar would be as indance. Debutantes waltzed in the teresting to Uncle John as the attic would be to Great-Aunt Martha. grand ballrooms of New York We had jack-o’-lanterns on the gateposts, and in the spooky corners of the cellar, and in the attic. All the young people were given City’s Hotel Astor, the Lorraine, cards, much like dance-cards, with spaces for engagements in and the Plaza to a backdrop of regular order: ‘9 o’clock, Mr. B-, cellar stairs; 9:30 Mr. C-, library jack-o’-lanterns and fall florals, and davenport, 10:00 Mr. D-, kitchen-table’; and so on. This arrangenewspapers dutifully followed the ment of conversational ‘dates’ kept the young people scrambling decorations and doings of Ameriall over the house, upstairs and down, and there was no possibility of stagnation! At half after eleven we all met in the big living-room ca’s elite. A New York City newsand ranged ourselves around the great fireplace . . . we told ghost paper reported that in 1914 J. D. stories, and roasted chestnuts, and popped corn, and counted Rockefeller was out dunking for apple seeds until well after the charmed hour of midnight!” apples at a Tarrytown, New York, —description of a Halloween housewarming party, Halloween party. The Delineator. October 1911 Imaginative hosts continued to search for ways to make their Halloween parties memorable. At Gracefield, the country home of William R. Grace in Great Neck, Long Island, in 1914, guests arrived to discover that their hosts had installed electric eyes in the heads of wild animals shot by Grace in Africa. At a 1923 party in Greenwich, Connecticut, the decor included crates of live pigs and turkeys, which pranksters opened up at midnight, letting the live animals run loose. More and more, people came to parties in costume, although they were still largely handcrafted. There were Egyptian queens, demure milkmaids, dominoes, and Spanish princesses. Father Time, Richard III, and Romeo shared the dance floor with prima ballerinas, Russian peasants, and Mother Goose.
Store-bought decorations appeared in the early twentieth century. Hostesses could buy pumpkin-shaped favors with candles inside, decorated place cards, and candy containers, as well as books full of ideas about how to decorate, such as this Bogie Book from Dennison. From the Mark B. Ledenbach collection.
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Noisemakers, like this tin tambourine from J. Chein (1920s) were an important part of Halloween celebrations in the early twentieth century. From the Mark B. Ledenbach Collection.
Buffet tables sagged under piles of doughnuts, fruit, and cookies, and partygoers roasted apples and marshmallows in the fireplace. Kids would be happy with “sticky molasses taffy, popcorn balls, doughnuts and hot green pickles.” The look of the American Halloween party crystallized between the two World Wars when mass-manufactured party décor, invitations, favors, and specialty foods became available. The first novelties were German imports, but American companies soon followed—the Beistle Company in Pennsylvania and Dennison Manufacturing Company in Massachusetts were two of the better known—and newspapers were filled with ads for Halloween food and favors. There were pretty, pointed crepe paper hats in yellow and black, masks, leering devil figures with wobbly heads, fortune-telling cake sets, and black paper lanterns with bright red, yowling cat faces. Schrafft’s advertised white layered Halloween cakes with orange jelly filling, and confectionary store windows showcased witch-on-a-broom-shaped cookies or licorice- and orange-flavored gumdrops in the shape of bats. A CHILDREN’S HOLIDAY? After World War II, America turned its attention to home and family, and subsequently, America experienced the largest baby boom in its history. Although shelves were full of Halloween merchandise each October, there was also a renewed emphasis on domestic skills, on knowing how to “do it yourself.” Moms baked healthy treats and stitched Halloween costumes. They squeezed frosting through pastry bags to draw cats on their cookies, and they cut out pictures of witches from magazines to press atop cakes. Halloween had become family friendly: a wholesome celebration for everyone, from the Boys Scouts marching down Main Street in the town’s Halloween parade to the Elks’ Club hosting a Halloween party for the city’s kids. Eisenhower’s 1958 White House was lit with an orange glow for a staff lunch given by the First Lady. In 1969, a giant, one-story-tall fabric jack-o’lantern was stretched over the White House entrance where presidential daughter Tricia Nixon greeted the kids coming to her party.
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Place card. USA Whitney Company, 1920s. From the Mark B. Ledenbach collection.
Four-sided shade, United States, 1930s. From the Mark B. Ledenbach collection.
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Most of Halloween’s iconography, as realized in its decorations and costumes, follows the passions and popular culture (witness Dracula and aliens in today’s Halloween mix!), but the essential elements have stayed throughout its entertaining history. From the Mark B. Ledenbach collection.
Halloween play took on the characteristics of other children’s games of the time. There were scavenger hunts, races, ball games, counting games, games of skill (such as hitting one of a row of cardboard pumpkins and winning a prize), and variations on musical chairs. Bobbing for apples was still a favorite, as were marshmallow-eating contests. Matchmaking games and prophesying gradually lost their relevance, and the Old World divinations quietly fell away. Halloween imagery softened over the course of the 1940s and 1950s as Halloween’s celebrants got younger and younger— witches smiled, black cats purred, owls winked. TAKING IT TO THE STREETS But just as Halloween became more family oriented, a new Halloween entertainment was taking shape. Try as they might, no one—not principals, parents, presidents, or police—had been able to stop hordes of young people from pulling pranks on Halloween. And although there had been kids out on the streets accosting passersby or banging on doors to demand sweets or money for decades, it was not a coast-to-coast phenomenon: to tell the truth, the relationship between children and homeowners on Halloween could be downright contentious. Then, in 1950, a group of children from the Philadelphia area sent a donation of their Halloween cash to UNICEF (originally the United Nations International Children’s Emergency Fund). The idea caught on instantly: in 1954, 500,000 kids raised $200,000 by collecting coins in orange and black UNICEF milk cartons. By 1961, President John F. Kennedy inaugurated the campaign, and by 1965, the year UNICEF won the Nobel Peace Prize, 3.5 million kids had raised $5.5 million. Trick or treat for UNICEF (along with the Halloween candy industry, by 1965 a $300 million business) helped pave the way for trick or treating in general; by the end of the 1950s it was uncharitable, definitely un-neighborly, not to open your door to children on Halloween night. Porch lights blazed on October 31, and America’s Halloween hosts prepared trays of popcorn balls and caramel-coated apples to welcome their newest guests: the neighborhood’s children.
Halloween
Halloween revelers in New York, 2003. © Serguei Bachlakov | Dreamstime.com.
CARPE NOCTEM Halloween entertaining has always had a big element of self-expression, and it’s this aspect that characterized late twentieth-century and early twenty-first-century celebrations. Décor runs the full gamut from gruesome to gorgeous. For some, fake graveyards, animatronic skeletons, and swooping bats join a humble bale of hay to welcome guests on Halloween night. Parties can feature jiggling, blood red Jell-O hearts, cookies in the shape of witch fingers, eggs decorated to look like eyeballs, and bubbling punches spewing fog. For others, Halloween can be nostalgic—décor can include vintage collectibles or novelties crafted by contemporary artists inspired by the ephemera of earlier Halloweens. In all cases, the outdoors is still pulled inside—be it tombstones as place settings or black roses set in a Victorian vase on the mantel. Candlelight and jack-o’-lanterns still reign. Guests have been arriving at the door for over two millennia now. First there were mythical visitors from the other world, then the souls of the dead. Next came the poor, then family, friends, neighbors, and finally, children from all over. Throughout, the essence of Halloween entertaining remains: the night is dark, the fire is warm. Come in, whoever you are, and have something to eat. No one dare turn away a stranger on Halloween night. Further Reading: Arkins, Diane C. Halloween Merrymaking: An Illustrated Celebration of Fun, Food and Frolics from Halloweens Past. Gretna, LA: Pelican
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Publishing Company, 2004; Bannatyne, Lesley. A Halloween How To: Costumes, Parties, Decorations and Destinations. Gretna, LA: Pelican Publishing Company, 2001; Bannatyne, Lesley. A Halloween Reader: Stories, Poems and Plays from Halloweens Past. Gretna, LA: Pelican Publishing Company, 2004; Bannatyne, Lesley. Halloween: An American Holiday, An American History. New York: Facts on File, 1990.
Lesley Bannatyne
Hors D’oeuvres and Canapés A canapé is a type of snack that consists of a piece of toasted bread or cracker and some topping. While the term is often used interchangeably with hors d’oeuvre, it is strictly speaking only a subset of hors d’oeuvre. The word derives from Latin canapeum, or canopeum, which means “mosquito net,” and in French, canapé is a type of sofa or couch. The term was established in English with the current usage by the 1890s. OVERVIEW OF HORS D’OEUVRE Hors d’oeuvre refers to an assortment of finger food (food small enough to be picked up with one’s fingers and eaten in a few bites) eaten before or between meals. In other words, it differs from the appetizer in that it is not a part of a meal, and the term literally means “outside of the work.” A range of hors d’oeuvres used to be attractively displayed at the entrance area of a restaurant in order to flaunt the menu and give a glimpse of the quality and variety of food they had to offer to their clients. Today, hors d’oeuvres are often served by a caterer at a reception, a gallery opening, or right before a formal sit-down meal while guests are still arriving. An assortment of hors d’oeuvres is often passed around on a tray and eaten standing up, with a small plate in one hand, and the food in the other. While almost anything can be served as an hors d’oeuvre, as long as it is small and steady enough to be picked up by fingers and eaten in only a few bites, there are several standard categories—smoked meat and fish, pâtés, canapé, cocktail, and crudité (and pickles) and dip. The term cocktail, when referring to a type of hors d’oeuvres, refers to cooked (usually steamed) seafood served on crushed ice with a tangy sauce. Shrimp cocktail immediately comes to mind. A cocktail can also be chopped-up pieces of fruit, sometimes tossed with lemon juice or some acidic dressing, to prevent oxidation and the resulting discoloration. Crudité is a piece of raw vegetable (the term means “raw” in French), such as celery, baby carrot, or broccoli, arranged attractively on a plate. It is served with a dip, or several dips, such as flavored mayonnaise or sour cream. Traditionally, hors d’oeuvre was cold food, but it can include something warm such as zucchini fritters, crocquettes, and small pastries, such as gougères (small cheese puffs). The 1961 edition of Larousse Gastronomique devotes over 30 pages to a list of hors d’oeuvres, and today, thanks to the abundant
Hors D’oeuvres and Canapés influence of numerous international cuisines, the possibilities of the hors d’oeuvre are virtually limitless. Cold canapé can be sushi, and warm canapé can include small tempura, Thai chicken on skewers, or falafels (Middle Eastern fried balls of chick pea purée). Dips can be international as well, examples being hummus (Middle Eastern chick pea purée) and taramasalata (Greek potato and fish roe purée). The important aspects of hors d’oeuvre, other than its small size, are variety (in terms of flavors, texture, and temperature) and visual attractiveness. Each item should have a strong flavor to be satisfying by itself but not too strong or filling so that the appetite is continuously piqued. CANAPÉ
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Dips In the Mediterranean and the Far East, dipping hand-held foods into special sauces is a long-held tradition. People in the United States did not serve dips until after World War II. Prior to that time, finger sandwiches were the major foods at casual parties. Around 1954, the Lipton Company introduced its dehydrated onion soup. Once combined with commercial sour cream, this highly popular “dip” gained the name California Dip and it became a favorite sauce for dunking potato chips. This fad for dip brought into use innovative chip-and-dip servers fashioned from hollowed bread shapes and fruits, along with highly creative dipping platters designed to hold a variety of objects for dipping. The rise in popularity of Mexican foods has also influenced dip flavorings. An example includes the popular seven-layer dip made of beans, cream cheese, salsa, cheddar, and other ingredients such as lettuce and tomatoes. Guacamole is a Mexican dish made from mashed avocado, tomato, onion, and pungent seasoning. Also from Mexico is Chile Con Queso: a concoction of cheeses, tomatoes, hot peppers,and sometimes ground meat. Once the dip was fashioned, hosts experimented with items to dunk into the dips. These ranged from salty chips and crackers to almost any morsel, pierced with a toothpick or suitable for fingers—raw or blanched vegetables, celery sticks, pita, bagel pieces, small biscuits, chunks of bread, cooked shrimp or scallops, cocktail sausages, meatballs, and chunks of any cooked meats. Many classic dips from other cultures also became popular. One such dip is hummus, which dating back to the Crusades, is an Arabic combination of chickpea paste, sesame seed paste, olive oil, lemon juice, and spices. It was traditionally scooped up and eaten with flatbread. Another is baba ghanouj, a Middle Eastern dip made from eggplant, olive oil, lemon, and garlic. Bagna Cauda from the Piedmont region of Italy is a mixture of butter, olive oil, garlic, and anchovies. From Provence in France, tapenade is made from cured black olives, olive oil, garlic, anchovies, capers, lemon, and cognac.
While it has some variations, the canapé is basically a small open sandwich. It consists of three parts—base, spread, and garnish. The base is traditionally a piece of toasted or fried bread, but today, it can be a cracker, or even a slice of cucumber for those who are trying to cut down on carbohydrates. A base can also be a small, unsweetened tart shell, or savory profiterole. The most basic type of spread is flavored butter or cream cheese (mustard butter, or cream cheese with chives, for example), but it can be meat or fish salad, pâté, or deviled eggs. The garnish can range from a leaf of parsley or caper ( just to add more color and flavor) to something more substantial such as ham or anchovy. In other words, in some applications, the spread is the main component and the garnish is a little decoration, for example, smoked salmon salad for spread and caper for garnish, and in other applications, vice versa, for example, horseradish mayonnaise for spread and a piece of ham for garnish. The possibilities are endless.
Marty Martindale
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INTERNATIONAL VARIATIONS OF HORS D’OEUVRES AND CANAPÉS Savory English savory, which came to be served at the end of a meal in recent centuries, was typically a hors d’oeuvre in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. More specifically, it was a type of canapé in that it usually consisted of a piece of toasted bread and some savory topping. An example from the mid-eighteenth century is anchovy fillets on fried bread sprinkled with Parmesan cheese and Seville orange juice. From the nineteenth century, one finds a rather elaborate preparation in which a piece of toasted bread, covered with butter, mustard, cheese, and ham, is fried and then placed in a Dutch oven. The savory enjoyed its heyday in Victorian and Edwardian times, and popular items included Scotch woodcook, chopped up anchovy, and fried oysters wrapped in bacon, all served on a piece of toast. Mezze The tradition of mezze (or meze) covers a wide area from Turkey to Lebanon, Morocco to Greece. The term has a Persian origin in the word meza, which were “small bites” (first a piece of sour fruit, later extending to include roasted meat and nuts) eaten together with wine to alleviate its bitter taste. In Turkey, meze is enjoyed with raki, an anise-flavored spirit. The tradition boasts over two hundred different dishes, and it used to be enjoyed at a table separate from a dining table, called the raki table. The variety includes eggplant purée with mint (baba ghanoush), roasted vegetables with tomato sauce, zucchini fritters, and beets with yogurt. An assortment of meze is often served with pita bread, which might qualify at least some of meze as a variation of canapé. In Lebanon, mezze also plays an important part in social activities, where it is enjoyed in conjunction with arak, wine scented with anise seed. Lebanon mezze include a wide variety of dishes, such as grilled or puréed vegetables, hummus, and tabbouleh. Bread is important in the Lebanese tradition as well; it is used to scoop up dip and pick up small morsels of food. While in Muslim countries one can observe a tendency toward making the mezze part of a meal, the original usage is preserved in Greece, where mezze is enjoyed in conjunction with wine, separate from a meal. Internationally famous examples include taramosalata and tzatziki (cucumber and yogurt salad). Smörgåsbord Smörgåsbord, from Sweden, can be either hors d’oeuvres or a full buffet meal. In the former case, various types of little morsels are presented on a table all at once, to be consumed as finger food. The term literally means “buttered-bread table,” and the assortment of food presented often includes small open sandwiches. Other typical items are cured herring, petit-choux
Hors D’oeuvres and Canapés with anchovy paste, fish in aspic, and pieces of cheese. Crispy bread pieces are served alongside. Tapas Tapas, from Spain, are close to traditional mezze in that they are enjoyed outside ( before) a complete meal and in that they are an integral part of socializing, wine-drinking occasions. Each tapas bar has different tapas specialties, and accordingly, tapas are often enjoyed in conjunction with bar hopping. While there are some tapas enjoyed nationally, for example, unpeeled prawn, each region contributes its own tradition, such as fried seafood and Serrano ham from Andalusia, blood pudding, chorizo a la plancha (grilled spicy pork sausage), and montados de lomo ( pieces of bread with a slice of meat on top) from Castile, pan con tomate ( bread with olive oil, tomato, and salt, sometimes with garlic as well) from Catalonia, and tortillas ( pancakes made with wheat and chickpea flours) topped with shrimp from Seville. Zakuski Zakuski from Russia, literally “little morsels,” is close to tapas in that it is enjoyed with alcohol (in this case vodka), between meals, or before ( but not as a part of ) a meal, in a bar called zakusochnaya. In previous centuries, grander houses had a room only used for zakuski, where guests would propose a toast and enjoy vodka with various finger foods. Zakuski can be hot or cold. Hot dishes include pirozhki; cold dishes include caviar or pickled herring on a piece of bread. PRACTICAL APPLICATION Many cultures have a long and cherished tradition of hors d’oeuvres, and while types of topping vary according to geographical regions, the ubiquity of bread to act as a vehicle is rather striking. Until recent centuries, silverware, especially for individual diners, was for the rich, and people often used a piece of bread to carry food to their mouths. Because hors d’oeuvres are typically eaten standing up, as a part of social, drinking events, perhaps the tradition of using bread, instead of plates, as the preferred vehicle for small bites of food developed as a way to ease the difficulty of trying to eat, drink, and socialize while roaming from one place to another. This aspect of socialization is of importance to modern practical applications. Hors d’oeuvres should be served in a small size, in order to facilitate carrying and eating, and should be relatively light, especially if they are to be followed by a meal. Hosts should strive for variety in order to accommodate guests’ various needs and to whet their appetite. When choosing items to serve as hors d’oeuvres, it is important to consider various food orientations and allergies, such as vegetarianism and veganism, wheat and
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dairy allergies, and to prepare enough options for those with specific needs. The whole assortment should also have a good visual appeal, as is evident from the fact that food is enjoyed by the eye first and that beautiful presentation adds to the conviviality of the overall experience of an event. Across cultural boundaries, it is difficult to find descriptions or instructions of hors d’oeuvres that do not start with the emphasis on the importance of elegant presentation that showcases abundance and variety. Further Reading: Casas, Penelope. Tapas: the Little Dishes of Spain. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2007; Gisslen, Wayne. Le Cordon Bleu Professional Cooking. 5th ed. New York: Wiley, 2002; Hazelton, Nika Standen. Classic Scandinavian Cooking. New York: Scribner, 1987; Roden, Claudia. Arabesque: A Taste of Morocco, Turkey, & Lebanon. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2006; Saulnier, L. Le Répertoire de la Cuisine. Woodbury: Barron’s Educational Series, 1976.
Chika M. Jenkins
I Inca The food that fed the Incas is the stuff of legends. According to myth, potatoes came into being with the “birth” of the founders of the Inca empire, Manco Capac and Mama Ocllo in the massive Lake Titicaca. The god Wiracocha taught them how to plant potatoes. There are thousands of varieties of potatoes and tubers native to the highlands of Peru and Bolivia; they were the so-called bread of life for the people who lived there in ancient times. And for people living there today the same holds true. In addition to potatoes, the foods that made up the daily diet of the Incas included corn, chili, squash, beans, tomato, sweet potato, manioc, avocado, peanuts, and various greens and meats. Chronicler Garcilaso de la Vega in his The Royal Commentaries of the Incas and General History of Peru describes the eating arrangements of the ruler, called The Inca. Because The Inca’s household was so large, tremendous amounts of food were prepared and served for the main meal of the day in the early morning, around 8 A.M. Concubines or wives cooked The Inca’s food and what he did not eat was distributed to the entourage of noblemen who attended him and others in the household, including servants. Another meal was served at nightfall. Dishes that The Inca might have enjoyed included humitas or tamales, each made with ground corn from either boiled fresh corn or dried kernels.
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The usual manner of preparing corn was boiling, but it was also often toasted. Roasted meats included huanaco ( llama, a mammal of the camel family), pacollama (alpaca), deer, and various fowl, of which one resembled the European goose and was called nunuma. Common people ate guinea pigs (cuy) and saved their skins to dry and then chop up to make charqui, which was used in soups and stews. The Inca received his food from the people in the form of tribute, farmed on land that each family owned and worked. Very similar to a welfare state, the Inca empire inspired awe in the Spanish conquerors, who marveled that no one starved, that the state took care of everyone. Laws for what and how much was to be planted, as well as provisions for storage and the handling of food were part of the system. That the Incas could feed everyone without problems was due to their method of storing surplus food in warehouses and holding redistribution banquets, started by the mythological Inca, Pachacuti. These banquets, really ordinary meals, took place in public in the plaza, according to Fray Bartolomé de las Casas. Fed by their wives or concubines, The Inca and his nobles ate off wooden plates and drank from beaker-like containers called keros sitting on mats on the ground. Keros found in archeological sites indicate that some were painted with intricate and symbolic designs. Servants, both male and female, served the leftover food to those who had not yet eaten. Beverages were drunk after meals. Water was not drunk. Whatever The Inca left on his wooden plate was then stored in
Pen and ink illustration of Inca farmers harvesting a potato crop in June 1515. The Art Archive /John Meek.
Inca a warehouse and burned once a year, so that no one would touch the items he had touched. Bernabé Cobo, who was born in 1580 and wrote much later after the conquest of Peru ended in 1549, stated that Incan kitchens used very little fuel in their small clay stoves. Although the kitchens contained grinding stones similar to those used in Mexico, women ground corn only for maize bread called sanco, which they used for two festivals, Raimi and Citua. According to Guamán Poma de Ayala, an Indian chronicler, wealthy nobles ate deer meat, duck, fish, and fruit like bananas and guavas, while peasants ate squash, stewed vegetables, and greens. Both groups also ate corn, potatoes, cassava, chili, and a tuber called oca, native to the high Andes. Meat, when available, was often cooked in the pachamanca style that is still an important cooking method in the Andes, because it was fuel efficient and many other dishes could be cooked at the same time. Llama meat was not eaten often, partly because their slaughter was highly regulated under Incan laws. As in any culture, the Incas of all classes devised special meals for special occasions. Plantings and harvests were two of those occasions. Planting potatoes in the highlands utilized both chicha and coca leaves, as well as sheep’s manure for fertilizer. Digging holes with chaki takllas, or shovel-like tools, the Inca farmers sprinkled the potatoes with the chicha, dropped in some sheep manure. Later, a potato and coca leaf were buried together to symbolize union. Afterwards, the planting party enjoyed music and a soup the women made with beans, tubers, guinea pig, quinoa, and toasted maize kernels. Harvest time, as with all agrarian cultures, was also a time of festivals, a time to honor the Corn Goddess, Mamasara, and to let loose by imbibing copious quantities of chicha, an alcoholic beverage created in part from pre-masticated corn kernels chewed by women chicha makers even today. Peasants as well as nobles drank chicha; however, according to the early chroniclers, drinking until a person lost judgment was a punishable offense. Drinking chicha was not simply a matter of getting drunk. There were certain religious and ritual connotations involved. Our understanding of the ritualistic aspects of drinking has been diluted somewhat by the prejudices of the early Spanish chroniclers. The planting ritual mentioned above is one example of this ceremonial usage. The drinking vessels for chicha could be of many different materials, ceramic, silver, or gold, or even the skulls of vanquished enemies. Further Reading: Betanzos, Juan de. Narrative of the Incas. Austin: University of Texas Press, 1996; Cieza de León, Pedro de. Discovery and Conquest of Peru. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 1998; Cobo, Bernabé, and Roland Hamilton. History of the Inca Empire: An Account of the Indians’ Customs and Their Origin, Together with a Treatise on Inca Legends, History, and Social Institutions. Austin: University of Texas Press, 1979; Coe, Sophie D. America’s First Cuisines. Austin: University of Texas Press, 1994; Crosby, Alfred W., Jr. The Columbian Exchange: Biological and Cultural Consequences of 1492. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1972; Garcilaso de la Vega, El Inca. The Royal Commentaries of the Incas and General History of
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Peru. Austin: University of Texas Press, 1966; Guamán Poma de Ayala, Felipe. Letter to a King: A Peruvian Chief’s Account of Life under the Incas and under Spanish Rule. New York: Dutton, 1978; The International Potato Center: http:// www.cipotato.org/; Moseley, Michael E. Incas and Their Ancestors: The Archaeology of Peru. Rev. ed. New York: Thames & Hudson, 2001; Xeres, Francisco de. Reports on the Discovery of Peru. Boston: Adamant Media Corporation, 2001 [reprint of 1872 edition].
Cynthia D. Bertelsen
India The Sanskrit phrase atithi devo bhava, or “the guest is God,” permeates Indian dining and entertaining practices. Sharing food with anybody who comes to the door or hosting feasts and celebrations, not only for entertainment but also as a way of thanks to God almighty, is considered a human being’s duty, the best karma (action). There is a story about Lord Krishna when he was a little boy. Once it rained for several days and the people sought refuge in his care to save them from drowning. He lifted the nearby mountain high on his index finger so that humans as well as animals could take shelter under it. The people were very grateful. When the rain stopped, they brought 56 types of food to thank him. Since then 56 has become an auspicious number for types of food to be offered to God and honored guests. Entertaining practices in India have evolved over time. It was customary to invite friends and family at the birth of a child (especially a son), at weddings, religious festivals, and other joyous occasions. The guests brought gifts, generally money or jewelry, while the host made it a pleasing experience for all those who came. Besides inviting guests to their home, people also distributed sweet and salty treats to all acquaintances. The royalty and the rich of course entertained a larger number of guests. Some opened their kitchens to the poor to come and eat to their heart’s content. While the rich were known to use silver or gold vessels, the common practice was to serve food on banana leaves or other large leaves pinned together as plates. The practice still continues at some places though the preferred way to serve food is on stainless steel or metal plates called thali with katori (small bowls) that are filled with different vegetable entrées, yogurt, and pickles and served with rice, sweets, and hot flat breads. Alcoholic drinks were not very common. Though vegetarian food was the norm, there were instances of a lamb or goat used as a sacrifice to the gods and served to guests. Beef and pork were never used. The advent in A.D. 1526 of the Mughal kings who ruled India for about 200 years largely influenced the entertaining practices and foods. Biryani (rice cooked with meat and vegetables) and some meat dishes were brought from the royal kitchens of Persia by the Mughals. The Muslim warriors established themselves as landed aristocracy. The banquets arranged by the
India noblemen at the Mughal court are described by some English authors who traveled to India after the British settled in the country around 1611. The splendor of the Mughal courts is described in detail. Entertainment at the courts included dancing, drinking, and playing elaborate games. It is said that 50 silver bowls containing different delicacies were placed before the honored guest. The British dominated in India for more than 200 years. The practice of eating formally in a dining room with a complete place setting was introduced by the British. They brought their own butlers and cooks, who prepared a number of meat dishes. The British cooks also worked with Indian cooks to prepare Indian-style dishes with aromatic spices and called them curry. Some say that curry comes from the Hindi word kar-hi, named after the karhi leaves that were one of the spices widely used. The most widely found origin of the word curry indicates that it comes from the Tamil kari which means “sauce, relish for rice.” In India today curry is considered a sauce rather than a spice. The British also promoted the cultivation of tea, which has since become a national drink in India. Any time is tea-time for Indians. In spite of a plethora of external influences, many traditions have remained in Indian dining practices. In general, people wash their hands before eating and eat with their hands. This is based on the philosophy that eating is a very sensual activity in which as many of the senses as possible— taste, smell, sight, and touch—should be involved. However, especially in northern India, it is impolite to use more than the first two segments of the fingers while eating. Another practice is that food must be taken with the right hand and the left hand should be used to serve food or to pass a dish to someone else. In some castes, such as the priestly or Brahmin, upper-class Hindu society, it is believed that the right hand and the food eaten by that hand becomes jhootha (used or soiled) and cannot be shared by anybody else. But in other parts of Indian society, such as in aristocratic Muslim families, it is more a question of courtesy and hospitality that one does not touch dishes that are passed on to others with the jhootha hand, than an attempt to maintain religious purity. People from India, living in their native land or other countries, have carried on most Indian celebration practices. Besides parties at home, larger occasions like anniversaries and weddings are held in restaurants, party halls, and sometimes on open country farms. Naturally a fusion of customs and foods has occurred. Sweet sixteen parties, bridal showers, and baby showers are also celebrated. Noodles cooked in Chinese-Indian style, pizza and different types of burgers have become popular, especially for children. The host makes all efforts to please the guests, not only with delectable food, but also an attractive setting decorated with flowers, lights, streamers, and other welcoming signs. Based on the occasion, light or classical vocal and instrumental music and dances are arranged. It is common for people to dance to lively music at parties. The host and hostess greet the guests on arrival. Guests generally eat first. If a guest is accompanied with a personal
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driver or the children’s nanny, they are also served food. The guests bring appropriate gifts and thank the host before leaving. A box of sweet delicacies or other small favors may be returned to the guests. Weddings are a prime occasion to invite friends and relatives and thus provide an opportunity for the elite to show off their fortunes. Decorating for the weddings, especially the mandap, the structure under which the marriage ceremony is held, is a business in itself. It is not uncommon to be invited to three or four related events that are part of the wedding ceremony. Besides the engagement party with dance, music, and food, a special music program, and mehndi ( henna) are organized before marriage. Applying henna is considered auspicious and is more prevalent in North India. Generally an expert is invited to apply intricate henna designs on the hands and feet of the bride as well as friends and relatives. The elaborate wedding ceremony is accompanied with snacks or lunch, and finally a reception, replete with alcoholic drinks, foods from different parts of India, and dancing to lively music. Some weddings boast 1,000 guests under a marquee that’s the size of a cricket field. Individual booths are set up for dishes from around the world. Wedding celebrations vary from region to region. For example, you may find dance and music at most Hindu and Sikh weddings, but it is very unlikely that you would find them in Muslim weddings (apart from weddings that take place in cosmopolitan cities such as Delhi and Mumbai), and
An Indian marriage. © Nikhil Gangavane | Dreams time.com.
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Typical stage of an Indian wedding. © Gansham Ramchandani | Dreamstime.com.
in some cases, in traditional Hindu, Jain, and Sikh weddings as well. Christian weddings have church ceremonies and church music, sometimes followed by the traditional wedding dance. But conservative Christians often skip the dance entirely. Marriage customs in India vary from absolutely conservative behind-the-veil-segregated ceremonies to completely modern ceremonies with Bollywood-style dances and bachelor / bachelorette parties. Buffets are becoming more of a norm nowadays. Men and women mingle freely though people of the same sex tend to congregate together. Fine china or paper goods are used to serve food. It is a personal preference whether to eat with your hands or with a spoon or fork. The practice to prepare fresh food as much as possible continues. The caterers come with large griddles, gas stoves, and portable ovens. Appetizers can be deep fried or steamed. Baked vegetables, chicken, and fish, along with well-known samosas ( potato or meat stuffed triangular patties) and papad ( large spicy wafers made from lentils), are available as starters. Chat papdi and Bhel, mixtures of flour chips, fried noodles, and chutney, alu-tikki ( potato and peas patties), idli and dhokla (rice and lentil cakes) are popular too. Most of the appetizers are served with sweet and sour chutney made from fresh mint, cilantro, and tamarind. The vegetarian and non-vegetarian dishes, combined with lentils and beans, full of fresh ginger, aromatic spices, hot green chilies or chili flakes,
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and herbs like green coriander (cilantro) and curry leaves (sweet and bitter leaves from a tree), make a memorable symphony of tastes. The menu always includes a cooling yogurt-based dish; various sour, sweet, and pungent pickles and chutney; and aromatic basmati rice. Different types of round or oblong flat breads are a trademark of Indian cuisine and must be served as they come piping hot from the griddle or oven. Some popular dishes include paneer (cheese chunks made by curdling milk) cooked with spinach, spicy lamb vindaloo and tandoori chicken ( baked marinated pieces of chicken), and stir-fried kadai (wok) vegetables. Ras Malai (milk cakes in thickened milk) tops the list of desserts. There is a variety of burfi (fudge-like delicacies), round cakes called laddu, and halvah (flour, lentils, or carrots slowly browned in butter and mixed with nuts and sugar). The sweets are generally covered with delicate sheets of beaten silver, which besides being a decoration are also considered healthy. Tropical fruits like mangoes and papayas are used in salads and ice creams. Besides water, mango lassi (a yogurt drink, that can be drunk with or without the fruit flavoring), Masala chai (spiced tea with milk), original Darjeeling tea, and coffee with milk are popular drinks. The meals end with paan ( beetle
Indian vegetable curries. © Paul Cowan | Dreamstime.com.
Invitations leaf folded around assorted digestive ingredients), which also acts as mouth freshener. Typical foods served vary from region to region due to climate and traditions. While in one area most of the dishes are onion- and garlic-based, coconut and tamarind ( pulp of a sour pod ) may be more commonly used in another area. Seafood is the staple food in coastal areas. However, the use of spices, the variety of sweets and snacks, and the pleasure of entertaining a guest are what binds the whole country. Further Reading: Baljekar, Mridula. Great Indian Feasts: 130 Wonderful, Simple Recipes for Every Festive Occasion. London: England: John Blake, 2005; Collingham, E. M. Curry: A Tale of Cooks and Conquerors. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press, 2006; Jaffrey, Madhur. From Curries to Kebabs: Recipes from the Indian Spice Trail. New York: Clarkson Potter, 2003; Jordan, Michele Ann, and Susan Brody. The World is a Kitchen: Cooking your Way through Culture, Stories, Recipes, Resources. Palo Alto, CA: Travelers’ Tales, 2006; Rani. Feast of India— A Legacy of Recipes and Fables. Contemporary Books, 1991; Wickramasinghe, Priya, and Carol Selva Rajah. The Foods of India: A Journey for Food Lovers. North Vancouver, B.C.: Whitecap, 2005.
Kusum Gupta
Invitations Inviting others to share our food and company has probably been around as long as mankind. The word invite first seems to appear in the Sanskrit language, the classical language of India, from the words in (toward) and vitas ( pleasant). As early as the eighth century B.C., hosting social events was of enormous social importance. Who was invited to dine with the host was often carefully considered and still is to this day. However, how different societies have gone about inviting their guests has varied and evolved through the years. The first known form of invitation was given verbally. When a Sherpa host, or the early explorers and mountain people of the Himalayan region, wanted to give what would have been the beginnings of the modern-day dinner party, he would send a small child to act as a messenger to call on the local neighbors. The small children were probably the only persons who didn’t have some other type of work to do. In ancient Athens, Greece, most invitations were offered in the public place of assembly referred to as the agora. The agora, or marketplace, was the hub of a city’s trade, political, and social activities. There were sections for merchants to sell their products, parks with the orchestra, or dancing floor, for dramatic presentations, and various gymnasia. The gymnasia were as much a place for socializing as for exercising. For a large social event, where the host could afford to accommodate many guests, a town crier would be called upon to loudly circulate the announcement in the agora. Or a host may decide to have a smaller, more casual symposium, or drinking party, and spontaneously invite friends in passing at the gymnasium. Here, it is first seen that it
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was customary for the host to inscribe the names of guests on a wax tablet, along with the day and hour for the symposium, and have a servant make the rounds to the guests’ homes. As history shows, the first form of the postal system appears to have started in Ancient Greece. Private messages, such as techniques of war, were written on stone, but carrying these message slabs proved to be a difficult task at best. It was probably the ancient Egyptians, who invented the first paper, called papyrus, that delivered the first light-weight messages. The first credible claim for the structuring of a message delivery system comes from Persia, present-day Iran, around 550 B.C. A message carrier would ride a horse from one station to the next, swap his horse for a fresh one, and continue onto the next. China also developed a mail delivery system; credit given to the Qin Dynasty in 221 B.C. This was an expansion of the previously random system of delivery that dated back to Confucius in 551 B.C. The first well-documented postal service is that of Rome. Organized at the time of Augustus Caesar (62 B.C.–A.D. 14) it is probably the first true mail service. Posta, meaning “place of rest,” comes from the stations where messengers used to rest during their travels. Modern-day mail is organized by national and privatized services, and mail can be sent to almost any country of the world easily. During the times of the New Testament, invitations were offered in two steps. The first invitations were formal and always refused with thanks. There would then follow a second and more personal request from the host until the guest would acquiesce to the offer. Illiteracy was still widespread in Europe during the Middle Ages. Similar to practices in ancient Greece, social events were announced by a town crier, or bidder. This was usually a finely dressed gentleman who would walk the streets and markets and loudly announce the news of the day. Anyone happening to hear the announcement would become part of the celebration. The kings and queens and those members of high society in England and France were the first to invite their guests to weddings with formally written invitations. Neighboring monks, skilled in the art of calligraphy, were often commissioned to write the invitations. The lady of the house or her secretary might also pen the invitations, signifying education and grace. These royal invitations often carried the cote d’armes or coat of arms of the family. These personal crests arose out of the need to identify a person, similar to a signature today. Today, invitations may still carry the family crest at the top to add a touch of class and honor to a society wedding. These invitations needed to be delivered on horseback by one of the servants or couriers. To protect the fragile and beautiful invitations, an outer envelope was used. This would protect the inner envelope from water and dirt. The courier would ride up on horseback, hand it to the butler, who discarded the outer envelope, and placed the inner envelope on a silver tray. This ensured the madam’s hands would never come into contact with the
Invitations grime of the road. The double envelope remains a tradition for many to this day. In 1447 Johannes Gutenberg invented the printing press. Some of the elite, fascinated with industrialization, tried “mass produced” invitations as a novelty and another expression of wealth. But because the ink was just stamped onto poor-quality paper, the look of the invitation was less than ideal and often found unacceptable for stylish invitations. So the novelty dwindled and handwritten invitations continued to be the tradition. During the early 1600s local newspapers started to be widely printed as literacy rose. Not long after, couples started announcing their engagements and upcoming wedding plans to the public, a practice still popular today. In 1642, Ludwig von Siegen created metal-plate engraving. With this method, an artisan was required to “hand write” in reverse onto a metal plate using a carving tool. When “printed” on the paper, engraving actually cuts the surface on the paper and deposits the ink into the cuts. This allowed the invitations to look more stylish and beautiful. A sheet of tissue paper was placed on top of the engraving to keep the ink from smudging. The tradition of a piece of tissue paper is still used today for most wedding invitations. The invention of lithography by Alois Senefelder in 1798 made it possible to produce very sharp and distinct inking without the need for engraving. Thus, the invitations were produced in the marked fashion we are familiar with today. “Dinner-parties rank first among all entertainments” is taken from the English manners book Member of the Aristocracy, dated 1879. The anonymous writer goes on to say, “An invitation to dinner conveys a greater mark of esteem than being asked to any other gathering could do.” Such was the height of social entertaining in the European countries where dinner parties were one of the primary ways to advance socially. Invitations could be tricky, because people on the host’s list might be insulted if someone of a lower class was invited, or if an invitee of certain ambition denied the invitation, it could ruin the whole schematics of the party. The first mass-printed invitations in the United States were probably for large events hosted by the wealthy industrialist wishing to exploit “new technology.“Gradually, the combination of democracy with industrialization led to the common man having the ability to mimic the lifestyles of the socially elite. However, it wasn’t until after World War II that the entire U.S. population began to commercially print wedding invitations. The most socially elite will still choose either engraved or handwritten invitations. For those of lesser means, a cheaper version of engraving called thermography, or “raised ink” printing, is available. Unlike engraving, thermography printed paper is removed from the press with wet ink and a plastic powder is sprayed on the wet ink and blown off. The plastic powder absorbs the ink color. It is then heated until the plastic powder melts and leaves a raised ink, which one can feel when brushing their finger across the paper.
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PAPER SELECTION AND WORDING In the mid-nineteenth century, Victorians sent engraved wedding invitations printed on fine stationary of either white or cream color. Today, white or cream paper is still selected for the most formal occasions. For lesser occasions, a wide range of color options is available, from pastels for baby showers to electric silvers and golds for anniversaries. Since the written invitation emerged in aristocratic society, proper wording has been essential in signifying the degree of formality. The actual wording used then is still very similar to the socially correct wording used today. Emily Post dictates that formal invitations be phrased in the third person. Invitations to a ceremony should request the “honour of your presence.” Honour is spelled the British way. “Requests the pleasure of your company” is the standard wording for formal social events. Names are always written in full, not initials or nicknames. Courtesy titles are abbreviated (Mrs., Ms., Miss., Mr.) as well as “Dr.” Numbers for dates and times are written out, often retaining conservative language, such as “half after seven o‘clock.” Month and state names are written in full, as are addresses. Invitations should include any additional details, such as: “You are welcome to join us for drinks before dinner starting at six o’clock.” Proper wedding invitations include the names of the bride’s parents. Since etiquette rules have relaxed, the groom’s parents are often included, especially if hosting the event. If the parents are divorced and remarried, all their names can be included. If the bride and groom are hosting the wedding themselves, the parents’ names might not be included at all. In the advent of invitations, when all were handwritten, the invitee’s name was always written on the invitation, as well as the inner envelope. Today, to defray cost, seldom is each guest’s name included on their invitation, except on the most elite occasions. In European society, the inner envelope was often affixed with a hot wax seal to ensure the privacy and heighten anticipation for the invitee. The wax seal was often the coat of arms of the host. Today using a hot wax seal adds a touch of class and portrays the importance of sealing each envelope. In the Victorian era, separate reception cards became popular. Today, these additional cards are used to receive an accurate count of guests to such things as dinner parties and receptions so the host can be well prepared. For formal events, cards will be included with the invitations stating, “the favour of a reply is requested.” To less formal and more spontaneous events, a phone call or email may be appropriate. Given the popularity of the Internet and text messaging one might wonder if the tradition of mailing formal invitations is at risk of extinction. This seems unlikely, as there are hundreds of competing companies to choose from to print a personalized invitation. Handmade invitations are becoming more popular, thanks to the efficiency of home computer printing programs and scrap booking techniques. Really, the imagination is the
Italy limit when it comes to options for invitations. Thus, it appears the craft and tradition of mailing invitations is as likely to be part of our future history as is our continuing to socialize. Further Reading: Flaceliere, Robert. Daily Life in Greece at the Time of Pericles. London: Phoenix Press [1959], 1996; Visser, Margaret. The Rituals of Dinner: The Origins, Evolution, Eccentricities, and Meaning of Table Manners. New York: Grove Weidenfeld, 1991; Garland, Robert. Daily Life of the Ancient Greeks. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1998; Post, Peggy, and Emily Post. Emily Post’s Etiquette. New York: HarperCollins Publishers, 2004.
WEB SITES “Invitation Cards.” http://www.creativeweddingcards.com. “The History of the Social Invitation.” http://www.ed-it.com. “History of the Wedding Invitation.” http://www.myexpression.com. “Renaissance Writings.” http://www.renaissancewritings.com. “The Past.” http://www.thinkquest.org.
Shannon Heffern
Italy Italian cuisine is one of the best known outside of its country of origin. Pasta, risotto, and pizza are eaten worldwide, and Italian cheese and cold cuts are available in supermarkets everywhere. Many factors have contributed to the success of Italian cooking. First, Italians cook seasonally, using the freshest ingredients available, which are cooked in a way that enhances, rather than smothers, their particular flavors. Second, Italian cuisine has benefited from the wealth and diversity of local culinary traditions and ingredients that characterize most areas of the country. Each Italian regional culinary tradition carries the legacy of past invaders and settlers. In Sicily, for example, some distinctive traits of its culinary tradition, marzipan and nougat, were introduced by the Islamic Saracens, who invaded Sicily in the Middle Ages. Third, geography has also been equally important. From the cheese in the North to the sun-ripened fruits and vegetables of the South, Italian morphology has enhanced such diversity. Finally, food plays a special role in Italian society. It is not seen as a mere way to obtain pleasure. Rather, it is considered a form of art that plays an important role in the way that Italians socialize and identify themselves as a nation. Thus, although Italian food habits may have changed over the centuries due to exogenous factors triggered by the process of modernization, the notion of culinary identity and its role in society has remained almost intact, making it one of the enduring traits of Italian culture.
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HISTORICAL OVERVIEW Italian cuisine is characterized by a variety of culinary identities that in some cases share very little in common. Each rural area, town, and region has developed its unique style and recipes, and passed these traditions to future generations. Used as an adjective, as in the expression all’italiana ( Italian style), so-called Italian cooking is rarely associated with a particular dish. On the contrary, images evoking regionalism are plentiful, such as the risotto alla milanese (risotto with saffron, traditionally served with ossobuco); pesto alla genovese ( basil, salt, garlic, Ligurian extra-virgin olive oil, pine nuts, and Parmigiano Reggiano); and “Neapolitan pizza” ( pizza topped with sunripened tomatoes, buffalo mozzarella, olive oil, and basil ). On the other hand, Italy has increasingly seen the emergence of a so-called national diet, which has led to what we now call la cucina italiana. The reason for these apparently contradictory trends can be traced to Italy’s political and historical evolution as a nation. Until 1861, when the kingdom of Italy was established, the country was a divided political entity that had suffered foreign domination at the hands of French, Spaniards, and Austrians. Although a sense of national identity started flourishing in the Middle Ages, this sentiment was limited to few intellectuals, writers, and scholars. The masses were left out from this process to the extent that, when Italy reached its unification, Massimo D’Azeglio noted in the inaugural session of the parliament, “We have made Italy, now we have to make Italians.” Thus, for the next 50 years, Italian authorities implemented a series of measures to build a national identity. In this historical context, Pellegrino Artusi wrote the first and most successful attempt to create a national culinary tradition: the famous cookbook The Science of Cooking and the Art of Eating Well (La scienza in cucina e l’arte del mangiar bene). Artusi’s book, published in 1891, was inspired mainly by his desire to create a national cuisine that could reclaim its autonomy from foreign influences. Drawing mostly from the Florentine and Bolognese cuisine (with few references to Neapolitan dishes, such as pizza and pasta), Artusi created a new national vocabulary that until that moment had been quite fragmentary. If the first edition was not a hit with the public, success eventually arrived, mostly due to the interest of a newly emerging middle class in need of being properly trained in food preparation and taste. In the 20 years following the book’s publication, 14 editions were printed, and by 1931 it had reached 32 editions, making The Science of Cooking the most read book in Italy together with the I Promessi Sposi (The Betrothed) and Pinocchio. The emergence of the bourgeoisie also had a strong impact on the structure of lunch and the sequence of courses. Since the eighteenth century, banquets consisted in having all dishes on the table simultaneously, and guests were introduced to food without observing any order, each obeying their own taste and appetite. This style of service was known as French style service. Tables were abundantly decorated to reflect the taste of the aristocracy, who were more interested in showing their wealth than in enjoying the
Italy meal. However, by the mid-1800s, French service was replaced by Russian service, where dishes were served one after the other, according to a hierarchical order. The reasons for the success of the Russian service were twofold. To begin with, it reflected a change in taste. Russian service rejected the cacophonic ensemble characterizing the French style, in favor of a more coherent order. From a culinary point of view, the advantages of Russian style service were obvious: dishes arrived at the table cooked to perfection to enhance the flavor and fragrance. Moreover, the bourgeoisie was less concerned with the formalities of proper etiquette and more focused on the pleasures of eating. As a result, the ceremonial went out of fashion, proving that eating well could be achieved without a display of luxury. The contemporary Italian meal owes its structure to the Russian service. A slow progression of dishes and courses still characterize Italian lunches and dinners, especially for special occasions, such as during il pranzo della Domenica (Sunday lunch), when extended families eat together. A Sunday lunch must include pasta fresca ( homemade pasta) as a first course, fish or meat and side dishes as a second one, followed by a dessert. However, social changes and the fast pace of today’s life have increasingly encouraged a more flexible way of consumption, such as making only one dish per meal. Il piatto unico (single dish) indicates “a substantial dish that is easy to prepare—or indeed the opposite—as a very rich and highly appreciated dish served at a dinner among friends” (Capatti and Montanari 151). Originally most popular with poor communities in need of creating a meal at the lowest cost, today’s single dish is eaten by many Italians. Condensing a meal into a single portion saves time and money. Since the 1950s, Italians have rediscovered regional traditions and folklore. Local food festivals, such as sagre, feste, and fiere, have become extremely popular. Centered on local products such as fruit, vegetables, or meat, festivals have become an opportunity to celebrate food, art, and culture. During these celebrations, mostly staged in old fortified villages and rural communities, old country fairs and entertainment are revived, sometimes after many years of oblivion. Simple dishes have been also rediscovered by younger generations. One of the most successful examples of this is spaghetti aglio, olio e peperoncino (garlic, oil, and hot pepper), which has turned into a favorite midnight snack for many, as immortalized by Federico Fellini in his movie, La dolce vita. However, the peculiarity of the Italian search for traditional flavors and smells is not purely hedonistic. Culture and food are strongly tied in Italy. Conviviality is not reduced to a sterilized set of good manners. In the Italian collective imagination, good food is not pretentious, expensive food; good food is tied to the table of the poor peasant family. Food is inextricably linked with the joys of family and sharing. In the 1954 Italian movie Un americano a Roma (An American in Rome), Alberto Sordi plays Nando Moriconi, a young aspiring artist in love with American models and myths: he wants “to eat like an American” (mustard, milk, and jam), and he renounces his mom’s spaghetti. However, at the end of the hilarious scene in which Sordi
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converses with a plate of spaghetti, he throws away the American food and goes back to his pasta. This scene is like a gastronomic hymn to the spirit of Italy and of Italian families everywhere. Although still persisting, this ideal of good food has been challenged from time to time. In the 1980s, there was an obsession for lean bodies and diets. Suddenly, pasta and bread became unhealthy, and dietetic products swept through the country as a storm. One paradox that characterized this process was the role played by media. On one hand, they promoted athletes and models as living examples of a new lifestyle for the common citizen. On the other hand, the same media encouraged consumerism and unconstrained abandonment to the pleasures of eating. This trend became pathological in the 1990s. Anorexia and obesity increased, especially among young people. Despite all these problems, traditional food fundamentally remains an anchor in Italian society. Roberto Benigni wonderfully portrayed this widespread feeling among Italians in his movie La vita è bella (Life Is Beautiful ). Benigni, playing a Jewish prisoner in a German concentration camp, uses food as a way of protecting his son from the cruelty of the camp. In a comically tragic scene, Benigni acts as interpreter to protect his son. He transforms the speech of a German soldier from a list of punishments for those who disobey the orders into a game. He does so by introducing foodrelated words in his translation, such as merendine (snacks) and leccalecca (suckers), which diminish the severity of the experience for his son. However, the turn to traditional food has not just been the result of a spontaneous popular initiative. Parliamentarians and scientists have also recognized the need to preserve certain traditions and the authenticity of Italian food. Italians are highly resistant to the influences of American food. They feel that an Americanization of Italian cuisine, through fast food and pre-cooked meals, would corrupt the unique taste of Italian food, destroy traditional differences, and compromise good nutrition. As a result of this national awareness, a number of institutions and associations, such as the slow food movement and l’Accademia Italiana della Cucina (Italian Academy of Cuisine), have emerged. Founded by Carlo Petrini in 1986, the slow food movement is an attempt to combat fast food by preserving regional cuisine and by linking food production to each ecological region. Although it started as a response to domestic concerns, today the slow food movement is present in more than 100 countries with over 83,000 members.
Traditional Italian pub food. Gianluca Figliola Fantini/Shutterstock.
Italy In contrast to this popular organization, L’Accademia Italiana della Cucina is a more formal institution. Recognized in 2003 by the Italian Ministry for Cultural Affairs for its cultural merits, the Accademia earned the denomination of “Cultural Institution,” thus placing it among the largest and most important Italian cultural organizations. Even though Accademia’s goals and objectives are plentiful and diversified, they believe that the appreciation for Italian food goes beyond the mere act of eating. For the Accademia, preserving Italian culinary traditions means: Discovering or rediscovering the culture of conviviality, also in one’s own home, with friends; acquiring or renewing the awareness of sitting at the same table, united by the participation in what might be defined as a common celebration—almost a re-experiencing of the spiritual significance of the rite of the communion, where the act of being together also has the function of reciprocal support, of solidarity expressed in the gesture of offering—is also a way of valorising oneself, a valid educational principle not to be dispersed. (Accademia Italiana della Cucina Web site)
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Il Cenone (The Italian Christmas Feast) In Italy the spirit of Natale (Christmas) begins around the first day of December. Il presepio (a Nativity scene) is a common sight in smaller towns, where a sense of awe for the day’s profound religious meaning is strongest. For the religious and the secular alike, the celebration is likely to include two important traditions: midnight Mass and il cenone, the Christmas feast, served on Christmas Eve. Many Italian Catholics hold to the Church tradition of abstaining from meat the day before Christmas. Thus il cenone is entirely fish based. Antipasto (appetizers) may include oysters, mussels, clams, shrimp, crab, or smoked salmon. The first course, either rice or pasta, is served with a sauce made with regional seafood. Entrées range from lobster to sea bass to the humble sardine. Baccalà (salted cod) appears on many tables in northern Italy. Eels are specialties of Venice and in the city of Naples. FURTHER READING Christmas in Italy. Chicago: World Book. 1995. Esposito, Mary Ann. Celebrations Italian Style: Recipes and Menus for Special Occasions and Seasons of the Year. New York: Hearst Books, 1995. Kasper, Lynne Rossetto. The Splendid Table: Recipes from EmiliaRomana, the Heartland of Northern Italian Food. New York: William Morrow and Company, 1992. Kasper, Lynne Rossetto. The Italian Country Table: Home Cooking from Italy’s Farmhouse Kitchens. New York: Scribner, 1999. Parmiani, Floria. “Christmas Tradition in Italy: Christmas Customs Split Italy in Two.” Floria Publications. January 13, 2007. January 15, 2007. http://www.floria-publications.com / italy/ life_and_customs /christ mas_tradition_in_italy.html. Plotkin, Fred. Italy for the Gourmet Traveler. London: Kyle Cathie, 2003.
Despite the heterogeneity in the goals and objectives of the slow food movement and the Accademia Italiana della Cucina, they share the notion that the unique Italian culinary experience should be protected. Despite the efforts of many Italians to rediscover their culinary roots, Italian cooking became more homogenized due to the proliferation of mass media, especially television. Local products became popular nationwide. Panettone was until the 1930s a cake exclusively consumed in Milan. The stiff competition between the two leading producers, Motta and Alemagna, which contributed to lower the price of the product, followed by a massive commercial campaign, allowed panettone to become today the country’s
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leading Christmas sweet. Another example of a successful marketing campaign is Barilla’s Mulino Bianco ( White Mill ) cookies and baked goods in the 1980s. By the 1990s, Barilla, a world-leading Italian food company, controlled 37 percent of the Italian market, mostly due to the ability of its commercials to connect its baked goods with the idea of a modern family—represented by a picture of a stylized family (father, mother, boy, and girl) living in the countryside in a “white mill” and enjoying a rural cuisine (wholesome products and healthy food). Finally, Nutella, a hazelnut-based sweet spread produced by Ferrero, has exceeded the most optimistic expectations by becoming not only the leading product in its segment, but also a cultural and social phenomenon, celebrated in books and movies. HOLIDAYS Dietary habits mark the pace of life experienced by a given community. Studying how a past culture prepared food can remind us of how for most of human history consumption was marked by the harvesting of seasonal crops. Italian holidays are a living example of this tradition. Although today we can find a wide selection of products, detached from their country of origin or traditional seasonal harvesting, Italian holidays and festivities are still true to their origins. This phenomenon is clearly evident on the occasion of national holidays and celebrations, when Italians turn to traditional cuisine. Carnevale is one of the most famous Italian festivities and surely the most joyful. Although its origins can be traced back to ancient Rome ( Saturnalia), Carnevale as a modern festivity appeared in the Middle Ages and marked the last possible opportunity for people to celebrate before Lent, when fasting and austerity were enforced as a way to become spiritually prepared to commemorate the Passion of Christ at Easter. During Carnevale everything is permitted—dancing, entertainment, and food. One saying says it all: A Carnevale ogni scherzo vale (All’s fair at Carnival ). Even though Carnevale is celebrated with parades and dancing in the streets everywhere in Italy; in some cities these celebrations are so unique that they draw tourists and visitors from all over the world. In Ivrea (Piedmont), one can find the “battle of oranges,” in which oranges are used as bloodless weapons in a “war” between those on carnival floats and those attending the parade. In Viareggio ( Tuscany), majestic allegorical floats, representing big names in show business and politics, are represented with satire and irony. Finally, in Venice, home of the most famous Carnevale in the country, squares and streets are filled with tourists who come to attend the parades and events organized each year. Each region has special culinary recipes for the occasion, but sweets play the leading role, and among them, fried sweets seem better to incarnate this desire for transgression. The most popular recipe is le chiacchere (gossips). They can be found everywhere in Italy, although with different names: in Friuli they are called grostoli, sfrappole in Emilia, galani in Veneto, frappe in Marche, and cenci in Tuscany. Other popular sweets include la cicerchiata (a fried pastry ball cake with honey and almond coating), typical in Central Italy, and gli struffoli, Naples’ answer to la cicerchiata.
Italy Although both sweets seem similar, the two recipes contain many differences, with the latter garnished with diavulilli (candy-coated almonds). Tradition and ritual play a strong role in Italian culture, especially during Pasqua ( Easter). The week preceding Easter is dominated by the numerous solemn dramatizations and processions commemorating Christ’s passion. Pasqua, on the other hand, detonates with joyful celebrations. For example, the annual Scoppio del Carro (explosion of the cart) is a 300-yearold Florentine tradition, during which the Archbishop lights a dove-shaped rocket that crosses the entire cathedral and collides with a cart in the square. Pasqua plays an important role in Italian society not only because of its religious significance but also because of its marking the unofficial beginning of spring. Thus, as the common saying Natale con i tuoi, Pasqua con chi vuoi (Christmas with your family, Easter with your friends) suggests, Italians take advantage of the good season to celebrate Pasqua and Pasquetta ( Easter Monday) away from the cities, maybe in somebody’s cottage or in countryside restaurants. During these celebrations, lamb is the main course on Italian tables. After a primo ( pasta or soup), an Easter lunch includes either capretto o agnellino al forno (roasted goat or baby lamb) or costolette d’agnello fritto ( lamb ribs breaded and deep fried ), followed by a wide selection of sautéed and fried vegetables, such as carciofi fritti (fried artichokes). A holiday meal in Italy would not be complete without a traditional dessert, and during Easter there are several. La pastiera is the classic Neapolitan grain pie. Another treat is the Colomba, a sweet, yeasted bread (like panettone plus candied orange peel, minus the raisins, and topped with sugared and sliced almonds) baked in a dove shape. Finally, there is the children’s favorite sweet, l’Uovo di Pasqua, a milk chocolate Easter egg, that, while it may change in size (the range varies from few grams to several kilos), always includes a present hidden inside. Between May and September, Italians like to commemorate two days in particular: la Festa dei Lavoratori ( Workers’ Day) on May 1, and Ferragosto on August 15. Workers’ Day was established by the Second International
Italian candy shop. © Agno_agnus | Dreamstime.com.
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Congress in July 1889 as a living reminder of the sacrifice of hundreds of American workers killed by the police in Chicago on May 1, 1886 during a demonstration, and it became a holiday in Italy in 1891. Although the Fascist regime moved the day to April 21, by 1945 Workers’ Day was moved back to May 1, becoming one of the most cherished holidays in the country. During the Cold War la Festa dei Lavoratori had strong political connotations (the Italian Communist party was the second largest party in Italy and the biggest outside of the Soviet bloc). Today la Festa has lost its revolutionary edge, but it remains a constant reminder of the workers’ struggle. Workers’ Day is now often associated with the rediscovery of the pleasure of eating outdoors. In the countryside, equipped with picnic baskets, Italians enjoy pasta salads, cold cuts, local cheese, sometimes paired with fresh vegetables, such as the classic combination of lima beans and fresh pecorino (goat cheese). Ferragosto commemorates the day when the Blessed Virgin Mary was assumed in Heaven. Ferragosto’s popularity comes in part from the fact that the holiday is celebrated in the middle of the Italian holiday season (August) when millions of Italians leave urban areas for the mountains and beaches to find relief from the stress of daily life. Each region has its own typical dish for August: l’anatra (duck) in Lombardy, la bomba di riso (rice mould with pigeon sauce) in Piacenza, and arancini (fried rice balls stuffed with ground beef, mozzarella, tomatoes, and peas) in Sicily. In November, Italians celebrate Il Giorno dei Morti (All Souls’ Day). On November 2, Italians remember their dear ones who died by going to cemeteries and attending masses for them. Far from being a gloomy celebration, Il Giorno dei Morti is instead a happy celebration. Many Italians take advantage of the holiday to return to their places of origin, allowing them to reconnect with relatives and friends. During this holiday, Italians like to celebrate by eating typical desserts. The most popular one is le fave dei morti (the beans of the dead ), bean-shaped cakes made of ground almonds, sugar, egg, butter, and flour. Although celebrated throughout the country, Il Giorno dei Morti assumes a particular meaning in Sicily, where the festivity is associated with gifts and children. According to Sicilian tradition, the dead bring presents to children who behaved well during the previous year. Thus, on November 1, parents prepare and hide sweets and gifts that children must find on the next day. At the end of the game, the entire family goes to the cemetery to thank the relatives for the presents left. Finally, we have Christmas, the most important holiday in Italy, during which Italians like to indulge, showing up the best of the Italian repertoire in food and drinks. Christmas is devoted to family and friends and, from a culinary point of view, to tradition. Christmas season in Italy starts on December 24, called la vigilia (eve), when Italians abstain from meat. Whereas lunch is very simple, such as pasta e ceci (chickpeas soup with pasta), Christmas Eve dinner is a great indulgence. Tradition dictates that fish be the main course. Thus, throughout the entire country, menus include, among others, spaghetti agli scogli (spaghetti with mussels and clams), baccalà (salted dried cod fish), roasted or fried eel, la caponata di pesce (fish salad). On Christmas
Italy day and Santo Stefano ( December 26), meat is the reigning ingredient. Lunch will start with baked pasta ( lasagne, cannelloni, ravioli) or cappelletti in brodo ( little hat pasta stuffed with a mix of beef, pork, chicken, parmesan cheese, and nutmeg, cooked in chicken or beef broth), followed by mixed boiled meats served with different sauces, roasted beef or pork, vitello tonnato (veal in tuna sauce), insalata russa ( pieces of boiled peas, carrots and potatoes, mixed with mayonnaise), different salads, and roasted potatoes. Traditional sweets are also important items for the Christmas menu in Italy. Among others, you can find dried figs, candied almonds, chestnuts, panforte (traditional Sienese cake), pandolce (a specialty of Genoa), and panettone. On New Year’s Eve, Italians pour into restaurants, night clubs, and convention centers to celebrate the coming of the New Year by eating lavish buffets that must include, among the other courses, lenticchie con il cotechino (a lentil soup and pork sausage made from cotica, or pork rind mixed with lean pork meat, fat, and spices), a dish associated with good luck and money. Christmas season ends on January 6 with l’Epifania ( Epiphany), when la Befana (an ugly old woman) brings gifts to good children. Originated in Rome, the visit of la Befana has now become one of the most loved celebrations in Italy. On January 5 ( Epiphany Eve), Italian families hang stockings that la Befana fills up with sweets for those children who have been good in the previous year or with coal-shaped sweets (traditionally coal) for those who have been bad. CONCLUSION “What is the glory of Dante compared to spaghetti?” the scholar Guiseppe Prezzolini wondered when he noted in 1954 that pasta had “entered many American homes where the name of Dante is never pronounced” (quoted in Capatti and Montanari xx). If comparisons in popularity between culinary and literary traditions would not find too much ground in many countries, in Italy they are more than legitimate. Food defines Italians both at home and in the world, because it has become an integral part of their cultural background. However, what makes Italian cuisine really unique is the capacity to unite a sophisticated and immense selection of dishes with the spontaneity and genuine enthusiasm of its humble origins. The Italian culinary tradition is thus not only the domain of a small elite but of an entire nation, which prides itself on this legacy. Further Reading: Alberini, Massimo. Storia della cucina italiana. Casale Monferrato: Piemme, 1992; Capatti, Alberto, and Massimo Montanari. Italian Cuisine: A Cultural History. New York: Columbia University Press, 2003; Helstosky, Carol. Garlic and Oil: Politics and Food in Italy. Oxford: Berg, 2004; Killinger, Charles. Culture and Customs in Italy. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2005; Accademia della Cucina Italiana, http://www.accademiaitalianacucina.it /.
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J Japanese Cherry Blossom Festival Viewing the beautiful pink blooms that emerge each year on the cherry trees of Japan is synonymous with the arrival of spring. There are several hundred varieties of cherry trees in Japan, with some existing only in particular locations because the Japanese have long enjoyed cultivating special varieties. To them, the emergence of the cherry blossom (sakura) signifies the fleeting yet spectacular beauty of youth and the fragility of life. Out of this tradition of flower viewing evolved the practice of picnicking under the gorgeous pink trees—hanami. For this occasion, elaborate lunchboxes— bento—are the traditional choice of packed food. Sakura mochi—sakura leaf preserved in salt, wrapped around a glutinous rice (mochi) dumpling—are also consumed at this time of the year. More recently the bento have been supplemented or replaced by sandwiches, stuffed rice balls (onigiri), and processed snack foods such as potato chips and biscuits. Sake (Japanese rice wine) and beer flow freely and sometimes picnickers may become a little boisterous. If the picnic is a gathering of the family, usually the mother or grandmother prepares the food. If it is an office gathering or a group of friends, people are assigned to bring certain things, potluck style. The picnics
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usually last for a couple of hours on weekends or after work during the short week or two that the trees are in flower. During this time, friends, family, and coworkers gather together on a blanket under the prettiest tree they can find. Many Japanese schoolchildren also picnic under the trees with their teachers and classmates in arranged outings. While some locations, such as temples, shrines, and parks, are famous for spectacular groves of cherry trees and enjoy many visitors during the festival, outings can also be low-key affairs with people simply settling under a neighborhood stand or lone tree. The modern practice of flower appreciation evolved from a long history of celebrations centered around the trees and the concept of rebirth. The Hitachinokuni Fudoki, an eighth-century guide to famous places, describes singing and dancing among the flowers after climbing Mount Tsukuba. During the Heian period (795–1192), the Imperial court held a banquet on the day of o-hanami to mark the change of seasons, but it was during the Edo period (1603–1867) that flower viewing became common among all Japanese, with much dancing, singing, and enjoyment of sake. Thus food, rice wine, and flower viewing are intimately linked, with the most commonly quoted poems at these parties being “Hana yori dango” (“Better than the flowers is the food”) and “Sake nakute, nanno, onorega sakura kana” (“Without the wine, the flowers have no attraction”). Today’s Japanese cherry blossom festivals (hana matsuri) feature dance and music concerts that celebrate the cherry blossom and the arrival of spring with poetry competitions, calligraphy exhibits, and paintings that depict the viewing season. Nor is the festival celebrated solely in Japan. With the Japanese government’s gift of
Japanese Flower Hat Dance performance at a Cherry Blossom Festival. Jenny Mie Lau King /Shutterstock.
Juneteenth 3,020 cherry trees to the people of America in 1912, the festival has become a highly anticipated annual event in Washington, D.C., with parades, karaoke, musical performances, and other entertainment, all with the intent of celebrating Japanese culture and the amiable relationship between Japan and the United States. Further Reading: http://www.nps.gov/nacc/cherry/history.htm; Erskine, William Hugh. Japanese Festival and Calendar Lore. Tokyo, Japan: Kyo Bun Kwan, 1933; Dagaku, Kokugakuin, and Nihon Bunka Kenkyu¯jo. Matsuri: Festival and Rite in Japanese Life. Vol. 1. Tokyo: Institute for Japanese Culture and Classics, Kokugakuin University, 1988.
Karen Lau Taylor
Juneteenth In June of 1865, Union General, Gordon Granger, and 2,000 federal troops arrived by ship in Galveston, Texas, to take possession of the state and to enforce the emancipation of its slaves. Although the Emancipation Proclamation had been signed by President Lincoln on January 1, 1863, the news and actual emancipation usually came to most states with the arrival of the Union army, so the dates of celebration of emancipation varied from state to state. Due to the small number of Union troops posted in Texas at the time, the Emancipation Proclamation had no impact on Texas when it was first signed. With the surrender of General Lee in April of 1865, and the arrival of General Granger’s regiment, the news finally reached the slaves of Texas. General Granger gathered a crowd on June 19, 1865, and read General Order #3 to the people of Galveston. General Order #3 stated: “The people of Texas are informed that, in accordance with a proclamation from the Executive of the United States, all slaves are free. This involves an absolute equality of personal rights and rights of property between former masters and slaves, and the connection heretofore existing between them becomes that between employer and hired labor. The freedmen are advised to remain quietly at their present homes and work for wages. They are informed that they will not be allowed to collect at military posts and that they will not be supported in idleness either there or elsewhere.” Former slaves in Galveston rejoiced in the streets with jubilant celebrations. The day was commemorated the following year and soon came to be known as Juneteenth, a melding of the words June and nineteenth. Juneteenth was observed mainly in eastern Texas, Alabama, and Mississippi. Some other locales celebrated the day as Emancipation Day. In the late 1800s many former slaves migrated to what was to become Oklahoma. Many settled in all-black communities, and they brought their Juneteenth traditions with them. Others, who did not settle in communities where it was remembered, often returned to their former homes to commemorate the day.
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Descriptions of initial emancipation celebrations include accounts of slaves tossing their ragged garments into creeks and rivers to redress in clothing taken from the plantations belonging to their former masters. Dress became an important element in early Juneteenth customs. This was in response to the days when there were laws on the books, in many areas, that restricted the kind of clothing worn by slaves. Most festivities took place around rivers, creeks, and on church grounds and usually lasted all day. These locations were perfect for activities such as fishing and picnics. More structured events such as rodeos and baseball were also common, as were dances, suppers, and parades. Education and selfimprovement were customary themes. Guest speakers were often brought in, and the elders were called upon to recount the events of the past. Prayer services were also a major part of these celebrations. Today, Juneteenth continues to be a day of reflection, renewal, and cultural pride. It is a day to take time to appreciate the African American experience. In addition to traditional activities, many celebrations include: music and entertainment; parades and walks; community wellness and betterment forums; health booths for screening, testing, and information distribution by social service and mental health agencies; vendors of handmade arts and crafts; children’s activities and contests of skill and talent. Juneteenth’s Texas roots lead most event menus to include barbeque, and the barbeque pit is often established as the center of attention at celebrations. Meats such as lamb, pork, and beef, which were not commonly available to slaves, are often featured. Strawberry soda pop has also come to be synonymous with the day. Today, many events include foods familiar to African American southerners such as platters of barbequed chicken, long link sausages, and brisket-sized chunks of beef, bowls of brown beans seasoned with hunks of bacon, trays of white store-bought bread, and peach cobbler. Foods that reflect slave traditions are also popular at Juneteenth festivities. These foods, often referred to collectively as soul food, find their roots in West African ingredients and cooking methods that over time were blended with various European and Native American influences. Some believe that barbeque is actually the result of a convergence of African, European, and Native American culinary methods. Many traditional West African cooking ingredients made their way to the Americas and have become very closely associated with African American cooking. Okra, watermelon, leafy greens, and yams were staples of West African cuisine and are now part of American cooking as well. As the Africans began to assimilate into the American slave society, they learned how to make the most of whatever ingredients were at hand. Sweet potatoes took the place of yams in the slaves’ diet. The fresh vegetables found in Africa were replaced by the throwaway foods from the plantation house like the tops of turnips and beets and dandelions. Nothing was wasted. They began cooking with new types of greens such as collards, kale, cress, mustard, and pokeweed. With cast-off ingredients such as pig knuckles or jowls and lard for flavor from the slaughtered hog and cracklin’
Juneteenth from its skin, slaves made filling meals. These practices have evolved into culinary traditions that include soul food dishes such as carrot and raisin salad, fried corn, hush puppies, corn pone, red beans and rice, black-eyed peas, greens, lima beans with ham hocks, stewed okra and tomatoes, cornbread dipped in buttermilk, fried catfish, pickled pig’s feet, fried cabbage, neckbones, tongue, chittlin’s, tripe, and gumbo. In the early years, there was little interest outside the African American community for participating in Juneteenth celebrations. In some cases, there was outward resistance that included barring the use of public property for the revels. As African Americans became landowners, property was donated and dedicated for the use of these festivities. Reverend Jack Yates organized one of the earliest documented land purchases in the name of Juneteenth. His church, Antioch Baptist, and Trinity Methodist Episcopal Church formed the Colored People’s Festival and Emancipation Park Association. In 1872, they pooled $1,000 to put down on 10 acres of open land in Houston, Texas, as home for their Juneteenth celebration. In honor of their freedom, they named it Emancipation Park. In 1896 a group of 54 exslaves, who wanted a regular place where they could celebrate Juneteenth without any hassles, decided to purchase 30 acres of land in Limestone County, Texas. This site, Booker T. Washington Park, became the Juneteenth celebration site in 1898. For decades these annual celebrations flourished, growing continuously with each passing year. As many as 20,000 African Americans once flowed through Booker T. Washington Park, during the course of a week, making their celebration one of the state’s largest. Celebrations began to decline in the early 1900s. Formal education had replaced traditional home and family-taught practices, and there was less emphasis on the activities of former slaves. Classroom textbooks proclaimed Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation of January 1, 1863, as the date signaling the ending of slavery with little or no mention of the impact of General Granger’s arrival on June 19. Economic and cultural forces came into play as well. While there are accounts of early Juneteenth activities being interrupted by local landowners demanding that their laborers return to work, most allowed their workers the day off. Some even made donations of food and money to support the festivities. During the Depression, however, many African Americans left farms in search of work in the cities. Employers in the city were less likely to recognize Juneteenth as a holiday and grant their employees leave. Unless June 19 fell on a weekend, many people were unable to return for the festivities. July 4 was already the established national Independence Day holiday, and a rise in patriotism, especially during World War II, steered more toward this celebration. For many African Americans the civil rights movement of the 1950s and 1960s brought about a rebirth of interest in the historical struggles of their ancestors. Some student demonstrators involved in the Atlanta civil rights campaign in the early 1960s wore Juneteenth freedom buttons. In 1968, Juneteenth received a strong support through the Poor People’s March to Washington, D.C. Reverend Ralph Abernathy called for people of all races,
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creeds, economic levels, and professions to come to Washington to show support for the poor. Many of these attendees returned home and initiated Juneteenth celebrations in areas where they had never been celebrated. Two of the largest Juneteenth celebrations founded after this march are now held in Milwaukee and Minneapolis. Throughout the 1980s and 1990s, Juneteenth continued to enjoy a growing and healthy interest from communities and organizations throughout the country. Institutions such as the Smithsonian and the Henry Ford Museum have begun sponsoring Juneteenth-centered activities. On January 1, 1980, Juneteenth became an official state holiday in Texas through the efforts of Al Edwards, an African American state legislator. The successful passage of this bill marked Juneteenth as the first emancipation celebration granted official state recognition. Representative Edwards has since actively sought to spread the observance of Juneteenth all across America. Several states, including Florida, Oklahoma, Delaware, Alaska, Idaho, Iowa, California, Wyoming, Illinois, Missouri, Connecticut, Louisiana, New Jersey, Arkansas, the District of Columbia, and Kentucky have issued proclamations recognizing the holiday, but the Lone Star State remains alone in granting it full state holiday status, when government employees have the day off. Nonetheless, supporters and celebrants of Juneteenth continue to grow in number and in diversity. Today, Juneteenth is promoted not only as a commemoration of African American freedom, but as an example and encouragement of self-development and respect for all cultures. Further Reading: Cohen, Hennig, and Tristram Potter Coffin, eds. The Folklore of American Holidays. Detroit, MI: Gale Research Company, 1987; Ellison, Ralph, Juneteenth: A Novel. New York: Random House, 1999; Harris, Jessica. The Welcome Table—African American Heritage Cooking. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1996; Wiggins, William H., Jr. O Freedom! Afro-American Emancipation Celebrations. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 1987.
Dorothy Denneen Volo
K Kaiseki Ryori Kaiseki Ryori is an elaborate multi-course meal developed in sixteenth-century Japan to serve as a prelude to the traditional tea ceremony. Today’s version, like the original, uses only the freshest, most seasonal ingredients combined with minimal seasoning to maximize the food’s natural flavors. Furthermore, each course’s presentation plays an important role in the ceremony, and the choice of serving dishes further complements the food. A Zen influence permeates the meal. Indeed, the word kaiseki comes from kai, meaning inside the neckband of the kimono, and seki meaning stone, because during the Muromachi period in Japan (ca. 1336–1573), when the custom of serving a light metal during the tea ceremony became widespread, Zen monks ate only twice a day—in the morning and at noon. To stave off hunger and keep warm, they would heat stones and place them in their kimonos above the chest. Kaiseki cuisine was originally vegetarian; however, the modern kaiseki meal is generally half vegetable, half meat. Depending on the formality of the ceremony, the number of courses varies, though the standard is between 6 and 15 courses, with little to no repetition of flavors or textures. All five tastes—sweet, salty, bitter, sour, and umami (the savory or meaty taste)— should be achieved in the meal, and the dishes must encompass different elements of nature: mountains, sea, rivers, and fields.
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The initial courses are served in three lacquer bowls positioned triangularly on a lacquer tray. The left-hand bowl is filled with one spoonful of rice (gohan); the bowl on the right with an equivalent portion of soup (misoshiru) that is usually white miso–based but could also be clear broth if the occasion is formal; and the bowl at the top of the triangle holds an equal portion of raw fish (mukozuki). The fourth dish served is the wanmori, or soup course, which is considered the heart and soul of the meal. It is said that if the wanmori is a success, then the whole meal may be considered an accomplishment. It is for this reason that only the finest ingredients are selected and painstaking effort is taken in the preparation. The fifth dish served is the yakimono, a grilled or broiled food (usually fish). Although various sauces may accompany the yakimono, it generally stands alone so that its delicate flavor does not get overshadowed. Following this course is one of simmered foods, usually vegetables, called azukebachi. Next is the hashiarai, or “chopstick wash,” which is usually a light stock flavored with kelp or pickled plum. The chopsticks are rinsed in the bowl, followed by sipping the stock in order for the palate to be refreshed and purified for the remaining courses. The meal continues with hassun, which are “piles” of food from the mountains and the sea that derives its name from the special tray upon which the food is served. Konomono, pickled vegetables, follows. The vinegar in the konomono helps to erase lingering odors and flavors from prior courses and prepares the guest for the formal tea drinking. Following the pickles, the diner may or may not receive kudamono, or fresh fruit. The kaiseki meal finally ends with kashi and ocha, sweets and tea, respectively. Sweets are served to offset the bitterness of the ground tea. To capture the harmony of nature, organic materials are used in the construction of the tearoom and also in the serving ware selected. The plates and bowls should reflect the seasons; brighter colors are showcased during summer months while muted colors are chosen during the winter. Moreover, the physical shapes of the dishes encapsulate the seasons, with summer wares being flatter and more open, while winter plates have lids and more vertical or sloped walls. The majority of serving dishes used in a kaiseki meal are lacquer or ceramic, though an exception is made for the hassun course, as hassun trays are usually made from unadorned Japanese cedar. The host takes great pains in showcasing a variety of dishes, all of which serve to highlight the food and complement one another. Just as the same food must never be offered in succession, the same is true of serving ware, and a range of shapes and styles is used to create a harmonious ambiance that touches all of the senses. The kaiseki meal should be served in a small, relatively unadorned room to help the guests achieve an elevated state of mind. For this reason, only a few guests and the host partake in a kaiseki meal. However, there will always be a principal guest who is the most knowledgeable in the “way of tea” and this guest is served first. The meal is a quiet affair with little talking, though usually after the azukebachi course, guests will comment on the meal and the serving ware. Business, politics, and loud talk are avoided,
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and there is little interaction between the host and the guests. The host is in charge of timing the meal properly, so he or she supervises the meal’s preparation in another room while the guests dine. During the hassun course, the host pours sake for the guests in order of rank beginning with the principal guest. Then the principal guest, in turn, offers the host sake, and they drink together, marking the only time in the meal that they partake together. At the end of the meal, the host rejoins everyone and apologizes for the meal’s inadequacy, which is, of course, a formality. The guests reply by thanking the host for his efforts and, especially, for all of the food served. The ritualized interplay between host and guests is a cornerstone of the kaiseki meal. The mid-1800s marked the end of the Edo period in Japan, and it was at this point that the traditional kaiseki meal shifted from being exclusively found in a tearoom to one served in a public restaurant. However, the meal’s tea component was itself gradually phased out, leaving what is today known as restaurant kaiseki. Although several temples in Kyoto and in other parts of Japan still offer traditional kaiseki meals, most such meals today are eaten in luxury hotel restaurants. Because such care is taken in preparing each course with only the finest ingredients used, it is very expensive and is reserved for truly special occasions. Nevertheless, the kaiseki meal remains an integral aspect of Japanese cuisine, an art form unto itself, for it sets the standards of excellence in food preparation and service, and it imbues all of the senses with the beauty and harmony of nature. Further Reading: Kakuzo, Okakura. The Book of Tea. Philadelphia, PA: Running Press, 2002; Tsuchiya, Yoshio, and Masaru Yamamoto. The Fine Art of Japanese Food Arrangement. Tokyo: Kodansha International, 1985; Tsuji, Kaichi. Kaiseki: Zen Tastes in Japanese Cooking. Tokyo: Kodansha International, 1972; Tsuji, Shizuo. Japanese Cooking: A Simple Art. Tokyo: Kodashana International, 1980.
Lauren Shockey
Kentucky Derby The Kentucky Derby is held the first Saturday in May every year at Churchill Downs in Louisville, Kentucky. The most famous horse race in the world, the derby is watched by millions on television and is the focus of The Day before Derby Day parties, balls, and galas in the LouAlice Cary Brown, wife of the former chairman of the board of isville area much like Mardi Gras Brown-Forman Corporation, whiskey manufacturers and owners features in the social life of New of the Jack Daniel’s brand, has been hosting the coveted lunch Orleans. slot on Friday, the day before the derby, and the day of the Modeled on England’s Epsom “race-before-the race,” the Kentucky Oaks—the filly counterpart Derby, the race was begun in 1875 of the derby. The Oaks features the best of the three-year-old filto revive Kentucky’s thoroughbred lies. Her husband, William Lee Lyons Brown, Jr., a fourth generahorse breeding industry, which was tion Brown-Forman businessman, inherited the coveted timeslot devastated by the Civil War. Fiffrom his parents, Sally Brown and William Lee Lyons Brown, Sr. teen horses ran on a 1.5-mile track.
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By the beginning of the twentieth century, it had become the most recognized horse race in America. Fame and attention brought rich horse breeders and racing fans to Louisville by private rail car for the race. Other attendees flocked to hotels and private homes for the race and the many breakfasts, parties, and balls during the weeks leading up to the race have become part of the Kentucky Derby tradition. Seating at Churchill Downs is limited and expensive, and many visitors never actually attend the race but come to Louisville for the festivities taking place during the two weeks leading up to the Ina B. Chadwick race and for derby day itself. The city is gripped by “horse fever,” and a carnival atmosphere prevails. The derby events begin two Horsey-set Party Saturdays before the derby with In 1953 famed jockeys Eddie Arcaro and Bill Shoemaker were Thunder Over Louisville, an air invited to Texas oilman Dick Andrade’s hotel suite for “shootshow and one of the largest fireers” before turning in for the night. The Texan, whose reputation works displays in the country; the as a lavish and strange host made his invites irresistible, had show is viewed annually by over not only asked the famous jockeys but, to set the stage for his half a million people. There are paelaborate themed party, he invited an unexpected A-list guest: rades, parties, concerts, steam boat a pony and its groomsman. The horse was outfitted in rubber races, and other activities so that shoes to keep the carpeting in the opulent Brown Hotel from the entire Louisville community getting soiled. It is reported that the horse was not allowed in may join in the festivities. Locals the lobby and had to enter via the service entrance. It rode up and serious horse people attend in the freight elevator where bon vivants and racing luminaries were ready to eat and imbibe. The impact on the party’s bottom the Kentucky Oaks, a race for filline for the one equine guest, without serving it food or liquor, lies held the day before the derby, was hefty for that era—$500. as tickets for the derby itself can be difficult to obtain. Ina B. Chadwick Jocularity and good will is fueled largely by beer at the concerts and outdoor events, and champagne flows freely at dinners and galas but for the race itself, bourbon whiskey is king. Kentucky’s pride and joy, bourbon appears in candies and desserts, and the mint julep is the official drink of the derby. Traditionally served in frosted silver cups, juleps are made of muddled mint, sugar, and the finest bourbon over shaved ice and are sipped through a straw. To most Louisvilleans, it just may be the best party timeslot, as it is more difficult to throw a derby-day party, and get to the races on time. For many decades and up until the sale of their home, Fincastle in Prospect, Kentucky, in 2005, 150 guests gathered around noon beneath a tent extending from the patio to the lawn. The party started with traditional pass-along hors d’oeuvres; cheese biscuits with pecans. The main course, turkey hash, which lends itself easily to cooking in advance, is a blend of onions and celery, mild spices and cooked shredded turkey in a light-colored creamy sauce. For three days prior to the race, the social set is steeped in customs passed on from family members. One of the most notorious events takes place on derby eve at Anita Madden’s Hamburg Place farm in Lexington, where Mr. Madden’s grandfather bred five derby winners. The Madden blowout is famous for its fanciful themes, such as a Greek Odyssey replete with imaginative recreations of Homeric scenes, and one year’s “Rapture of the Deep” with animated mermaids, an octopus, and a shadowy underwater atmosphere rising from dry ice.
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Kentucky Derby Other regional favorite foods are showcased at derby parties. Benedictine spread is traditional to Louisville, a cucumber and cream cheese concoction often dyed bluegreen. Cheese grits star in brunch buffets as well as beaten biscuits with Kentucky’s prized country ham. Burgoo is traditional Kentucky fare that has become popular at derby time. A country stew of cooked meats and vegetables, burgoo is dished up from a steaming vat, preferably over an open fire. The Hot Brown, a turkey sandwich with bacon and melted cheese sauce developed at the Brown Hotel in Louisville, is another regional favorite that is served at lunches and brunches. Henry Bain sauce (named for a legendary head waiter at a local club) tops beef tenderloin at the upper end of the social scale, and barbeque is showcased at backyard events. Pie made with bourbon, pecans, and chocolate has become associated with the derby and every restaurant and home cook has their own name and variation on the recipe. Kentucky blackberry jam cake is another favorite dessert. Decorating a hat for derby day is part of the race tradition, and hats range from custom millinery to homemade glue-gun fabrications. Dressing up for “Millionaire’s Row,” the seating for the elite, is part of the ritual, and many people assemble to gawk at the arriving celebrities in their finery. Race day begins with breakfast, whether served to thousands on the lawn of the governor’s mansion
Mint Julep While there is much lore on how the mint julep and the goblet it is served in became the symbols of the Kentucky Derby, it is safe to say that bourbon, the true whiskey of Kentucky, was the first choice in the fundamental recipe for a mint julep. The magazine The American Museum of 1787 contains the first known mention of a julep: the drink is reported as being a “draught with which to start the day.” Museum details the routine of Virginians (Virginia was once part of Kentucky) waking, and prior to starting their day, swallowing a julep made of rum, water, and sugar, “but very strong.” In 1803 an Englishman tutoring on a plantation in Northern Virginia recorded his most pleasurable quaffing experiences of the mornings, and detailed for the first time, the addition of perfect sprigs of mint to the drink. The classic silver Julep cup seems to have debuted when a wealthy, South Carolina gentleman, William Heyward Traipier, brought casks of bourbon to Oxford for his extended teaching stay. Once there, he asked his hosts’ servants to make him a mint julep. Of course, they couldn’t meet the request, and Traipier supposedly taught the English how to make one and he became a favorite son immediately. From then on, and with varying reports of how the custom was carried on, the New College at Oxford University has served free mint juleps once a year in June, as an endowment from the bountiful American, Traipier. From that legend, the commemorative silver julep cup, hammered from 1740 Georgian silver and then engraved, was born. The original cup, about 5½ inches high now rests among the treasures of New College in England. The inscription is dated 1845. More than a hundred years later in 1956, a visiting Englishman returned the silver cup favor, by bringing with him another cup similar in size to the original and presenting it to the University of South Carolina. Thus, a hundred years of tradition has been handed on to Southerners as the cup was forever deemed a mint julep cup. Exchanging cups as gifts is a derby tradition. FURTHER READING Harwell, Richard Barksdale. The Mint Julep. Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press, 2005.
Ina B. Chadwick
Silver julep cup with roses and lace. John Clines/Shutterstock.
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in nearby Frankfort or at a tailgate picnic in the parking lot of the racetrack. Many gather at private The W. L. Brown, Jr., family continues to entertain on Kentuckyhomes to start derby day activities designed dishes created especially for them by a local potter, and then proceed by mid-afternoon M. A. Hadley (1913–1991). Hadley, a Louisville resident for most of her adult life, became sought after in the 1940s, after a to the track if they have tickets or custom set of dishes she designed for her own luxury riverboat on to more parties to view the race, gained favor in the in crowd. Each Hadley piece—all plates, that, for all the ballyhoo surroundserving dishes, cups, and bowls—were, and still are, painted ing it, actually lasts less than three freehand by more than a dozen decorators on hand in the Louminutes. isville factory—all still replicating Hadley’s many designs (http:// The race at Churchill Downs www.wku.edu/Library/onlinexh/kwa/hadley.html). Mrs. Hadley is a two-tier social affair. In the sold the company in 1979 but very little changed. Hostesses stands and boxes are the rich and from the area still order custom dishes for their parties from famous that come from all over craftsmen who follow in the Hadley tradition. the world for this premiere race. Ina B. Chadwick Millionaire horse breeders, royalty, politicians, and celebrities mingle while waiters attend to their drink and food requests and elaborate buffets are set out in private boxes. At the other end of the spectrum is the infield crowd, where people dress in T-shirts and shorts and tote their coolers and chairs in for a day of revelry and fun that often becomes a boozy, muddy free-for-all. Few in the infield can actually see the track, and having a good time is the main event. But while the social division is evident, all stand for the traditional, misty-eyed singing of “My Old Kentucky Home.” Most people view the race on television at private parties in homes or at sports bars. The atmosphere is just as festive, and many celebrants spend the day going from party to party. Houseguests are numerous, and work grinds to a halt on Friday and Saturday of the derby weekend for the parades and parties as Louisville becomes the center of the world for a few brief hours.
Derby Dishes
Further Reading: Doolittle, Bill. The Kentucky Derby: Run for the Roses. New York: Time-Life Books, 1998; Hirsh, Joe, and Jim Bolus. Kentucky Derby: The Chance of a Lifetime. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1988; Nold, James, Jr., and Bob Bahr. The Insiders’ Guide to Louisville and Southern Indiana. 2nd ed. Manteo, NC: Insiders’ Publishing, 1997; Derby Entertaining: A Celebration of Kentucky Derby Food Traditions. http://southernfood.about.com/library/weekly/aa043000a.htm. This site contains many links to food and drink associated with the Kentucky Derby and Kentucky food traditions.
Mary Sanker
Kitchen Staff Dress Clothing and hats were clear indications of one’s rank and social station among service staff in Western Europe. In the Middle Ages, long before public restaurants existed, male kitchen servants in wealthy homes and manor
Kitchen Staff Dress houses of the royals, wore doublets with shoulder capes and short tunics. They carried napkins, as did the male carvers, working from the sideboards to serve meats in the dining rooms. There are early images of fifteenth-century male cooks wearing aprons and white over-sleeves. The 1662 service manual for “Officers of the Mouth” included mention of uniforms, complete with swords for highest-ranking servants who presented food at formal dining. Rough fabrics in dark, dull colors were worn by lower-level household staff while those in public service positions were dressed in more formal, often more fashionable costumes. In the eighteenth century kitchen boys wore canvas shirts and loose over-jackets, as they fed fires, scrubbed pots and pans, and men wore jumps, informal, buttoned jackets over breeches and stockings. African pages, young male slaves, wore turbans, as they served in parlors, wearing formal tailcoats with silver collars tight around their necks bearing their masters’ names and addresses. Livery staff, those who tended to horses and carriages, were seen in public in formal uniforms similar to the buttoned-down military jackets with shoulder epaulets. In the eighteenth century, in modest households, female cooks wore long aprons covering plain, dark long skirts. Hats also signified individual status and reflected the fashions of the times, with the soft caps of Tudor times giving way to pointed caps for kitchen workers and then the tri-corner caps of the eighteenth century. Women wore white mob caps or smaller coifs in kitchen and parlor and men cooks wore white toques in the larger, wealthier homes. In the nineteenth century top hats were worn by senior livery staff sent on errands to shops on behalf of the household. More formal attire for servants seen in public often indicated the size and wealth of a household while the distinctions of apparel signified ranks and tasks of service staff. During the nineteenth century, women housekeepers served as household managers in modest homes. They carried keys to the larder, the silver service, and most of the valuable provisions under their long, white aprons. They acted as purchasing agents or stewards might in wealthier homes and in commercial kitchens today, controlling costs, dispersing luxury ingredients and liquors. Toward the end of the nineteenth century, in the wealthiest and most formal homes, male butlers wore evening dress suits at all times: the black coat with tails and trousers, white starched shirt, white waistcoat and tie. The British Museum and several European national and historic libraries have etchings and images of household staff dress as it changed from medieval times to the present. The chef’s costume today consists of several elements. The traditional jacket, worn in restaurant and hotel kitchens since the nineteenth century, is white cotton, to demonstrate cleanliness and absorb sweat, although current fashions include a range of styles, colors, fabrics, and detailed stitching. The classic chef’s coat is double-breasted and double buttoned, permitting chefs to reverse their coats if called upon to present themselves to diners, thereby appearing clean.
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The toque, or puffed cloth cap, came in several different heights, indicative of kitchen brigade positions. The tallest erect toque signified the chef, the executive in charge of the kitchen, then a shorter toque was worn by the sous chef, or under-chef, responsible for the execution of most meats and the coordination of timing for delivering foods to guests. Flatter caps were worn by line cooks, those charged with preparation of fish, vegetables, side dishes, sauces, soups, and by the lowest station, where the condiments and cold salads are assembled, called garde mange. This use of hats as symbols of leadership has now merged with the newer requirements for all kitchen staff to cover hair when preparing and handling food for the public. The original purpose of the headgear was to prevent grease dripping from the kitchen ceiling onto chefs’ heads. Nowadays headgear includes baseball caps, kerchiefs, and hairnets as well as a variety of stylish and colorful cloth caps, designed to complement the variety of clothing options that abound. The traditional kerchief, worn around the neck, was intended to prevent sweat dripping into foods, and also served as a tourniquet handy for emergencies. This has now become optional in some kitchens, although it is generally included for formal appearances, when chefs participate in contests, and photographs. Checkered pants also indicated status of workers, but this signifier has changed as pants now come in many styles, colors, and patterns that reflect the tastes of the worker and are not always indicative of kitchen rank. Aprons, worn long to cover and protect cooks’ lower bodies and legs as they faced the heat, also served as convenient hand wipes, an extra cloth with which to grasp pans, and as cover to uniforms, to be changed quickly, if called into the dining room. Long white lab coats were used in large manufacturing facilities, in recipe research and development settings, in butcher shops, and by cheese mongers. In royal and aristocratic manor houses specific costumes existed for each service position. These costumes evolved into the formal attire worn by service staff working in the front of the house in formal or white table cloth dining establishments. When formal restaurants began to develop in the eighteenth century in England and Western Europe, men were trained for professional service work, and wore the formal tuxedo or white dinner jacket, adapted from the butler’s uniform to signify their positions. Women worked in home kitchens and served in homes, often wearing white aprons to cover black or gray skirts and dresses. They made pastry and sold food in retail shops and public street markets, wearing aprons, the dark, long skirt with white collar, cuffs and cap of the maid’s uniforms, or street clothes, but they did not serve food or wine in fine dining establishments. Women were not permitted to dine in most fine restaurants during the nineteenth century, except in the company of a gentleman. The exceptions to this rule were the tearooms, where the service was often performed by women (Kinchin 1998). Respectable women servers wore long dark skirts, white shirt-waists, and black bows at their buttoned-up necklines.
Kwanzaa As factory work increased, managers demanded the workers eat quickly and return to their jobs, requiring more casual eateries. Some allowed women to serve. Horn & Hardart was a famous New York City chain, and the Harvey Dining Rooms, along the Santa Fe railroad system, were another well-known example of the more casual establishments that hired women to serve. Some women donned uniforms similar to those worn by housekeepers and maids, complete with white collars, cuffs, and pocket trim. More contemporary dress codes allow both men and women service staff to wear both formal and less formal attire, such as black or khaki slacks, a vest, and colorful, stylish shirts. Some restaurants select theme costumes for service staff, as bizarre as bunny costumes, space suits, island bikinis with and without wraps. Although dress codes for many service staff have become less formal, black pants and a white button-down shirt remain the standard for many establishments. Further Reading: Cobble, Dorothy Sue. Dishing It Out: Waitresses and Their Unions in the Twentieth Century. Urbana and Chicago: University of Illinois Press, 1991; Culinary Institute of America. The Remarkable Service SM: A Guide to Winning and Keeping Customers for Servers, Managers, and Restaurant Owners. New York: John Wiley & Sons, 2001; Cunnington, Phillis. Costume of Household Servants From the Middle Ages to 1900. London: A and C Black, 1974; Drury, Elizabeth. The Butler’s Pantry Book, a Compendium of Household Secrets from the Victorian Age. New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1981; Ferry, Steven M. Butlers and Household Managers: 21st Century Professionals. North Charleston, SC: Book Surge, 2005; Halvorsen, Francine. Catering Like a Pro: From Planning to Profit. New York: John Wiley & Sons, 2004; Kinchin, Perilla. Taking Tea with Mackintosh: The Story of Miss Cranston’s Tea Rooms. Rohnert Park, CA: Pomegranate Communications, 1998; Poling-Kempes, Lesley. The Harvey Girls, Women Who Opened the West. New York: Paragon House, 1989; Roberts’ Guide for Butlers and Household Staff. Old Saybrook, CT: Applewood Books, 1988 [First published in 1827]; Ruhlman, Michael. The Making of a Chef: Mastering Heat at the Culinary Institute of America. New York: Henry Holt & Co, 1997.
Carol G. Durst-Wertheim
Kwanzaa Kwanzaa is a non-religious African American observance that celebrates family, community, and culture. It takes place over seven days from December 26 to January 1. The name Kwanzaa is derived from the phrase matunda ya kwanza, which means “first fruits” in Swahili. Harvest or first-fruits celebrations are recorded in African history as far back as ancient Egypt and Nubia. These celebrations are also found in ancient and modern times among societies such as the Zulu or smaller societies and groups of southeastern Africa like the Matabele, Thonga, and Lovedu. Dr. Maulana Karenga, professor and chairman of Black Studies at California State University, Long Beach, created the celebration in 1966. It was
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designed to strengthen community and reaffirm common identity, purpose, and direction for African Americans as a people and a world community. Dr. Karenga combined facets of several different African harvest celebrations. Families celebrate Kwanzaa in many ways but common elements include songs, dances, African drums, storytelling, poetry reading, and traditional foods. African Americans of all religious faiths come together to celebrate based on the rich, ancient, and varied common ground of their cultural heritage. Kwanzaa reinforces seven basic values of African culture. These values are called the Nguzo Saba, which in Swahili means the “Seven Principles,” and stand at the heart of the origin and meaning of Kwanzaa. The first is Umoja, or unity of family, community, nation, and race. The second is Kujichagulia, or self-determination to define oneself and to speak for oneself. Next is Ujima, which means collective work and responsibility. The principle of Ujima encourages community members to unite to solve one another’s problems. Ujamaa represents cooperative economics and encourages the creation of local businesses. Nia means to have purpose, particularly the collective vocation of a community to restore the pride of traditional cultural greatness. Lastly, the principle of Kuumba represents creativity to make the community more beautiful than it was. The greeting during Kwanzaa is in Swahili: “Habari gani?,” translated as “What’s the news?” The answer to this question is the principle of the day for each of the seven days. In this way awareness and commitment to the Seven Principles is reinforced. Kwanzaa has seven basic symbols and two supplemental ones. Each represents values and concepts reflective of African culture and essential to community building and reinforcement. Fruits, or Mazao, are symbolic of African harvest celebrations and the rewards of the season’s collective and productive labor. A straw mat, or Mkeka, is representative of tradition and history. The candleholder, or Kinara, symbolizes African roots. Corn, or Muhindi, stands for children and the future. An ear of corn is displayed for each child in the family. At least two ears of corn are placed down on the mat regardless of whether there are children in the immediate family or not, for the children of the community belong to all, and every adult in African tradition is considered an immediate or social parent to any child. The seven candles, or Mishumaa Saba, represent the seven principles. The unity cup, or Kikombe cha Umoja, commemorates the ancestors. Gifts, or Zawadi, are symbolic of the labor and love of parents and the commitments made and kept by the children. The gifts are modest and should be chosen to encourage creativity, achievement, and success. The two supplemental symbols are the flag, or Bendera, and the poster of the seven principles, the Nguzo Saba. The colors of the Bendera are black for the people, red for their struggle, and green for the future and the hope that comes from their struggle. The colors are the same as those in the Bendera Ya Taifa, the African American flag designed by Marcus Garvey in the early 1900s. In preparation for the celebration, a table in a central place in the home is spread with a piece of African cloth. The mat is positioned on it and all
Kwanzaa
Kwanzaa display featuring lit candles. Timothy R. Nichols/Shutterstock.
of the other symbols are placed on or immediately next to it. The candleholder contains one black, three green, and three red candles. The black candle represents the first principle of unity and is placed in the center of the candleholder. The red candles represent the principles of self-determination, cooperative economics, and creativity and are placed to the left of the black candle. The green candles represent the principles of collective work and responsibility, purpose, and faith and are placed to the right of the black candle. This order emphasizes the idea that the people come first, then the struggle, and then the hope that comes from the struggle. Lastly, African art objects and baskets and books on the life and culture of African people are also placed on or next to the mat to symbolize commitment to heritage and learning. On each of the seven nights of Kwanzaa, celebrants gather to light the candles and share their thoughts about that day’s principle. The black candle is lit first on the first day of the celebration. The remaining candles are lit from left to right on the following days. Each gathering includes discussions and activities representing Kwanzaa’s five fundamental concepts: unity of family, friends, and community; reverence for the creator and creation and respect for the environment; commemoration of the past and honoring one’s ancestors; commitment to the cultural ideals of the African community, which include truth, justice, and mutual respect; and celebration of the “Good of Life” and appreciation for the blessings of achievement, family, and community. The weeklong festival culminates in a feast on December 31 that draws on a variety of cuisines. At the center of the celebration is the table, set with a bowl of fruits and vegetables, the straw place mat, communal cup, and
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candelabra. The feast includes a wide variety of dishes, many inspired by African foods. Recipes that feature sweet coconut are particularly popular. Foods that are traditionally served during Kwanzaa include chicken and fish dishes, plantains, sweet potatoes and yams, nuts, and greens. The last day of Kwanzaa is January 1. Historically, this first day of the New Year has been a time of self-reflection and self-assessment for African people. Following in this tradition, Kwanzaa celebrants observe a day of meditation and reflection. They ask themselves, “Who am I? Am I really who I say I am? Am I all I ought to be?” It is a time for reassessment and recommitment on a personal and family level. Further Reading: Angaza, Maitefa. Kwanzaa: From Holiday to Every Day. New York: Dafina, 2007; Karenga, Maulana. The African-American Holiday of Kwanzaa: A Celebration of Family, Community and Culture. Los Angeles, CA: The University of Sankore Press, 2007; Riley, C. Winbush. The Complete Kwanzaa: Celebrating Our Cultural Harvest. New York: Castle Books, 2002.
Dorothy Denneen Volo
L La Quinceanera La quinceanera is the celebration in many Hispanic cultures that marks a young woman’s 15th birthday and her passage from childhood into womanhood. In the past, it would signify her readiness to be married, but now it more often means that her parents will allow her to start dating. The festejada (the young woman celebrant) typically holds court with 14 maids (damas) and 15 escorts (chambelanes) to make 15 couples all together. This number is significant as it represents her 15 years of life. Depending on the economic means of the family of the celebrant, quinceanera celebrations can range from very simple get-togethers with home cooked food in the backyard to large and lavish events with designer gowns, live bands, and catered meals. One thing most quinceanera celebrations have in common is the church service that is held before the party begins. As a “coming of age” party, these celebrations can be compared to the American traditions of the sweet sixteen party and debutante ball and the Jewish celebrations of Bar/ Bat Mitzvahs. La quinceanera parties have their roots in ancient Aztec traditions. Aztec women, at age 15 or 16, would be celebrated as the future wives and mothers of the community. When the Spanish conquered areas of South America in the sixteenth century, this practice was combined with a Catholic ceremonial
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Dozens of 15-year-old girls prepare for a government-sponsored mass coming-out ball in Mexico City, April 28, 2007. AP/ Wide World Photos.
tradition in which young women would either decide to devote their lives to God and join the church or vow to become good wives and mothers. This Catholic tradition had its roots in France where it was common for young girls to be debuted at debutante balls when they reach a marrying age. The aspects of each quinceanera celebration vary from family to family and from culture to culture, but the most important components of the celebration are always the same. A church service, as stated before, is almost always held before the party begins. Catholic families in Mexico attend a misa de accion de gracias (thanksgiving mass) in which the celebrant is the guest of honor. The celebrant arrives at the church in a formal dress, which traditionally is pink, and at some point during the mass she vows to remain a virgin until marriage. She also uses this occasion to give thanks to God for allowing her the opportunity to reach that age. When the mass is over, friends and family members of the celebrant may pass out favors, called bolos, to those in attendance. After the church service, the guests are led (sometimes by parade) to the place where the party will be held. A father/daughter waltz almost always begins the festivities, after which the celebrant is allowed to have her first coed dance with a boy her own age. In Peru and Argentina, tradition allows the birthday girl to choose her first dance partner by throwing
Luau a bouquet of flowers into a group of her male guests. Whoever catches the bouquet may dance with her. Sometimes, before this dance begins, the celebrant will change her shoes from flats to heels to signify that she has gone from childhood to womanhood. Her headpiece may be replaced with a tiara to indicate that, for the day, she is a princess in the eyes of God. She may also receive a doll, that is dressed in a gown that matches her own, suggesting that this is her last doll she will ever receive. In some quinceanera celebrations, the celebrant may even throw the doll into a crowd of her guests, symbolically ending her childhood. Another common tradition is that of a choreographed dance by the celebrant and her court. After their performance, all of the guests are invited to dance. Food, cake, and alcohol are commonly served, and the party could last well into the night. Further Reading: Arcaya, Sara. La Quinceañera: Performance of Race, Culture, Class and Religion in the Somerville Community. Medford, MA: Tufts University, 2004; Cantú, Norma Elia. La Quinceañera: Towards an Ethnographic Analysis of a LifeCycle Ritual. San Antonio, TX: Guadalupe Cultural Arts Center, 2001; FormanBrunell, Miriam. Girlhood in America: An Encycolpedia. Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO, 2001.
Jessica Kokinos-Havel
Luau The luau was originally celebrated to please the ancient gods of Hawaii. The word luau, in Hawaiian, refers to the young, tender leaves of the taro plant that were eaten alone as a vegetable side dish or sometimes added to meat dishes. Current usage is the general term for any feast where Hawaiian food is served. The luau began as a ritualized and elegant event but also could be casual and informal. It was an outdoor event where most of the cooking occurred in a heated, underground pit known as the imu. Hawaii’s fertile soil, tropical climate, and clean salt waters of the Pacific provide a wide variety of vegetables, fish, seaweed, flowers, and other food. Sugarcane, indigenous to Hawaii, was used as the sweetener, and rock salt was the residue of ocean water washed into rock basins and evaporated by the sun. Initially, luaus were forbidden to women; men and women ate separately according to religious taboos. Foods were placed on the floor on a central decorated woven lauhala mat. Among royalty, luaus often lasted weeks—exhibiting unique foods, superior athletic talents of natives, and local customs of the population. Hawaiian games and hula dances were accompanied by ukuleles, guitars, drums, gourds, and other instruments introduced by foreign dignitaries to local arts and culture. The chores in preparation for the luau were many and varied. Gathering food from the ocean was essential, as abundant seafood was once the Hawaiians’ primary source of protein. The finest of fish caught was offered
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Hawaiian women and children at a luau, c. 1900–1910. Library of Congress.
to the gods and religious men and then to royalty. Members of the community received the rest in accordance to their rank. Children picked opihi, a shellfish that clung to rocks on the shore, and gathered seaweed. Banana and ti leaves were picked for the imu, and flowers and vines were gathered and leis sewn. The taro root was harvested, steamed, and pounded for poi, a mashed taro dish common to luaus, and pineapples, breadfruit, coconuts, papayas, and so forth were picked and prepared. Musicians, hula dancers, and athletes also had to be recruited and organized for purposes of entertainment. Central to the feast was the kalua pig, prepared whole, gutted, dehaired, and drained, and then roasted in the imu. The imu is lined with red-hot lava rocks (lava being the foundation of all the Hawaiian Islands). The rocks are covered with a bed of banana leaves, on top of which lies the kalua pig. The pig’s cavity is also lined with hot rocks. Other items are added to the pit such as yams, breadfruit, laulau (made with butterfish, chicken and/or pork wrapped in ti leaves). Another layer of banana leaves tops the comestibles, and moistened bamboo poles protrude from this oven for the purpose of introducing water and allowing steam to escape. The bamboo is covered by a burlap canvas, which is itself covered with a layer of dirt to keep the internal heat of the imu insulated from ambient temperatures. At one time, a dog called the luau dog was raised specifically for consumption at luaus. No descendant of this dog now exists. In order to address the squeamish nature of this unfamiliar delicacy, the head of a hog was sewn onto the dog’s body and all other features that would have identified the
Luau cooked carcass as dog were removed; guests happily consumed the delicacy without complaint. Poi is a staple at luaus; it comes from the root of the taro plant. After it is steamed and pounded into a mash, water is added to form a paste that can be scooped using the index finger and one or two adjoining fingers to eat it. In fact, the fingers and hands are used instead of utensils except when the dish was too soft in which event coconut shells were fashioned into a spoon-like utensil. Fresh poi has a mild flavor; some prefer it fermented which yields a soured taste. Another typical luau dish is lomi lomi salmon. The salmon is cooked with fresh tomatoes and raw onion and scallions. Lomi lomi means “massage,” so lomi lomi salmon is salmon that has been massaged to accept tomato and other flavors of the dish. Aku poke (po’ ki) combines fresh raw tuna, seaweed, rock salt and fresh ginger with scallion and toasted sesame seeds sprinkled on top. Haupia is also commonly served at luaus and is made with coconut milk, sugar, and water congealed with gelatin. Outside of haupia, desserts, other than fresh fruits, were unusual in the early luau feasts. Luaus are no longer just for royalty (as there is no longer any royal family in Hawaii) and nearly any occasion for celebration can call for a kalua pig done in the traditional way along with poi, laulau, and poke.
Undated photo of hula dancers. Hiroyuki Saita/Shutterstock.
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Foods served at luaus reflect the change in Hawaii’s population as laborers came to work the sugar cane and pineapple fields and brought with them new spices, animals, vegetables, and fruits from their homeland. Missionaries from New England brought cod; salmon comes from the Northwest to make lomi lomi salmon; Japanese, Chinese, Filipinos, Samoans, and European sailors added new ways of cooking indigenous and nonindigenous foods that added diversity and uniqueness to local cuisine. Even the kalua pig is sometimes not done in an imu but rather in the kitchen oven with liquid smoke to make it taste like the real thing! Further Reading: Handy, E. S. Craighill, and Elizabeth Green Handy. Native Plants in Old Hawaii: Their Life, Lore and Environment. Honolulu: Bishop Museum Press, 1972; Josselin, Jean-Marie. A Taste of Hawaii—New Cooking from the Crossroads of the Pacific. Honolulu: Stewart, Tabori and Chang, 1992; Keao, Lee, and Mae Keao. The Hawaiian Luau Book. Honolulu: Bess Press, 1988; Krauss, Beatrice H. Plants in Hawaiian Culture. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1993; Landau, Rachel. The Food of Paradise: Exploring Hawaii’s Culinary Heritage. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1996; McClellan, Edwin North. “Ahaaina or Luau in Old Hawaii.” Paradise of the Pacific, Vol. 52,(1), (1940), p. 9–12; Mitchell, Donald D. Kilolani. Resource Units in Hawaiian Culture. (revised edition). Honolulu: Kamehameha Schools Press, 1992; Pukui, Mary Kawena, and Samuel H. Elbert. Hawaiian Dictionary. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1986; Solomon, Jay. Taste of the Tropics: Traditional and Innovative Cooking from the Pacific and Caribbean. Berkeley, CA: Ten Speed Press, 2003; Titcomb, Margaret. Native Use of Fish in Hawaii. Honolulu: University Press of Hawaii, 1972; Wong, Alan, and John Harrison. Alan Wong’s New Wave Luau Recipes from Honolulu’s Award-Winning Chef. Berkeley, CA: Ten Speed Press, 1999; Yamaguchi, Roy, and John Harrison. Roy’s Feasts from Hawaii. Berkeley, CA: Ten Speed Press, 1995.
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Ruth Shibuya
M Mardi Gras In the Gulf of Mexico coastal region of the United States, Carnival refers to the period of festivity and public celebration immediately preceding the Christian period of Lent. Most famously celebrated in New Orleans and throughout southern Louisiana, but originally observed in Mobile, Alabama, Carnival the pre-Lenten holiday is not to be confused with a carnival—the traveling show of amusements or circus-type activities. Carnival, as celebrated worldwide traditionally in Roman Catholic communities and countries, is a Bacchanalian celebration of meat-eating and excess. Extraordinary displays of costuming, parading, and feasting are common occurrences of the Carnival season. Carnival ends on Mardi Gras (Fat Tuesday), the day before Ash Wednesday, which marks the beginning of a period of fasting, piety, and penitence. RELIGIOUS SIGNIFICANCE The first reference to the word or holiday occurs in A.D. 965: Carnelevare, from medieval Latin caro, meaning “flesh,” and levare, “to put away.” By 1140, Roman texts document public street parades followed by a ceremonial slaughter of cows and other animals in the presence of the Pope
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and Roman patricians. Though more unmistakably discernable during the modern-day, infamous Mardi Gras celebrations of New Orleans, the pagan aspects of Carnival festivities undoubtedly have roots in pre-Christian rites. The early Roman festivals of Saturnalia and Lupercalia, the Greek Dionysian celebration, and rural springtime agricultural ceremonies all incorporated aspects of feasts and masquerades. Historically, the Carnival season developed as a popular Christian reaction against the prohibitions of the Church during the traditional 40 to 50 days (depending on the denomination) of Lent. Lent ends with the most holy of holidays on the Christian calendar, the Holy Week, the period of Christ’s suffering and execution (The Passion) and Resurrection ( Easter Sunday). As prescribed by the church, Lent is a period of human suffering and reflection, thus Lent is also a period of abstinence from selfindulgence—such as excessive eating, sex, and so on. As contrasted to the piety of Lent, Carnival encourages immoderation, sometimes leading to outright hedonism. Falling on different dates throughout the Western Christian calendar—anywhere from February 3 to March 9—Mardi Gras (from French gras for fat and Mardi for Tuesday) marks the final day of the weeks of Carnival excess. In Anglican countries, Mardi Gras is known as Shrove Tuesday—from shrive meaning “confess”—or Pancake Day—after the breakfast food that symbolizes one final hearty meal of eggs, butter, and sugar before the fast. On Ash Wednesday, the morning after Mardi Gras, repentant Christians return to church to receive upon the forehead the sign of the cross in ashes. Thus the present-day American Carnival celebration signifies a seasonal cycle of demise and rebirth, the abandonment of normal life and daily obligations, culminating in a final outburst of overindulgence ( by outwardly becoming someone or something else: through costuming, drunkenness, etc.), and finally resulting in a return to all that is familiar and sacred. FROM EUROPE TO THE GULF COAST As early as the thirteenth century, revelers in Venice attended formal masked balls during the Carnival season. From Italy the practice was carried elsewhere around Europe, especially Paris. The origins of Gulf Coast Carnival celebrations are traceable to the Parisian festivals of the eighteenth century. Wealthy and working class joined in the week-long festivities. Organized, exclusive masquerade balls and dinners for the aristocracy occurred separately from loosely arranged street parades and public costuming. Later adopted in New Orleans, a guild of butchers would march the garlanded boeuf gras (fat ox) through the streets to its slaughter. The authoritarian government of Napoleon III all but eliminated the private and public Parisian Carnivals upon seizing power in 1851. The institution of Carnival survived in the French colonization of Louisiana. Pierre Le Moyne (1661–1706; also called Sieur d’Iberville), a FrenchCanadian soldier of renown, was hired in the service of France to settle
Mardi Gras Louisiana. As legend follows, four ships commanded by d’Iberville, initially unable to sail too far up the Mississippi River, camped nearly 70 miles downriver from the future site of New Orleans. The date was March 3, Mardi Gras back in Paris; d’Iberville named the landing Pointe du Mardi Gras. However it is further east along the Gulf Coast that Carnival in the Americas first began. Mobile was settled in 1702 by d’Iberville and his younger brother JeanBaptiste Le Moyne, Sieur de Bienville. As the first capital of French Louisiana, Mobile can historically claim the first New World Carnivals. In 1705, at Fort Louis de la Louisiana, just up the Mobile River from the capital, soldiers and colonists celebrated the first Mardi Gras with masking and feasting. The only other mention, in the archival record, of a Carnival during this era is of a faux-boeuf gras (a man wore a papier-mâché bull’s head) occurring in 1711. To find another mention of a Carnival celebration in the Americas one must fast-forward over a century to New Year’s Eve, 1831. That night several dozen costumed Mobilians paraded through the streets, ringing bells and carousing. They called themselves the Cowbellion de Rakin Society (historians speculate the name incorporates the words cowbell and rebellion with the phrase raising a commotion). As the crowd proceeded to be greeted by the mayor, members of the crowd joined in the festivities. Within a decade the Cowbellion Society had become gentrified. Mobile’s civic leaders controlled membership to the organization through invitation-only masquerade balls and official street parades. A direct line may be drawn that traces the Cowbellion de Rakin Society to the modern New Orleans Carnival. NEW ORLEANS CARNIVAL No one nationality or cultural group can claim to be the founders of the New Orleans Mardi Gras tradition. Carnival in New Orleans, like its cuisine and musical traditions, was created by the city’s gallimaufry of people and cultures—French, Spanish, German, Italian, Indian, African, Caribbean, and black American. The first mention of a New Orleans Carnival dates to a 1781 edict that prohibited “people of color, both free and slaves . . . from taking advantage of carnival.” Undoubtedly, Carnival and Mardi Gras were being celebrated in New Orleans throughout the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, but more importantly this proclamation outlines the racial schisms that underscore Louisiana Carnival to this day. By 1827, the ban on masking was lifted, a petition having been signed by 200 leading Creoles. (Creole is a sensitive and widespread term in Louisiana. Originally a Creole was a person of another nationality born in the Louisiana Territories. Eventually, Creole came to designate a person of French and Spanish or, at times, African and Caribbean heritage living in New Orleans and its environs. Today, many cultures and ethnicities call themselves Creole; based on their ancestry, everyone from Latin Americans, to descendents of slaves, and Croatians can claim Creoleness.)
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Documentation of early Carnival celebrations in New Orleans show them to be egalitarian in nature. At both public and private masked balls, the members of high-society shared the floor, and dances, with freed people and Creoles of color. Spectacles of street parades—its members dressed as animals, creatures of fantasy, and ethnicities other than one’s own—filled the streets in the days leading to Mardi Gras. Members of the procession threw trifles—handfuls of flour, fruit, and kisses—to equally stunned and jubilant onlookers. New Orleans’s infamous reputation as a vulgar, unhinged sort of town may be attributed to these early Carnivals, when prostitution, thievery, and murder proliferated. Increased calls by local newspapers to end or severely limit Carnival coincided with members of the Cowbellion de Rakin Society emigration to New Orleans in the early 1850s. In 1857, a group of six men, some former members of the Cowbellion and none of them born in Louisiana, invited 13 others to join them in forming the Mistick Krewe of Comus and birthed the traditions of the modern Carnival. They took their name Comus, son of Bacchus, and their annual parading themes from readings of English poetry and prose, especially the works of John Milton. Many of the aspects of the first Comus parade and festivities survive in the Mardi Gras Krewes of today. Moneyed New Orleanians soon paid memberships to join other krewes: the Krewe of Rex and the Knights of Momus both started in 1872, followed by the Krewe of Proteus a decade later. By principle these organizations were composed of white males. Members of these early krewes were sworn to oaths of secrecy from revealing the identity of each other or the King, who was voted to lead the festivities each season. However, a public face fronted the privacy of the krewes: eating clubs. These still-exclusive supper clubs—Comus was known as the Pickwick Club in homage to the Charles Dickens novel—allowed the members to deliberate over supposed acts of charity, according to the krewes’ charters. The exclusivity of the krewes and clubs has both been expanded and opposed by start-up organizations. Today the krewes of Bacchus and Endymion are kept private, yet enthusiastically incorporate thousands of members. Smaller krewes, sometimes called marching clubs, walking clubs,or social aid and pleasure clubs, are both private and open to the public and march during the Carnival season and year-round. Many of these clubs center on a theme: the Krewe du Vieux excels at satirizing local politics, the Krewe of Barkus openly invites canines and their owners to march, and college students mostly comprise the Krewe of Tucks. Parading through public streets has long been the most exciting happening during Carnival. Most krewes and clubs march on the same day of the Carnival calendar: the extensive procession of Orpheus rides on Lundi Gras—the Monday before Mardi Gras—while the Krewe of Rex always parades late-morning on the final day of Carnival. In local parlance, larger krewes are said to roll, meaning that the parades are mostly comprised of decorated, wheeled carriages—floats—on which riders sit or stand. Tractorpulled, sometimes double-decker trailers, have replaced the horse-drawn
Mardi Gras transports of the past. Keeping with tradition, the floats largely remain decorated in large papier-mâché items—flowers, local caricatures, fantastical beasts. To the chagrin of traditionalists, animatronics, elaborate lighting, and images of the latest cartoon characters have largely, but not entirely, replaced references to mythology and literature. Along with floats, many other rituals occupy a space in the parade procession. Remainders from the very first Comus parade, flambeaux, or lighted torch, carriers herald the start of many parades. Originally the flambeaux, traditionally carried by African American men, illuminated the parade for spectators, but today they continue as a vital part of the production. The other significant component of parades is marching bands. The bands formed by professional musicians, universities, and high schools are essentially brass bands, being the traditional New Orleans jazz style of band, which evolved from the native second-line dance parades. The bands play both customary gospels, such as “When the Saints Go Marching In,” and the newest pop songs, done brass-style. The second-line of dancing revelers follow the so-called first-line, or members of the band. Whether or not a spectator chooses to join the second-line, the music infuses the audience with the Carnival spirit. Spectator-parade interaction is a highlight of the processions. Very few members of the congregation, which line the streets for hours each day and night of Carnival season, merely sit back and watch. Krewe members often
“Red” Pageant at Mardi Gras in New Orleans, c. 1890–1910. Library of Congress.
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Mardi Gras day in New Orleans, c. 1900–1906. Library of Congress.
spend thousands of dollars on throws and trinkets to toss to the captive audience. Strings of beads are certainly the most famous of throws; once made of glass in Czechoslovakia, the cheap, multi-colored strands are now made of plastic and produced in China. Spectators holler, “Throw me something, Mister!,” to the parade riders for toys, embossed plastic cups, and collectable doubloons—large, commonly metal coins stamped with a krewe’s insignia and the date. The Zulu Social Aid and Pleasure Club parade on Mardi Gras features Carnival’s most sought after throw: the Zulu coconut. The coconut is hand-painted and covered in glittering adornments; riders hand this rarity over to lucky parade-goers. For both float riders and street-side spectators abundant alcohol consumption is the norm. Louisiana’s liberal open-container laws, made freer during Carnival, ensure the imbibing of cans of beer and to-go cups of mixed cocktails along the parade route and in the streets of the Vieux Carré, or French Quarter. Although New Orleans is known for its fabulous Creole cuisine, food during Carnival often includes boxes of fried chicken, sandwich trays, and stuffed po-boy loaves. Fortunately, however, the crawfish and oyster seasons coincide with Carnival-time, resulting in numerous backyard crawfish boil feasts and trips to local raw-oyster bars. The time-honored colors of Carnival—purple, green, and gold—were chosen by the Krewe of Rex and enhance the seasonal attire. Most krewes enforce the masking and costuming of float riders. The common parade riders wear plastic masks and brightly colored, shimmering costumes. While the royalty—king, queen, maids of honor—and officers of the krewe wear elaborate often feathered suits and glittery gowns; depending on krewe
Mardi Gras tradition, their faces may be unmasked. Non-krewe members seldom wear masks and costumes, except on Mardi Gras when most businesses close and all of New Orleans seems to crowd the streets. Costumes range from Halloween type dress-ups, to handcrafted, feathered masks, and out-right nakedness. Though the New Orleans Carnival is today famous for the public parades and throngs of Bourbon Street, a private, formal sphere still exists. Old-line krewes maintain annual balls that are as much about social hierarchy and pageantry as the Carnival season is. A long-standing member, commonly a business or civic leader, is chosen to reign as krewe king for one year. The krewe also picks a queen, typically an unmarried, college-aged daughter of former royalty. The social balls are formal and invitation-only; guests speculate as to the identity of the masked king. The King of the Krewe of Rex, since its beginnings in 1872, has been honored as the King of Carnival. Each year on Lundi Gras morning, a fleet of riverboats deposits Rex on the quays of downtown New Orleans. The mayor of the city greets the King, declares the following day to be a holiday, and ceremoniously grants all governing powers to Rex. In a tradition borrowed from eighteenth-century France, King Cake parties continue from Twelfth Night (the last day of Christmas festivities) to Mardi Gras. The cake is an oblong or circular, brioche-style bread covered in icing and purple, green, and gold sugars. A trinket—a small bean or plastic baby figurine—is placed inside the King Cake. Whoever receives the slice of cake with the prize, must provide for the next King Cake. Some krewes nominate their queens in the same fashion, a ritual also repeated in offices and school classrooms during Carnival season. MODERN CARNIVAL Carnival is still celebrated in Mobile and has been adopted in the Gulf Coast region stretching from Galveston, Texas, to Pensacola, Florida, and as far north as St. Louis. The second largest celebration occurs in Lafayette, Louisiana. Contrary to the urban street parades in New Orleans and elsewhere, the citizens of the southwestern Louisiana, rural Acadiana area (or so-called Cajun country) celebrate Carnival in an entirely different way. In the courir de Mardi Gras (literally, the Mardi Gras run), masked riders—in distinctly French-Acadian costumes—ride in packs through the countryside on horseback or wagons. The revelers, under the guidance of a captain, travel from house to house, collecting ingredients—rice, onion, bell pepper, celery, sausage, flour, fat—for a community gumbo to be served at dusk. Like the processional parades, non-active participants and tourists follow the riders with carousing, especially with the hope of catching a glimpse of the comedic live-chicken catch. Neighbors occasionally donate a chicken, which rightly has no wish to be caught and will often fly onto the nearest tree or rooftop. Capturing the chicken proves one’s virility, though women also courir, and it proves that one belongs within the group. By donating
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ingredients the friends, family, and neighbors of the riders strengthen community bonds while ensuring a plate to partake in the evening’s gumbo festivities. Race and racism have unfortunately been a factor since the dawn of Carnival celebrations in America. Many krewes and parades have excluded African-Americans from joining. In 1991, the Krewes of Comus, Momus, and Proteus, when forced by a City Council mandate, chose not to publicly march rather than desegregate their societies. The Zulu Social Aid and Pleasure Club, a predominately African-American krewe, first marched in 1909. By dressing in grass skirts and blackface, the Zulus sought to define themselves by appropriating the racial stereotype used by white society and the mass media to portray them. The Mardi Gras Indians is a category used for dozens of groups of African-American men who parade throughout the Carnival season. The Mardi Gras Indians have marched since the mid-nineteenth century. Reputedly, run-away slaves shared a rapport with the social pariah Native Americans. The groups melded their music, dress, and dance. The members wear intricately hand-designed body suits made of feathers and beadwork. The Indian costumes cost thousands of dollars to design and are often worn only once or twice before being dismantled, to prepare for next year’s suit. The Mardi Gras Indians march in tribes—such as the Wild Tchoupitoulas and the Golden Eagles—that are hierarchical. There are the three Chiefs, the Spy Boy (who looks out for other tribes), the Flag Boy (who relays signals from the Spy Boy to the Chiefs), and the Wild Man (who is a sort of escort to the Big Chief ). Crowds come out to watch the tribes “do battle” through dancing, chanting, and one-upmanship; though the so-called battle is for the most part theatrical in nature, there is occasionally real violence. It is a testament to the distinction of New Orleans and the southern Gulf Coast that the term Carnival could include such a variety of ceremonies, involving a mix of so many peoples and cultures. In February of 2006, just six months after Hurricane Katrina and its repercussions demolished New Orleans and the surrounding areas, there was talk in the city of canceling the Carnival celebrations. Despite the gloomy atmosphere, Carnival was held. That year like any other, hands—young and old—reached out for plastic baubles. Crowds swayed to the “Mardi Gras Mambo.” For one day a king named Rex ruled the city. And, yes, breasts were bared on Bourbon Street. Among the ruins, Mardi Gras Indians competed to be “the prettiest” and danced among the survivors. Further Reading: Gill, James. Lords of Misrule: Mardi Gras and the Politics of Race in New Orleans. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 1997; Kinser, Samuel. Carnival American Style: Mardi Gras at New Orleans and Mobile. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1990.
Rien T. Fertel
Masquerade
Masquerade The masquerade (masque) is generally thought to have been an outgrowth of the costumed pageants and religious processions used to celebrate marriages, victories, feast days, and other important events during the late medieval period in Europe. In the fifteenth century, masquerades became popular as social functions among the fashionable upper classes of the city-states of northern Italy, and most historians closely associate their development with the annual Venetian Carnival. In Italy the masquerade took many forms including the courtly masque (masque della corte), the masked ball (sfera mascherata), and ultimately the masked opera ball (sfera mascherata di opera). Events like these spread across Europe from the sixteenth to the nineteenth centuries. It is not surprising that the masquerade had Italian roots. The wealth accumulated by the maritime states of northern Italy in the Renaissance period came from mercantile enterprises supported by an extensive network of trade over which Italian tastes and styles spread throughout Europe. Italianate tastes in clothing, furnishings, architecture, food preparation, and personal appearance helped to form the characteristics of upper-class culture in much of Europe. The so-called Macaroni—an ornate fop adorned with curled periwig, excessive make-up, and extravagant clothing—was an Italian extraction, but the style was assumed by only a minority of young wealthy men. The lavish Italianate style often expressed itself most strongly in upper-class architecture, art, and music. Initially restricted to the members of the ruling court, the courtly masque was highly scripted and often set to music with pieces written by some of the premiere composers of the day. It might take a year to prepare a masque that would be performed just once for the eyes of a very select audience. The good guys would be elegantly portrayed by courtiers (including at times the king or local ruler) and the bad guys by professional actors who were allowed to be grotesque, sinister, or funny. Courtly masques featured the newest dance steps set to the latest music brought by Italian dancing masters to the courts of Europe. Brilliant costume designs were often copied from the Ballet della Corte of the powerful families of Florence, Milan, or Venice; or from the Commedia Dell’Arte—a form of improvisational and very physical theater developed in sixteenth-century Tuscany. The costs of such an enterprise were enormous, but the ultimate purpose of the masque was to symbolically underpin the authority of the ruler. As long as the masque was considered primarily an aristocratic form, it was unavoidably political and had political consequences. It is important to note, however, that monarchs were not the only sponsors of masquerades, nor were they the sole participants in their production. The so-called Ascension Day masque of 1595, held during the reign of Elizabeth I (Tudor), was sponsored by the Earl of Essex and designed with the help of Sir Francis Bacon. It was meant to upstage the queen in the waning years of her
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Fat Tuesday in Venice. The Art Archive/ Theatre Museum London/Graham Brandon.
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Venetian masquerade mask. © Stephen Stiling | Dreamstime.com.
Masquerade masks in a Venetian market. Luciano Mortula | Dreamstime.com.
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Masquerade Ball-Mi-Careme, 1908. Library of Congress.
reign (1558–1603) and was crucial to Essex’s campaign of self-promotion. He was ultimately beheaded for treason. William Shakespeare included a presentation of a courtly masque in The Tempest (1611) as a sort of window into the life of the royal court of the Stuart kings (James I [reigned 1603–1625], Charles I [reigned 1625–1649]) for the paying audience. The so-called Sun King, Louis XIV of France, was noted for the lavish masques he sponsored throughout much of his long reign (1643–1715); and Marie Antoinette, wife of Louis XVI (reigned 1775–1793), was said to be both a patron of and an avid participant in masquerades—sometimes to the detriment of her reputation as Queen of France. The masked ball developed as a participatory event for the rich from its introduction (c. 1708) by Count John Heidegger, a Swiss diplomat, as an innovative variation on the somewhat boring seasonal regimen of dances, musicals, and other events that composed the upper-class social calendar. These masquerades were largely unscripted affairs—spectacular dance parties, if you will—that retained the characteristic trappings of costume, disguise, and role-play while downplaying the larger political significance. As such, the masquerade was an immediate hit. Thereafter, masked balls and costume parties became wildly popular and fashionable throughout Europe. Masquerades quickly expanded to the residences, ballrooms, and private parks of the well-to-do. Ultimately, semi-public affairs spilled over into the
Masquerade streets and plazas of European cities to affect a growing merchant class, sometimes with unfortunate or unexpected results. Although masquerades varied greatly from one another and from place to place, there were specific elements that tended to be common to all of them. These commonalities ranged from specific costume types to the general atmosphere and the protocols that governed the events. Although costume was important, the defining characteristic of the masquerade was disguise. The donning of masks by all the participants—and the virtual shield of anonymity that it provided—invited a sense of release from the day-to-day behavioral controls imposed by the wider society. The masquerade focused on this anonymity, or at least on the mutual agreement that participants would not be held to close public scrutiny for their actions at the event. This sense of freedom—if not absolute license—was prevalent among masquerade-goers and was the subject of much scrutiny by anti-masquerade factions. The face was often hidden—sometimes by a full headdress, sometimes by a half-mask with two eye-holes made of pressed paper, velvet, lace, or any other appropriate material. The latter were often tied with ribbons at the back of the head, but hand-held masks on wands were also used. At masquerades issues of gender, sexuality, and role-reversal could all find expression within the confines of the ballroom or the opera house. The body was often emphasized through the participant’s choice of costume. Ostentatious, revealing, and suggestive costumes contributed to the sense of open eroticism that was heightened by comparison to everyday clothing. Certain overly revealing feminine costumes shocked contemporary observers and contributed to an air of sexual explicitness. Cross-dressing, a common form of disguise at masquerades, was almost always a form of sexual symbolism rather than of gender denial. Costumes like these tended to generate an erotic atmosphere clearly palpable to the guests. The activities at masquerades went well beyond simply dancing and revelry in costume, and often included the stroking, touching, and fondling of strangers of both genders. While symbolic, the focus of many masquerades became deeply mired in voyeurism, hedonism, and blatant self-display. Due to the fact that they were heavily freighted with sexual innuendo, masquerades were thought to be particularly liberating for women, who normally had to conform to very strict societal rules regarding gender roles and sexuality. However, at masquerades some of these rules were seemingly stripped away. Any hint of open promiscuity exhibited among the female participants might be considered simply titillating. Young women were thought to be particularly prone to the detrimental effects of the masquerade, which threatened to lead them from simple flirting to open promiscuity. Masks were often assigned the power of an aphrodisiac supposedly causing an abrupt loss of sexual inhibition and an immediate detachment from traditional codes of morality. The widely held belief that prostitutes and serving girls regularly used the anonymity of costume to attend masquerades disguised as proper ladies contributed to the sexually charged atmosphere.
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Nonetheless, most masquerades enforced strict codes of dress and interpersonal etiquette on the participants. These were usually imposed by those who were hosting the event. Costume categories were often limited to certain acceptable themes: historic, mythological, literary, grotesque, or exotic. Examples of costumes include witches, conjurers, satyrs, or devils. The colorful guises of the characters from the Commedia Dell’Arte (or their equivalents) like Columbine, Harlequin, Brighella, Pulcinella, and El Capitan were often adopted as costumes. In 1679 the Duke of Mantova, held a notable masquerade in the streets of Venice that featured horsemen in parti-colored livery and guests fitted out as Indiamen, Africans, Turks, and Tartars, all dressed in exotic costumes. The so-called domino costume was often used as a generic alternative to more complicated or expensive outfits. It was comprised of a loose flowing cloak that enveloped the body. Sometimes the cloak was accompanied by a hood called a bahoo, of which female party goers with complicated hairdos were particularly fond. A tricorn hat or silk top hat (depending on the period) often completed the ensemble that was worn with a mask that covered the upper half of the face. These costumes were usually deep black, but occasionally varied to virginal white, royal blue, or blood red. The cloaks were often worn as accessories by both sexes, usually over one’s own clothing, whether they be silk breeches and a frockcoat or an elegant empire gown. The domino costume was meant to lend a sense of intrigue, adventure, and mystery to the experience of the masquerade, and as such, it was a distinctive part of the masquerade tradition. The domino would be immediately recognized by those familiar with the dark characters associated with the twentieth-century musical adaptations Amadeus (1979) or Phantom of the Opera (1976)—the former characteristic of the eighteenth century and the latter, the nineteenth century. The masquerade also provided an interesting plot device for authors who used the setting of the masquerade to add mystery or new perspective to their stories. Shakespeare used the anonymity of a masquerade at the home of the Capulet’s (Romeo and Juliet, 1596, act 1, scene 4), to quietly insinuate Romeo into the presence of Juliet, a daughter of the house. Novelists, in particular, found the masquerade a place of intimacy and intrigue, where reality and logic could be suspended. The masquerade often allowed for the destabilization and replacement of the ordinary. American author Edgar Allen Poe used it as a vehicle of gothic horror in “The Mask of the Red Death,” where death, costumed as himself, invades the supposed protective precincts of a masquerade. More often, however, the masquerade was used as a device to test a character’s virtue, honesty, or chastity. In Vanity Fair, English author William Makepeace Thackery used the masquerade to help expose the foibles of his main character, Becky Sharp, a shameless, self-indulgent, and, by the end of the book, dissipated woman. Despite the different perspectives authors took on masquerades, they were usually associated with a dialogue concerning social change or cultural propriety. These were common threads appearing in many novels, and masquerades fit in quite easily.
Masquerade In 1835, French author Alexandre Dumas penned a short story called “A Masked Ball” that featured a tragic assignation between his hero and heroine at a public masquerade. Dumas described the masquerade as a “sea of scarcely human beings, all in grotesque dominos, all leaping and thrashing around to the strains of a band which could hardly be heard through their obscure shrieks, yells, laughs and cries.” In 1859, Dumas’s short story became the basis for a Giuseppe Verdi opera (Un Ballo in Maschera) that was set at a masked ball. The masked opera ball (an opera party en masque) was a variation on masquerade. From the very beginning, this variety of masquerade was well received and quickly became a social event of the first magnitude. A masked opera ball was held for the first time in England in 1710 at the Haymarket Opera House, and the type quickly spread to Covent Garden and other respected operatic venues. In 1729, Heidegger—now considered the impressario of masquerade—joined with composer George Frideric Handel to produce masked operas at the King’s Theatre in London. Masked opera balls often served to open the French carnival season. In revolutionary France in the 1790s, however, masquerades of any kind, long thought to be aristocratic devices, were deemed to be anti-republican and were widely banned. Indeed the zenith of their popularity was seemingly reached during the brilliant gatherings and receptions held during the Congress of Vienna in 1815 where the multinational aristocracy of Europe celebrated the death of the French republic and tried to piece together the political jumble left behind by the recent defeat of the empire under Napoleon Bonaparte. Late in the nineteenth century, Edouard Manet offered a glimpse of sophisticated Parisian society in his painting the Masked Ball at the Opera (1873). This work was supposedly inspired by the mass of masked young men and women who attended the centennial opening in Paris of The Marriage of Figaro, written by Pierre de Beaumarchais before the revolution. The painting clearly shows the floor of the opera house (the pit) packed with revelers (including Manet in cameo), and the boxes filled with all the pretty, scantily clad women of Paris dans les masques. There is little doubt about the openly sexual nature of the encounters that Manet depicted between the masked young women and the well-dressed young men in their frock coats, silk hats, and capes. Again and again those who attended the masked opera balls in Paris in the nineteenth century were cited for their excesses, leading the Viennese directors of the newly opened Ringstrasse Opera House in 1877 to limit such events to those sponsored by the Austrian court of Emperor Franz Joseph. In this way—for the Viennese at least—masquerades had virtually come full circle. For the British or Anglo-American participant, masquerades redefined the concept of modesty and shocked the cultural rubric that defined the ideals of English Protestantism. In Britain, the masques held in the courts of the early Stuart kings, James I and Charles I, were spectacular dance parties that helped to define the concept of a social occasion during the English Renaissance. However, during much of the seventeenth century,
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the rise of a conservative Puritan sentiment largely repressed the growth of personal ostentation and public revelry of any kind especially during the English Civil Wars and the Republican Period of parliamentary government (c. 1640–1660). Puritans in both Old England and New England rallied against womanish periwigs, perfume, and make-up; banned popular theater; arrested actors as undesirable persons; and made ostentation in costume illegal. There was no way that they would tolerate the lavish and highly erotic qualities of the masquerade. Nonetheless, with the restoration of the Stuart monarchy under Charles II (reigned 1661–1685), the styles that were popular under his royal predecessors were quickly readopted in London and spread to some of the larger population centers of the Anglo-American colonies. James II was deposed in 1688 by Mary Stuart ( his daughter) and her husband William of Orange (reigned 1688–1702) and followed by Queen Anne (Stuart) who reigned until 1714. The so-called Restoration period lasted throughout most of the remainder of the seventeenth century and was noted for its liberal attitudes, its theatrical comedy, and its high style of living. In America, however, masquerades were generally held outside the sphere of influence of the dower Congregationalists and plain-living Quakers and Pietists who dictated the mores of New England and Pennsylvania. Nonetheless, many of the upper-class residents of the Southern and Middle colonies were open to its influence. In the second half of the eighteenth century the popularity of Persian, Indian, and Chinese costumes increased along with the level of Anglo-American world trade in those regions bringing novel elements to the masquerade. Nevertheless, the masquerade remained a rare social commodity in British North America, and it was often attacked by the more conservative elements of colonial society as immoral, depraved, or foreign. Today, remnants of masquerade pepper American popular culture. Modern costume parties, especially those held at Halloween or Mardi Gras, often incorporate elements of the masquerade, especially the concepts of disguise, role play, and the mask itself. No self-respecting eight-year-old would appear as a vampire without the long-flowing black cloak and high collar made popular as an opera accessory in the nineteenth century. Moreover, the celebration of Mardi Gras certainly resurrects some of the gaiety and release from convention among its revelers that characterized the masquerades of earlier centuries. Popular fictional characters of the twentieth century like the Lone Ranger, Zorro, Captain America, Catwoman, Batman, and Spiderman donned masks, hoods, or full costumes to protect their identities and to endow themselves with seemingly irresistible or mysterious powers. Hollywood movie producers have also incorporated the masquerade as a plot device into a large number of films with historic settings such as Vanity Fair, Amadeus, Restoration, Casanova, Marie Antoinette, or The Man in the Iron Mask. It has also been used as a convenient device to further plot in twentieth-century situations as in the movies To Catch a Thief and Eyes Wide Shut.
Medieval Further Reading: Bevington, Davis, and Peter Holbrook, eds. The Politics of the Stuart Court Masque. Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press, 2006; Castle, Terry. Masquerade and Civilization: The Carnivalesque in Eighteenth-Century English Culture and Fiction. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1986; Ribeiro, Aileen. The Dress Worn at Masquerades in England 1730 to 1790. New York: Garland Publishing, 1984.
James M. Volo
Medieval The two concepts that lay at the heart of the medieval dining experience were status and sharing. The status of the host determined the setting, size, and luxury of a meal, and the sharing of food and dinnerware was a common feature throughout the medieval period in all classes of society. In Europe, the millennium from around A.D. 500 to 1500 known as the Middle Ages was a time of increased refinement. Thanks to the influence of Arab cuisine, dishes and table manners both became more refined. We know little about the way the poorer segments of society entertained during this time, but we can assume that they, too, indulged in some festive foods at Christmas, Easter, or at weddings as they celebrated with family and friends. Most of the information we do have about the preparation and consumption of food comes from the end of the period, the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, and from the upper classes. The grandest banquets of all were those given at royal coronations at which fantastic amounts of exquisite foods were served. Manners were considered to be people’s outward expression of their inner worth. Therefore, members of the medieval elite sought to control most bodily functions by making them subject to countless rules, drawn up in a new genre of text, the courtesy or etiquette book. For medieval dining, the fundamental virtues were courtesy, cleanliness, and moderation. Being a glutton that looked after his own belly first and discarded the bones on the floor may be the popular image of a medieval knight painted by the more modern media, but it was not what the age aspired to. On the contrary, diners were expected to offer the best pieces to their companions: in fact, the term companion originally meant the person one shared one’s bread with. Guests were usually arranged in messes of between two and six people that shared the food they were served, whereby a person of lower rank would help a person of higher rank. Sharing food with the poor was also a feature of entertaining medieval style, albeit indirectly, through the almoner, a person whose duty it was to collect the leftovers and hand them out as alms to the less fortunate. Host and guests alike were concerned about cleanliness and hygiene. Diners were advised to make sure their seats were clean before they sat down and to keep their hands clean before, during, and after the meal. Clean hands were important because forks were not yet part of the cutlery, and much of the food was still handled with fingers. The
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hand-washing ceremony quickly evolved into an important ritual at table. Spitting into the water basin or splashing water on fellow diners was considered bad manners. Foodstuffs once they had touched the mouth were not to be shared. For example, bread was to be cut or broken off a shared loaf, but not bitten off. The same was true for other foods that were not to be dipped in liquids a second time. Half-eaten food, too, was not to be returned to the platter on which it was served. Salt was provided in common saltcellars, some of which served as ornate status symbols. Diners were supposed to move salt from a saltcellar to a trencher (a piece of stale bread that served as a plate) for their individual use. Under no circumstances was food to be dipped directly into a saltcellar. Dinnerware, too, was frequently shared by the guests, first and foremost the drinking cup. Diners were to pass a cup on in such a way that the next person would not drink from the same spot on the cup. Then, as now, licking one’s plate or cutlery clean was bad manners. Using bread instead of the tongue was acceptable. Courtesy demanded that men served women first before they helped themselves, and women were expected to appear disinterested in food. Some women carried this concept to the extreme and had their meal in private first and only afterwards put in an appearance at high table. This had the added advantage that their fingers and clothes could remain spotless. Diners usually brought their own knives to the banquet, while the host supplied the spoons. Knives were not to be used at table for activities other than handling food, especially not for paring nails, picking teeth, or carving. Cutlery made of precious metal such as silver or gold, along with cups, were frequently stolen, which is why upper-class households took to counting their flatware before dinner guests were allowed to leave. With oral hygiene leaving much to be desired and bad breath a problem, blowing on food was discouraged, as was belching too close to one’s neighbor. To clean one’s nose at table fingers could be used, which were then to be wiped on one’s clothes. Napkins were not to serve as handkerchiefs. Sitting decorously at table without scratching one’s head or other body parts, without talking a lot, laughing out loud, or whispering were some of the general rules of comportment expected of medieval dinner guests. Banquets usually took place in the great hall which had a raised platform known as the dais at one end and a musicians’ gallery at the opposite end. The lord and lady as well as important guests and close family members would occupy the dais, which was frequently framed with beautiful tapestries. Only the truly rich could afford to cover all the walls of the great hall with tapestries. Covering the walls with wall paintings or decorating them with garlands were less costly alternatives. With the great hall also serving other functions than banquets, tables were rarely permanent. Instead of such “dormant” tables, hosts normally opted for trestles and boards that were easy to put up and dismantle once the meal was over. Most diners sat on benches with only the highest-ranking member being given a chair of his own at the high table. Because the trestle tables were rather crude, much emphasis was put on the perfect tablecloth. Ideally of the finest linen
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and snow white, sometimes also patterned and fringed, tablecloths covered the table generously. To match the tablecloth, napkins and hand towels were usually cut from the same fabric. In preparation for the banquet, servants would arrange the tables in an angular U shape. The food would be served from the inside of the U, while the diners sat on the outside only. In England, rewarde was the term used for the table adjoining the high table to the right, and second messe the table adjoining it to the left. The quality of tablecloth, napkins, table setting, food and drink diminished the farther away a table was from the dais, and so did the status of the guests seated there. One important piece of furniture used for serving and for representation was the buffet, known as the cupboard. Depending on the status of the host, it could have up to seven shelves, with a cupboard in our modern sense of the word located under the top shelf. Pitchers filled with the drinks to be served to the guests were placed on this buffet, as were any expensive gold and silver vessels the host wished to display. A medieval table setting usually consisted of a trencher that served as an edible plate, a spoon, and a napkin. For the highest-ranking diners the carver would cut the trenchers in neat squares, while lower-ranking diners had to take care of it themselves. A saltcellar was placed on each table with the most luxurious, often in the shape of a boat and aptly called a nef ( boat), adorning the dais, and simpler versions at the other tables. For most of the Middle Ages, only the lord and his distinguished guest would be given a knife, all the other diners were expected to bring their own knives. It was in the rich Italian cities where the custom first began to change, and dining knives were made an integral part of a place setting. The bigger and more ornate carving knives were supplied by the host. A knife with a rounded blade was used by the carver to present the carved food to the diner. Spoons, which came in a variety of materials, from wood and horn to silver, were shaped like a fig with a shaft at the pointed end. Forks were used in the
Banquet scene with minstrels playing trumpets from Poems of Guillaume de Machault on a fifteenthcentury French vellum. The Art Archive JFB.
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kitchen, but they were not yet part of the cutlery. This custom reached Italy from the east via Byzantium, and only in the early modern period gradually spread northward. Occasionally at the end of the Middle Ages little forks were used to eat dainty food such as sweetmeats or fruit. There was a great variety of drinking vessels in medieval times, ranging from shallow wooden vessels known as mazers, to cups and goblets and the classic drinking horn resting on legs. Pottery, pewter, and silver cups were often skillfully crafted and much more durable than glass, which was still a precious rarity. Like saltcellars, water jugs such as the famous aquamanile, a jug in the shape of a heraldic animal, could become art objects. This was also the case for the lord’s water basin or ewery, and the cup that was used to test the water for poison. With the great hall decorated and the food in the kitchen ready to be served, the spectacle that was a medieval banquet could begin, sometime between late morning and early afternoon. The ewerer, in charge of linen and hand washing, spread the tablecloths, and prepared the ewery, cup, and towel. The pantler, or head of the pantry, was the one entrusted with the spoon for the lord, as well as with bread knives, saltcellars, bread rolls, and trenchers, which he distributed. Once this task was completed, the lord sat down, grace was said, and the meal began. After bowing three times in front of the lord, the carver uncovered the salt and the lord’s bread while kneeling. The pantler was then given small pieces of white bread and trencher bread to test for poison or to assay. At the same time the cupbearer assayed the water in the lord’s ewery and kissed the towel. By then the dishes of the first course were about to be served. The chief cook and the steward who was in charge of the entire household, assayed samples of the food handed to them by the head waiter and the taster, who was called the sewer. The diners were now allowed to sit down while the wine and ale were examined by the marshal, serving as the chief official at dinner, the butler who was in charge of drinks, and the cupbearer. The carver then began his work at the head table as various courses arrived. Unlike today, a main course consisted of a wide variety of different dishes, from meat and fish to sweet dishes, all of which were brought into the great hall on large platters known as chargers. Two main courses were the norm, but six or seven were also not unheard of at special occasions such as marriages. Following the main courses, the table was cleared of spoons and leftover food, and fruit, cheese, the famous spiced wine known as hippocras, wafers, and sugar-coated spices known as comfits were served. Once these treats were consumed, the table was cleared of all remaining food and utensils, and the banquet ended as it began, with a hand-washing ceremony and grace being said. The lord and distinguished guests would at times continue enjoying some more treats in another room. As a consequence of the fireplace no longer occupying the middle of the great hall but being integrated into the wall in the later Middle Ages, the upstairs chamber, or bedroom of the lord and lady, could now also be heated. This made exquisite dinners for a select group of guests in the
Medieval chamber more and more popular. However, this two-tier banqueting was not welcomed by the “lesser folk” in the great hall that had to make do with cheaper fare. To avoid a diners’ revolt, the lord and lady did return to the great hall for banquets at Christmas, Easter, and on other special occasions. Major feasts were rare and costly events. They took many months of planning to make sure the thousands of deer, boars, pigs, game birds, rabbits, hares, fish, and the enormous amount of firewood required to turn these and other ingredients into delicious dishes were ready when the cook and his army of kitchen staff needed them. Medieval upper-class cuisine was an international cuisine with cookbooks (and cooks) circulating among the courts of Europe. Spices such as pepper, cinnamon, ginger, and saffron were used extensively in the kitchens of the rich, as were sugar, rice, almonds, eggs, chickens, and pork. Judging from the cookbook manuscripts that have survived, a combination of sweet and sour flavors seems to have been the preferred taste at the time. This combining of opposites may have been rooted in medieval medicine that was based on keeping the four humors in balance. Roasted meat, presumed to have a humoral composition of hot and dry, was usually balanced or tempered with sauces that had a cool and moist composition. The high degree of processing of ingredients suggests a preference for a creamy consistency of dishes. Coloring food was a trait of Arab cuisine that became all the rage in late-medieval Europe. The dish found in nearly all medieval recipe collections is blanc manger, a creamy dish made from the principal white ingredients chicken or fish, rice flower, almond milk, and sugar. Omelettes, broths ( brewets), and meat potages (civets), pies with edible crust (tourtes) or without, and mortar dishes (mortrewes) named after the kitchen utensil in which the meat was pounded to a paste, as well as fritters, clear and opaque jellies, marzipan, and signature sauces such as the cinnamon sauce (sawse camelyne) were international favorites. The drink that was the crowning of any medieval banquet was the spiced wine hippocras, named after the Greek physician Hippocrates. Menus varied depending on the status of the host and the region, but some common patterns do emerge across Europe. Soups frequently opened the meal, to be followed by assortments of roasts, pies, pasties, tarts, fritters, and finally sweets. The most famous medieval cookbook was the Viandier written in the fourteenth century by Taillevent, chief cook for the king of France. Its structure more or less follows the sequence of dishes at an aristocratic banquet: potages formed the first course, roasted meats with their appropriate sauces the second course, and surprise dishes (entremets), which could range from venison and fish to frumenty (wheat porridge), provided entertainment before the next course was served. Taillevent did not discuss confections, pastries, and other foods that were eaten at the end of a banquet. Waffles, wafers, and hippocras were prepared by specialized personnel, cheese and fruits were served raw, and candied fruits were usually bought along with the parlor spices such as candied aniseed, coriander seed, or gingerroot that were meant to aid digestion and were eaten in another room after the banquet had officially ended. At about the same time across
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the channel in England King Richard II gave a banquet for the Duke of Lancaster which featured venison, frumenty, and a meat potage first, then an assortment of roasted meats from boar’s head to pigs and swans, followed by a sweet custard, and a surprise dish (sotelty). A jelly and white dish started the second course, which was otherwise made up mostly of wild and domestic birds, rabbits, fish, and tarts, and concluded with another sotelty. A potage, stew, and more meat dishes, including quails and larks, together with a jelly, sweet curd, and egg fritters formed the third course that again concluded with a sotelty. The preferred drink at medieval banquets was wine, drunk either pure or diluted with water. Famous wine regions in the Middle Ages were Beaune near Dijon, and Bordeaux, the Rhine and Moselle region, as well as Alsace, Rivoglio, and Sicily. Greece was known for its sweet wines such as malmsey named after Malvasia on the island of Crete. England imported much of its wine from Gascony, but some was also produced locally. Ale and, at the end of the period, beer were drunk by the masses, especially in northern Europe where wine was an expensive import. Mead still played an important role in the early Middle Ages but by 1400 had gone out of style as a suitable drink for a banquet, while distilled drinks known as aqua vitae were just beginning to leave the medicine cabinet and enter the banquet hall. As the discussion of the menus has shown, dishes known in England as sotelty and in France as entremet were served between courses at medieval banquets. From colorful but simple fare they evolved into elaborate edible and eventually inedible artistic creations that moved from the dining table to the floor of the great hall and even became the backdrop for small plays. The development of surprise dishes was greatly aided by the high degree of processing and coloring that was the hallmark of medieval upperclass cuisine. Among the earliest examples were wheat porridge known as frumenty, and dishes made from the liver, giblet, and feet of poultry, with saffron used to color these dishes golden. Blanc manger, originally a “white dish” made from white ingredients, later also appeared in multicolored arrangements on the tables of the rich, as did jellies in the form of a checkerboard. Clear jellies encasing fish or other seafood were especially sought-after sotelties during Lent when the consumption of meat, eggs, and dairy products was not allowed. Eggshells filled with fish roe, fruits, and spices were a type of illusion food designed to provide diners with a guilt-free pleasure on fast days. The same was the case with giant eggs made from differently sized animals bladders whose meat-day fillings of egg yolks and egg whites were substituted with fish roe, almond, fruit, and spice fillings. Ground almonds, a staple in the medieval kitchen, were used to shape smaller animals such as hedgehogs, with almond slivers serving as quills. Fake roasts were covered in fried gingerbread to make them look roasted; pieces of hard-boiled egg whites cut in strips were used to simulate barding, that is, inserting fat in lean meat; and sauces and broths normally served with specific meat dishes were employed as markers to trick diners into thinking that what they were offered really was meat. Molds
Medieval were another convenient way of shaping processed food into a variety of different forms, and so was stuffing the prepared meat back into the raw skin of animals. The meat of a decorative bird such as a swan, peacock, or pheasant, prepared, returned to its plumage, and mounted on a platter in a life-like pose was a more elaborate type of sotelty. A Russian doll effect was achieved when a larger animal such as a pig was stuffed with a goose, which in turn was stuffed with another animal, and so on and so forth. Stuffing the skin of one animal with the prepared meat of another, and placing the roasted carcass of the original animal beside it was a way of turning one animal into two. Rather than stop at giant eggs of fantasy animals, some cooks went further and invented entire fantasy animals; most famous of all was the Cokagrys or cockatrice, whose culinary version was a creature half piglet and half cock. Mimicking human activities were the fowl or fish made to look like knights riding into battle or like pilgrims, complete with pilgrim staff. Soon the static images of these animals were not enough, and special effects were added to make them emit sound or breathe fire. The combination of heat and quicksilver or mercury in the tied neck of a bird helped create the desired sound effect of a singing bird, and cotton with camphor, later also alcohol, when lit had fish, piglets, boar’s heads, and swans emitting flames. Practical jokes that evoked disgust rather than amazement included sprinkling dried animal blood on food to make it look raw and bloody, or using pieces of intestines to make it look wormy. Not for the squeamish diner were the various live animals served in covered dishes, encased in pies, or otherwise made to appear cooked, such as the famous “four-andtwenty blackbirds baked in a pie.” Even humans could find themselves “pied” in this way. Dough is one of the oldest types of processed food used to make imitation dishes, and its popularity in Italy and England extended beyond pies to edible structures such as castles and towers, most famous among them the Parma Pies, shaped like towers, adorned with banners, and covered in gold or silver leaf. As the Middle Ages drew to a close the sotelties became grander and at the same time less nutritious. While the Castle of Love described in a fifteenth-century cookbook from Savoy with its towers and assortment of animal sotelties inside was still edible, one can assume that the living creatures “served” to diners in pies were purely for entertainment. Inedible structures, initially used as centerpieces, soon occupied parts of the floor, and depicted such mythical and religious subject matter as the Annunciation, the Shepherds and the Three Kings, The Lamb of God (Agnus Dei), or the Lady with the Unicorn. Some of these foods and tableaux were certainly nothing more than party games, but others give an impressive demonstration of how food, politics, and religion were capable of merging in the grand spectacle of a medieval feast. An example of a themed feast was the banquet hosted by Philip le Bon on February 17, 1454, commemorating the loss of Constantinople to the Ottoman Turks a year earlier. The entremets at table included automata such as fountains, moving tableaux,
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and a pie crust with 28 musicians inside. A boy and the deer he was mounted on sang a duet, and the allegorical figure of Sainte Eglise (Holy Church) entered on the back of an elephant. The performance apparently so moved Philip and his guests that they made vows to the Virgin Mary and to a live pheasant to recapture Constantinople from the Turks. Sotelties, whether edible or not, were by no means the only form of entertainment at medieval banquets. The beginning and end of a meal, and the start of each new course were signaled by the sound of the trumpet; and music usually accompanied feasts as indicated by the presence of the musicians’ gallery in the great hall. Minstrels were an integral part of larger households, with wandering minstrels also being hired for special occasions. These singers performed songs of heroic deeds (chanson de geste), political satires, or love songs, often in praise of the lady of the house. Romances, popular with the ladies even then, were also recited. Of the instruments played by medieval musicians, there were many besides the trumpet. A portable organ known as the dulcimer; the bagpipe; the stringed instruments psaltery, harp, lute, citole, rebec, and viele; and the percussion instruments tabouret and naker were all popular. Mysterious strangers in disguise performing a dance would sometimes appear, and so would mummers and mimes performing short interludes. The list of entertainers could also include acrobats, jugglers, animal trainers, conjurors, a fool, and dancers. Alternatively, the dinner guests themselves would dance popular dances such as the carole, a round dance. When inedible props were used and actors in costumes performed historical events, this was called a pageant in England. One such pageant at a banquet in 1378 recreated the crusaders’ conquest of Jerusalem and included a ship and knights scaling the walls of the city. By 1500 pageant cars were also in use in France, Burgundy, and England, ranging from castles and ships to mountains on wheels. Further Reading: Adamson, Melitta Weiss. Food in Medieval Times. Westport, CT: Greenwood, 2004; Hammond, P. W. Food and Feast in Medieval England. Stoud, United Kingdom: Alan Sutton, 1993; Henisch, Bridget Ann. Fast and Feast: Food in Medieval Society. University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press, 1976; Scully, Terence. The Art of Cookery in the Middle Ages. Woodbridge, United Kingdom: Boydell Press, 1995; Scully, Terence. The Viandier of Taillevent: An Edition of All Extant Manuscripts. Ottawa: University of Ottawa Press, 1988; Wilson, C. Anne, ed. ‘The Appetite and the Eye’: Visual Aspects of Food and Its Presentation Within Their Historic Context. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 1991.
Melitta Weiss Adamson
Mesta, Perle Perle Skirvin Mesta was America’s most famous hostess throughout the 1940s and early 1950s. Known as the “hostess with the mostes’ [sic],” her
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lavish and memorable Washington, D.C., parties made entertaining history. At that time, an invitation to a Mesta party was the most coveted prize in the nation’s capital. The March 14, 1949, issue of Time magazine (featuring her photo on the cover) notes, “in a city where a hostess’ success can be scored like points in a cribbage game by counting up the rank of her guests, Perle Mesta outscores them all.” A bright and energetic woman, astute in both business and politics, and active in women’s rights and social welfare causes, Mesta is most remembered as a political hostess and the inspiration for Irving Berlin’s play and movie, Call Me Madam. Mesta was born Pearl Skirvin in Sturgis, Michigan, on October 12, 1889. That same year, her father, William Balser Skirvin, headed to Oklahoma for the 1889 land rush and then moved on to Texas where he made a fortune in oil and land development. Once she became a renowned hostess, Perle liked to tell guests that she organized her first party on her 12th birthday while the family still lived in Texas. In truth she seemed to be training for her ultimate career throughout her youth. In 1906, when Pearl was 17, Skirvin moved his family to Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, and set up the American Oil & Refining Company. At that time, their new hometown was in a period of explosive development and had only one luxury hotel so Skirvin determined to build another, the biggest and most opulent hotel in town. On September 26, 1911, he opened the ornate 10-story, 225-room Skirvin Hotel. Featuring English gothic interior details, the hotel included a drug store, air-conditioned café with live music, grill room, tea room, two electric elevators, and telephone service in each room. The Skirvin family moved
Perle Mesta waving before leaving New York for Brussels, 1962. Library of Congress.
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Mrs. Perle Mesta receiving a double presidential handshake from Mrs. Harry S. Truman and Margaret Truman as she sails on the U.S. liner America to take up her duties as the new Minister to Luxembourg, 1949. Library of Congress.
into a five-room suite on the ninth floor, and Pearl and her two siblings had the opportunity to observe lavish entertaining and to welcome hotel guests from all walks of life. Several years later, Pearl was sent East to attend music school. There she met 54-year-old Pittsburgh engineer and steel manufacturer, George Mesta; they were married in 1916. As a new wife, Pearl became interested in the social welfare of the people working in her husband’s mills and started nursery care centers for his employee’s children. During World War I, George Mesta became a one-dollar-a-year consultant for President Woodrow Wilson and the couple moved to Washington, D.C. This was Pearl’s first taste of political and social life in the capitol. She continued her social work and became involved in local children’s projects. After the war ended, the Mestas traveled to Europe 22 times giving Pearl the opportunity to learn much about international business and politics. George Mesta’s substantial contribution to Calvin Coolidge’s presidential campaign brought the couple three overnight visits to the White House. When she was suddenly widowed in 1925, Pearl became director of the Mesta Tool Company, which she had inherited. She took an active role in managing the company until 1949 when she moved to Luxembourg. She also became involved in other businesses, including a cattle ranch with her
Mesta, Perle brother and sister. As a young widow with a substantial fortune, Mesta left Pittsburgh and returned home to Oklahoma for a short time. Then, in 1929, she decided to settle in Newport, Rhode Island. In that seaside resort of opulent mansions called cottages, she soon gained a reputation as an extraordinary hostess. In the 1930s, she became involved in the National Woman’s Party and lobbied for the Equal Rights Amendment. She became friendly with Herbert Hoover’s vice president, Charles Curtis, who spent a week at her Newport mansion and, in 1931, arranged for her to be presented at the Court of St. James’s. By the early 1940s, she was ready for a change. Keeping her Newport home, she moved into the exclusive Sulgrave Club in Washington, D.C., and began giving parties. Up until that time, Mesta had been active in the Republican Party but was unhappy with the party’s treatment of Wendell Willkie after his 1940 loss to Franklin Roosevelt. Once in Washington, she changed her political alignment, registered as a Democrat, and in 1944 changed her name from Pearl to Perle. She became an early supporter of Harry S. Truman, was the first to give a party in his honor when he became vice president, and continued to be his so-called unofficial hostess throughout his presidency. According to the Time magazine article, Mesta did not think of herself as just a hostess. She told them, “the entertaining I do is my way of serving the President and the party.” Her work for the president included giving an annual alcoholic “tea” for the women’s press corps, producing an elegant coming-out party for Margaret Truman in 1946, serving as a Rhode Island delegate to the Democratic National Convention in 1948, fund-raising and serving on the Democratic finance committee during Truman’s 1948 campaign, and co-chairing his inaugural ball. Mesta’s parties were known for bountiful but simple food, plentiful and high-quality liquor (even though Mesta only drank Coca-Cola), and an atmosphere in which everyone felt comfortable. A friend noted, “You go to Perle’s, and you know it’s going to be fun.” In 1949, Truman named Mesta United States Minister to Luxembourg. She was only the third woman appointed to a foreign diplomatic post and served until 1953, becoming the first woman to receive Luxembourg’s highest honor, the Grand Cross of the Crown of Oak. In her new post, Mesta, who called herself “Madam Minister,” continued orchestrating elegant parties, sometimes for international dignitaries, sometimes for American servicemen and women stationed in Europe. Her experiences in Luxembourg inspired the 1950 Irving Berlin Broadway musical and 1954 Hollywood movie, Call Me Madam, both starring Ethel Merman. A song from the show, “The Hostess with the Mostes’ on the Ball,” gave Perle her well-known nickname. Explaining that “only the busy person is happy,” Mesta traveled extensively after leaving Luxembourg, meeting political leaders all over the world, and continued to entertain until 1970. Her 1960 biography, Perle: My Story, includes dust jacket blurbs from Lyndon B. Johnson and Clare Boothe Luce. Mesta died in Oklahoma City on March 16, 1975, and was buried in Pittsburgh.
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Further Reading: Lesch, Paul, director. Call Her Madam. Bertrange, Luxembourg: Samsa Film. 1997. (Documentary Film); Lesch, Paul. Playing Her Part: Perle Mesta in Luxembourg. American Chamber of Commerce in Luxembourg. 2001; Mesta, Perle Skirvin. Perle: My Story. New York: McGraw Hill, 1960; “Widow from Oklahoma.” Time Magazine. March 14, 1949. volume 53 (11), http://www. time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,794659,00.html.
Joanne Lamb Hayes
N New Year’s Eve New Year’s Eve is celebrated on December 31. Although only a day apart New Year’s Eve and New Year’s Day are two separate holidays. New Year’s Eve is generally celebrated with parties and social gatherings that begin in the late evening and often continue into the wee hours of the morning. Much of the celebration focuses around the consumption of alcoholic beverages, and rowdy behavior is not unknown. Partygoers often don silly party hats made of cardboard or other inexpensive material. There are a number of traditions that are focused upon the strike of midnight, when the New Year actually commences. It is traditional to make a toast on the New Year. Champagne is the beverage of choice for this event. The champagne toast at midnight has been an American tradition for celebrating New Year’s Eve since the beginning of the twentieth century. This was originally practiced by affluent members of society but has since become popular for people of all income levels. Forty percent of all the champagne sold in the United States is sold during the last several weeks of December. The midnight kiss is another New Year’s Eve custom. Traditionally, it was thought that people could affect the luck they would have in the coming year by what they did or ate on the first day of the year. German and English folklore
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Caf Ú, New Year’s Eve. Library of Congress.
held that it was the first person with whom a person came in contact that dictated the year’s destiny. Over time people may have begun to take a proactive approach by kissing someone they knew and liked at the first moment of the New Year. Another luck-governing custom is opening the back door to let out the old year and then opening the front door to let in the new. New Year’s Eve revelers often toot horns or other noisemakers and throw confetti and paper streamers at the stroke of midnight. This is believed to have originated in ancient times when it was thought that the noise would drive away evil spirits. Shooting fireworks is also common. In addition to the noise fireworks create, they also can be linked to Celtic traditions of burning bonfires all night to ward off evil spirits, which symbolized burning the old year out. Singing “Auld Lang Syne” at midnight is also a traditional part of the celebration. The name literally means “old long since” or, in a more modern translation, “in times gone by.” The song is based on a poem written by the Scottish poet, Robert Burns in 1788. Burns drew upon the work on earlier Scots ballads, including works by Robert Ayton, Allan Ramsey, and James Watson. The song is universally sung to an old pentatonic, or five pitch per octave, Scots folk melody, which likely existed as a dance tune with a livelier tempo than is currently used. The lyrics call for remembering old friends. Although the song has five verses, few people know more than the first, “Should old acquaintance be forgot, and never brought to mind? Should old acquaintance be forgot, and auld lang syne?” and the chorus, “For auld lang syne, my dear, for auld lang syne, we’ll take a cup o’ kindness yet for auld lang syne.” Bandleader, Guy Lombardo is generally credited with popularizing the tune, which he used in his annual New Year’s Eve broadcasts. Lombardo and his Royal Canadians first played the song at the Roosevelt Hotel in New York
New Year’s Eve City in 1928. Lombardo’s version of the song became such an intimate part of the holiday tradition that Life magazine once wrote that if Lombardo failed to play “Auld Lang Syne” the American public would not believe that the New Year had really arrived. Lombardo did not, however, actually start the custom. Newspaper articles dating back to 1896 describe New Year’s Eve revelers singing the song to welcome in the New Year. Guy Lombardo and his Royal Canadians became cultural icons with their broadcast from the ballroom of the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel, in New York City, from 1956 to 1976. The program was an outgrowth of Lombardo’s 1928 radio broadcast. The Royal Canadians continued the tradition alone, after Lombardo’s death in 1977 for two more years. In 1972 Dick Clark began hosting Dick Clarke’s Rockin’ Eve, a less sedate version of a New Year’s Eve celebration. It included live video of the crowds gathered in Times Square and the countdown to midnight. Over the years the format has changed, and Clark hosts from indoors while other celebrities broadcast from high atop Times Square. The first celebration of New Year’s Eve in Times Square took place in New York. It was planned to celebrate the official opening of new headquarters for the New York Times in Times Square. The newspaper’s owner, Alfred Ochs, had lobbied to rename Longacre Square after the famous newspaper. Ochs spared no expense for his gala, which included an all-day street festival that culminated with
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Scottish New Year Hogmanay is the celebration of the New Year in Scotland. While the origin of the term Hogmanay is debated, it has been in use since the late seventeenth century. The first written reference was from 1696 when a “hog ma nae” song was sung. Officially lasting from noon on December 31 till noon on January 1, the term is popularly used to refer to all New Years’ celebrations that continue through January 2 (a public holiday in Scotland). This New Year’s celebration likely has its origins in preChristian—Celtic, Viking, and Roman—rituals that entreated the return of the summer sun and gave thanks for the gift of fire while simultaneously lifting peoples’ spirits during a cold dark time of year. A particularly dour strain of Protestantism took hold in Scotland in the 1560s, the leaders of which disapproved of Christmas and the Epiphany except in their purely religious sense. Following this period, Christmas and Epiphany celebrations were banned throughout Scotland up into the twentieth century. However, rather than disappearing entirely, the festivities moved to the New Year period: by the late seventeenth century the feasting and gift-giving previously associated with Christmas was played out at the New Year. Hogmanay has survived mostly intact despite the reintroduction, in the twentieth century, of Christmas festivities in Scotland. Probably the most widespread Hogmanay custom are the large gatherings to ring in the New Year. At midnight, bells toll, and there is toasting accompanied by much hugging and kissing. These large-scale celebrations quickly give way to the smaller-scale rituals of “first footing.” By tradition, the first person to step over the threshold in the New Year will set the luck for the household in the coming year. The type of luck depends on who this person is and the gifts they bring. A tall dark male is
Revelers dressed as Vikings take part in a “Torchlight Procession” as part of the Hogmanay celebrations, 2007, in Edinburgh, Scotland. AP/ Wide World Photos.
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a fireworks display set off at midnight from the base of the tower. The event was a tremendous success, and Times Square replaced Manhattan’s Trinity Church as New York City’s favorite place for New Year’s Eve revelers. During the nineteenth century, Trinity Church had been a favorite gathering place to welcome the New Year with the ringing of the church’s bells, but in 1894, Rector Morgan Dix, believing that the noise and commotion FURTHER READING from the crowds had grown too Banks, M. Macleod. British Calendar Customs: Scotland. Preface by the great, stopped the bell-ringing. FolRev. Canon J. A. MacCulloch, D. D. London: Pub. for the Folk-lore lowing vigorous protests from citiSociety, W. Glaisher, 1937–1941. zens and the newspapers, the bells Brown, Catherine. A Year in a Scots Kitchen: Celebrating Summer’s End to returned a year later, but once the Worshipping Its Beginning. Glasgow: Neil Wilson Publishing, 2002. Times Square celebrations began, Edwards, Gillian. Hogmanay and Tiffany: The Names of Feasts and Times Square became the hottest Fasts. London: Geoffrey Bles: 1970. spot to celebrate. The city banned the fireworks Kirsten Taylor display for 1907 but Ochs would not be repressed. He arranged to have an illuminated, 700-pound iron and wood ball lowered from the 77-foot-tower flagpole exactly at midnight to signal the beginning of 1908. In 1914 the New York Times relocated but Times Square and the New Year’s Eve tradition had already become part of the culture. The ball has undergone many makeovers over the years. The ball shrunk from 700 to 150 pounds, over the years between 1907 and 1955, but it ballooned to a colossal 1,070 pounds for the Millennium in 2000 and its centennial celebration in 2007. It has been covered in everything from wood to iron, aluminum to Waterford crystal, and has included simple light bulbs and advanced, computerized strobe light systems. In 2008, the lights on the ball were changed to energy-efficient LED lighting. In 1942 and 1943 the glowing ball was on hiatus due to the wartime dimming of New York City’s lights. Revelers still gathered at Times Square to welcome in the new year with a moment of silence, followed by the ringing of chimes from Times Tower. From 1961 to 1988 New York changed the illuminated ball to a large illuminated apple, in recognition of the city’s nickname, “The Big Apple.” The festivities at Times Square have become an international phenomenon as satellites transmit the image of the illuminated ball when it is raised to the top of the flagpole at One Times Square and lit, and, at exactly 11:59 P.M. EST, when it makes its 60-second descent down the flagpole to signal the start of the New Year. the most auspicious, which likely comes from the period of history when a blonde stranger at the door most probably meant a Viking raid. A group of first footers may visit many houses through the course of the night. “Redding” is the custom of cleaning out the house before the New Year. Useful as it no doubt is, it is now almost extinct. It was important to clear out all the ashes in the fireplaces. Based on a pagan ritual, it had the advantage that the new fire was less likely to go out while the household was out enjoying the festivities. Juniper was also burned while the cleaning occurred to ensure that any evil spirits that had moved in during the year were expelled.
New Year’s Eve Many other cities have developed their own version of this countdown celebration and, following in the tradition of “The Big Apple,” they lower an object representative of their community. Some objects dropped are done out of local pride while others are more in jest. Several localities in California and Florida drop an enlarged depiction of an orange. Hershey, Pennsylvania, raises a large Hershey Kiss. Other dropped, or raised, objects include a tangerine, conch, pinecone, rose, and pear but there are many others as well. Seattle countdowns the end of the year by raising the Space needle’s elevator to the top of the needle and then setting off fireworks. In addition to New York, New Year’s Eve is a major event in Las Vegas where the famous Las Vegas Strip is shut down so that people can gather to party. The downtown area hosts “America’s Party” where a light and sound show runs overhead on a lighted “canopy,” and confetti showers down at midnight as the electronic “fireworks” burst on the overhead canopy. The French Quarter in New Orleans and Miami’s South Beach are other popular venues that attract huge numbers of revelers. In South Beach, the New Year’s Eve fireworks show over the ocean is a prized attraction. At Walt Disney World in Florida and Disneyland in California, New Year’s Eve is usually the busiest day of the year. The parks stay open late, and a special fireworks show takes place at midnight. Toward the close of the twentieth century, many communities began to host First Night celebrations. First Night is a public festival that marks the passage of another year with art, entertainment, and festivity. The nonalcoholic merriment is family-oriented and offers affordable admission to a wide assortment of entertainments at an affordable price. Participants purchase buttons that admit them to events, which are held in both indoor and outdoor sites. Activities range from puppets to piano recitals and clowns to country music. Naturally, there are plenty of food vendors offering a plethora of tasty treats. Many First Night celebrations include fireworks displays. The tradition was initiated by a group of civic-minded Boston artists who wanted an alternative to the customary New Year’s Eve revelry. Boston offered the event as a finale to its Bicentennial celebrations in 1976. Soon, other communities began to ask for assistance in creating similar events. In 1993 First Night International was created to help communities to plan and to organize their First Night celebrations. Although the event actually takes place on the last night of the year the name “First Night” was chosen to symbolize a look forward to the new year. Some churches hold a Watch Night on New Year’s Eve. The faithful gather to reflect upon and give thanks for the blessings of the past year and ask for continued favor during the New Year. The service begins anywhere between 7 P.M. to 10 P.M. and ends at midnight. Some people go to church before going out to celebrate in a more traditionally secular fashion. For others, this church service is their only New Year’s Eve observance. The practice goes back to the Moravians who held the first Watch Night in 1732. John Wesley, the founder of Methodism, adopted the practice. Watch Night is most commonly observed in African American churches. This can be
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traced back to December 31, 1862. Known as “Freedom’s Eve,” that was the night that slaves came together in churches and private homes throughout the nation, anxiously awaiting news that the Emancipation Proclamation had become law. At the stroke of midnight people fell to their knees and thanked God, for according to Lincoln’s promise, all slaves in the Confederate States were legally free. In actuality, emancipation usually arrived when the Union troops took control of a location but the legal status of freemen had been established on that night. It had been customary, even before 1862, for slaves to gather on New Year’s Eve on many Southern plantations. Plantation owners tallied up their business accounts on the first day of each New Year. Many slaves were sold along with land and furnishings in order to satisfy debts. Families and friends were separated, never to see each other again. Assembling on December 31 was done in fear that it might be the last opportunity to be together with loved ones. Symbols for New Year’s Eve include party items such as party hats, balloons, noisemakers, confetti, and streamers. Champagne and champagne glasses are also popular, as is a clock striking 12. The most iconic image may be that of the bearded Father Time carrying his scythe. Representing the outgoing year, he is often counter posed with Baby New Year, who represents all the potential of the New Year. Further Reading: Cohen, Hennig, and Tristram Potter Coffin, eds. The Folklore of American Holidays. Detroit, MI: Gale Research Company, 1987.
Dorothy Denneen Volo
P Parisian Cafés The first café opened in Paris in 1686. By the reign of Louis the XIV, cafés were all the rage. Scandal, gossip, and political tension ignited the pages of the Paris papers, which fueled political discussions, and cafés became centers of information. Cafés were places where men and women could passionately express their ideas, and places where revolutions could be plotted. While eighteenth-century ideals brought change to nineteenth-century France, the importance of cafés stayed the same. As the cafés continued to grow in number, they remained a public venue for social interaction and a forum for free expression. Paris in the nineteenth century faced a housing shortage. Living spaces were cramped and societal demands were eroding family life. In search of more space and to ease the feeling of isolation, people flocked to cafés. There, one could drink, smoke cigars, and play cards, dominoes, billiards, or backgammon. People went to the café to find camaraderie, companionship, and, for those who were willing to pay a price, even love. Cafés became a substitute, in a sense, for domestic life. They provided the setting for both weddings and baptisms, and according to records, café owners served as witnesses to both events. It is interesting to note that socialists in the Paris suburbs created the socialist baptism, held in a café
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Paris café. Dana Ward /Shutterstock.
or dancehall, to try and end the influence of the Church. In fact, after the storming of the Bastille, cafés grew in number as the Church declined. Before the French Revolution, there were 290 churches; more than 200 of them were eventually sold or demolished. The number of French drinking establishments, however, increased to approximately 400,000 between 1789 and 1914. France was experiencing change, and the café reflected a new modernity. For example, women were gaining a sense of independence and equality. Husbands and wives who owned cafés were sometimes business partners. It even became acceptable for women to be the sole owners of cafés. The counter also arrived on the scene, and with it came the women who worked at the counter. While café owners thought pretty girls at the counter would lure men in from off the street, female workers also attracted more female patrons. Sometimes the women were for sale; other times they were not. Nevertheless the presence of women in the cafés made it easier for prostitutes to blend in with both the working girl and the girl next-door. By 1870 there was an abundance of café prostitution. France in the nineteenth century underwent the loss of traditional values, the breakdown of the family, the advancement of female independence, the rise and fall of political regimes, and the transformation of the sacred to the secular. The sentiment surrounding these events infiltrated the cafés, making them a natural headquarters for the bohemian movement and the artist progression associated with it. For a slice of nineteenth-century
Parisian Cafés Parisian life, one need not look any further than the café, where the relationship between art and life fed on each other wildly. INSIDE THE CAFÉS Various cafés throughout Paris tended to attract certain clientele. For example, financiers and literary men gathered at the Café Riche; military men met at the Café du Helder; radical journalists and businessmen went to the Café de Madrid; and the Café de la Paix attracted young and wealthy Parisians, and wealthy people from other countries, such as Brazilians, Englishmen, Chinese, and Arab sheiks. One of the most famous cafés, however, was Café Tortoni, located on the Boulevard des Italiens. Established in the eighteenth century, Tortoni was one of the oldest cafés. Throughout its history, its patrons included King Louis-Philippe, Édouard Manet, Honoré Balzac, Alfred de Musset, and Alexandre Dumas. The exterior of the café is captured in Jean Béraud’s painting “On the Boulevard at the Café Tortoni.” Alfred de Musset provides a written description of the café in the following passage: The Boulevard hardly begins moving until noon. That’s when the dandies arrive; they go into Tortoni by the back door, since the pavement in front is invaded by the barbarians, that is, by the Stock Exchange people. The dandified world, shaved and barbered, lunches until two o’clock, with a great racket, then flies off in polished boots. (Bernier 28)
In addition to the dandies and financiers, Tortoni was popular with the ladies whose carriages would stop in front of the café so that the waiters could bring them Tortoni’s famous ices. Located on one of the most fashionable streets in the city, Tortoni became a symbol of elegance associated with the Parisian boulevard. Not all cafés, however, were located in such sophisticated settings. They flourished in the outskirts of the city as well. Café Guerbois was located on the Grande Rue des Batignolles, near Manet’s studio, which was southwest of the center of Montmartre. The area, occupied by the lower class, was where many artists had their studios. In 1860 the area became a part of the capital under a project dedicated to the rebuilding and modernization of Paris, led by Baron Haussman. The writer Edmond Duranty religiously attended the meetings at the café, and in his short story “La Double Vie de Louis Séguin,” he describes the Café Guerbois (renamed “Barobis” in his story) where a revolutionary art movement was born. After meeting at Guerbois for a decade, the artists moved their gatherings to the Café de La Nouvelle Athènes, located on the Place Pigalle. The artists met in the omnibus, a narrow enclave near the entrance of the café that only fit four tables. They also met in the Le Cénacle, a large room in the back of the café, which was the main area for social encounters. It was here, at La Nouvelle Athènes, that the artists planned the first impressionist exhibit, which opened in 1874.
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In 1876, La Nouvelle Athènes was the setting for a controversial painting of the impressionist movement, Edgar Degas’s “L’Absinthe.” The painting portrays a woman and a man sitting next to each other in a café. The woman is in a stupor and on the table in front of her sits a glass of absinthe. Indeed, Montmartre was the center for both individual and artistic license, as sex and absinthe flowed in excess. Just across the street from La Nouvelle Athènes was Le Rat Mort, where, in the evening, women went to seek other women. Le Hanneton and La Souris were also lesbian bars. La Souris was near Toulouse-Lautrec’s studio and provided inspiration for his paintings of women engaged in amorous caresses with women (Adams 190–191). Lautrec also found subject matter for his art at the cabaret La Moulin Rouge. The cabaret, famous for its raucous entertainment, was patronized by various walks of life, including aristocrats, bourgeois, bohemians, tourists, and women of the demimonde (Adams 131). Another café famous for its audacious theatricality was Le Chat Noir. The sign that hung outside of Le Chat Noir was the famous black cat with an erect tail; it read, “Passant, sois moderne,” or “passerby be modern.” As patrons flocked into the café, owner Rodolphe Salis greeted them with insults. And for dramatic effect, the wait staff was dressed in the livery of the Académie française. The café, formerly a post office, was divided into two rooms by a curtain. Salis invited the writers, musicians, and other artists into the backroom of the café, where they provided entertainment such as singing, recitals, plays, and shadow-puppet performance. Like many cafés, Le Chat Noir produced a literary journal, also called Le Chat Noir, which included the works of Paul Verlaine, Stéphane Mallarmé, Théodore de Banville, and Charles Cros. On Friday and Saturday evenings, literary soirees were held at the café, and Wednesday evenings were absinthes littérairs or literary absinthe nights. The original haunt of poets and writers, however, was the Latin Quarter, which was known for its literary events. Leon Deschamps, for one, held his Soirées de La Plume, first at the Café de Fleurus and then in a basement room of the Soleil d’Or. Deschamps named the soirees after his journal La Plume, which published the work of new and emerging artists. Every other Saturday, about 200 guests, including students, artists, writers, and musicians, would recite poetry and sing songs on a wooden stage. The guests were dressed in capes and wide-brimmed felt hats, which were fashionable in the quarter. The Latin Quarter defined the bohemian lifestyle. It was the center for intellectual life, and students from all over Europe came to live and study there. In fact, the area was named the Latin Quarter because Latin was the students’ common language. The area was noisy and crowded until the early morning hours. Theodore Child captures the busy atmosphere in his
Parisian Cafés article, “Characteristic Parisian Cafés.” He describes the waiters, the strange liqueurs, the fancy costumes, and the aromas of tobacco and onion soup. The noise, activity, and diverse crowds found in the Latin Quarter provided camouflage for prostitutes who mingled among the population. Like Montmartre, the Latin Quarter was known for its easy access to pleasure. ABSINTHE Although cafés served food, they primarily served alcohol, and the most notorious beverage available was absinthe. The drink was first introduced into French society by the military. While in combat in Algeria, the troops drank absinthe for medicinal purposes; it was believed to prevent fever and, when mixed with water, kill microbes. After developing a taste for the beverage, the troops brought the drink home with them, and soon it became popular throughout France. In fact, the hours between 5 P.M. and 7 P.M. were known as the “green hour.” This was the time when everyone drank absinthe, characterized by its green color. Because absinthe was popular among all classes of society, people in the upper classes distinguished themselves from the lower classes by drinking absinthe made from wine alcohol, which was expensive. In addition, they only drank absinthe as an aperitif. If they ordered absinthe after dinner, or if they ordered more than one glass, the waiter and other diners would think less of them. As a result, they would go to one café and drink a glass or two of absinthe and then move on to another café where they would do the same; thus, the invention of the absinthe stroll. Absinthe paraphernalia, particularly the absinthe spoon, also identified the class of the drinker. Elaborate and crafted in expensive material, the absinthe spoon held a cube a sugar and was placed over a glass of the drink. Water was then poured over the spoon. This diluted and sweetened the bitter absinthe, which was high in alcohol content. The water turned the green absinthe into a cloudy white. For some, the enjoyment of drinking absinthe was the ritual involved; consequently, it was considered an insult for the waiter to prepare the drink. Each person diluted his or her drink to their own desired strength, watching the water form white drops until it reached just the right color. In order to dilute the absinthe, the drinker could also frapper or étoner ( knock on or surprise) the drink; another option was to battre ( beat) the drink. On hand was a jug of water with a thin spout that produced a fine trickle so that the water could pour into the glass drop by drop. Later, cafés began to offer absinthe fountains in place of the jug. The ratio of water to absinthe was determined according to taste, the average being around five to one. Some people, however, preferred a stronger drink, mixing it at a ratio of one to two. Others drank it almost straight up. Some absinthe glasses included a cavity at the base to measure the correct dose of absinthe. Others were acid etched to indicate the dose level.
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In general, absinthe glasses were rounded at the foot and flared up at the top. Pictures of the absinthe absinthe de vidangeur or scavenger absinthe: absinthe mixed glass can be seen in many impreswith red wine sionist paintings, including Manet’s absinthe de minuit : absinthe mixed with white wine instead of water “The Absinthe Drinker,” Degas’s absinthe anisée: absinthe with extra anise “L’Absinthe,” and Van Gogh’s “Still une bourgeoisie or une panachée: absinthe with extra anisette cordial Life with Absinthe.” absinthe gommée: absinthe sweetened with gomme syrup Although the cocktail was vichy (called bureau Arabe or “the Arab department” by the milinot popular in nineteenth-century tary): absinthe and orgeat in equal quantities mixed with the usual France, Toulouse-Lautrec was a amount of water cocktail connoisseur. Two drinks tomate: absinthe and a few drops of grenadine plus water he was noted for were the tremblement de terre (earthquake), which consisted of absinthe and cognac, and the maiden’s blush, which was a mix of absinthe, bitters, red wine, and champagne. Absinthe was undeniably attractive to many artists. While some associated themselves with it because of its bohemian image, others became quite addicted. Additionally, the drink was believed to have a hallucinogenic effect. A man and woman in a cafe. This is due in part to the presence Library of Congress. of thujone, a chemical similar to the one found in cannabis. The mind-altering effects of absinthe became more apparent as addiction to the drink increased. There are in fact many accounts that associate both crime and madness with absinthe. Some of the most famous surround the erratic and sometimes violent outbursts of Vincent van Gogh, who was admitted to an asylum after he tried to drink turpentine. Turpentine contains terpenes, a chemical also found in thujone. Artists were not the only people who succumbed to absinthe-induced madness. By the end of the century, stories of men killing their entire families became all too common. The culprit was believed to be absinthe. Although there was a growing temperance movement in France around 1872, it did not receive strong support until the end of the century (Adams 196). In 1891, Dr. Paul-Maurice Legrain began a new society, which was eventually called the Union française du temperance antialcoolique. The organization produced a monthly journal and a children’s magazine. It also taught temperance in all state schools (Adams 196). Still the battles for and against absinthe continued until World War I. The war made it necessary to sober up the troops and unite a country divided by absinthe and moral
In addition to adding water and sugar, there were other ways to drink absinthe. Your choices might have included: • • • • • •
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Party Favors decay. Finally, a law banning absinthe went into effect on March 16, 1915 (Conrad 129). As for the cafés, they continue to survive to this day, even without absinthe. However, the nineteenth-century café, French society, and absinthe are forever united in the work of some of the most famous artists and writers in history. Perhaps, indeed, it is Van Gogh who best captures the reality and escape, the hope and despair, the beautiful and grotesque, and the liberation and entrapment that characterizes both nineteenth-century Parisian life and the cafés. Further Reading: Adams, Jad. Hideous Absinthe: A History of the Devil in a Bottle. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 2004; Baker, Phil. The Book of Absinthe: A Cultural History. New York: Grove Press, 2001; Bernier, Georges. Paris Cafes: Their Role in the Birth of Modern Art. New York: Wildenstein & Co., 1985; Child, Theodore. “Characteristic Parisian Cafes.” Harper’s New Monthly Magazine 78, no. 467 (April 1889): 687; Conrad, Barnay III. Absinthe: History in a Bottle. San Francisco: Chronicle Books, 1988; Haine, W. Scott. The World of the Paris Café: Sociability among the French Working Class, 1780–1914. Baltimore and London: The John Hopkins University Press, 1996; de Polnay, Peter. “Cabarets, Restaurants, Cafes and Brasseries.” In Aspects of Paris. London: W. H. Allen, 1968, p. 47; Rudorff, Raymond. Belle Époque: Paris in the Nineties. London: Hamish Hamilton, 1972; Seigel, Jerrold. Bohemian Paris: Culture, Politics, and the Boundaries of Bourgeois Life 1830–1930. New York: Viking, 1986; Thomson, Richard, Phillip Dennis Cate, Mary Weaver Chapin, and Florence E. Coman. Toulouse-Lautrec and Montmartre (exhibition catalog) Washington, D.C. National Gallery of Art in association with Princeton University Press, 2005. [Published in conjunction with the exhibition “Toulouse-Lautrec and Montmartre” shown at the National Gallery in Washington, DC, and the Art Institute of Chicago.]
Amy Seifried
Party Favors The common definition for the term party favor is an object, often a trinket or nominal gift given at celebrations, festivals, or parties as an expression of appreciation to guests and attendees. Depending on the theme or event, the gift may also be given as a keepsake or memento of the occasion and may bear some spiritual, cultural, or providential significance to the host or guests. Party favors have most often been associated with celebratory events such as weddings, birthdays, and notable holidays such as Christmas. Many modern-day party favors are presented at a guest’s table or place setting such as those found at wedding receptions. These gifts are often given to each guest individually, but favors may also be won as prizes in games of chance or in competitions played at parties and events. On these occasions, the winning of the prize can be seen as an indicator of the determination, fortune, or destiny of the receiver. In comparison, contemporary party
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favors may reflect modern themes or trends, such as a Spiderman goody bag at a child’s birthday party. While the literal term party favor is contemporary in nature, the act of giving gifts to guests is steeped in ancient tradition, culture, and history. Some of the earliest evidence of party favors suggests that the practice may have been inspired by the ancient practice of proffering symbolic gifts to ensure a positive outcome such as love, fertility, long life, or prosperity. While specific origins or events are difficult to trace, this gifting to guests can be traced back to ancient Greek and Roman times. Although formal occasions are typically the most likely circumstances where favors were given, history has indicated that an array of common events may have sparked the more formalized concept of the gifting of party favors. The most likely forms of ancient favors came in the form of food, flowers, or decorations presented to the guests as part of an event or celebration. In ancient Rome, guests often used two table napkins each, one tied around the neck and the other used to wipe fingers and to wrap around food to take home. It was common for the ancient Greeks to furnish garlands of flowers on the tables of their guests to be used for adornment as part of their drinking parties or symposia. In the Middle Ages, celebrations often included entertainment for the guests between courses, also known as entremets. During this intermission in dining, colored balls or beads were thrown to guests by the entertainers. At the end of these celebrations, elaborate table decorations of carved wood or embroidered banners would often be given away to favored guests. Forms of favors are also traced back to competitions or the running of games by the ancient Greeks. During the celebration of Athena, also known as Panathenaia, victors of competitions were awarded olive oil as a symbol of victory over adversity. WEDDING FAVORS The practice of giving party favors is most closely tied with the celebration of marriage. It has long been the traditional way for the bridal couple to thank their guests by bestowing gifts as an expression of gratitude. Many believe that the practice was born in Italy in the nineteenth century at the wedding of Victor Emanuel of Savoy to Elena of Montenegro. The hosts of the wedding bestowed solid silver favors to the huge number of guests. History also tells us that other wedding favors were simpler in nature. Records dating back to the sixteenth and seventeenth century document the practice of English bridal couples giving love knots made of ribbon or lace to guests. Often times these knots were tacked to the bridal gown, and guests were invited to pluck the knots from the bride’s dress. Other origins of the wedding favor are most commonly linked to the cake itself. Ancient Roman wedding ceremonies were finalized by the breaking of a cake over the bride’s head as a symbol of good fortune. The guests would gather and eat the crumbs in an effort to share in the couple’s good
Party Favors luck. A piece of cake would guarantee an auspicious life. The guests were also supplied with confetto a combination of nuts, dried fruit, and honeyed or sugared almonds. In the seventeenth century, British wedding cakes were made in pairs, one for the bride and one for the groom. Smaller than the bride’s cake, the groom’s cake was a dark heavy fruitcake that was often cut into small squares and placed in boxes for the guests to take home as a favor and memento of the event. While the use of a groom’s cake has faded in British tradition, it has undergone a recent revival in the United States. A piece of the more traditional wedding cake given in boxes to guests is still seen today. Other inedible favors can be traced to Scottish wedding traditions. Favours were the ornaments used to decorate the cake itself. These favors were pretty confections of ribbon and artificial flowers, sometimes of tartan and heather. They and the decoration at the top of the cake were removed and distributed by the bride and bridesmaids to the women attending the wedding. Bouquets and table flowers were also sometimes distributed. This practice would ensure that the bride would greet all the female guests at the wedding. A wedding cake can also have surprise favors baked into the cake itself. In Yorkshire tradition, bridal cakes often contain charms, such as a coin, a ring, a button, or a thimble. Each charm carried with it a different meaning. For example, the guest who received the slice with the coin was assured future prosperity, while the ring meant marriage within a year. The button or the thimble meant that the recipient would remain a bachelor or a spinster. Wedding favors also are grounded in cultural and ethnic traditions, many of which have survived the test of time. One of the most common and popular wedding favors is candied or sugared almonds. The almond tree itself has been revered as a provider of life, love, and happiness—all classic themes of traditional marriage. Fresh almonds have a bittersweet taste that represents life. The sugaring is added with the hope that the newlyweds will be more sweet than bitter. Records indicate that sugared or honeyed almonds were used to celebrate weddings and births in Ancient Rome. The ancient Greeks viewed the almond as a sign of youth, everlasting love, and prevention of drunkenness. They would often give five almonds to party guests to avoid unruliness. The practice of giving five almonds is also seen in Italian wedding culture where five almonds are given to each guest to symbolize the five wishes for the bride and groom: health, wealth, happiness, fertility, and longevity. In modern-day Greek culture, sugarcoated almonds are called koufeta and are given to guests in odd numbers symbolizing the indivisibility of the marital union. In Middle Eastern weddings, the candy-covered almonds symbolize fertility and are often considered aphrodisiacs. Many wedding favors reflect the ethnicity of the couple or families themselves. For example, in Malaysian culture, hand-painted decorated eggs,
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a symbol of fertility for the couple, are a traditional favor for guests. Orange blossoms are left loose at place settings or in bud vases for each guest at Spanish weddings. The Dutch distribute bridal sugar, which consists of five pieces of candy wrapped in tulle. In Japanese cultures, symbolic flowers, small bottles of sake, or pieces of sugared candy are left for guests. Guests at a Puerto Rican wedding can expect to receive a copias, which is an ornately decorated card with the newlyweds’ name and the date of their marriage. In Muslim cultures, the bride and groom may give guests candy or eggs, representing a sweet and fruitful life. Many cultures share common types of favors such as scented sachets, floral centerpieces, and picture frames. Modern day brides and grooms are no longer limited by wedding favors dictated by tradition. Recent movements in the wedding industry have sparked an explosion in the choices couples have with regard to the favors they bestow upon their guests. Today’s couples can choose from countless options of favors for their guests. While many choose popular favors such as chocolates or flowers, recent trends have included more personalized favors. From CDs with music mixes that express the couple’s personal taste to small bottles of wine with the couple’s name and wedding date, wedding favors have become functional and cherished. Other favors that express the personality of the couple include favors that reflect the couple’s work, hobbies, or interests. Personalized seed packets, apple baskets, and mugs with packets of hot chocolate reflect seasonal themes while Christmas ornaments and Halloween goody bags reflect holidays on or around the wedding date. Even the most common wedding favors have been dressed up in keeping with modern times. Goldencrusted almonds, cookies that mirror the brides dress, and high-end heartshaped truffles can now be found at the place setting of many wedding guests. In opposition to more extravagant favors, some couples opt to donate money to a favorite charity in the name of each guest or couple. CHRISTMAS CRACKERS The origins of some favors, such as Christmas crackers, are grounded in a specific event or holiday. This unique favor, the cracker, was invented, almost by accident, by Tom Smith in 1847. In its simple form, a cracker is a small cardboard tube covered in brightly colored paper and most often pinched at the ends in a traditional firecracker shape. The tube contains a small strip of paper saturated with saltpeter as well as a prize. The ends of the paper extend outside the cracker and the friction causes a sharp pop or crack when the ends are pulled. The prize inside then falls into the waiting hands of the recipient. This ingenious idea became part of the British holiday celebration and tradition and still continues today. Originally, the Christmas cracker contained a bon-bon or confection. However, its contents have evolved into items such as bright paper hats, balloons, and pieces of paper containing a fortune or joke. Tom Smith produced crackers not only for the Christmas season but also for such notable occasions as world fairs and trips by members of the British monarchy. For these occasions, the contents of these
Party Favors crackers were upscale, handmade treasures, such as artistic masks, beautifully illustrated boxes, and jeweled headpieces. Christmas crackers are still made today and are often used at other events including children’s parties, New Year’s Eve, and weddings. OTHER EVENTS From baby showers to birthday parties to holiday celebrations, guests are likely to see favors as part of the festivities. Some events warrant typical, more traditional favors, while the uniqueness of the event may call for more unusual favors. New Year’s is a typical time when favors play an integral role in the celebration. Common New Year’s favors include noise makers, horns, hats, silly string, party streamers, and confetti—all of which are used by the guests during the celebration. Birthdays for all ages are often accompanied by favors. For a child’s party, friends and family will often be given goody bags filled with candies, cookies, confections, comics, or even rub-on tattoos. More elaborate types of children’s favors may include gift certificates in small denominations, T-shirts with messages marking the event, jewelry, or small toys. A growing trend in children’s party favors is an increase in the cost and extravagance of the favors. A competitive environment among parents has resulted in the favors given at children’s parties costing hundreds or even thousands of dollars. Adult birthday parties are not exempt from the tradition of bestowing gifts to guests. Many adult birthday parties reflect the marking of a birthday of significance such as a 30th, 40th or 50th birthday. Very much like wedding favors, these favors are often personalized and may reflect the hobbies or interests of the guest of honor. Golf balls, cigars, or bottles of wine personalized with the date of the event are a unique way to commemorate the special day. However, our social customs no longer limit these birthday celebrations to humans. Birthday parties for pets, particularly dogs, have come into vogue in recent years. The pooch and his friends may be treated to specially made and decorated party dog biscuits, cookies, and cakes. Expectant mothers and the planners of baby showers also give gifts of appreciation to their guests. While these gifts need not be extravagant, they can be both interesting and creative. Goody bags filled with beauty products, music mixes, personalized fortune cookies, and coffee- or teacups filled with candies or confections are common at these events. Often, if the expectant mother has determined the name of the baby, the gifts may reflect the baby’s name as the giver of the gift. WINNING OR FINDING FAVORS Favors may also be given as a prize for a game. The sharing of favors through activities that require guests to participate in games is often steeped in tradition and symbolism. In cases where guests seek or find the favor, it is usually an indicator of the luck or fortune of the recipient of the favor.
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Piñatas are a classic mechanism for sharing favors with guests. A piñata is a clay or papier-mâché figure that is often filled with candy, fruits, small trinkets, and/or confetti. Traditionally a piñata is hung on a string and a blindfolded guest swings at the piñata with a stick and is encouraged, correctly or incorrectly, by the other guests in hitting the target. If the guest is successful in breaking the piñata, the other guests, often children, will scatter to gather the contents on the ground. Many believe piñata originated in China where clay pots were filled with seeds and the successful act of breaking the pot was a sign of good luck. As the piñata evolved, it was further adorned and was thought to represent Satan masked to attract humanity. Beautiful and highly decorated, the piñata is designed to attract. The most traditional style of piñata resembles a modern-day space satellite, having seven points. These seven points represent the seven deadly sins or pecados—greed, gluttony, sloth, pride, envy, wrath, and lust. The breaking of the piñata represents the overcoming of evil and the treasures inside represent the just reward for keeping the faith. Today, the piñata has lost much of its religious and symbolic significance, and the game is played mostly for fun. It is often seen at Christmas time in Mexico but can also turn up at other occasions such as children’s birthday parties. On the latter occasion, to avoid hurt feelings and tears, a little basket of candy is passed to those children without treats after the goodies are gathered from the ground. The rest of the basket is passed to the guests before the party is over. On other occasions, a favor may be hidden for a guest to seek or find. Modern-day Easter egg hunts, where real or plastic eggs are hidden for children to find are both entertaining and rewarding for the hunters. Real eggs may be exchanged for favors or money, while plastic eggs, which are hollow inside, may house money, candy, or a favor for the child. The king cake is another classic example of this sharing of favors through fortune. The cake is most often associated with New Orleans and Mardi Gras, but other cultures including Latin America also celebrate with king cakes. The cake is traditionally served for the Feast of the Epiphany or Twelfth Night celebrated January 6. Today, the cake is served throughout the Epiphany season or, in New Orleans, until Mardi Gras. Traditionally, a baby figurine representing the Christ child is hidden inside the cake for one of the guests to find. The king cake may also contain a coin, bean, or pea. Traditionally, the finder of the coin was expected to make a contribution to a worthy cause whereas the finder of the bean or pea is hailed as king or queen for the day. The person finding the piece with the baby must provide the king cake for the next gathering of the season. EXTRAVAGANT FAVORS While favors are classically seen as nominal expressions of appreciation, some modern-day circumstances have taken the practice of sharing
Party Favors favors to new and much more extravagant levels. Celebrities and the wellto-do have a history of giving and receiving some elaborate and expensive favors. In 1910, when famed jeweler Pierre Cartier told 24-year-old socialite Evalyn Walsh McLean that the Hope Diamond was cursed, she was intrigued. That next year, she and her husband paid $154,000 for the 45carat, walnut-sized diamond and took it to a priest to have it blessed. At a famed event, she treated the deep-blue gem as a party favor, tossing it into the swimming pool and letting guests dive for it. A more contemporary example of posh and expensive favors can be found at celebrity award shows. Presenters, nominees, attendees, and award winners are given high-end gift bags and presents as favors. Award shows such as the Golden Globes, the Academy Awards, and the Cannes Film Festival all indulge in this extravagant gifting practice. These gift packages are so expensive and so extreme they have warranted their own term—swag. Swag bags, as they are often called, are filled with gifts and services that make traditional favors pale in comparison. Some classic swag bag contents include: a five-night stay at a French Polynesian resort, an extended visit to an exclusive salon, a computerized massage table, a cashmere travel blanket, a $3,400 diamond watch, and a $600 bottle of perfume. These high-dollar favors are used as much for marketing as for appreciation. Firms will donate the contents in the hopes of one day being associated with the celebrity. Swag bags and their recipients have come under fire recently by the IRS. In 2007, tax laws were enforced requiring the recipients of these gifts to pay the taxes on their value, which can be considerable. Madison and Mulholland, a company known for creating these bags, put together the “Ultimate Celebrity Gift Bag” in 2003 valued at $70,000. Due to the recent tax implications, celebrities are becoming more conservative in accepting swag. Some are opting out, while others use a more creative, philanthropic approach of auctioning off their swag and giving the money to their favorite charity. In 2006, George Clooney put his Oscar swag bag up for auction to raise money for the United Way hurricane fund. Bidders paid a sum total of $45,000 for the contents of the bag that included a seven-day Hawaiian vacation, a string of Tahitian pearls, a silk kimono, and a spa treatment package at an exclusive Arizona retreat facility. Further Reading: Charsley, Simon R. Wedding Cakes and Cultural History. New York: Routledge, Chapman and Hall, 1992; Garland, Robert, Daily Life of the Ancient Greeks. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1998; Gorenflo, Donna. Party Favors: Why Are They Given? [Online, July 2008]. http://articles3000. com / Family/62440/Party-Favors-Why-Are-They-Given.html; Hudson Valley Wedding Company. Party Favors: Origin, Old Standards and New Ideas. [Online, August 2007]. Hudson Valley Wedding Site http://www.hudsonvalleyweddings. com/guide/favors.htm; Roney, Carley. The Knot Complete Guide to Weddings in the Real World: The Ultimate Source of Ideas, Advice, and Relief for the Bride
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and Groom and Those Who Love Them. New York: Broadway Books, 2004; Visser, Margaret. The Rituals of Dinner: The Origins, Evolution, Eccentricities and Meaning of Table Manners. New York: Grove Weidenfeld, 1991.
Leslie A. Meyer
Party Planners Party planners help clients focus on decisions related to events and guide them to appropriate choices, from the initial idea or concept to the execution of an event. Planners select everything from a theme to a competent caterer, they find a location, they strategize the flow of an event, and they organize the myriad details leading up to an event, such as invitations, entertainment, décor, signage, and transportation. With the globalization of businesses following World War II, there has been an expansion of events, both formal and informal, business and social, which cross cultures and customs and require knowledge of traditions as well as acceptable adapted practices. In nations where religious and cultural traditions became enforced as state rule, it is imperative that international business travelers and government representatives know those traditions and respect the dress codes, dietary rules, seating arrangements, speaking order, and physical contact customs. In other nations where international business and the Internet drive the need for new protocols to be created, information is needed that respects the various traditions as they come together. Party planners can advise on etiquette, helping clients comply with proper ways of greeting and seating honored guests. They can help clients avoid embarrassing social errors that clients may not know how to handle. On one hand, party planners can help relieve the stress of working parents trying to celebrate a child’s birthday, on another extreme, they can advise the proper ways to greet and host royalty at formal events. Party planners can specialize in helping nervous brides select items for a bridal registry, determine seating arrangements, and smooth the awkward etiquette of handling multiple sets of married, divorced, and remarried relatives. Party planners and event management companies can also be asked to organize special transportation needs on a safari or a cruise, hire limousines or hang gliders, locate accommodations for disabled guests or a traveling orchestra. They might apply for parade permits or for licensing for exhibitions and floor plans for trade shows; or they might provide speechwriting, lighting, sightseeing, and many other services needed for conferences and conventions. Party planning is an enormous and expanding industry that encompasses and links many professional companies providing services for a huge range of events. Sometimes called event planning, production or marketing companies, special event management and /or conference management, many creative people find work organizing the food services, logistics, transportation, audio visual services, and décor for spectacles, galas, fundraisers,
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Event Industry Certifications In order to establish standards to help clients select responsible party planners to trust with major events, several professional associations have created certifications that demonstrate the levels of knowledge attained by their members. Among the certifications and granting organizations are the following:
Designation CAE CDME
CERP CFEE CHME CITE CMP CPCE CSEP DMCP TCP (EVC)
TCM (EVM)
Certified Association Executive Certified Destination Management Executive
Certified Event Rental Professional Certified Festival & Event Executive Certified Hospitality Marketing Executive Certified Incentive and Travel Executive Certified Meeting Professional Certified Professional Catering Executive Certified Special Event Professional Destination Management Certified Professional Certified Tourism Professional (Event Coordinator) Certified Tourism Manager (Event Manager)
Affiliation
Web Site
American Society of Association Executives Destination Marketing Association International (formerly International Association of Convention & Visitors Bureaus) American Rental Association
http://www.asaenet.org
International Festivals and Events Association Hospitality Sales & Marketing Association International Society of Incentive & Travel Executives Convention Industry Council
http://www.ifea.com
National Association of Catering Executives International Special Events Society
http://www.iacvb.org
http://www.ararental.org
http://www.hsmai.org http://www.site-intl.org http://www.convention industry.org http://www.nace.net http://www.ises.com
Association of Destination Management Executives Canadian Tourism Human Resource Council
http://www.adme.org
Canadian Tourism Human Resource Council
http://www.emerit.ca
http://www.emerit.ca
product launches, even company meetings and picnics. Party planners sell coordination, planning, and decision-making services along with various capacities to identify subcontractors, staff, and locations appropriate to a wide range of events. Some party planners learn through professional associations, some through experience, teaming up with other small service businesses, and some attend colleges for formal programs in hospitality, tourism, or event management degrees at American schools such as: University of Nevada at Las Vegas, University of North Carolina, George Washington University, Northeastern State University, Temple University, College of the Cariboo, Florida State University, among others.
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Depending on the kind of party or event required, party planners might draw on the services of consultants and subcontracted specialists such as caterers, florists, printers, tenting specialists, lighting designers, as well as location locators, audio visual and sound system teams, even mobile staging and trade show booth production companies, and parade and transportation specialists. Independent party planners may require a fee for services from a client and an additional percentage of the amounts to be paid to subcontractors. Thus they fulfill their role as intermediaries, bringing client and services together for events. Some provide the subcontracted goods and services themselves, for additional compensation. Hotels and resorts offer packages through their catering departments, as well as customized event planning and coordination services. Typically these facilities offer a range of in-house meals, services, and function spaces, including private rooms and public space accommodations. They outsource or subcontract many details of execution through a range of independent businesses. Depending on requirements, customers usually can choose from a great variety of services under the umbrella and guidance of a hotel or resort manager who specializes in event planning. Further Reading: Allen, Judy. Event Planning: The Ultimate Guide to Successful Meetings, Corporate Events, Fundraising Galas, Conferences, Conventions, Incentives and Other Special Events. Toronto, Canada: John Wiley & Sons, 2000; Allen, Judy. The Business of Event Planning: Behind-the-Scenes Secrets of Successful Special Events. Toronto, Canada: John Wiley & Sons, 2002; Goldblatt, Joe Jeff, and and Kathleen S. Nelson, eds. The International Dictionary of Event Management (The Wiley Event Management Series). Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons, 2000; Goldblatt, Joe Jeff. Special Events: Event Leadership for a New World ( The Wiley Event Management Series). Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons, 2005.
Carol G. Durst-Wertheim
Philippine Fiestas Fiestas are festive celebrations commemorated by various towns in the Philippines typically in honor of a town’s patron saint. These celebrations are a legacy of Catholic Spain, which colonized the Philippines for over three centuries, from 1565 to 1898. Today, about 80 percent of the Filipino population is Roman Catholic. Religious and secular activities characterize present-day town fiestas, where church masses and religious processions go hand-in hand with townorganized activities like beauty contests, fairs, variety shows, games, and other commercial-type ventures meant not just to bring fun to the community but to provide extra funding for the town’s coffers as well. All these communal activities set the stage for gatherings that ultimately bring families, friends, and strangers together to townspeople’s homes for the sharing
Philippine Fiestas
of the fiesta meal. The typically extravagant fiesta meal, available to visitors all day long, is a highly-anticipated component of the celebration. It is a fiesta’s highlight for many food-loving Filipinos, second only to the saint being honored. The word fiesta is Spanish, meaning “feast,” from the Latin word festa. Many Catholic countries including Spain and Italy as well as those in Latin America celebrate fiestas. A Philippine fiesta is a unique blend of religion and a country’s own intertwined Hispanic and pagan traditions. It is a time for joyous celebration, a thanksgiving for the earth’s bounty and God’s benevolence. To many Filipinos, the fiesta represents a reaffirmation of their religious faith and just as importantly, their identity as a community. It is to this day celebrated with as much preparation, anticipation, and passion as it was centuries ago. HISTORY Ferdinand Magellan, a Portuguese-born explorer, was on a naval expedition on behalf of the Spanish Crown to find new trade routes for spices and other riches in the East when he discovered the Philippines in 1521. His discovery paved the way for the eventual occupation of the islands in 1565. Around the 1890s, the Spanish conquerors strongly encouraged the natives, called Indios by the Spanish, to relocate to compact villages. This was their solution to finding an easier way to govern a highly scattered population (the country is made up of over 7,000 islands) while converting as many natives as possible to Christianity. Each village had a church, which became its social center. The church was presided over by the highly influential fraile, or “friar.” Over time, the pagan Filipinos who resettled in these communities converted to Catholicism. The Spaniards used fiestas honoring Jesus Christ and patron saints to teach the faith. For Filipinos, including those who resisted settlement and lived far away from the towns, fiestas were a joyous diversion from the routine of their indentured lives. Their participation in the religious rituals of the fiesta, made so much more appealing with the involvement of dance, music, theater, and food, eventually became an integral part of communities’ social fabric. But all the revelry and worship associated with fiestas were not unfamiliar to Filipinos, who were animists before conversion to the Catholic faith. They were already familiar with rituals and celebrations held to appease or honor spirits and thus, easily adapted to honoring a new God. Presently, parish churches—with the support of the town’s most prominent citizens—still largely control town celebrations, successfully preserving the religious aspects of the festivities. However, a commercial element has also strongly evolved, as townspeople have turned more enterprising and found ways to use these annual events as tools for their town’s economic and cultural development.
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Filipina girl participating in Philippine street parade. shadow216/Shutterstock.
FIESTA PREPARATIONS Fiestas are highly communal events. A committee typically composed of the parish priest and the town’s prominent citizens prepares months ahead of the actual feast day. The committee assigns various townsfolk to handle preparations for many activities including the decoration of the town, publicity for the event, the religious procession, and contests and programs to be held. A few days before the fiesta, colorful buntings and banners are up and around town, the streets are swept clean, the stage is set up for the variety show to be held on fiesta night, and the church cleaned and decorated—its altar adorned with abundant fresh flowers. In townspeople’s homes, preparations are no less intense or frenetic days before the feast. The household’s focus is on the food to be served at the festive table throughout the day. Some relatives and friends will come not just as guests but also to assist in culinary preparations. A fiesta is also a time when townspeople make necessary repairs and improvements to their homes, in their desire to be seen by guests at their best. Close to fiesta day, houses are thoroughly cleaned and the best linens, silver, and china taken out from storage. Some out-of-town guests are expected to stay the night or for a few days following the fiesta, so celebrations, this time more privately
Philippine Fiestas conducted, continue on past the feast day. Many guests are sent home with pabaon, take-away packages containing substantial leftovers of the fiesta meal. Fiestas also serve as homecoming events for many locals who have moved away from their town. Come fiesta day, homes are open to all visitors, invited or not. It is an accepted fact that some households go into debt just to come up with highly memorable feasts for their guests to enjoy. FIESTA FARE The introduction of Catholicism paved the way for the introduction of Spanish cuisine, in part through fiestas that became associated with the celebration of the religion. For many Filipinos, fiestas and holidays mean preparing or ordering a spread of Spanish-influenced Filipino dishes to grace their tables. Indigenous food usually remains in the background, as it is considered everyday fare. Because Spanish food was the food of the colonizers, it was—and still is—considered elitist fare. During the colonial period, the ruling class and more prominent natives served Spanish food to demonstrate wealth, power, and association with the upper classes. Fiestas during this period were showcases of traditional Spanish cuisine, many introduced by cooks employed by friars and wealthy townspeople. Over time, however, many of these dishes were adapted to suit Filipino tastes and the availability of ingredients. These Spanish-influenced dishes using expensive ingredients and prepared through labor-intensive procedures continue to be cooked (or nowadays, ordered) for fiestas. These include morcon (stuffed beef roll in tomato sauce), callos (stewed tripe), caldereta (stewed beef or goat), galantina (deboned chicken stuffed with pork and vegetables), pastel de lengua (ox tongue covered in pastry), and paella. But the festive table would not be complete without its centerpiece, the quintessential lechon (a whole roasted pig stuffed with aromatic leaves such as lemon grass or tamarind). Seafood such as steamed whole fish, crabs, and prawns, as well as various noodle dishes (a culinary legacy from Chinese immigrants), are also mainstays of many festive tables. Some dishes are strongly associated with fiestas. The town of Lucban in Quezon province always celebrates the feast day of San Isidro de Labrador with a dish called jardinera, a steamed meat loaf of cubed pork, sausages, pineapple, cheese, pickles, and eggs molded into a lanera, an oval-shaped tin container also used for making leche flan, a popular steamed or baked egg and milk custard of Spanish origin. POPULAR PHILIPPINE FIESTAS Fiestas are held throughout the Philippines, and many stand out because of the distinctive way they are celebrated. Every June 24th in the town of Balayan in Batangas province, pigs take center stage in the fiesta known as
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Parada ng Lechon, or “parade of roasted pigs,” in honor of their patron saint St. John the Baptist. After mass is held for the parishioners during feast day morning, the officiating priest blesses not just the townsfolk but also a line-up of roasted pigs. The pigs are dressed according to the theme of their sponsoring organization and then paraded around town before all are being consumed by a hungry public. The town of Lucban, Quezon, celebrates the highly festive and colorful Pahiyas every May 15th to honor San Isidro de Labrador, patron saint of workers. Homeowners decorate the façade of their houses with edible ornaments—brightly colored kiping, or rice wafers, as well as various local fruits, vegetables, and flowers. After the celebration, the wafers can be fried and dipped in vinegar or syrup or sprinkled with sugar and deep-fried to make a satisfying snack. There is also a contest for the best-decorated house, injecting a competitive spirit in the festivities. The carabao, or water buffalo, still considered an agricultural workhorse on Filipino farms, takes the limelight in the Carabao Festival held every May 14–15 in Pulilan, Bulacan province. To celebrate the feast of the patron saint, San Isidro de Labrador, the carabaos are elaborately decorated, pulling processional carts containing images of the saint, local produce, and farming implements, as they are paraded around town by their farmer-owners leading to the parish church—where carabaos are made to kneel in front of the church to be blessed by the saint. Further Reading: Fernandez, Doreen G. Tikim: Essays on Philippine Food and Culture. Manila: Anvil, 1994; Lynch, Frank, Aram A. Yengoyan, and Perla Q. Makil eds. Philippine Society and the Individual: Selected Essays of Frank Lynch, 1949– 1976. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1984; Phelan, John Leddy. The Hispanization of the Philippines: Spanish Aims and Filipino Responses, 1565– 1700. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1959; Rodell, Paul A. Culture and Customs of the Philippines. Westport, CT: Greenwood, 2002.
Maria G. Steinberg
Potluck Suppers The word potluck has at least three meanings. It can refer to a meal of whatever is on hand at the moment or to an offer to an unexpected guest to share what has been prepared for the family. In twentieth-century America, however, it was best known as a social occasion in which everyone brought something to share with the group. While the concept of a communal meal to which everyone contributes what they have predates history and is enjoyed around the world, the first known use of the term potluck in English appears in 1592 and refers to accepting whatever is available rather than a meal of foods brought by the participants. The concept of pot luck originated when the remnants of one meal would be thrown into the pot to be
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served as the basis for tomorrow’s Cookbooks inspired by the concept of potluck suppers include meal. Arriving guests would be the following: served the “luck of the pot.” Of Potluck Party Recipes: 200 Suggestions for Casseroles, Salads, Desnecessity, early European coloserts by Thora Hegstad Campbell (Chicago: Rand McNally, 1960). nists in North America shared meals Helen Corbitt’s Potluck Cookbook (Wilmington, MA: Houghton Mifflin, until their individual households 1962). were established, and communal Entertaining With Potlucks How to Survive and Enjoy Them by Marcella Hook (Seattle, WA: Mardelho Publishers, 1990). dinners accompanied political Cooking for Friends: Cookbook for Potluck Suppers by Susan Peery events and patriotic celebrations (New York: Fireside, 1991). throughout the seventeenth and Potluck Plain & Fancy: Our Favorite Recipes from “Quick ‘N’ Easy” eighteenth centuries. Although it to Masterpieces by Susan and Gordon Peery (Chambersburg, PA: was probably never called a potAlan C. Hood & Company, 1996). luck, the communal supper shared in the Plymouth colony in 1621 certainly met the criteria. The Dictionary of American Regional English traces the first use of the word potluck in the New York Times to a March 28, 1880 article about a group called “The Potluck Club.” Similar clubs originated in cities across the country during the nineteenth century and existed throughout the twentieth century. The occasion was a social gathering in which people either brought a finished dish to be shared or brought prepared ingredients and finished cooking the dish in the host’s home. A theme was often selected in advance and the shared responsibility of providing the food allowed the host and hostess more time to create the proper décor. In addition to this social setting for the potluck supper, churches and community groups across the country incorporated the concept into their programs. Church meetings often included a potluck supper (also called a covered dish social ), which encouraged social communication within the congregation and sometimes encouraged competition among participants to bring the most favored dish. A special section in the “Buffet Meals” chapter of the Mary Margaret McBride Encyclopedia of Cooking titled “The Potluck Meal” notes that “potluck has become a popular meal for an all-day club meeting, an extension leader training meeting, church social, or a community or family get-together.” The text offers tips on ensuring a varied menu, arranging the foods on the serving table, and avoiding “confusion and delay,” as well as recipes for the event. In the American West, the term potluck also included ingredients brought by a guest to be added to a communal stew. While strictly social potluck clubs are only occasionally found today, church, community group, and fund-raising potlucks are alive and well all over the country. In the late twentieth century, food-safety concerns caused local health departments to require groups sponsoring potlucks to adhere to special procedures and inspections. In some areas local government agencies tried to ban the events entirely. Potluck supper legislation became an incendiary political debate in some parts of the country, and regulations are still in effect in some areas.
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Further Reading: Anderson, Jean. The American Century Cookbook: The Most Popular Recipes of the 20th Century. New York: Clarkson N. Potter. 1997; Hall, Joan Houston, ed. The Dictionary of American Regional English, Volume IV. Cambridge MA: Belknap Press, 2000; London, Anne, ed. Mary Margaret McBride Encyclopedia of Cooking. Evanston, IL: Homemakers Research Institute, 1958; Schremp, Gerry. Kitchen Culture: Fifty Years of Food Fads. New York: Pharos Books, 1991.
Joanne Lamb Hayes
Progressive Dinner Parties Not to be confused with the political term progressive, progressive dinner parties allow several participants to share in the preparation of multiple courses, by creating a truly moveable feast. This practice became popular during World War II when it was possible for more than one family to enjoy many of the foods rationed at the time. Groups share one course in one location, and then move along or “progress” to a second, third, even fourth location for subsequent courses of one dinner party. Different from a pot luck supper, where each guest brings something to one location, a progressive party is a party that moves from house to house, thus making it possible for participants to enjoy playing both roles, that of host and guest, in the course of an evening. Progressive parties need to be very tightly choreographed events, with menu and choice of locations carefully selected to allow for seating, parking, and transportation between locations sufficient to accommodate the invited guests. They are most successful if all guests live in close proximity, thus minimizing the risks of drinking and driving as the event progresses. The best recipes are those that can be prepared ahead of time, and the best strategy is to set the table or buffet before the event begins; otherwise, someone must leave one venue early to organize the next course that he or she is hosting. A seasonal, ethnic, or special event theme for the dinner can keep the menu coherent and help simplify decision making for the hosts. Progressive parties allow for guests to share in the preparation and clean up of a party, and they require fairly exacting plans and timing of execution. In addition, respecting times, so everyone’s efforts receive equal attention, is an important courtesy. Allowing about one hour per course, then time for travel between locations, should provide for a leisurely evening, and depending on the number of courses, something like four to five hours will easily be filled. Progressive dinner parties are excellent vehicles for welcoming a new neighbor, for getting a group of nervous hosts to share responsibilities, or as a fundraiser for a good cause. While it is difficult to pinpoint the origins of progressive dinner parties, there are several factors that may have led to their rise in popularity in the late twentieth century. First, fewer middle-class households had servants to help
Prohibition prepare multiple courses and provide cutlery and linens for seated, formal dinner parties, as was done in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, so sharing the task of throwing a party made sense. Second, as time pressures increased with women’s increased participation in the labor market, there was a general lack of home entertaining experience. Progressive dinner parties are a way to share the burdens and lower everyone’s stress levels. Progressive dinner parties reflect back to a time when communities gathered for shared cooking at festivals, harvests, celebrations, and funerals. At this point in our nation’s history, we have precious few barn raisings or communal times to bring in the crops; perhaps this is a way of bonding a community, albeit removed to our separate homes, transposed into suburban and urban settings. Further Reading: Hayes, Joanne Lamb. Grandma’s Wartime Kitchen: World War II and the Way We Cooked. New York: St. Martin’s Press, 2000; http://www.entertaining. about.com; http://www.lifestyle.msn; http://www.progessivedinnerparty.org.
Carol G. Durst-Wertheim
Prohibition Entertaining in America changed dramatically on January 16, 1920. After nearly a century of trying, a disparate coalition of political, social, and religious groups succeeded in pressuring Congress to ban “the manufacture, sale, or transportation of intoxicating liquors within, the importation thereof into, or the exportation thereof from the United States and all territory subject to the jurisdiction thereof for beverage purposes.” Passed on December 18, 1917, and ratified on January 16, 1919, the Eighteenth Amendment to the Constitution went into effect a year later on January 16, 1920. The National Prohibition Act, known as the Volstead Act, which defined the parameters of the amendment and gave the Treasury Department enforcement power was passed on October 28, 1919, and became law on January 29, 1920. It defined “intoxicating liquors” as anything with more than 0.5 percent alcohol. For the first time in the more than four hundred years that Europeans had lived in North America, alcoholic beverages were no longer legally a part of a good meal or an evening’s entertainment. Although there is limited evidence of alcohol consumption in America before the arrival of European explorers, it had certainly been a part of American life after. Coming from Europe where water was not considered safe, each wave of new Americans assumed the consumption of alcohol at each meal to be a part of everyday life, no matter their economic status. The colonial homemaker was judged as much on her beer-making skills as on her breadmaking skills. To the colonial hostess, gracious dining always included wine and spirits. By the nineteenth century, New World fortunes supported the import of much European wine and spirits as well as the skilled production of American
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New York City Deputy Police Commissioner John A. Leach, right, watching agents pour liquor into the sewer following a raid at the height of prohibition, c. 1921. Library of Congress.
Interior of a crowded New York City bar moments before midnight, June 30, 1919, when wartime prohibition went into effect. Library of Congress.
Prohibition wines and whiskeys. Alcoholic beverages provided both flavor and sophistication to restaurant and hotel menus, as well as to elegant entertaining in the homes of the wealthy and upper-middle class. French cuisine reigned, and wine and spirits are the heart and soul of French cuisine. In Revolution at the Table, Harvey Levenstein quotes a 1931 article by Julian Street that calls the 1890s “the Golden Age of eating in the United States.” He goes on to quote Street saying, “The art of noble dining . . . was assassinated under legal process on January 16, 1920.” The end of legal alcohol in America meant the end of many of the elegant hotels and famous big-city restaurants whose kitchens were dependent upon wines and spirits to provide signature sauces for their dishes and whose budgets were dependent upon the sale of alcoholic beverages in order to show a profit. Legendary restaurants such as Delmonico’s and Louis Sherry closed; hotels such as the new Pierre Hotel in New York went bankrupt. Classically trained chefs left for Europe, moved to the kitchens of wealthy Americans, or headed the food-service staffs of ships not subject to U.S. regulations. Entertaining at home caused hosts and hostesses to choose between serving non-alcoholic beverages and breaking the law. Middle-class hostesses, who were adjusting to the loss of full-time maids in their homes, had just learned to prepare the classic French dishes that were in vogue. They were left two options: pay a great deal for illegal wine and spirits or substitute broth for alcohol. In truth, wine and spirits were not the intended targets of most prohibitionists, and elegant entertaining was not the expected victim. Although so-called demon rum received a lot of bad press, it was beer that caused the brouhaha that led to the passage of the amendment. And, until the Volstead Act defined the alcohol content of the beverages covered, it was assumed by many that the 18th Amendment would only apply to beer. During the nineteenth century, German immigrants brought their brewing skills to America, and local breweries were established across the country. In No Foreign Food, Richard Pillsbury says that there were 4,000 breweries in America in 1876. With transportation by rail available some small breweries became large and extended their reach to nearby cities. In order to promote their beer, breweries set up saloons or supported already existing saloons as exclusive outlets for their products, greatly increasing the number of saloons even in small towns. To compete for survival, saloons offered “free lunch,” and some became associated with illegal activities such as gambling, cock fighting, and prostitution. By 1890, beer was the largest selling alcoholic beverage in the United States and although it was available in the gentlemen’s clubs of the wealthy as well as in saloons, it was associated with the latter. Taverns had always been meeting places for men but just the increased number of places where alcohol was available made it attractive to people who might not have sought out a drink under other circumstances. Increased immigration from the most impoverished areas of Europe brought workers for America’s Industrial Revolution but poor living conditions in many working-class neighborhoods made the saloon an attractive escape. Social reformer Jacob Riis noted, “The dramshop yawns at every step, the poor man’s club, his
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forum and his haven of rest when weary and disgusted with the crowding, the quarrelling, and the wretchedness at home.” WHY PROHIBITION? Prohibition was supported by a bevy of strange bedfellows. First advocated by conservative religious leaders during the so-called Second Great Awakening, a period of revivalist fervor during the late eighteenth to midnineteenth centuries, the temperance movement was always strongly associated with religious organizations including, by the time the 18th Amendment was passed, the Federal Council of Churches. But it also attracted women’s rights activists concerned about alcohol’s effect on the family; abolitionists concerned with the association of slavery and the rum trade; social reformers such as Jacob Riis who saw saloon proliferation destroying neighborhoods; nativists who felt alcohol was an immigrant problem; health food practitioners who declared alcohol unhealthy; the Ku Klux Klan who made the enforcement of prohibition its central goal; and industrialists such as Henry Ford, Sebastian Kresge, and John D. Rockefeller who opposed alcohol because of its effect on labor productivity. Some of the first temperance societies were organized in New York in 1808 and in Massachusetts in 1813. By the mid-nineteenth century, several Northern cities and even a few states had passed laws controlling the sale of alcohol. During the chaos of the Civil War, increased alcohol consumption was overlooked, but temperance activism gained energy as the war ended. Women’s groups such as the Sanitary Commission organized during the Civil War to help in military hospitals gave many women their first opportunity to venture outside the home and to accept responsibilities they would never have been offered in other circumstances. Once the war was over they translated that experience into leadership positions in women’s rights and temperance organizations. The Prohibition Party was started in 1869, just after the war, to offer help to political candidates committed to the prohibition cause. The party still exists as a minor political party. Founded in Fredonia, New York in 1873, Woman’s Christian Temperance Union (WCTU) lobbied, published, demonstrated, and peacefully invaded taverns. Feminist Frances E. Willard, the first Dean of Women at Northwestern University, became WCTU’s second president, a position she held for life. The Woman’s Crusade of 1873 and 1874 was an effort to involve women in direct action. One of its leaders, Eliza Daniel Stewart, known as “Mother Stewart,” wrote an account of the Ohio crusade entitled, Memories of the Crusade, a Thrilling Account of the Great Uprising of the Women of Ohio in 1873. Temperance even took up residence in the White House. When Rutherford B. Hayes assumed the presidency in 1877, he was convinced by his secretary of state to serve wine for his first grand banquet in the White House. The experience so upset him that his wife, Lucy Webb Hayes, probably at his insistence, banned alcohol from the White House. She was known thereafter as “Lemonade Lucy.” In 1881, Kansas was the first state to outlaw
Prohibition alcoholic beverages in its Constitution. Carrie (or Carry) Nation, famed WCTU member, gained notoriety when she personally enforced the provision against alcoholic beverages by entering Kansas saloons and destroying liquor bottles with a hatchet. The Anti Saloon League, a non-partisan group focused solely on the issue of prohibition, was founded in 1893 and soon became a powerful national organization with its own publishing company. Although women played a large role in making prohibition a public issue and are sometimes blamed for its successful adoption, they did not vote for the legislators who made it legal. The 19th Amendment giving women the right to vote was not proposed until June 4, 1919, and it wasn’t ratified until August 18, 1920. When America entered World War I, prohibition was declared patriotic. In December of 1914, several months after Europe’s entry into the war, Richmond P. Hobson from Alabama suggested a prohibition amendment in the House of Representatives. It received a majority of votes but not the twothirds majority required to send it to the Senate. In 1917, once the United States entered the war, alcohol became a target. In an effort to conserve grain for war-related programs, President Woodrow Wilson first cut beer’s alcohol content to 2.75 percent and reduced production, then banned wartime beer production completely. Beer’s German origin provided an easy association with the nation’s enemy and it became known as “Kaiser brew.” AMERICA’S REACTION Beer and its home, the saloon, were cast as the cause of America’s social ills and prohibition was billed as the perfect solution. Breweries, wineries, and distillers closed or made something other than alcohol. Saloons closed all over the country but the men who frequented them didn’t necessarily go home. It has been speculated that at least twice as many illegal establishments for alcohol consumption appeared as the legal ones they replaced. In 1926, while testifying before a Senate committee on the consequences of prohibition, New York Representative Fiorella H. LaGuardia said, “It is impossible to tell whether prohibition is a good thing or a bad thing. It has never been enforced in this country. There may not be as much liquor in quantity consumed today as there was before prohibition, but there is just as much alcohol.” Hard liquor which, because of its concentration, was less expensive to transport, replaced beer as the favored alcohol source. Rum came into Florida from the Caribbean; Canadian whiskey came across the northern border in a variety of ways (the automobile tunnel between Windsor, Ontario, and Detroit was nicknamed the “Windsor funnel”); European alcohol landed on Atlantic beaches in small boats. Small local producers redistilled denatured alcohol and added artificial flavors to produce so-called bathtub gin or fermented and distilled grains to make moonshine. Because of prohibition, Americans began to drink more potent drinks and became drunk faster. With no safety standards in illegally purchased
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alcohol, deaths from poisonous liquor rose. There was a noticeable increase in home brewing and wine production. Although not legal, small-volume home production was not a target of enforcement; so-called revenuers had enough else to do. There were several ways to purchase alcoholic beverages legally during prohibition. With a physician’s prescription written on a special government prescription form distilled spirits could be purchased for medicinal purposes from a pharmacy. Wine could be purchased by religious organizations for sacramental purposes. Fermented cider, alcoholflavored syrups, wine vinegars, and near beer with 0.5 percent alcohol or less were not covered by the legislation. Tourism offered another option. A quick flight to Cuba from Key West or a drive across the border to Mexico or Canada could turn back the clock. The years of legislative battle leading up to the amendment gave people time to stockpile and store some wine and spirits, but few people’s reserve lasted the 14 years. Alcohol consumption was no longer associated with good food. It was the Roaring Twenties, and the economy was soaring; Café Society was dancing the Charleston and going to speakeasies where cocktails were highly flavored to cover the taste of inferior liquor, and no one noticed the food. One exception to that rule was New York’s “21” Club. Noted for its good food and wine, it was kept exclusive by very high prices. Other exceptions were the small familyrun Italian restaurants where authentic home cooking was accompanied by homemade wine from the basement. These establishments introduced Italian food to a wide range of customers, who continued to come back after the end of prohibition and within several decades made Italian food one of America’s favorites. Large, easily visible hotel restaurants had more trouble circumventing the law and many became tearooms, ice cream parlors, or sandwich shops. Since there was no good reason to linger over a meal, cafeterias and the automat became popular. One of the most serious results of prohibition was the development of organized crime. The tremendous market for illegal alcohol turned small local gangs into tightly managed and competitive businesses. Many of America’s big cities became more dangerous than they had been when there was a saloon on every corner. Anti-Prohibition groups developed by the mid1920s and pressure for repeal grew. When the country entered the Great Depression, the jobs and tax revenue that a legal liquor industry could produce were appealing. In 1932, presidential candidate Franklin D. Roosevelt recommended repeal. The 21st Amendment repealing prohibition was proposed on February 20, 1933, and ratified at 3:32 P.M. on December 5, 1933. The country celebrated but mostly with soft drinks. Martinis, popular before prohibition became America’s favorite alcoholic drink, but many people were so used to ordering coffee and soft drinks that they didn’t exercise their new freedom. Fine dining didn’t recover for several decades. If people went out for dinner, they ordered simple American food at inexpensive restaurants. If they entertained, it was at home with a luncheon, tea, or cocktail party. Big city hotels didn’t fill their restaurants again until the end of World War II.
Prohibition Further Reading: http://prohibition.osu.edu/content/why_prohibition.cfm; Levenstein, Harvey. Revolution at the Table: The Transformation of the American Diet. New York: Macmillan, 1995; Lovegren, Sylvia. Fashionable Food: Seven Decades of Food Fads. New York: Macmillan, 1995; Mariani, John. America Eats Out: An Illustrated History of Restaurants, Taverns, Coffee Shops, Speakeasies, and Other Establishments That Have Fed Us for 350 Years. New York: William Morrow, 1991; Morris, Lloyd. Incredible New York: High Life and Low Life from 1850 to 1950. Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University Press, 1996; Pillsbury, Richard. No Foreign Food: The American Diet in Time and Place. Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 1998.
Joanne Lamb Hayes
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R Renaissance Imagine yourself slowly ascending a grand tapestry-lined staircase, then being announced and graciously ushered into a long and narrow hall where the plaintive tones of viols (a bowed, stringed instrument popular in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries) waft through the air. To one side, mullioned windows let in the crisp morning light, as the occasion is dinner, served around 11 A.M. Along the wood-paneled wall await a cadre of servants, arranged hierarchically from banquet manager to carvers and page boys, each brimming behind their starched ruffs, bearing napkins and basins of water. Down the center of the hall a long trestle table, covered in white linen and strewn with flower buds, stands crisply beneath a mist of rosescented perfume. Majolica plates; golden forks and spoons; and silver saltcellars are arranged geometrically along the table’s length. At the end of the hall stands another table, the credenza, laden with antipasto such as olives, cheeses, little pies and pastries, cold wildfowl, and oysters, and at the center, a mountain of artichokes. Strategically placed along the floor are gigantic ice buckets cradling ceramic jugs and bottles of wine, with cup bearers ready to sate diners’ thirst. This was the typical scene of the Renaissance banquet, the prime form of entertainment at European courts in the sixteenth century. Why a meal
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Banquet given by Bartolomeo Colleoni, Italian condottiero, for King Christian I of Denmark, c. 1470–1550. The Art Archive/Malpaga Castello Bergamo Italy/Gianni Dagli Orti.
should take such grandiose form and how such meals became opulent multimedia events designed to titillate every sensation is a story rooted in politics and state building. The Renaissance was not only the era that invented diplomacy and formal ambassadors who were regularly entertained but also a time when burgeoning Italian states vied for power and displayed their newfound wealth in the arts and dining on an unprecedented scale. This wealth was generated partly from efficient systems of taxation and through incorporation of new territory, but also through an efficient bureaucracy which could administer the state’s income. That is, the Italian courts, which often set the fashions had coffers bursting at the seams with which they could wage war or just as often entertain. Strong nations such as France, Spain, and England eventually followed suit. Wherever there is money and patronage of the arts, entertaining on a grand scale necessarily follows, and the greater the concentration of political power, the more resplendent the display of food and festivity. Fledgling courts were obliged to keep up with the greater powers or at least dazzle with wit and sophistication when mere abundance no longer impressed. Renaissance courts engaged in competitive entertaining, ever trying to outdo
Renaissance each other with culinary marvels, just as they vied with each other building magnificent palaces, gardens and patronizing the finest experts in the arts, culinary and otherwise. It should come as no surprise therefore that the great courts of Renaissance Italy and the burgeoning nation states in sixteenth-century Europe witnessed some of the most opulent banquets in recorded history. A wide variety of culinary texts were published for the purpose of documenting for posterity the details of such banquets, and it is precisely because of these texts that we know as much as we do today. The cookbook authors themselves, armed with the new technology of printing, achieved a level of fame never before enjoyed by chefs. Their portraits adorned their massive tomes, and some were even ennobled for their extraordinary service. There were manuscript cookbooks and authors with a degree of notoriety before this time—Apicius in ancient Rome, known as the author of one of the first cookbooks, and Guilaume Tirel, called Taillevent, renowned in the fourteenth century as chef to King Charles V of France. But manuscripts could only be copied by hand so often. It was not until the age of print that great chefs and banquet managers could effectively publicize their expertise to emerge as true celebrities, on a scale if not comparable to today’s TV chefs, at least to an exponential magnitude when contrasted to preceding centuries. The first printed cookbook does not explicitly describe entertaining per se. In fact, it was a strange hybrid: a manuscript cookbook attributed to one Martino of Como, although surviving manuscript variants may have been written earlier, and by someone else, perhaps in Naples. This cookbook was appropriated by Bartolomeo Sacchi, known as Platina, first Vatican Librarian, and stuffed into his guide to food and health De honesta voluptate, published in 1470. Although not about entertaining, it does offer a vivid glimpse of the taste preferences of mid-fifteenth-century Italy. Platina also comments, sometimes negatively, about the effects of consuming these magnificent dishes and about aristocratic dining in general. Fifteenth-century cuisine was essentially the final expression of a culinary tradition stretching back at least four centuries, which depended on heavily spiced, brightly colored, and sometimes finely pounded dishes, highlighted by sour high notes, with vinegar or verjus ( juice of unripe grapes), or by creamy flavors, with almond milk. Spectacles were particularly favored—such as a peacock cooked and resewn into its feathers, presented spewing flames from its mouth—a trick accomplished with a wad of cotton soaked in camphor and alcohol. Martino’s cookbook was still firmly in this tradition, and ancestors of his recipes can be found several centuries before. That is, there was no abrupt change such as experienced in the arts, as taste in food seems always to proceed more cautiously than taste in painting and architecture. Nonetheless, judging from contemporary accounts, the style of Renaissance taste in all the arts was also manifest in actual meals, particularly because dinners in this period were often multimedia events. Performances of theater and music punctuated each course; painted backdrops with
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mythological scenes honored guests through indirect reference; and grand sugar sculptures and “subtleties,” or pretend foods, formed the centerpiece of every grand banquet. An idea of the structure of an actual banquet can be gleaned from the description of Hermolo Barbaro who attended a wedding of the Trivulzio family in 1488 in Milan. He remarked that it seemed the foods were laid out more for spectacle than consumption. The requisite hand washing ceremony was described and then the first credenza or cold course, including pine nut confections flavored with sugar and rosewater, tarts of marzipan, and fresh asparagus. The next course was a dish of birds’ livers and giblets, followed by a roast deer, a veal’s head, then capons, pigeons, beef tongues in lemon sauce. The seventh course consisted of a whole roast kid with cherries; the eighth of a variety of wildfowl: turtledoves, partridge, pheasant, cranes, and fig peckers. The banquet continued with a sugared rooster, then a roast suckling pig, then a roast peacock in a white sauce. Then came a kind of sweet custard tart, preserved quinces, artichokes, and their stalky relative cardoons, and finally, comfits made of coriander, fennel, almonds, or musk. This was a typical banquet structure of the period, and the meal itself was followed by farces and comedies, acrobats, musicians, and fragrant perfumes. Counterfeit animals were then brought out to each table. The animals were so real as to leave the guests dumbstruck. The whole intention was to dazzle every sense into an aesthetic stupor. The spices and perfumes would have been impressively expensive, but what was truly impressive was the sheer volume of food and elegant display, along with the artistry with which each course was prepared, as well as the artistry of the performances. Christoforo Messisbugo’s Banchetti, composed for the Este Court of Ferrara, recounts the festivities arranged by the author for the decades previous to the book’s publication in 1549. Messisbugo was not a chef but a banquet manager or scalco, as well as master of the household and court accountant. There survives not only his testimony of these feasts, but his actual account books recording court expenditure. Clearly cost was no concern, and each banquet, like the Trivulzio wedding, was meant to dazzle every possible sense. Messisbugo’s banquets are nothing short of perverse orgies of feeding and spectacle. A typical meal included dozens of courses and could last for many hours. Not that diners were expected to consume everything. Unlike modern service, food was presented on large platters from which diners could choose whatever they liked and in seemingly any order whatsoever. Today we follow a progression of courses meant to correspond with flavors and textures of food, such that soups and delicate fish precede the heavier taste of meat, and sweet dishes are served after meat. During the Renaissance, such attention to the sequence of dishes as related to flavor was unheard of. Any flavor or form of food could be eaten in practically any course. The only real structure was that cold foods started the meal and fruits concluded, although the term fruit was broad enough to include
Renaissance artichokes, olives, and cheeses. This culinary mayhem was not considered indecorous though, and esthetically it is comparable to the plays, music, and paintings at the Este Court. They were composed of a wild variety of motifs, forms, flavors, and colors intended to overwhelm the spectator with ingenuity and invention, and often with classical allusions favored by all conoscenti of the arts. In art history, this period is known as mannerism, and it is not coincidental that painters such as Giulio Romano, Il Rosso, and Pontormo traveled in these circles and designed decorations for these festivities. At the Este Court the banquets were punctuated by plays written by Ariosto, the author of the greatest literary masterpiece of this period, the Orlando Furioso. Again, these entertainments were intended to be extravagant spectacles enticing the palate, eyes, ears, and nose with every imaginable form of sensory allurement. For example, a banquet thrown on January 23, 1529, for 104 people, including dukes and duchesses, ambassadors, archbishops, and other gentlemen and women, began with a comedy by Ariosto titled Cassaria. This was followed by a procession into the hall where music was playing and a long table covered with three cloths awaited, topped with silver candlesticks as well as cutlery and folded napkins. There were also gilded pine nuts and other confections, flowers of gold, and perfumed silk. Three credenza tables bore antipasto, and another bore bottles of precious wines. Sugar sculptures representing Hercules next appeared, in honor of Duke Hercole d’Este. The meal itself, which takes up nine pages of Messisbugo’s book, includes about 100 different dishes, many of which arrive on separate plates for each diner or on 25 large plates for roughly every four people. The first course began with 104 caper, truffle, and raisin salads in pastry, 104 endive and radish salads, 104 anchovy salads, 25 plates of carved radishes, 104 cream tarts, 25 tongue prosciutto platters, 25 platters of boar pastries, 25 platters of mortadella, 50 smoked mullets, 104 marinated bream. This was only the first of six courses, followed by a fruit course and then confections. Literally thousands of individual dishes were served containing every imaginable ingredient cooked in as many guises as possible. Between each course there was also entertainment—trombones or a singer with lutes and viols, a capella madrigals, and the like. Hands were periodically washed with perfumes as well. The entire banquet was intended to absolutely ravish the senses. The next great guide to dining produced in the sixteenth century is Domenico Romoli’s Dello Scalco of 1560, which is the earliest extant document that specifies the many duties of the scalco. These include devising the menu, instructing the cooks, and managing the staff, including the pages and separate officers in charge respectively of bread, wine, spices, as well as the carvers, or trincianti, and all the servers assigned to every table. The scalco did not cook, but for Romoli, feeding a noble household did mean knowing the qualities of each ingredient and finished dish, and how these might contribute to the health of the master of the household. While there were
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always court physicians on hand, the practical day-to-day dietary considerations were in the hands of the scalco. Another crucial officer was the cook who was in charge of the cold courses laid out on the credenza. His position derives originally from his being the official court taster, checking every dish intended for the mouth of the master for poison. His title, credenziero comes from the verb credo, “to believe or trust,” but by this time the tasting was merely ceremonial, and his real duties were taking charge of the antipasto. The crowning achievement of Renaissance gastronomy is the magisterial tome of Bartolomeo Scappi, chef, rather than banquet manager, to several successive popes, and lastly private cook for Pius V. His Opera (Works) record not only all conceivable ingredients and how to deal with them in a variety of culinary options but also recommendations for buying the freshest ingredients in season, directions on how to set up a professional kitchen, and even a complete set of illustrations of cooking implements. Scappi also offers menus in which a more precise order of courses is discernable—antipasto dishes, such as olives and cheese and pastries (sometimes sweet), appear first. Subsequent courses still offer fish, fowl, and meat cooked in every imaginable fashion, but these are separated by other small cold courses, palate cleansers, as it were. At the end again are fruits and then finally confections and cordials. By this time it is also clear that culinary preferences had evolved. Dairy products such as butter and cream, as well as eggs are featured as never before. Sweetness gradually replaces the fondness for heaping of spices, and certain spices favored in the Middle Ages disappear almost entirely—cubebs, grains of paradise, long pepper, and spikenard. Cinnamon, on the other hand, remains as an almost universal flavoring. Condiments such as almond milk and verjus (the juice of unripened grapes) are still used and there is still a noticeable appreciation for sour flavors, but gradually the ingredients are allowed to speak for themselves. They are increasingly prepared simply, flavored with herbs or with garlic. In many respects the developments we associate with classical haute cuisine in seventeenth-century France, were already occurring in sixteenth-century Italy. Scappi’s recipes are in line with the Italian cuisine of today, though without the majority of New World ingredients such as tomatoes and peppers. Scappi does, however, introduce the turkey and guinea pig. Scappi’s Opera was first and foremost a book about cooking and running a kitchen, rather than a complete guide to entertaining. Giovanni Battista Rossetti’s Dello Scalco of 1584, on the other hand, is precisely that. Rossetti followed in the footsteps of Messisbugo in the same court at Ferrara, and like him, he describes in meticulous detail the many actual banquets thrown for every day of the year. That is, we have not only a few menus but a complete dining repertoire with 547 pages of menus. Obviously this was intended not only to show off the great achievements of this banquet manager but was meant to be imitated in other courts. Publishing of such guides in a sense advertises and instructs.
Renaissance Rossetti was also the first author to give a complete explanation of the entire kitchen and wait staff and how they should be organized into a rationally subordinated army that takes its commands from the top. In a word, the staff was becoming increasingly professionalized, with a recognizable uniform, although the scalco himself, ideally a noble, still carried a sword and was entitled to wear a hat. Nonetheless, this was considered an honorable and worthy position at court, and one of the most trusted since delicate political decisions might very well hinge on the success or failure of the entertainment. With the turn of the seventeenth century a whole new crop of banquet management guides appeared. First among these were the works of Cesare Evitascandalo, written in the late sixteenth century but not published until 1609 in Rome. Clearly there was an eager audience of readers hoping to move up the professional ranks in the service of courtly households, eventually to become master carvers or scalchi. His book on carving is a dialogue outlining the various duties and proprieties of the ideal carver. The book on the scalco describes the hierarchy of the banquet staff and their various qualifications and duties. He was especially careful about making sure servants didn’t steal and about keeping accurate account books. Most importantly he gave instructions on setting the table, including how to lay out dishes for maximum visual effect and how to alternate large and small dishes. There is also a discernable order in the progression of courses, what might be described as a simplification and streamlining of the meal, certainly when compared to the mayhem of early sixteenthcentury banquets. Evitascandalo also offered suggestions about how different wines would best accompany each course. For example, a malvasia or guarnaccia begins the meal, followed by a white Greco or moscatello with the antipasto, then a “small” wine with the boiled course and piquant red wine with the roasts, and finally sweet wines to end. As in many parts of the banquet, there was a new gastronomic sense of order and intensification of flavors as the meal progressed. Also, hot courses were alternated with cold palate cleansers as it were, so as not to dull the palate with too many flavors at once. There was also an increasing tendency to garnish plates, a trend that would only intensify through the century with baroque adornments of the plate such as cockscombs, testicles, pistachios, lemon slices, or gilded slices of toast. Even pasta was considered a garnish rather than a course in its own right. All these served the same function as swags and putti in the paintings of the era—pure frivolous embellishment. By the seventeenth century the flavor profile had also dramatically changed. Diners completely lost interest in dense clusters of spices, though cinnamon and sugar remained in almost every dish. Perfumed food was something fairly new though; musk and ambergris, as well as the old standbys rose water and jasmine, were introduced in contexts that we would find jarring and incoherent, but diners of the seventeenth century seem to have enjoyed these aromas on most any dish.
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As in other scalco guides, Evitascandalo also offers tips about when ingredients come into season, how each is best prepared, as well as how to set menus. In other words, the scalco is both the manager and a professional arbiter of taste—a gastronome before that word was contrived by the French. Similar guides appeared through the seventeenth century and were eventually imitated throughout Europe. Although the origins of modern cuisine might be debated, there is no doubt that elegant entertainment in the form of the grand banquet was invented in Italy, and as the fashion there spread throughout Europe with the other arts, the Renaissance model of fine dining came to be adopted everywhere. It remained in place up to the twentieth century in virtually every place there were still ruling courts. Further Reading: Albala, Ken. The Banquet: Dining in the Great Courts of Late Renaissance Europe. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2006; Cappatti, Alberto, and Massimo Montanari. Italian Cuisine: A Cultural History. New York: Columbia University Press, 2003; Evitascandalo, Cesare. Libro dello Scalco. Rome: Carlo Vulietti, 1609; Martino, Maestro. Libro de arte coquinaria. Luigi Ballerini and Jeremy Parzen, eds. Milan: Guido Tommasi, 2001 [Translated by Jeremy Parzen as The Art of Cooking. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 2005]; Messisbugo, Cristoforo di. Banchetti. Ferrara: Giovanni de Buglhat and Antonio Hucher, 1549 [Reprint: Bologna: Arnaldo Forni, 2001]; Romoli, Domenico. La Singolare Dottrina. Venice: Gio. Battista Bonfadino, 1593 [1st ed. 1560]; Rossetti, Giovanni Battista. Dello Scalco. Ferrara: Domenico Mammarello, 1584 [Reprint: Bologna: Arnaldo Forni, 1991]; Scappi, Bartolomeo. Opera. Venice, 1570 [Reprint: Bologna: Arnaldo Forni, 2002]; Strong, Roy C. Feast: A History of Grand Eating. Orlando, FL: Harcourt, 2002.
Ken Albala
Rent Parties Rent parties were an important part of the social life of working class African Americans in New York City’s Harlem in the years between the world wars. While not unique to Harlem, as African Americans in other northern industrial cities brought the concept with them as they migrated north seeking jobs, they are most often identified with Harlem during the years of the fabled Harlem Renaissance in the 1920s and 1930s when art, music, and literature flourished in this neighborhood. Expensive housing and low-wage jobs pressured Harlem’s poorer residents to find creative ways to meet their monthly rental costs. The rent party, derived from the tradition of holding fundraisers, was an easy solution. The host invited friends or sometimes advertised on the streets to strangers to come up for an evening’s entertainment. A nominal fee, usually a quarter, admitted one to plenty of food, liquor, music, and dancing. At the end of the night, the host would have collected enough money to pay for the next month’s rent.
Rent Parties Rent parties were popular with workers in menial jobs, especially recent arrivals from the South who found themselves alone in a strange, urban environment. Many were young people who worked as maids, porters, and bellboys and were the first of their family to come north. Alone in New York, they sought out other young men and women from similar backgrounds for recreation and relaxation. Generally, the middle- and upper-class black population avoided these affairs but occasionally artists and writers would make an appearance. Few white people attended rent parties or even knew of their existence, allowing African Americans to socialize among themselves. Rent parties usually were held on Thursday night as live-in domestic servants traditionally had that night off. Saturday, since it was payday, was also a popular night to host the parties, and they sometimes went on into the early morning hours. Hosts cleared out furniture, cooked food, and either made their own liquor or got supplies from the local bootlegger. Dancing was a staple entertainment and a piano or a small band provided music. After the mainstream Harlem nightclubs closed, musicians such as Fats Waller sometimes stopped by to play with the house band. Guests paid additionally to eat and drink. Food was the comfort food of the South. Collards, fried chicken, pigs feet, chitterlings, corn bread, potato salad, and other familiar fare were served. The costs of cooking these dishes were low so the host could keep the prices down and still make a profit. Corn whiskey and gin were the drinks of choice, and the liquor flowed freely. The majority of hosts focused on providing dancing, drinking, and food but some made extra money by renting out rooms for more private activities such as sex and gambling. These activities made rent parties unpopular with the more straitlaced citizens of Harlem and they developed an unsavory reputation, especially among the middle-class population. By the end of the Great Depression, rent parties had waned. Better wages and more available housing reduced the pressure to hold them and the social needs of lonely migrants lessened. Rent parties remain in history as another colorful facet of the Harlem Renaissance. Further Reading: American Life Histories: Manuscripts from the Federal Writer’s Project, 1936–1940. Harlem rent parties. http://memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/ r?ammem/wpa:@field(DOCID+@lit(wpa221011010)); Anderson, Jervis. This Was Harlem: A Cultural Portrait, 1900–1950. New York: Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, 1982; Banks, William H., Jr., ed. Beloved Harlem: A Literary Tribute to Black America’s Most Famous Neighborhood, from the Classics to the Contemporary. New York: Harlem Moon, 2005; Bascom, Lionel C., ed. A Renaissance in Harlem: Lost Voices of an American Community. New York: Avon Books, 1999; Watson, Steven. The Harlem Renaissance: Hub of African-American Culture, 1920–1930. New York: Pantheon, 1995.
Mary Sanker
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Restaurants Public eating places have long proved indispensable to hosts and hostesses. Whether furnishing dinner parties and banquets on their own premises or delivering meals for home consumption, restaurants have for centuries held a premier place in the annals of American entertaining. Entertaining in public eating places goes back at least to the eighteenth century. It was common for coffeehouses and taverns to set aside one or more dining rooms for private dinner parties. Although these rooms could be used by travelThe Exchange Coffee House ing couples and families, the host When it opened in 1808, Boston’s seven-story Exchange Coffee and guests for most small parties House was an elegant establishment housed in one of the largest were all men. Eating places that and most imposing buildings in the city, perhaps on the entire placed notices in newspapers inEastern seaboard. With rooms for dining, overnight occupancy, variably announced that “parties and business and fraternal meetings, it was meant to serve the of gentlemen” could be accommerchants of Boston and environs. But, although it played host modated with dinner or supper to President James Monroe, the wealthy kid glove–wearing businessmen of Salem, and other dignitaries, clubs, and societies, in separate rooms “on the shortest it was beset by troubles. Costing half a million dollars to build, notice.” Oysters, green turtle soup, it ruined two banks and never attained hoped-for success. Its and beefsteaks, accompanied by dining facilities went through a constant turnover of managers. relishes and imported wine, porIt burned to the ground in 1818, was rebuilt in scaled-down style ter, and ale, furnished the essential in 1822, and was razed in 1853. elements of these feasts. Diners had a choice of eating facilities in the Exchange. Each Often the groups of men day an “ordinary,” or table d’hote, dinner was produced around who dined in private rooms were 2:30 P.M., its menu and meal tickets available each morning at members of organizations such as the bar. Small groups could be accommodated in private dining military companies, college alumni rooms for dinners or suppers. Travelers arriving at odd hours associations, or fraternal societies. and others seeking flexibility could eat in the coffee room anyIn 1832 a Boston restaurant antime from dawn to late at night and order whatever was listed in the daily bill of fare. As was the custom of the times, soup was nounced it had recently opened available each morning at 11:00. several private dining rooms and When the new Exchange opened under the management of could furnish suppers, game, and Dudley Bradstreet in 1822, he promised the public he would wine to “parties, fire-companies, provide the best venison, turtle, and game of all kinds. He inand clubs.” Fire-companies could vited private parties to arrange dinners, even at short notice. be notoriously rowdy, but the proHis successor, the following year, vowed to continue serving prietor carefully noted that “the parties and to keep up the house’s reputation as one of “the decorum, propriety, and style of first respectability.” Several Harvard alumni groups chose it his establishment [has] secured for their reunion dinners in succeeding years. By 1829 new a liberal patronage.” Advertisemanagers renamed the coffee room a “restaurateur” in the ments often mentioned that theirs French manner, nonetheless proclaiming lower prices were in were “genteel” private rooms, imeffect. Despite its rocky operation, the Exchange was long rememplying that many were anything bered as the “pride of Boston,” the founding site of the Ameribut. Nonetheless, a quoit (a game can Antiquarian Society, and the place where many of the finest similar to horseshoes) club, in sailing ships of the Atlantic were planned and financed. Washington, D.C., celebrated its
Restaurants first season in 1838 with a dinner at Monsieur Boulanger’s American and French Restaurant, pronouncing it “one of the most splendid entertainments ever served up at a public house in the United States,” and equal to anything in London or Paris in terms of “sumptuous and recherche [exquisite] viands, splendid appurtenances, or fine wines.” As with home entertaining, restaurant dinners featured luxury foods. At the top of the pyramid was the game dinner. Before game laws regulating the hunting of animals severely curtailed the feasting, almost any creature could be served. One of the best-known resorts in the country was Taft’s, located on Point Shirley in the Boston harbor. In honor of a traveler returning from Europe in 1876, 30 guests assembled for a lavish game dinner that included “owls from the North.” The year before, the restaurant had on occasion served hummingbirds in nutshells. In Washington, banquets were not considered proper unless they featured diamond-back terrapin from the Potomac. In Chicago a big-spending host in 1884 treated 500 men to his annual game dinner that included boiled buffalo tongue, 27 roasted dishes including five kinds of duck and black bear, and 18 broiled dishes including plover, a bird similar to a sandpiper. Perhaps to fill the meat gap left by tightening game laws, the beefsteak dinner came into popularity in the 1890s. Some restaurants and hotels kept a special candle-lit basement “dungeon” outfitted with rustic benches and crates for tables. No utensils were allowed, so guests, swathed in aprons, ate steaks with their bare hands. Stalks of celery and mugs of ale rounded out the all-you-can-eat meal. The Bismarck Café in San Francisco advertised in 1908, “Our Beefsteak Rooms afford an opportunity for novel entertainment, which must appeal to the gentlemen who contemplate bachelor dinners or like functions.” The availability of private dining rooms grew as the number of restaurants and patrons increased in the nineteenth century. In Louisville, Kentucky, the elaborate new Walker’s City Exchange of 1851 boasted several floors with a drinking saloon, an oyster stand, and bowling alleys. Entering the restaurant itself, the viewer saw a series of doors marking “small eating apartments” for groups of two to four, with larger rooms for big parties. That same year, a restaurant and “oyster saloon” opened in New York that boasted “twenty spacious apartments, elegantly fitted and furnished.” Not until the more socially informal twentieth century was it considered proper to entertain guests in the open, public spaces of a restaurant. Although men were generally the primary customers of private dining rooms and public eating places, women were almost certainly included in some of the festivities in taverns, coffeehouses, and other public eating places. Women enjoyed attending balls that were frequently held at larger eating places. Dancing, often preceded by dinner, was capped off by a midnight supper or a light buffet of cold dishes. The multi-storied Boston Exchange Coffee House built in 1809 was designed with a ball and banquet room accompanied by a “resting room” for ladies. Charleston had a coffeehouse next to the city theater where groups as large as 300 could have
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Delmonico’s For nearly 100 years, New York’s Delmonico’s was synonymous with exquisite French cuisine, fine wines, and elite society dinners, banquets, and balls. Beginning as a small European-style coffee house and confectionery in 1827, it soon expanded into a full “restaurateur” serving meals to rival the best found in Paris. Until its closure in 1923 it remained under the control of the ItalianSwiss “Del Monico” family, occupying 11 different addresses over time, usually with several in operation simultaneously. Because Delmonico’s had been the first to institutionalize practices such as the French-language menu, the service of different wines with each course, and the provision of clean linens for each party of patrons, among many others, it swiftly attained the title of the most important restaurant in America’s history. For decades it was almost certain that any bon vivant worth his salt would describe unforgettable dinners at Delmonico’s in his memoirs. So exalted has the reputation of Delmonico’s become over time that it is a useful corrective to recall that, like other restaurants, it employed bouncers, blacklisted undesirable patrons, unwittingly hosted a number of con men, and, according to an 1852 advertisement, used the finest roach and rat poison. Beyond its superlative offerings in food and wine, Delmonico’s was known for hosting internationally famous men in the fields of statecraft, commerce, literature, and the arts. It convened banquets for the alumni of Harvard and other Ivy League schools, and for the many elite social organizations of New York such as the Patriarchs and the St. Nicholas Society. By instituting the strictest rules of behavior for guests—no dining behind closed doors and no heterosexual couples, married or not, permitted to dine alone in private rooms—it won the trust of women of high society and became the center of the social whirl. For about the first 20 years Delmonico’s was considered a foreign eating place and primarily attracted French and European merchants and travelers. It widened its patronage and attained its greatest fame in the latter half of the nineteenth century during the reign of two of its Fifth Avenue restaurants, one in an old mansion at 14th Street, the other at 26th Street near Madison Square. The former was the site of two renowned banquets, one given by an English railroad magnate, Sir Morton Peto, and the other to honor Charles Dickens. In 1865 Peto threw a lavish 10-course dinner for 100 guests, at the unprecedented cost of $20,000. Although Dickens was suffering from gout and arrived one hour late to the 1868 dinner given by 200 journalists, the author was touched by his reception and spoke warmly of Americans, making up for negative views he had presented in
dinner, play cards, and dance. A favorite pastime of wealthy Bostonians around the mid-nineteenth century was a late afternoon sleigh party to one of the old coaching roadhouses that ringed the city. Taking over the entire house, they would enjoy a turkey dinner, followed by dancing until midnight. In summer, decades earlier, such groups might have gone to outlying tea gardens. Many organizations were established around the practice of communal dining. Men of comfortable means formed dining clubs that met regularly for social, business, or political reasons. Later, some of these clubs acquired permanent houses in which members could live and take all their meals. The well-known New York Club, founded in 1846, originated in a group that met for dinner at the Woodcock, a chophouse on East Houston Street. Boston’s hotels hosted 300 or 400 literary, political, and business dining clubs in the late 1890s. On a club night, dining rooms at Young’s, the Bellevue, the Revere House, and other prominent hotels hummed with activity. Generally women were not invited to these events except, possibly, at a club’s annual dinner dance. In the latter nineteenth century, women began to challenge this rule by forming their own dining clubs. Women journalists had started the trend in 1869 when they formed the club Sorosis in response to their exclusion from a Delmonico’s dinner honoring Charles Dickens. Banqueting proliferated in the 1870s and 1880s in large
Restaurants cities, eventually becoming routine. There were so-called professional banquet goers, ritual toasts (invariably ending with “to the ladies”), and complaints about monotonous menus and overcooked foods. Once in a while a banquet would stray off the beaten path with a humorous menu card or unusual food. The Arts and Crafts Society of Chicago avoided standard fare for their 1900 dinner party. Instead of patronizing a hotel, they called upon the skills of the caterer at Jane Addams’s Hull House. The settlement house, which had recently opened a public coffeehouse and lunchroom, provided them a Comida Espanola, with olla podrida, salsa picante, and a chicory salad with a daring “suspicion” of garlic. Banqueting took place nationwide. Like Boston, New York had hundreds of societies and organizations forever holding banquets at Delmonico’s, the Hotel Brunswick, and scores of other restaurants and hotels. By the turn of the twentieth century, the West Coast was catching up. In Los Angeles, Al Levy ran the city’s top banquet house, which he enlarged in 1906. In addition to his first-floor banquet room that held 500, he had three banquet halls on the second floor as well as 57 smaller private rooms and plans for a fourth-floor hall accommodating at least 600. Beginning in the 1880s wealthy Americans began to engage in elaborate, competitive entertaining in public places. Dinners such as that given by a streetcar magnate at Delmonico’s in 1888, at which each woman
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two of his novels. This dinner cost just over $3,000 and featured pâtés and ice creams in the shape of Dickens’ well-loved characters. Women of the press were not admitted and, in indignation, they formed their own club, Sorosis, which continued to dine at Delmonico’s regularly. In the 1870s and 1880s it became commonplace for restaurants with even a degree of pretension to refer to themselves as the Delmonico’s of a certain place, such as the Delmonico’s of Washington, the Delmonico’s of the Southwest, and the Delmonico’s of the Pacific Northwest. Legions of Delmonico’s cooks and waiters opened their own places from one coast to the other, elevating the tone of dining out wherever they settled.
Cabin John Hotel Long before the automobile came on the scene the Cabin John Hotel was a favorite destination for Washingtonians on short pleasure trips in what was then rural Maryland. It could be reached by water on the Potomac, by rail, or by a beautiful carriage ride over the splendid Conduit Road. Because drinking water for the city flowed underneath the road, it was one of the best maintained around Washington. Though called a hotel, Cabin John was a day resort which hosted groups who came out to feast on Maryland fried chicken and biscuits, to ramble on the shady lawns, and to view the remarkable span of the adjacent stone bridge aqueduct. When bicycling became a fad in the 1890s, cyclists piled onto the Conduit Road to make early morning pilgrimages to the hotel for its famed fish breakfasts. In the words of a newspaper reporter in 1896, “You can’t imagine anything more delicious than a broiled Potomac bass after this delightful seven-mile ride.” Summer evenings brought throngs of people to dine, dance, and listen to band music. It was a favorite yearround spot for the annual dinners of social clubs and professional groups such as dentists and typographers. In the early 1900s, the hotel opened a large outdoor dining area, a vaudeville theater, and rides such as a Ferris wheel. In 1904 the roadhouse-cum-amusement-park booked so many Sunday school groups the streetcar company wondered how it would transport them all. Always a target of temperance advocates, the business closed sometime around Prohibition. After years as a derelict, the main structure burned to the ground in 1931, ending a history dating back at least to the Civil War.
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guest was presented with an emerald ring, garnered a lot of press—as well as intense negative reaction from a public increasingly critical of the ostentatious habits of the rich. By 1895 there wasn’t much in the way of food that was considered novel, and, even with wine, it was hard to spend more than $25 or $35 per head for the most lavish dinner. Decorations, favors, and unusual entertainment became ways to distinguish the pedestrian ball from the outstanding one. The bill for flowers could easily outstrip food and wine costs, especially when walls and ceiling Schrafft’s were completely covered with roses, as at the 1901 Valentine’s Begun as a Boston candy maker in the 1860s, Schrafft’s Day dance and dinner given by a launched its New York City restaurant career in 1909. That year bachelor at Sherry’s, the premier a salesman for the company, assisted by his sister and her New York venue of that time. stock of family recipes, opened a small tea shop in one of the The burden of entertaining was firm’s candy stores. By 1925 they had a chain of 21 full-service restaurants in New York known for their dainty food, genteel a heavy one, even for bachelors. atmosphere, and fastidious cleanliness. The growth of the chain If they did not maintain a large coincided with the emergence of legions of women diners in house with many servants, they the 1920s, often eating alone or with other women. Nothing typically repaid their social debts symbolized this change as much as the 1920s installation of a with restaurant dinners. ReputSchrafft’s at the site of the failed Browne’s chophouse, an anedly the annual expenses of a cient males-only gathering place. wealthy bachelor totaled more There were Schrafft’s restaurants in Boston, Syracuse, Philafor the category “restaurants and delphia, and in latter days even in Los Angeles, but the name entertaining” than for either runwas especially associated with the New York metropolitan area, ning a house or keeping a yacht. where there were more than 50 units before the chain’s 1970s Although women hosted ocdecline. casional elaborate dinners in chic After repeal of national prohibition, some Schrafft’s began serving alcoholic beverages. Despite the popularity of Manhatrestaurants of the 1890s, their tans and whiskey sours with patrons, though, the venerable inforte was the luncheon or afterstitution kept its tea room aura. Signature items such as cheese noon tea, often given for bridesbread, crustless sandwiches, creamed chicken dishes, and icemaids or as part of a bridge party. cream cakes and sundaes made with Luxuro chocolate were Around 1905 it became more longtime menu staples. fashionable for women to invite Schrafft’s restaurants were popular places for women’s guests to lunch at a restaurant than organizations to raise funds and honor important women. At their own homes. Tearooms often one all-day fiesta at the 556 Fifth Avenue Schrafft’s women became the scene for luncheons supporters of a medical facility earned 50 percent of the day’s in the 1910s and 1920s, consisreceipts, boosting patronage with a tea dance and a “Celebrity tent with the toned-down type Meeting Place” at the soda fountain. In 1930 Eleanor Rooseof entertainment in wartime and velt was feted by women in the arts with a tea at the new Madison Avenue Schrafft’s in recognition of her project of emamong the supporters of Prohibiploying craftspeople to make adaptations of early American tion. The notion of entertaining furniture. in a restaurant, which had once As late as the 1960s, when shrewd restaurant operators been limited to the wealthy, now timed how long patrons occupied their seats, Schrafft’s was increasingly involved the middle known for refusing to hurry along the lone customer nursing her class, extending into the African cup of coffee. American community as well. In
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1936, for instance, a black hostess in Chicago treated the members of her Bid-Rite card club to lunch, and then play cards, amid the “oriental” decorations of the Pickett Tea Room. After World War I, dining out in restaurants became a popular activity for dating couples as restrictions on young women enjoying a restaurant meal with a man were generally relaxed. In 1904 an etiquette book still advised that “a young woman condemns herself in the eyes of good society who is observed to enter alone with a young man a place for public refreshment, be the restaurant or tea-room ever so select.” But this was quickly becoming obsolete. Few young women could resist restaurants. In large cities the typical courtship of The Pump Room the 1910s was largely conducted in restaurants, as it would be for In its heyday Chicago’s Pump Room was all about theater. This decades to come. glamour spot of the Midwest was located in the Ambassador East Hotel. Outfitted with all the basics such as good food, Restaurant catering has also luxurious backdrops, and hosts of flashbulb-popping photograplayed a major role in entertainphers, it was a jewel case for actors of stage and screen, politiing through several centuries in cians, and deposed royalty. The occupants of its white leather America. Families living near tavbanquettes could be certain to find themselves featured in the erns, coffeehouses, and restaurants gossip columns of the 1940s and 1950s. in the latter eighteenth century According to its lore—and it had a lot—Chicago’s celebrity could easily obtain individual watering hole was inspired by the Pump Room in the spa town dishes or dinners fully prepared, of Bath, England. The original Pump Room was a place for the and clearly did so judging from fashionable lounging class to drink healing waters and spread the number of purveyors who ofgossip. In Chicago they could do the same, though the water fered this service. Restaurateurs was usually mixed with something stronger. The eighteenthwould also come to the home and century dandies of Bath lent their breeches, satin waistcoats, and pom-poms to Chicago’s costumed waiters and coffeeprepare refreshments for special servitors—while the kind of sword play preferred in the Windy occasions such as funerals and City involved spearing beef and chicken livers and setting them weddings. aflame. The fun and games in the Pump Room were always Black men had a place of retongue-in-cheek and meant to entertain rather than follow strict nown in catering, but women were dictates of good taste. As host Ernie Byfield once remarked, also represented in this profession. the atmosphere conveyed by the costumes and flaming swords Samuel Francis (aka Fraunces), a suggested something like “Halloween in Hell.” West Indian who served as stewTo get the enterprise going in 1938, it is said, Byfield ard to George Washington, ran an began sending limousines to the train station to pick up newseating place and cook shop known worthy passengers stranded by cross-country layovers of as the Sign of Queen Charlotte up to 12 hours. As he shrewdly realized, he who entertains in New York. He announced in the entertainers easily draws a crowd of high-rolling limelight baskers. The formula worked beautifully for several decades, 1766 that he supplied all kinds though the Pump Room began to fade in the 1960s, undergoof cooked food, confections, and ing several transitions thereafter. When Sonny Bono dined there pastries, as well as wedding cakes, sans suit jacket in 1968, observers felt the end could not be and “cut Victuals by the Shilling’s far off. In 1976 the establishment’s famed furnishings, includWorth.” In 1770 he advised he ing booth number one reserved for top-notch celebrities, were would also send out dinners and auctioned off. suppers. In 1815 a Mrs. Poppleton
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kept a refreshment room and food shop where she sold a variety of delectable dishes such as savory patties, puff pastry, “Italian Sallads,” cakes for weddings and christenings, and “Elegant ornamental Trays, for ladies’ parties.” In the late nineteenth century, no successful Boston Back Bay hostess could do without the services of black caterer Joseph Lee, while Salem hostesses counted on black caterers and restaurateurs such as Edward P. Cassell to run their dinners. Even in his old age, in 1910, Cassell could be seen on the streets of Salem, impeccably dressed in Chesterfield coat and top hat, hand delivering invitations. Like other society caterers, he undoubtedly knew the rules of etiquette as well as, or better than, his clients. Further Reading: The best sources for late eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century coffeehouses, taverns, confectionery and catering establishments, and oysterand chophouses are newspaper announcements such as those found in the Royal Gazette and the Daily Advertiser in New York City, the Aurora General Advertiser in Philadelphia, and the Columbian Centinel and the Boston Commercial Gazette in Boston; “A Royal Feast; A Complimentary Dinner to Mr. Thomas Dana, 2d.” Boston Daily Globe. July 24, 1876, p. 4; “The Clubs at Dinner. Thirtieth Year of the Boston—Other Gatherings at Parker’s and Young’s.” Boston Daily Globe. January 4, 1885, p. 3; “Beefsteak Feasts the Fad.” Washington Post. March 27, 1893, p. 11; Hallmark, Harrydele. “Woman and Home. Women at Cafes. Society Approves High-class Restaurant Dinners.” Los Angeles Times. December 31, 1893, p. 12; “Noted Feasts of Modern Times; Extravagance in Dining.” Current Literature. XVII:2. February, 1895, p. 154; “Catering Extraordinary.” New York Times Sunday Magazine. December 29, 1901, p. 8; “The Washington Season; A Society Girl’s View of the Restaurant Habit in the Capital.” Washington Post. March 23, 1902, p. 23; “While the Kettle Sings; Parties at the Tea Room.” Tea Room and Gift Shop. 2:6, June, 1923, p. 13.
Jan Whitaker
Russia Russian aristocrats hosted marathon banquets that were theatrical extravaganzas of food, table settings, and costumed servants. Yet this showiness contained much that became traditional in city and countryside, in good times and bad: hours-long feasting, sequential table service, heavy drinking, and lavish generosity toward special guests. EARLY TIMES When the sixteenth-century Grand Duke Vasilii III (r. 1505–1533) had an important foreign visitor, all (male) residents within riding or walking distance from the Moscow Kremlin, from nobles to servants to marketplace loafers, were commanded to be part of the welcoming masses and herded to his palace. Inside, rooms were filled with scores of local nobility. By ordering up a crowd the Grand Duke hoped to impress foreign visitors as
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Russian tea table, 1851. The Art Archive/Russian State Museum Saint Petersburg/ Alfredo Dagli Orti.
well as locals with his own importance and power. Once inside, important guests (ambassadors and the like) became part of an elaborately choreographed processional en route to the banqueting room and the royal presence. Guests at first were greeted with handclasps, embraces, and kisses. But on approaching the Grand Duke himself, noblemen did not acknowledge the visitors’ presence, even when greeted directly. Banquet preliminaries included presenting guests to the Grand Duke. Diplomats did not have to bring the Grand Duke gifts but were expected to express their deep gratitude to him. At Vasilii’s court, the banquet tables were arranged in a circle, with a gap near the entrance to the banquet room. Vasilii sat at a long table together with his brothers and most of his councilors. Guests of honor, provided with table settings and implements of gold and /or silver, sat opposite his table. The Grand Duke honored important diplomats by sending them, from his own table, salt (signifying affection) and white bread shaped like a horse collar (signifying favor). Bread and salt are still traditional symbols of welcome in Russia. Guests drank brandy while waiting for their food. The first course was usually roast swans, which were set before Vasilii so that he could determine which was the tenderest and the one for his table. After that judgment was made, expensively costumed servants bore the swans to a nearby carving table. The Grand Duke’s table was served first, and like the other diners, he sprinkled his portion
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of swan with salt, pepper, and vinegar. After the Grand Duke had been served, platters were delivered to guests according to rank and political importance. Guests could also nibble on soured milk and long-preserved cucumbers. Throughout the banquet, Vasilii sent choice pieces of meat to one or another guest, who was expected to stand up and bow as the other guests also rose to their feet. All sat down again until the next tender morsel arrived from the Grand Duke’s table. Foreign guests were sometimes exhausted by the crowded arrangements, rituals, and lengthiness of Russian banquets, which might begin around noon and not end until the next morning. For Russians, however, the endless banquet had become and continued to be a staple for entertaining, however much their guests tired. SEQUENTIAL TABLE SERVICE An early record of Russian-style sequential table service (serving only one kind of food at a time) comes from one of Ivan the Terrible’s (r. 1533– 1584) banquets for 300 diners. There were five courses. The first offered roast fowl: swans, a peacock with its plumage intact, cranes, guinea fowl, and creamed ducks. The second round was a soup course with a variety of soups cold and hot, thick and thin; the third, main course, featured larger mammals: loins of bear, a reindeer, a sheep, a calf, and quarters of beef. The dessert course offered, among other sweets, a pudding in the form of the Kremlin (the walled palace compound). The courses were carried in and guests waited on by servers dressed in uniforms of white satin with sable trim. For Ivan’s court, getting food in separate courses rather than having the feast brought to the table all at once was a novelty, but that style of table service was eventually accepted as a hallmark of Russian dining customs. Sequential service became known in fashionable European circles as dinner à la Russe and was popular in Europe by the 1870s and 1880s. Sequential service, now universal in United States restaurants—first appetizers, then soup or salad, then the entrée, then dessert and coffee, may have originated with stylish dining à la Russe. In the sixteenth century however, despite Ivan’s preference, most noble hosts had all the food, including desserts, set out at once. Banqueters didn’t use forks or knives; every fourth diner shared bowls and plates, but not spoons. Guests wiped their hands on their portion of the tablecloth. DRINK From the earliest accounts of such things, people have noted the importance of alcohol for Russian hospitality. No banquet table was or is complete without a variety of alcoholic drinks. One method of persuading, or even bullying, guests to drink was well-established in the sixteenth century, and lives on in Russian culture: the host proposes a toast, then another,
Russia and another. In the case of a formal state banquet, toasts proposed to a tsar or local bigwig had to be followed by everyone downing his drink. At sixteenth-century banquets, the man who gave the toast was expected to stand in the middle of the room, say which nobleman or royal the toast was meant for, say what kind of good fortune he should have (health, happiness, victory in battle, etc.), and wish the honoree’s enemies might be as drained of blood as the toaster’s own cup, which the speaker then emptied and placed upside-down on his head, praying for his lord’s good health. Guests who preferred not to drink themselves silly could evade some refills by pretending drunkenness or extreme sleepiness. Leaving a palace banquet would not necessarily free guests from their drinking obligation. Honored foreign guests might be guided back to their lodgings, but after arrival the escorts would not leave. Instead, they sat themselves down and told the guests their orders were to stay and provide more cheer. Then people of high station would show up to help pour. It was believed that a guest who had not been made drunk to the point of falling under the table had been neglected by his host. As time went by, the social obligation for hosts to encourage male guests to drink heavily remained unchanged, but vodka, classically about 40 percent alcohol, gradually replaced beer and mead as the social drink of choice. Eventually vodka came to be surrounded by a set of rituals. Russians are expected to drink it straight, to down a small glassful while the bottle remains uncapped, ready for the next round, and finally to be finished by the group one is with. Men should be hearty vodka drinkers; women don’t have to be. OTHER ENTERTAINMENTS AND GIFTING Aside from being banqueted and plied with drink, important guests in sixteenth century Russia might also be entertained by accompanying the royal host for a day of hunting rabbits in the countryside, finishing with a picnic in a tent. They might also be invited to witness a fearsome contest in which a caged wild bear was let loose among a group of poor peasant men armed with wooden pitchforks. If a peasant was injured, he faced the Grand Duke and begged for pity, whereupon the ruler gave him something. Foreign envoys, however, might receive lavish gifts at their departure banquet. The German envoy Herberstein returned from his Russian voyages with such gifts as clothing sewn with gold thread and lined with sable, a sleigh with snowy white, warm blankets and a fine horse to pull it, sable pelts plus hundreds of other valuable furs, and quantities of smoked sturgeon and other varieties of preserved fish. WOMEN And where were women during the sumptuous festivities? Until the accession of Tsar Peter the Great (r. 1682–1725) Russian noblewomen did not mingle with their husband’s guests; rather, they were cloistered
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in special women’s quarters. Only at banquets, and then only to honor a special guest, would the host present his wife to his all-male company. On these occasions, the lord of the manor gave a signal, and then the lady, in her most stunning clothes, appeared holding a golden cup and kissed its rim. While she remained standing, each guest was allowed to give her a kiss. For practical reasons, the lower the social class, the fewer the household servants, the less were women hidden. Under Peter the Great, who admired and imported Western European culture, men and women aristocrats were not only encouraged, but commanded, to attend parties together. But other Russian banqueting traditions remained including marathon lengthiness (eight hours or more) and sequential table service (common by the 1600s, with as many as 200 different kinds of food served). Each course featured one kind of food prepared by a particular method, such as varieties of roasted wild fowl for one course, varieties of salted fish for another, crepes ( blini) with various fillings followed by small pastries ( pirogi, sing. pirog ) with different fillings, and so forth. By the late eighteenth century, the order of Russian-style banquet courses was standardized, at least in the highest society: (1) hot soups; (2) cold dishes, such as cold fish, or fish or meat in aspic; (3) roasts (meat or poultry); (4) boiled or fried fish; (5) savory pies; (6) kasha (a cereal made with grain, usually buckwheat); (7) sweet pastries; (8) candies and other sweet confections. In the nineteenth century, dessert at a banquet might also include ice cream shaped in a mold, then unmolded on a plate. The more formal the banquet, the more attention had to be paid to an artistic table setting. In the late nineteenth century, a wealthy family served their feast on exquisite china accompanied by silver flatware. For very formal banquets, servants collected the dirty dishes and silver after every course and brought clean ones. Tables were decorated with vases of fresh flowers, a glass or silver étagère laden with candies, fruits, and flowers, and each place had monogrammed napkins folded so that the monogram hung gracefully over the table’s edge. Small salt cellars were set at every place or every other place. The banquet table was also laden with water pitchers and wine bottles symmetrically arranged. Around mid-nineteenth century, wealthy hosts giving formal banquets served each different kind of wine in a separate glass. And beneath it all, a spotlessly white tablecloth (no longer used as a hand wiper). After dinner, the guests repaired to an adjoining room to drink black coffee, tea, and liqueur from tiny wine glasses. If a host decided to have a French-style banquet (four or so courses, placing many kinds of food on the table at once) both French and Russian cuisine were served, but the emphasis remained on Russian-style stupefying abundance—each course might feature more kinds of foods than diners. Thus, at one such banquet, the first course had 29 dishes (six different soups); the second course, 24 dishes, featuring many kinds of fish and fowl (including pigeons); the third course, 24 dishes, including eight sauces and eight kinds of salad; the fourth and final course featured 26 platters of both sweet and savory dishes, everything from a wild boar’s head to pistachio
Russia cream. Maybe it was that conjunction of boar’s head and pistachio cream that turned Russians away from the French-style banquet. LITTLE BITES Russians may not have known exactly when a banquet would end, but since the late nineteenth or early twentieth centuries, they know that every feast begins with zakuski (“little bites,” Russian-style hors d’oeuvres; sing. zakuska). The legend, perhaps inspired by the resemblance to smorgasbord, is that Viking invaders under the leadership of Rurik brought zakuski to Russia in A.D. 862. In any case, zakuski seem not to have come into their own as a banqueting requirement until some time in the late eighteenth or early nineteenth century, perhaps in the country villas of the pre-Revolutionary elite. Given the Russian custom of casual visiting back and forth and the chronic impassibility of Russian country roads, landed gentry, not knowing exactly when or if guests might arrive, kept a table loaded with snacks for the weary, hungry traveler. That way guests could have something to eat while a meal was being readied. Pre-Revolution, overnight guests at a wealthy household might be offered a second dinner between one and three in the morning. There would be a zakuska table almost as sumptuous as the earlier one but with fewer choices on the main menu. Starting formal meals with “little bites” has a social-psychological benefit. Classically, at formal occasions in a spacious setting, zakuski are set out on a separate table either within the dining room or in an adjoining room. Ideally the appetizer table is surrounded by a generous amount of empty space so that guests can circulate around it, walk away from it carrying their plate and drinking glass, chat with other circles of guests, then return to gather more nibbles and chat some more. In this way, guests who haven’t met before have time to make each other’s acquaintance, and those who prefer to arrive late can do so without missing dinner. For an at-home event, zakuski are placed on the dining table in separate dishes, and everyone immediately sits down at the table. Either way, guests like to linger around the zakuski (an hour at the very least), chatting, nibbling, and drinking vodka from tiny glasses (women might drink sherry). If guests are sitting, there will be many toasts with compulsory clinking of glasses even if diners have to lean precariously across the table to “clink.” On a zakuska table set for a major banquet, guests will find all the necessary implements for helping themselves, plus dozens of different varieties of appetizers, cold and hot, each type presented on a separate plate or platter. There will also be baskets with small squares of white and dark bread for conveying zakuski from plate to mouth. Types of zakuski dishes include a variety of preserved fish, fresh caviar, sausages, fancily prepared tidbits of pork and fowl, pickled and fresh fruits and vegetables, faux caviars made from eggplant and /or mushrooms, boiled eggs prepared in many ways, veal kidneys in sweet wine, chicken livers in sour cream, little sausages or meatballs in tomato sauce, condiments such as horseradish and mustard, and
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a dish called forshmak—herring, boiled potatoes, onions and apples baked in sour cream. At the center of the table: 15 or 20 bottles and /or pitchers of different flavors and kinds of vodka (all icy cold) and vodka glasses. The vodka is to be followed by a bite of zakuska, another bite, another drink, and so on. In the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, men often drank a glass of English ale after zakuski and before beginning the main meal, believing the ale would sober them up and restore their appetite. By the late nineteenth century, in wealthy homes, zakuski became ever more lavish, varied, and artistic. Examples from one cookbook describe onions cut in rings and formed into a chain to surround a herring, scallions cut to resemble white peacocks with green tails spread wide, and flower-shaped carrot slices submerged in aspic; in short, no vegetable was safe from being sculpted to look like something else. The very arrangement of appetizers also had its ritual: crisp beside soft, light colors next to dark, and so forth. Caviar is the most important food on the zakuska table or platter. The quantity and diversity of kinds and colors of fish roe advertise the host’s status and riches, and the guest’s importance. Earlier in Russian history, eggs from many different kinds of fish were considered delicacies, but by the nineteenth century, fashionable hosts would only serve their guests caviar from four kinds of sturgeon (salmon roe would do for less important dinners). Pre-Revolutionary hosts also followed fashionable rules concerning presentation (in a crystal bowl), and type of bread (such as rye or pumpernickel) to accompany a daub of a particular kind or color of caviar. Preserved herring, prepared, sauced, and cut up in many attractive ways, is second to caviar in its importance to the zakuska offerings and is cheaper than caviar. There are many other cold fish appetizers—pateed, pickled, smoked, or served in aspic. Banqueting as a way of entertaining and honoring guests is not confined to the powerful and wealthy. Whether rich, poor, or middle-class, or city, town, or country folk, holidays and life-milestones are times when a Russian’s thoughts turn to feasting, and often with help from neighbors, relatives, and friends, they set their table as abundantly as they can. HOLIDAYS: EASTER AND MASLENITSA (BUTTER WEEK) After 1917 the new Bolshevik government suppressed religious observances. Before the Revolution, Maslenitsa, a holiday comparable to Carnival or Mardi Gras, was a week-long revelry preceding the dietary restrictions of the 40 days of Lent. Rich people hosted balls for their peers, and feasts occurred daily in every social circle and village, with special emphasis on bliny (a crisp pancake made with yeast batter, then fried in and drenched with butter). The custom of eating buttery round bliny during this spring festival may be a vestige from pre-Christian sun-worshipping religions. In the nineteenth century, and up to the Revolution, rich people held banquets on the last day of Butter Week. Such a banquet would begin around 1 in the afternoon and last until Lent officially began at 6 P.M. Between those
Russia hours, the guests were treated to a multi-course dinner, with bliny as the first course. The pancakes were and are served with many accompaniments. Tasty morsels are rolled up inside bliny as well as piled on top, including caviar. The second course was soups; the third, fish; the fourth; roast game with salad; the fifth, dessert with coffee, tea, liqueurs, and fruit. From the Soviet period Maslenitsa has been celebrated with more casual home bliny parties. Such a party will likely begin with a table or platters of artistically arranged appetizers accompanied by vodka. The bliny themselves will be served with such tidbits as smoked sturgeon, salted herring, red and /or black caviar, sour cream, melted butter, chopped mushrooms, onions, and (for dessert) bliny with jam and sour cream. Besides vodka, guests and host might drink one or all of the following: champagne; wine; liqueurs; and strong sweetened tea, Russia’s most popular nonalcoholic drink. Guests arrive some time in the afternoon or early evening, and would not be surprised to find themselves leaving around midnight or later, if the conversation and camaraderie are as good as the food. Before the Soviet era, midnight Easter services were followed by a period of feasting and drinking that lasted through the second Tuesday after Easter (radonitsa). Although Soviet religious repression caused a radical setback to church attendance, Russians continued to enjoy traditional postchurch Easter banquets whether or not they had actually been to church. Classically, such a meal, served on a table that may be decorated with flowers and /or leafy green plants and a lamb carved out of butter, features some eight courses, beginning with appetizers and vodka and followed by some or all of the following: cold hams baked in rye dough; spicy sausage; cold baked ducks; chicken salad; cold suckling pig; colored hard-boiled eggs. Guests traditionally smash their egg’s pointed end against other guests’ eggs; the last uncracked egg standing is the champion. For Easter, families serve traditional desserts: kulich, a dome-shaped type of yeast-raised coffee cake with raisins and nuts, and paskha (which means Easter), an unbaked cheesecake shaped like a dome or flat-topped pyramid, made of cottage cheese, cream, egg yolks, vanilla extract, sugar, butter, candied fruit, almonds, and raisins. Besides these classic Easter treats, such calorie-rich cakes and pastries as baba, (a yeast-raised cake) and khvorost (crisp, buttery, twig-like pastries), might be served as well. For many families, Easter is a moveable feast with relatives and friends exchanging hospitality in each other’s homes for four days, eating, drinking, playing games. During that time, the dining table that was loaded for Easter Day retains its food and drink, in the spirit of “open house.” CHRISTMAS-NEW YEAR In Russia, the distinction between Christmas and New Year has become murky. Before the Soviet period, Christmas Eve and Christmas were major holidays. One of the regime’s biggest triumphs was in reshaping rituals and festivities associated with Christmas, which in the Russian Orthodox “Old
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Style” calendar is now celebrated January 8. Christmas was secularized and melded with the New Year holiday. After the fall of the Communist government, religious groups, including the Russian Orthodox Church, began a comeback, reviving the old religious holidays and rituals. Still, many who had grown up with Soviet holidays were reluctant to forsake their favorite celebrations. After 1991, holidays during which people were likely to host others, fell into a state of flux, including Christmas and New Year. Before the 1917 Revolution, a prosperous peasant family might have celebrated Christmas with a big, lavishly decorated fir tree; they and their guests enjoyed a banquet of roast suckling pig, fish in aspic, jellied cold cuts, pirogi, cold roast meat, cabbage soup made with meat broth, chicken with noodles, kasha, kisel’ (a fruit dessert), and alcoholic drinks such as beer, brandy, and vodka. After the Christmas dinner there were party games, including fortune telling done by girls. Roving carolers singing about a good harvest, good luck, and money, were invited inside villagers’ huts for refreshments and coins. Today Russians celebrate New Year’s Eve by exchanging presents and / or cards, cooking a special meal (very likely the fanciest meal of the year), decorating a fir tree with ornaments and colored lights, and hosting parties. Children get presents at New Year parties from “Ded Moroz” (Grandfather Frost), a white-bearded man dressed in a long, fur-trimmed robe, which is often red but might be other colors, especially blue. Grandfather Frost may well be accompanied by his trusty companion the Snow Maiden in a furtrimmed blue robe and cap, a pretty young woman with a single long blond braid. Russians often go to their city center for a celebration—the most famous occurs in Moscow’s Red Square—bringing champagne to toast the New Year when the Spassky Tower clock strikes midnight, and a band plays the national anthem. After a fireworks display, many will return to their own or to someone else’s home to continue celebrating with friends and family. Others may opt to watch the public festivities on TV while partying with friends and relations. A typical New Year’s Eve dinner might consist of: zakuski, soup, entrée (suckling pig is traditional), and dessert. For drinks, hosts will offer tea, coffee, vodka, wine, and champagne, and there will be many toasts, especially when clocks strike midnight. Gifts may be exchanged during the evening and besides watching TV, there might be dancing and singing. Children go to bed, but grownups continue to party, in the belief that a joyous celebration insures a joyous New Year.
CELEBRATING LIFE MILESTONES Christening In the Central Russian village of Viriatino a family would throw a party right after a woman in the household returned from the hospital with her new baby. If she had the baby at home, the party occurred a few days after
Russia she gave birth. The party was called a christening feast, although during the Soviet period especially, the baby may not have been christened. The most important guests were the godparents and midwife (if her services had been used). After dinner, the midwife dished out a special “christening porridge” with a wooden spoon, and the guests thanked her by giving her a few coins. The guests also gave the baby gifts. By the 1950s, however, the midwife’s role was dwindling and guests were no longer served porridge. Only the infant’s father had to eat a bit of very salty porridge, to the guests’ amusement. Godparents continued to have a place of honor at the christening feast, sitting near the baby’s closest relatives. Other guests sat at the festive table in order of their relationship to the new child. In earlier times it was taboo for the infant’s mother to attend the christening party, but that taboo vanished by the late 1950s. There could be many revelers at a christening party, and as with other family celebrations, the guests were not necessarily all relatives. Dinner was followed by music, singing, and dancing, inside the house or out, depending on the weather. Marriage Nineteenth-century peasants in Central Russia celebrated a preliminary betrothal party called malyi zapoi (small binge) when marriage negotiations were successfully concluded. The final betrothal party, known as rukobit’e ( handclapping) or bol’shoi zapoi ( big binge), was held at the bride’s house. Between the second betrothal drinking spree and the wedding, the bride and her girlfriends hosted guests while preparing the bride’s trousseau—clothes, bedding, drapery. By the late nineteenth century, the sewing of the bride’s trousseau was mostly symbolic because most families had those goods made professionally. Nevertheless, the tradition provided the bride and her friends with a chance to get together at her home, socialize, and sing laments for a lost carefree girlhood. The atmosphere could get very mournful, and rightly so: after the wedding, a peasant woman traditionally resided in her in-laws’ house as a low-level drudge. When the bride-elect and her girlfriends got together for this betrothal activity, they even wore a kind of mourning dress. On the eve of the wedding there were parties at the bride’s and groom’s houses, the general theme of which was the same mournful farewell to carefree youth and friends. The couple exchanged small “brooms” of twigs tied together and dismantled a decorated tree. Among the peasants of south Russia, there was a ritual baking of the wedding bread. The whole process of mixing, kneading, baking, removing from the oven, was accompanied by special ceremonies and songs. In some areas, a good-luck coin was baked into the loaf, and somehow the coin always ended up in the bride or groom’s slice. This “loaf ritual” may also have occurred at royal weddings of earlier eras. Just before the wedding, the bride’s girlfriends dressed her, unbraided her single long braid, and rebraided the bride’s hair into two braids
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arranged on either side of her head, or encircling the top of her head. The hair fashioning was accompanied by more special songs, and more laments. Then the bride’s parents sat her down with the bridesmaids to await the groom, en route in a ritual procession. The groom’s party would encounter obstacles set up by the bride’s party, such as poles laid across the road, and they had to buy their way to the bride’s house by giving the bride’s friends wine and sweets to remove the obstructions. This custom continued well into the Soviet period. After the groom and his friends and relations entered the bride’s home, there were more rituals: the showing of a “false bride,” the selling (to the best man) of the seat next to the bride, the purchase of the bride from the bridesmaids, and so on. Finally, everyone sat down to a feast from which the bride and groom were supposed to abstain. As with other hospitality events, most or all of the men, very likely including the parish priest, would become extremely drunk, and stay that way to the end of the multi-day festivities or beyond. The bride’s and /or groom’s parents might spend recklessly on vodka for the guests. When the wedding party departed for the church, someone carried an icon around the wedding procession three times, whips cracked, men fired guns, and everyone made a racket to frighten off evil spirits. In the mid-nineteenth century, in rural areas near Moscow, the bridal couple went to the groom’s home after the church service. In south Russia, the wedding party went to the bride’s house for a feast. But whether guests traveled to the bride’s or groom’s home after church, the custom was for the multi-day celebration to be constantly shifting from one to the other, to emphasize the new relationship between the two families. The inlaws welcomed the couple with bread and salt, blessed them, and sprinkled grain kernels on them. The bride’s father-in-law removed her veil. Then bride and groom sat down in the icon corner (the part of the peasant hut decorated with sacred pictures), and family and guests greeted them there. Originally the custom among Russian peasants was for guests to lead the bridal couple to bed in a separate room, or behind a partition, or in an outbuilding, before the first of several wedding feasts began, only allowing them to participate in the banqueting the day after the wedding. Later, the couple was permitted to join in the feast that immediately followed the wedding, and were bedded after the banquet, a custom that continued at least into the late nineteenth or early twentieth century. During the first wedding feast, the bridal couple sat at the head of the table, but the bride was expected to sit very quietly, her head tightly wrapped in a shawl, even when the other guests got very boisterous. The wedding feast (and other important celebrations) would have prominently featured some kind of meat, a rarity in the peasants’ everyday diet. There was much singing, dancing, and drinking. Often the bride’s dowry was presented at this time. Also at this time, the bride’s father gave his new son-inlaw a symbolic whip to wear in his belt. During the festivities the bride gave her in-laws sweets, and they gave (or threw) money at her and the groom, in a ceremony called gilding. In Saratov province, it was customary to hand
Russia the bride a baby to hold for a lengthy time, in order to symbolically promote fertility. In front of the guests, the bride removed the groom’s boots, to show her submission to him (sometimes this boot removal was part of the bedding ritual). When the feast was over the best man and one or two matchmakers and sometimes other guests led the bride and groom to bed while guests sang bawdy songs. Among many nineteenth-century Russian peasants, the bridal bedding customs included placing the groom on top of the bride and tying their legs together with a fine towel or belt, whereupon the guests left the room, locking the door behind them. The next morning, guests banged on pots and pans to awaken the couple and force them out of bed. The bride’s bloody nightgown was shown to the guests, then there was further celebratory racket making, including smashing pottery. After that, bride and groom together went to take a steambath. On this second day, guests gathered or remained at the bridegroom’s house, but later went to the bride’s house for the next ritual. At the girl’s house, her mother cooked a special omelet or pancake, and presented it to the groom, who poked a hole in it. Then the groom put money in a wine-filled wineglass, and handed the glass to his new mother-in-law. By these rituals, the groom acknowledged that his bride had been a virgin. Those ceremonies accomplished, the guests returned to the bridegroom’s house for another day of feasting and heavy drinking. At the groom’s house, the young man was again presented with an omelet, plus a meat pie, both of which he would be the first to taste. On the third day, the bride removed her headscarf and for the first time since her wedding, joined the merrymaking. On this day, her in-laws prepared a ritual testing of the bride’s housekeeping skills by throwing trash on the floor for her to sweep up. When she passed that test, the in-laws threw money on the floor. In the following days (there could be at least three more days of celebration) other relatives held parties, and guests performed comic skits. Among the upper classes in the nineteenth century, it was usually the bride’s parents who paid for the wedding dinner and possibly an orchestra to play during the banquet and white flowers for the table(s). The menu for an upper-class wedding dinner would include champagne and roast meat. As in a peasant wedding feast, there were many toasts to the couple, with guests frequently shouting “It’s bitter!” whereupon the bridal couple must kiss, to “make it sweet.” Sometimes the hosts offered a buffet supper with champagne. Guests were given gifts of “wedding candy”—small pieces of chocolate or other candy, wrapped in white satin trimmed with lace and decorated with orange blossoms, or other elaborate packaging, such as a tiny house or filigree basket. Similar candies in white satin were given out at royal balls, but with miniscule photos of the royal family, framed in bronze. Although the multi-day wedding celebration has been shortened, many traditions persist, with some post-1917 customs. Today, after the ceremony, whether civil or religious, the wedding party commonly visits an historically
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important site or popular landmark, very often a famous grave. Newlyweds ride in a car decorated with ribbons, balloons, big mock-ups of wedding rings on the roof, and a doll on the hood. In the countryside, the bridal couple might still have to treat neighbors to drinks in return for removing logs from the road. The wedding feast, for which both families may share expenses, might take place in a restaurant, a private residence, or a banquet hall. The ritual of raising a glass with orders to kiss still applies, guests still sing and dance, and shower the couple with grain. However, in post-Revolutionary times, couples began to feel freer to reject those parts of a traditional wedding celebration they didn’t like or didn’t want for themselves. Name Days and Birthdays Children born into the Russian Orthodox Church were given a saint’s name at baptism. Pre-1917, people celebrated their saint’s day on the church calendar, rather than their birthday. Birthdays were celebrated, if at all, only by close relatives. In the late nineteenth century, in urban upper- or middleclass households, the cook would prepare several very large pirogi, some filled, and some not. At the name-day dinner, a stuffed pirog was brought in; two relatives broke it over the name-day honoree’s head, expressing the wish that gold and silver would fall on her head just like pirog filling. Afterwards the pirog was divided among guests to eat; vodka was drunk to the honoree’s health, zakuski were served, then dinner was served. A later, simpler version of the name-day meal featured lunch with a large pirog as the entrée following zakuski. During the Soviet period, name-day celebrations were officially frowned on, so people switched to birthday parties. Post-Soviet, many have returned to the older custom, but either way, people like to invite friends and relations for a party, perhaps a surprise party, with, at the least, pie or cake, especially a pretzel-shaped coffee cake called krendel’ and possibly champagne. As with other social events, no one will complain if the party is more elaborate, with a decorated table, and additional food and drink, such as zakuski, vodka, hot chocolate, and so forth. Funeral Meal in Russian Peasant Villages In villages of Central Russia, after returning home from the cemetery, mourners were served pancakes, kisel’ and kut’ia (small cakes made from roasted grains of wheat, or rice, with honey, poppy seeds, and stewed dried fruit). Guests drank vodka, and the meal ended with wheat porridge made with either milk or (during non-dairy fast days) hempseed oil. People believed that the departed was present at the funeral dinner. Among middle-class Russians in the late nineteenth century, the priest, assistant priest, and relatives returned to the deceased’s house after the burial, prayed for the deceased’s soul, and then sat down to the funeral dinner which started with bliny and caviar, and might be followed by cabbage
Russia soup, roast goose or suckling pig, and much vodka and wine. When the roast was brought in, everyone stood, the priests and relatives sang a prayer for the dead, then everyone sat down again and continued eating and drinking. When the funeral meal ended, a pirog surrounded by candles was distributed to beggars (in later years, the guests ate the pirog). After that, guests, including the priests, stayed for drinks (wine, punch, mead) served ceremoniously by the priest’s assistant from a small table in the dining room. Later tea was served, after which guests left. CASUAL ENTERTAINING Russians often drop by a friend’s residence unannounced, even very late at night. Among the late nineteenth-century and early twentieth-century upper classes, “evening tea” for family and drop-in guests could mean dining between 10 P.M. and midnight, and having a samovar (a Russian urn-style water-boiler) simmering, perhaps on a small separate table or on the dining room table. That table was set with snacks: cold cuts, sliced cheese, sliced white and dark bread, unsalted butter, and a variety of sweets (fruit preserves, candied fruit, and various cakes) on glass dishes. Then as now, people with less money welcomed unexpected friends with whatever food and drink they could provide, the table being the focal point of Russian hospitality, formal and informal. As soon as guests—probably bearing a hostess gift, especially an
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The Russian Samovar The elegant and exotic samovar is a symbol of Russian hospitality. The samovar was introduced by the Mongolians when they invaded Russia in the thirteenth century. Originally the samovar was used for a spiced honey drink called sbiten’. It was not until several hundred years later that the samovar was incorporated into everyday life. By the late eighteenth century, the hiss of the samovar became a familiar sound inside Russian homes, which were always prepared to welcome friends and family with a warm cup of tea. Inside the samovar, which means “self-boiler,” there is a central tube that is heated with hot coals, and this devise heats the water. Because the coals produced smoke, the samovar was heated outside in the summer. In the winter it was connected to a pipe extension that fit into the stove so that the soot from the samovar was carried out of the house through the stove’s chimney. While the samovar kept water boiling, the tea was brewed separately in a small teapot, which was placed on the top of the samovar to keep it warm. The tea was used as concentrate called zavarka, or “essence.” A hostess poured the zavarka for each individual then water from the samovar was added so that each guest could adjust the strength of the tea according to his or her own taste. Most usually, women drank their tea from cups, men drank from glasses, which were inserted into a decorative metal frame and children drank from saucers. Although the Russians still have retained their penchant for tea, the traditional samovar is rarely used to prepare it. Electric samovars or kettles are used instead. Generally, Russians prefer sweet, black tea. A favorite way to take tea is to hold a sugar cube between the teeth while drinking, which is called pit’ chai upriglyadku. Russians also like tea with jam. The thick jam with whole pieces of fruit is served along with the tea. It can either be eaten separately or spooned into the drink, making it sweet and fruity. Amy Seifried
Silver and ivory samovar, c. 1925. The Art Archive/ Private Collection /Gianni Dagli Orti.
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uneven number of flowers—cross the threshold of someone’s home, they remove their shoes and the host provides them with a pair of soft, wellworn, floppy slippers. As an American visitor remarked, “It is hard not to feel at home when your costume ends in an old pair of your host’s slippers.” For drop-in guests, the socializing spot of choice is the kitchen table, but if there isn’t enough space in the kitchen, then hosts and friends can gather around a living room table, or a table in another room, if there is no “living room” as such. A couch in a tiny apartment will substitute for three or four chairs. Guests, no matter when they visit, will be urgently invited to stay for a meal. The point isn’t just to eat and drink but also to converse and commune. A casual Sunday lunch in a middle-class urban apartment might have 10 friends squeezed around a small table. Guests aren’t seated in any special order, the apartment has not necessarily been tidied, tableware doesn’t have to match. The meal is simple but filling, perhaps a salad of home-preserved vegetables, rye bread, soup, meat patties, potatoes, and peas. Dessert might be fresh or preserved fruit. As very special, foreign visitors may discover, it’s best to be careful about admiring something your Russian host owns as you might be forced to take it with you when you leave. Further Reading: Berry, Lloyd E., and Robert O. Crummey, eds. Rude & Barbarous Kingdom: Russia in the Accounts of Sixteenth-Century Voyagers. Madison: The University of Wisconsin Press, 1968; Dabars, Zita, with Lilia Vokhmina. The Russian Way. Lincolnwood, IL: Passport Books, 1995; Dunn, Stephen P., and Ethel Dunn. The Peasants of Central Russia. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1967; Herlihy, Patricia. “‘Joy of the Rus’: Rites and Rituals of Russian Drinking.” Russian Review, vol. 50 (April 1991): 131–147; Hudgins, Sharon. The Other Side of Russia: A Slice of Life in Russia and the Siberian Far East. College Station: Texas A& M University Press, 2003; Kropatkin, Alexandra. How to Cook and Eat in Russian. New York: G. P. Putnam’s Sons, 1947; Lee, Andrea. Russian Journal. New York: First Vintage Books edition, 1984 [1979]; Markevitch, Marie Alexandre. The Epicure in Imperial Russia. San Francisco: The Colt Press, 1941; Matossian, Mary. “The Peasant Way of Life” in: Beatrice Farnsworth and Lynne Viola, eds., Russian Peasant Women. New York: Oxford University Press, 1992; Papashvily, Helen, and George Papashvily. Russian Cooking. New York: Time-Life Books, 1969; Richards, Susan. Epics of Everyday Life: Encounters in a Changing Russia. New York: Penguin Books, 1990; Schulze, Sydney. Culture and Customs of Russia. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2000; Selivanova, Nina N. Dining and Wining in Old Russia New York: E. P. Dutton, 1933; Smith, Hedrick, The Russians (revised edition). New York: Ballantine, 1984; Toomre, Joyce, trans., ed. Classic Russian Cooking: Elena Molokhovets’ A Gift to Young Housewives. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1992; Worobec, Christine. Peasant Russia: Family and Community in the Post-Emancipation Period. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1991.
Katherine Bliss Eaton
S Saints’ Days The Roman Catholic Church has influenced many societies and cultures in myriad ways throughout its 2000-year history. The Church’s influence extends into food traditions. A number of foods and dishes—particularly those featuring meat, breads, and sweets—eaten today were once associated exclusively with Roman Catholic feast days or other religious celebrations and festivals during the liturgical year. Many traditions originated during the Middle Ages (ca. 476–1485) in Europe and later spread to other parts of the world with the migration that began with the Age of Exploration and continues to this day. In most cases, feast days revolved around the various saints and martyrs of the Church. Such festivals played (and still play) an important role in defining and forming cultural identity, as well as passing on traditions to the younger generation. As St. Augustine (A.D. 354 – 430) said, apocryphally or not according to Katherine Burton, “We have received these days by tradition from our forefathers and we transmit them to those that follow to be celebrated with like devotion.” Beginning almost immediately in the early days of the Church, devotion to the saints came about because the first saints were martyrs, called red martyrs. Devotion to these martyrs drew believers together and, to honor the saints’ memory, people began to sanctify the lives of these martyrs. In
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Statue of San Gennaro in Little Italy, New York City. Gregory James Van Raalte/Shutterstock.
A.D.
354, the Roman calendar began with a listing of 23 saints’ feast days in the Depositio Martyrum (list of martyrs) and the Depositio Episcoporum (list of bishops). Later, after persecution of Christians stopped in A.D. 313 with the Peace of Constantine, those people imprisoned for the faith or who withdrew into ascetic lives also entered the ranks of sainthood as so-called white martyrs. Up until the tenth century, saints generally were acclaimed by the people; only later did the official canonization process become the major avenue toward sainthood. During the Middle Ages, popular devotion to the saints engendered the pilgrimages, traditions, and festivals that are often still associated with the saints. The concept of festival stems from the Latin words festum (feast) and indirectly, feria (free day). Many of the Church’s festivals had roots in pagan harvest feasts and celebrations of spring or new life. The word Easter in English, for example, stems from Oestre, an Anglo-Saxon goddess associated with the spring equinox. Earth-bound symbols of renewal—water and fire—were incorporated into Christian worship. And All Souls’ Day originally existed as the Saxon New Year or Capodanno in Italy. In the eleventh century, Odilo of Cluny created All Saints’ Day (November 1) and All Souls’ Day (November 2) in an attempt to thwart pagan practices. Festivals tended to be great equalizers, because peasants and landlords both saw changes in their daily behavior. Peasants did not have to work and landlords had to provide goods for the feasts. Time suddenly took on a new dimension, becoming “time out of time.” Sociologist Emile Durkheim’s criteria for feast days and holidays included classifying feast days as either being recommitment holidays (Easter, Christmas, and most saints’ feast days come under this category) or tension-management holidays (Carnival and possibly All Souls’ Day fit into this category).
Saints’ Days Most feast days commemorated the patron saints of villages, although other saints were lauded on name days (christenings) and special days associated with major historical events, for example, St. Joseph’s Day and the end of famine. Patron saints served as protectors of individuals, institutions, occupations, and nations, or at least regions. They also symbolized various virtues aspired to by human beings. Preparations for festivals and feast days included cleaning (purification), wearing special clothing including masks, religious services and processions, incantations, prayers, displays of shrines and special relics, and so on. Village women handled most of the preparations for the festivals. Perhaps the most memorable part of festivals dealt with the foods prepared, usually by the women, although in some cases men prepared various special dishes. Most of these acts of preparation had origins deeply rooted in the past, associated with purification from evil spirits and other polluting elements. Saints in the Roman Catholic Church served several purposes, especially what folklorists call revitalization—a renewal and reconfirmation of the cyclical aspects of an individual’s, and hence, society’s, life. Festivals take celebrants out of so-called ordinary time, cast them into a ritualistic mode, and then bring them back to, and reconfirm, their place in the order of life. Today, nearly every day of the year there is a saint’s day being celebrated somewhere in the world. Some of the grander feast days observed beyond the individual or village level included St. Patrick’s Day (March 17), St. Joseph’s Day (March 19), St. John the Baptist’s Day (June 24), St. James’s Day (Santiago, June 25), All Saints’ Day (November 1), Candlemas (February 2), Christmas (December 25), and “moveable” or “temporal” feasts, such as Easter and Whitsuntide (Pentecost). The feast of San Fermin (July 7) is still acclaimed with the running of the bulls in Pamplona, Spain. And the Feast of the Assumption (August 15) is a harvest feast, glorifying the assumption into heaven of the Virgin Mary, a day when the fruits and vegetables of the harvest, including wheat, were blessed. Of these feasts, Carnival/Carnevale was another moveable feast with deep-rooted traditions. Meaning “goodbye to meat,” Mardi Gras/Fat Tuesday was the day when all meat, butter, cheese, and other animal products had to be consumed in preparation for the rigorous 40-day fast of Lent. At the same time, the “time out of time” effect took place, as people donned masks in parts of Italy and behaved in a manner best described as scandalous in ordinary society. Gluttony, one of the Seven Deadly Sins, took the frontseat for a day or several days prior to Ash Wednesday or the beginning of Lent. As Carnevale came to a close, and the feasting ended, people moved back into their ordinary and relatively well-ordered lives. This is what happens in the modern-day celebrations of Mardi Gras in New Orleans; and Carnival in Brazil and Venice, Italy. Many of the foods and dishes served at a particular saint’s day feast came into being because of previous traditions associated with pagan holidays. Examples include Shrove Tuesday pancakes and the tradition of sun
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worship in England, or the time of the year, for example, lambing at Easter (spring). These celebrations originated in religious cult practices and agricultural rituals mixed with the fulfillment of promises made to a saint. Popular songs sung at these feasts often contain traces of these extinct cults, with veiled references to orgiastic encounters, sexual longing, and praises to the sun god. Another factor of importance was the carry-over of the medieval concept of clean and unclean foods, reflected in the rigid fasts of Lent and of other times during the liturgical year. In other words, different saints’ day dishes were served all across Europe or in the regions later colonized by European explorers, missionaries, and settlers. One special food item appeared on most menus when feast days rolled around, at least the more important feasts, and that food was meat. Because of the Roman Catholic Church’s prohibitions against meat for fast days ( Wednesdays and Fridays and sometimes Saturdays), Lent, and the little Lent before Advent, people preferred meat as a celebratory food. While the nobility enjoyed meat more often than did the peasants, because the privilege of hunting was reserved for them, even they felt the sting of the Church’s chronic prohibitions on meat. And during certain feast days, the lords were required to provide meat for their vassals and peasants. For example, the custom of Christmas boar as eaten in medieval England came about because of the hunting season and pagan feasts. Meat given as a sacrifice no longer required the ritual slaughter of animals on the altar, but providing meat was often no less a sacrifice because of the cost. Sometimes the Church would relax the Lenten strictures on certain ingredients in exchange for a specified amount of money. Take the German holiday bread stollen as a case in point. According to a story relayed by Betsy Oppenneer, during Advent in the early Middles Ages, the Church allowed bread made with only flour, water, and oats. Petitioning the pope to permit them to include milk and butter in their loaves, two brothers—Ernest and Albrecht of Saxony—succeeded in getting the “Butter Letter” written. And so stollen came into being. Bread was another food that cooks served in one form or another for most saints’ days. Tied to the Eucharistic ritual, bread also had deep roots from the old days and old ways before the advent of Christianity. After all, wheat traveled with the Roman legions wherever they went. Celebration breads often required the whitest flour possible, at a time when coarse, dark flour provided most people—lords and peasants alike—with the “staff of life.” Many of these breads incorporated expensive ingredients, and so the use of spices, sugar, dried fruits, and nuts reflected the desire to give the best of the family’s larder as an offering to God. Bakers studded stollen, hot cinnamon buns, and other similar breads with these expensive and rare treats that required some financial sacrifice. In the use of various breadstuffs, St. Joseph’s Day (March 19), as memorialized in the United States and Italy, displayed an enormous number of characteristics typical of most saint day festivals. Pope Pius IX named St. Joseph the
Saints’ Days patron saint of the Universal Church on December 8, 1870, but the popular celebration of the feast began in Sicily during the Middle Ages. Practices associated with St. Joseph’s Day represent the type of festival that Durkheim called recommitment or revitalization in more modern parlance. One of the most significant aspects of the celebration included large altars, called tables, dedicated to the saint, festooned with breads of all shapes and sizes and symbols. In thanks to Sicily’s patron saint St. Joseph (Giuseppe) for saving the people from a severe famine, the different loaf shapes of the breads made for this feast day evoke ancient symbolism, often intertwining Christian symbols with ancient fertility motifs. Underlying this feast day is the aura of a pagan spring festival, which makes sense, as the day falls close to the spring equinox. Three braids gracing a loaf of bread stand for the Holy Trinity, while a lamb shape symbolizes Christ, and roses signify the Virgin Mary. But here, too, pagan symbolism shines through, in the form of peacocks (immortality), lilies (purity), horses (intelligence), and broad beans (fertility), all shapes found in breads baked for Sicilian-style St. Joseph’s Day altars by modern-day Italian Americans and Italians, as well as those discussed in historical accounts. Before any eating occurs, the parish priest blesses the altars. And then three children, called virgineddi and representing the Holy Family, eat a sample of each of the breads and other dishes, meatless due to the saint’s day falling during Lent. The total number of dishes numbers in the dozens and includes everything from pasta to bean soup to sfince, special ricotta fritters made for St. Joseph’s Day. Fennel and oranges, both symbols of spring, decorate the St. Joseph tables, as do beans and seeds, ancient symbols of fertility. An abbreviated list of the foods presented at a St. Joseph’s table in Salemi reads like an encyclopedia of Italian cooking, including everything from pasta made with bread crumbs; soups laden with six types of beans; fish-fried, baked, and stuffed; and pastries and breads so numerous that the altar/table really groans with the weight of all the glorious abundance. One of the best places to enjoy a modern version of a saint’s day festival is in Salemi, Sicily, near Palermo, Italy. This revived version of the feast exemplifies the traits of most saints’ day feasts with its ritualization of food and behavior, and the memorializing of a sacred figure. Further Reading: Burton, Katherine, and Helmut Ripperger. Feast Day Cookbook. New York: David McKay Company, 1951. www.ewtn.com/library/FAMILY/ FSTDAY.TXT; Collister, Linda, and Anthony Blake. The Bread Book. New York: Lyons Press, 2000; Cumbo, Enrico Carlson. “La Festa del Pane: Food, Devotion, and Ethnic Identity, The Feast of San Francisco di Paola, Toronto “[Online, August 7, 2006]. Material History of American Religion Project Web site: materialreligion.org/journal/festa.html; Della-Casa, Nicoletta. “Sardinian Ceremonial Breads.” Folklore 95 (1984): 30–37; Field, Carol. Celebrating Italy. New York: William Morrow & Co., 1990, pp. 397–398; Oppenneer, Betsy. Celebration Breads: Recipes, Tales, and Traditions. New York: Simon & Schuster, 2003; Schugraf, Ernst. Cooking with the Saints: An Illustrated History of Authentic Recipes Old and Modern. San Francisco: Ignatius Press, 2001; Urlin,
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Ethel L. Festivals, Holy Days, and Saints’ Days: A Study in Origins and Survivals in Church Ceremonies & Secular Customs. London: Simkin, Marshall, Hamilton, Kent & Co., 1915 (reprinted 1990); Rodrigues, Gabriel Moacyr. “Traditional Festivities in Cape Verde: http://www.umassd.edu/specialPrograms/caboverde/ cvfestas.html.
Cynthia D. Bertelsen
Serving Platters Serving objects and cooking tools reveal the development of food technologies for storing, cooking, and sharing food through history. Artifacts made of many materials, from stone and clay, bone and ivory, leather, wood, plant fibers, glass and metals, even plastics, are markers of societal development, affluence, social position, customs, and cultural etiquette. While hunter–gatherer campfires allowed for communal serving from the spit or a large pot, more complex societies brought food away from the fire to a table. When kitchens were separated from formal dining areas, many different kinds of vessels were needed to prepare, transport, and serve foods. Some of the oldest surviving samples of serving platters and vessels date from the Bronze Age—in Greek, Persian, Asian, and Roman societies. Bronze vessels from Roman Palestine, dating from the first century, were used in affluent households. The Phoenician colonies, trading along the eastern Mediterranean Sea, used terra-cotta and woven vessels to transport foods. Terra-cotta vessels were used for fermentation, storage, preparation, transportation, and serving food and drink, and samples of this pottery have been uncovered dating back several centuries B.C. in the Middle East. The Greeks prized a black slip glaze for the elegantly styled clay cups and pitchers used for ritualized wine drinking. Romans used Arretine and Samian ware, a red pottery, and served guests from discus-like platters used to carry foods from kitchens. Medieval paintings show farm workers eating in the fields as well as household servants seated at long, wooden tables. The workers used a trencher, literally a tree hollowed out to contain food at the center of a table. Those at the table carried their own knives to slice their share, sometimes bringing food directly to their mouths with their knife or on tranchoirs, stale bread that was used as a plate. The early versions of two-pronged forks appeared first in Italy, in the Middle Ages, along with individual place settings; evidence of smaller trenchers, or wooden plates and pewter mugs set directly in front of individuals, document further changes in etiquette and eating customs. Paintings, museums, and European palaces hold china of ornate decoration, silver candelabra, footed bowls, and huge service trays from wealthy and royal homes. The emergence of such opulent serving dishes reflects the sophistication of silver and gold work as well as hand-painted porcelain
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work. These displays indicate that Gullah Sweetgrass Baskets international trade brought an exchange of techniques to manuWhile many societies developed basketry skills, those skills facture complex porcelain, brass, brought to the South Carolina Low Country by West African bronze, silver, and pewter work, as slaves, called sweet grass baskets, are one of the oldest art forms of African origin in North America. These coiled, woven well as hand-painted pottery made baskets were originally used to collect and store rice, fish, of ceramic and stoneware, handvegetables, and staples. Some were used for winnowing rice, blown crystal, and cut glass. These called a fanner, and others served everyday transportation techniques evolved into significant and storage functions. Gullah families have kept their basket industries in many nations. making tradition, a link to their cultural heritage, passed on Service platters can demonthrough generations. Family members shared the work: men strate wealth, religious affiliation, and boys gathered the sweet grasses (sweetgrass, bulrush, sophistication, and style; they long leaf pine needles, and palmetto leaves) from swamp and may convey artistic expression marshlands, while girls and women “sewed” the baskets. Mount in addition to their useful funcPleasant, just outside Charleston, South Carolina, is the cention. They can mark the affluence ter of the Gullah community where families ply their handmade of their owners, bearing family and signed wares from carts along the road, in the covered Charleston market, and on the sidewalks outside the historic crests, initials and/or significant city sites. dates impressed into the service piece. Some vessels, such as wine decanters, chalice cups, or wafer trays, have ritual significance and traditions associated with them. Platters, soup tureens, trays manufactured from materials such as silver or brass, may be used solely to transport foods cooked in another vessel. Some serving vessels can withstand heat and move directly from cooking heat to table, some rest on trivets—decorative, insulated items that diffuse heat and protect tables and cloths from scorching. By the end of the twentieth century, in most developed societies, style and function had shifted to accommodate commercial appliances and equipment in affluent homes. Industrial design plastics and other man-made, synthetic materials are now used alongside family heirloom silver service and hand-painted platters. Further Reading: The Rietz Collection of Food Technology at the California Academy of Sciences, www.calacademy.org/researc/anthropoloty/rietzcoll/med. html; Allen, Gary, ed. Remarkable Service. New York: John Wiley & Sons, 2001.
Carol G. Durst-Wertheim
Singles Bachelors have roamed the urban landscape for centuries, entertaining friends and lovers in public and private spaces. It is only in very recent times that single women are expected to compete on equal footing with their
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bachelor counterparts in most arenas. Entertaining and hosting by singles, at home or on the town, is now the province of both genders. The bachelor came into his own in the nineteenth century, as the emerging middle classes created a new demographic of men for whom marrying early in life was not an immediate necessity. For these men, marriage was not necessary for sheer survival or to meet the expectations of their social group. Some young men could afford to spend time on their own to travel or live independently before “settling down.” Clerks and secretaries were universally male, and this group of bachelors, very often newcomers to cities from rural areas, occupied themselves with work and getting ahead in life. Leisure and entertainment options were modest, but beginning to become affordable to more people. Certain professions successfully harbored bachelors and indulged their alleged eccentricities. In academe, such a man, especially in Britain, could live comfortably within his college, living, teaching, and entertaining his students and colleagues in the same set of rooms, and dining communally with all members of the academic community. Other bachelors, perhaps more daringly, began to live on their own in city apartments. In fiction, Sherlock Holmes was quite comfortable alone in his London rooms, and Lawrence Selden in Edith Wharton’s The House of Mirth provides the ultimate model of Gilded Age bachelorhood. Other, less affluent bachelors, lived in rooming or boarding houses, their meals prepared for them by the proprietors. Since personal privacy was greatly diminished, most outlets for entertaining would be limited to the public sphere: workingmen’s or fraternal associations; nights at the local tavern or sporting events for the company of men; mixed religious activities or lectures; and modest public strolls to entertain a young woman. The need for workers in growing industries in the nineteenth century caused a great population shift from rural areas to urban centers. Single women, too, began to move to cities for employment. Factory-sponsored living arrangements and rooming-house culture left little room for private entertaining but for new urban singles, the rooming-house culture helped create leisure time and disposable income, both necessities for entertaining. Securing independent living arrangements was the key element for bachelors and single girls to properly entertain friends, family, and paramours. This shift began to happen in large numbers in the twentieth century, as more singles began to inhabit their own or shared apartments. Esquire magazine was founded in 1933 (in the middle of the Depression) as a lifestyle magazine for single, moneyed men. With a focus on literature, cars, food, drink, clothing, and women, it created an idealized world of consumption for wealthy bachelors and aspirants. Along with its later rival Playboy, an emphasis on “feminine elements” such as grooming, haberdashery, fine food, and cooking skills was tempered by the liberal exposés of scantily clad women, thus reinforcing the notion that real men could appreciate cooking and fine clothing as well as cars, alcohol, and women. Or, as Hugh Hefner wrote in Playboy’s first issue, which came out in December 1953: “We enjoy
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mixing up cocktails and an hors Keg Parties d’oeuvre or two, putting a little mood music on the phonograph Keg parties are notorious events featuring alcohol served from and inviting a female acquaintance a metal cylinder container referred to as a keg. Keg parties for a quiet discussion on Picasso, are especially popular among the younger generation. They are often held in isolated wooded areas or basements or at college Nietzsche, jazz, sex.” The sophistifraternities. cated bachelor was both a renaisDespite their arguably negative impact on the youth, since sance man, an informed hedonist, the push of kegs in the late 1960s by the breweries, keg parand a good consumer, all in one. ties have been wildly popular among college students. Until Esquire and Playboy both the late 1980s, it was legal to drink alcohol on many college launched their own publishing campuses, with 18 being the legal drinking age in many states. houses, turning articles on food, Many organizations, especially Greek fraternities, held keg pardrink, and entertaining into cookties during the first week of school to draw new and returning books, entertaining manuals, and students. Many of the freshman students did not have a lot of lifestyle handbooks for the sophisexperience with drinking alcohol, and over-indulgence led to a ticated bachelor. Playboy created a string of well-publicized tragedies, including rapes and deaths. media empire of television shows, This has led to many colleges becoming dry campuses, and the day of the open keg party is gone. While keg parties cannot be videotapes and DVDs, and online advertised or admitted to, the word is that they still widely exist. media, beginning with Playboy’s Most have moved to locations off campus, such as local homes Penthouse in 1959, a syndicated TV or outdoor rural locations. variety show staged in an idealized Playboy-designed bachelor pad. EsFURTHER READING quire’s motto today is “Man at His Corsi Staub, Wendy. College Life 101: Kim: The Party. New York: BerkBest.” It offers much the same conley Publishing Group, 1997. tent as in earlier decades: advice for Niles, Bo. What Goes with What for Parties: Planning Made Easy. Sterunderstanding women; and informaling, VA: Capital Books, 2003. tion on accessories, clothing, food, Shannon and Kurt Heffern cooking, and entertaining. Playboy, selling a million copies of each issue by 1959, also featured tableaus and architectural renderings of idealized bachelor spaces, such as “Playboy’s Penthouse Apartment” (September 1956), a “Weekend Hideaway” (April 1959), “The Playboy Town House” (May 1962), and “Playboy’s Patio Terrace” (August 1963). Each space was a carefully rendered design scenario for successful living and entertaining. The bachelor pad has always been seen as a vehicle for seduction. At its comical extreme, one can recall Rock Hudson’s sofa in Pillow Talk (1959) with pushbutton controls to start the stereo, dim the lights, and automatically open the sofabed. For single women, socially acceptable living arrangements were not necessarily as varied. After World War II, the peacetime manufacturing industry and growing corporate world promised jobs. Perhaps by seeing their mothers and older siblings living independently during the war, young unmarried women began to move outside the home in unprecedented numbers. Many would live in women’s rooming houses, but others began to live together in apartments and shared houses. Possibilities for single women living a fulfilling life on their own before marrying began to take shape.
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Singlehood in the 1950s and 1960s was seen as an increasingly preferential state, at least for a few years. One could live and work, experience city life and romance, and enjoy being independent. Working in a corporate environment allowed ample opportunities to meet the right young executive who could provide a happy and secure future. Rona Jaffe provides an interesting look at the postwar working girl’s world in her novel The Best of Everything (1958, and made into a 1959 film). The book is a mildly sensational look at the joys and perils of single life in Manhattan seen through the eyes of a group of young women working in corporate America. There are: deceptive men (many); affairs with married men; drunken passes from the boss; failed and frustrated careers; unexpected pregnancies; and a suicide. The novel shows the complications in women’s lives created by their attempts to integrate into traditionally all-male worlds. In 1962, Helen Gurley Brown’s Sex and the Single Girl created a sensation when it encouraged a considerably less constrictive social lifestyle for single women. Betty Friedan’s The Feminine Mystique, a landmark study of American women’s identities and their dissatisfaction within traditional marriage roles, was published the following year. Following on the success of Single Girl, Brown wrote Sex and the Office (1964) and eventually became editor-in-chief of Cosmopolitan. In 1965, a clearly unauthorized knockoff appeared: Saucepans and the Single Girl: The Cookbook With All The Ingredients For That Light-Hearted Leap From Filing Cabinet to Flambé;. Saucepans was written for single women working in corporate America who wanted to cook, impress, and catch an up-and-coming executive for a husband. Brown herself did not advise single girls to cook for their suitors (“After you’re married you’re home a long time cooking, cooking, cooking. Better go out while the going is good!”) but by 1969 had revised her opinions enough to publish a different take on cooking for single women, called Helen Gurley Brown’s Single Girl’s Cookbook. Gay men and lesbians were until recent times part of underground subcultures defined by their distance from mainstream society. They have always used entertaining as a means of self-identification and communitybuilding. Throughout the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, activities and places such as private tea dances, nightclubs, bars, and other private and semi-private events have been used to demonstrate identity and nurture the gay community in the face of a hostile and disapproving public. But with the more open climate of recent decades, social events, community activities, and other shared entertainments take place more easily in the public sphere as well as in private. Recent population statistics reveal that married couples are now a steadily decreasing population group in America. So as the percent of single adults gradually rises, bachelor and singles entertaining will become even more the norm for many social activities. It has also become firmly imprinted on us because of its near omnipresence in the popular culture of the twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. From the televised presence of
Soul Food Seinfeld, Friends, and Sex in the City and their innumerable spin-offs, popular representations of singles will continue to offer the suggestion of endless freedom and possibilities for the single life. Further Reading: Brown, Helen Gurley. Sex and the Single Girl. New York: B. Geis Associates, 1962; Esquire’s Handbook for Hosts. New York: Grosset & Dunlap, 1953; Hollows, Joanne. “The Bachelor Dinner: Masculinity, Class and Cooking in Playboy, 1953–1961.” Continuum: Journal of Media and Cultural Studies 16 (2) 2002, pp. 143–155; Israel, Betsy. Bachelor Girl: The Secret History of Single Women in the Twentieth Century. New York: William Morrow, 2002; Jaffe, Rona. The Best of Everything. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1958; Kragen, Jinx, and Judy Perry. Saucepans and the Single Girl: The Cookbook With All The Ingredients For That Light-Hearted Leap From Filing Cabinet to Flambé! New York: Doubleday, 1965 [reprint from Warner Books in 2006]; Loeb, Robert H. Wolf in Chef’s Clothing: The Picture Cook and Drink Book for Men. New York: Wilcox & Follett, 1950; Mario, Thomas. Playboy’s Host and Bar Book. Chicago: Playboy Press, 1971; Neuhaus, Jessamyn. Manly Meals and Mom’s Home Cooking: Cookbooks and Gender in Modern America. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2003; Osgerby, Bill. “The Bachelor Pad as Cultural Icon: Masculinity, Consumption and Interior Design in American Men’s Magazines, 1930–65.” Journal of Design History 18 (1) 2005, pp. 99–113.
Jeffrey Makala
Soul Food Soul food is a term from the 1960s used to describe African American traditional cooking and foods unique to the black folk life coming out of the American South. In its generic sense, it means the canon of African American cuisine. The African American tradition in entertaining guests sprung from a synthesis of traditional African values that held hospitality and feasting a visitor in high regard with the Western social graces of wealthy EuroAmerican urban households and the Big House of the plantation. The Wolof of Senegambia, one of the more influential ethnic groups brought to America during the slave trade had an intricate culture based on keeping the social peace, grounded in the practice of teranga, or hospitality. The Igbo, another group that came en masse to the colonies, had a formal ritual by which a guest was provided ceremonial food and drink complete with elaborate prayers and libations. In most traditional agrarian African societies, the harvest season and life-cycle events meant open-door hospitality, widespread feasting, and communal celebration. During slavery, African Americans employed as domestics learned English- and French-based approaches to formal entertaining, and carried many of those elements into their own communities’ approach to hospitality, including special service–wear, the custom of fanning the diners during the meal to cool them down and wave away insects, and a prescribed order of courses, which to people used to
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eating communally was a very different way of approaching the meal. Certain dishes reserved for special company, including cakes, pies, fried chicken, waffles, macaroni, baked ham, and roast turkey, quickly became a part of edible vocabulary of African American entertaining, alongside fare such as egg-based cornbreads, okra, bean dishes, and one-pot stews. During the calendar year, the average enslaved African American could expect several occasions where the diet moved beyond corn, salt pork or fish, potatoes (white or sweet), molasses, legumes, and a few leafy greens. Unofficial by law, but sacrosanct to the community, enslaved Africans held weddings where at least one woman enslaved in North Carolina reported a “pretty white cake with orange flavored icing,” made special for her wedding day. Louis Hughes, formerly enslaved in Mississippi, spoke of apple dumplings, peach cobbler, barbecued pork, and mutton being the main dishes at the Fourth of July barbecue at his home plantation. William Wells Brown reported that in Missouri, if a slaveholder did not have a full feast for a corn shucking, they would be openly derided in song for not having provided cake for a cakewalk, “turkey with clam sauce,” or fresh white bread, for all to enjoy. The African American experience as enslaved domestics carried into an early literature based on their training and experience in the so-called
Ellen Patterson, left, serves “soul food” outside Sylvia’s restaurant in the Harlem neighborhood of New York, where free breakfast and music were provided to celebrate the restaurant’s 40th anniversary, August 1, 2002. AP/ Wide World Photos.
Soul Food Big House. Several African Americans, most notably, Tunis Campbell, wrote short guides on entertaining and hospitality for free domestics of all backgrounds, complete with recipes. His Hotel Keepers, Head Waiters, and Housekeepers’ Guide (1848) was merely one of several crucial written contributions to formal American entertaining. In the nineteenth century, a growing number of black catering companies were founded by families that had once performed in the capacity of house servants and household chefs during slavery. Among the more remarkable were the Dorsey (Maryland) and Augustin (Haiti) families in Philadelphia, and the Fosset family of Cincinnati, formerly enslaved by Thomas Jefferson. These families not only passed on unique approaches to seasoning and culinary innovation from their own community, they effectively translated American versions of fine European dining to an increasingly more sophisticated audience. The fame of these early black caterers of the Northeast and Midwest was such that they often bragged that no society function was official without their food or circumspect service. After emancipation, more formal membership in black churches, social clubs, and fraternal organizations provided occasions for communities to hold picnics, homecomings, and church socials where soul food was enjoyed. Families were especially honored to host clergy, and chicken came to be known as the preacher’s bird, or gospel bird, since it was usually served to visiting preachers and their families for Sunday dinner. Drawing from “days of rest,” the term used during slavery when better rations might be offered, and from the early days of community formation after Emancipation, the Sunday dinner became a ritual by which families expressed their emotional bonds and aesthetic tastes. Preparing greens, dough for fresh yeast breads and biscuits, shelling peas, snapping beans, making salads, and plucking chickens might occupy the women of the household late into Saturday night. Mothers, grandmothers, and sometimes fathers might rise early to make a substantial Sunday breakfast before a long day at church, and generally someone returned home to ready the table for the late afternoon/early evening meal. Only the best tablecloths, plates, and silverware were used to set the table, the house was cleaned until it was spotless, and candles might be lit to enhance the occasion. As African Americans moved from the rural South to the cities of the Northeast, Midwest, and West Coast, they carried many of these organizational dinners and celebratory style to new communities. Despite poverty and hardships based on racial and class status, a special effort was made to normalize community life through these types of events. Besides being fancy affairs attended by well-dressed ladies and gentlemen, African American entertaining moved beyond having “class” and became distinguished by being used as a vehicle for social justice. Rent parties for needy families, communal dinners held by Father Divine (a black religious figure and philanthropist of the Harlem Renaissance), and benefits for legal teams fighting discrimination, racial violence, and other communal woes, all translated food into a means to facilitate social progress. These traditions helped define the
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civil rights movement and the era of greater black professional achievement where scholars, lawyers, and medical professionals scoffed by the white establishment were honored at elaborate dinners held for them by their own communities. In traditional African American cultural, social, and familial gatherings, food is served buffet or family style, with the elders and children fed first according to need. Depending on the religious tradition of the assembled group, whether they are Baptist, Muslim, Jewish, Yoruba, or Akan, a benediction or libation of some sort is offered on behalf of the group. In keeping with some elements of African tradition, small circles of eaters form once everyone has received food, replicating the practice of eating around a common bowl. Different occasions call for different dishes. New Year’s Day is typically the most ceremonial and revered opportunity to entertain guests and enjoy traditional African American foods. Greens—collards, mustard, or kale—are served for blessings of cash money, while black-eyed peas are served for change. Some families serve hog jowl or other parts of the hog’s head to represent being at the head and not the tail. Because New Year’s Day also falls on Imani Day, the Day of Faith during Kwanzaa, for some African American families, soul food is served at the Karamu, or feast, where it is joined by Afro-Caribbean curries, chicken and groundnut stew, beef suya, fried plantain, Joloff rice, and other West African dishes celebrating the unity and diversity of the African diaspora. Kwanzaa, innovated in 1966 by Dr. Maulana Karenga, is celebrated by an increasing number of African American families and has introduced a number of Pan-African elements, including symbolic table settings such as African straw mats, candles in the colors of the African liberation struggle, African art, incense, and fragrant oils, all of which have become more integrated into the everyday sense of style and family identity practiced by African American households. A number of chicken dishes, including, but not restricted to, fried chicken are prepared for funerals and family reunion as well as the traditional Sunday dinner. At African American weddings in the Yoruba tradition, sweet foods such as pumpkin or sweet potatoes are served to honor Oshun, the orisha, or divinity of love and marriage. In Muslim households, lamb is often served for Eid-ul-Adha, the feast of the sacrifice of Ishmael. Every fraternity, sorority, family reunion, and informal gathering of friends in the African American community has had its share of barbeques, fish fries, and potluck suppers, where spicy food, sweet and sticky desserts, dancing, music, card games, sports, and storytelling bring people together across the generations. Regionally based soul dishes—gumbo, jambalaya, red beans and rice, burgoo, Brunswick stew, crawfish or crab boils, and Frogmore stew (a South Carolina shrimp, corn, sausage, and potato dish)—are still used to bring people together even in those areas of the Northeast, Midwest, or West Coast where African Americans migrated several generations ago. African American cookbooks and restaurateurs have become essential in helping the soul food entertaining tradition to maintain its cultural respect inside and outside of the African American community. Many women
St. Patrick’s Day have authored cookbooks and set up eating establishments that celebrate the African American aesthetic in décor, hospitable service, gastronomic excellence, and a dedication to keeping personal and communal histories alive. Some of these women include the late Edna Lewis of New York and Atlanta, Leah Chase of New Orleans, Mildred “Mama Dip” Council of Durham, and Sylvia Woods of Harlem. Scholar cooks like Jessica Harris have added to this canon by providing volumes of recipes and full menus for different African American cultural and life-cycle events, thus promoting a more self-aware eating experience. Contemporary voices in African American entertaining have emerged to meet the new demands of an African American community that is somewhat underserved by the Martha Stewart market. B. Smith, restaurateur and style-expert began B. Smith with Style in the 1990s showing viewers unique ways to incorporate soul food, contemporary African American visual art, music, and dance into an upscale soul food aesthetic. Following her, is the neo–soul food of G. Garvin, whose cooking show and cookbooks have moved soul food beyond single-dish courses to eye-catching meals plated restaurant style with hints of nouvelle cuisine. Further Reading: Bower, Anne, ed. African American Foodways: Explorations of History and Culture. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2007; Harris, Jessica, The Welcome Table: African American Heritage Cooking. New York: Fireside Press, 1995; Zanger, Mark H. The American History Cookbook. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2003.
Michael W. Twitty
St. Patrick’s Day St. Patrick’s Day is a holiday honoring Saint Patrick, a missionary in the fifth century A.D. who is credited with converting Ireland to Christianity. It is celebrated annually on March 17, the day believed to be the anniversary of his death. Much Irish folklore surrounds St. Patrick’s life, however, little of it is actually substantiated. Today, people of all nationalities celebrate St. Patrick’s Day in cities across the United States, Canada, and Australia. Although North America is home to some of the largest productions, St. Patrick’s Day has been celebrated in other locations far from Ireland, including Japan, Singapore, and Russia. Originally a Catholic holy day, St. Patrick’s Day has evolved into more of a secular holiday, even in Ireland, where Irish laws mandated that pubs be closed on March 17 as late as the 1970s. When St. Patrick’s Day falls on a Sunday, church calendars commonly move it to Monday. When the 17th falls during Holy week, the observance of the feast can even be moved to April. Beginning in 1995, however, the Irish government began a national campaign to use St. Patrick’s Day as an opportunity to increase tourism. Close to one million people now take part in Dublin ‘s St. Patrick’s Festival.
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St. Patrick’s Day Parade on New York City’s Fifth Avenue, 1961. Library of Congress.
The five-day celebration features parades, concerts, street theater, family carnivals, comedy, street performances, dance, a treasure hunt, and fireworks culminating on March 17 with the St. Patrick’s Day parade. St Patrick’s feast day is a national holiday in Ireland. St. Patrick’s Day parades are an American invention. Irish immigrants to the United States began publicly observing St. Patrick’s Day as far back as 1737, when Boston held its first St. Patrick’s Day parade. Among the most renowned of the parades is the New York City parade, which officially dates to March 17, 1766, and was organized by Irish soldiers serving in His Majesty’s service. Over the years many large cities followed suit. The St. Patrick’s Day parade in Montréal, Canada, is the oldest in the country and was first held in 1824. The Savannah, Georgia, parade also dates to 1824, and there has been a St. Patrick’s Day parade in Pittsburgh since 1869. Today, more than 100 U.S. cities hold St. Patrick’s Day parades. The Irish presence in America increased dramatically in the 1840s, a result of Ireland’s potato famine of 1845–1849. The potato had been introduced to Ireland in the 1600s, and by the end of the 1700s, the Irish depended on it as a main source of nutrients. Tragically, in 1844, the potato crop failed, leaving more than a million people dead from starvation and disease. Many emigrated to America. Irish immigrants in America were often subject to discrimination in the workplace. American newspapers of the
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St. Patrick’s Day Parade in London. Pres Panayotov/Shutterstock.
day portrayed the Irish as lazy drunkards. As a group, the Irish were further disparaged for their role in the draft riots during the Civil War. The parade began to serve as a means for the Irish to show their strength and political power in the United States, and the number of marchers in the parades increased dramatically over the years. The New York press described the burgeoning parades with increased detail. Thirty thousand men marched in the 1870 parade. The line of march started with a platoon of policemen followed by the famous Sixty-Ninth Regiment, an Irish regiment that distinguished itself in the Civil War; the Legion of St. Patrick; the Men of Tipperary; 21 divisions of the Ancient Order of Hibernians; numerous parish benevolent societies; and total abstinence units. The parades sometimes drew criticism. In 1868, the Irish Citizen complained that too many German bands were hired to play. Acknowledging that there were only a few Irish bands in the city, it proffered that virtually every participant would prefer to march to “stirring airs” from the “old land” even if only played by fife and drum. The parade usually concluded with speeches balancing tales of persecution and suffering with those of humorous anecdotes. Music is closely associated with St. Patrick’s Day and has been an important part of Irish life that dates back to the ancient days of the Celts. The Celts’ oral culture passed religion, history, and legend from one generation to another through stories and songs. When the English passed laws forbidding the Irish to speak their own language, they turned to music to help them remember important events and hold on to their heritage. Music, too, was outlawed. Queen Elizabeth I went so far as to order all Irish pipers to be arrested and hanged on the spot. Today, traditional Irish bands are
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featured around the holiday. They use instruments that have been used for centuries, including the fiddle, the uilleann pipes, an Irish style bagpipe, the tin whistle, and the bodhran, an ancient type of frame drum. One traditional icon of the day is the shamrock. Irish folktale claims that St. Patrick used the three-leafed shamrock in his sermons to explain the Trinity. He used it to represent how the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit could all exist as separate elements of the same entity. The shamrock was a sacred plant in ancient Ireland because it symbolized the rebirth of spring. Patrick’s followers adopted the custom of wearing a shamrock on his feast day. By the seventeenth century, the shamrock had become a political symbol of emerging Irish nationalism. As the English began to seize Irish land and make laws against the use of the Irish language and the practice of Catholicism, many Irish began to wear the shamrock as a symbol of cultural pride and defiance of English rule. The leprechaun is another image that is closely associated with St. Patrick’s Day. The idea of leprechauns, whose name means “small-bodied fellow,” is believed to come from Celtic belief in fairies whose magical powers were used for both good and evil. Celtic folktales include references to leprechauns acting as shoe-menders for the other fairies. They are portrayed as cantankerous characters that often resort to trickery to protect their fabled treasure. Other than their roots in Irish folklore, leprechauns have nothing to do with St. Patrick. In 1959, Walt Disney introduced a new kind of leprechaun with the release of the film Darby O’Gill and the Little People. This friendlier leprechaun quickly came to be a symbol associated with both St. Patrick’s Day and Ireland itself. Foods commonly eaten on St. Patrick’s Day are Irish stew and corned beef and cabbage with boiled potatoes. Ironically, corned beef and cabbage is not considered the national dish of Ireland, as some people believe. While cabbage has long been an Irish food, corned beef made its way into the Irish diet at the turn of the nineteenth century when Irish immigrants living on New York City’s Lower East Side learned from their Jewish neighbors that corned beef was a cheap alternative to traditional Irish bacon. While meat and potatoes are a mainstay of the Irish diet, cattle are kept mostly for milk, which makes it possible for them to have a diet rich in dairy products. Root vegetables, such as parsnips, turnips, and carrots, and onions are also eaten in abundance. Also found in abundance in the Irish diet are seafood and lamb and plenty of oats, barley, and wheat. More traditional Irish fare includes baked codfish, poached salmon, kale with Irish bacon, coddle, champ, and colcannon. Coddle is a comfort dish of potatoes, sausages, and bacon. Both champ and colcannon are popular potato and vegetable dishes. Treats include Irish soda bread, bread pudding, and bannock, a buttermilk-moistened bread. Carrageen pudding is another dessert that is traditionally made with carrageen moss, a red algae that grows on rocks in the North Atlantic and forms a jelly when boiled; however, many cooks nowadays prepare carrageen pudding with commercially produced gelatin.
Stewart, Martha While beer is probably the most widely consumed beverage on St. Patrick’s Day, Irish coffee, a cocktail made with hot coffee, Irish whiskey, and sugar with a thick cream on top is another popular choice and a choice whose tradition does not go that far back in time. In the late 1930s and early 1940s, Foynes Airport in Ireland served as the hub for the flying boat, which traveled between the United States and Europe. In order to get to the terminal, passengers had to take a boat trip that often left them chilled to the bone in the cold, North Atlantic winter. Joe Sheridan, head chef at the airport, decided to help some passengers to warm up by adding a drop or two of Irish whiskey to their coffee. A surprised American passenger is said to have inquired if it was Brazilian coffee. Joe replied, “No, that’s Irish coffee!” Shannon airport replaced Foynes in 1945, and a plaque marking the achievement has been erected at Shannon Airport to commemorate the creation of Irish coffee. Years later, travel writer and San Francisco columnist Stanley Delaplane came to be one of the recipients of the warming brew. When Delaplane returned to the United States, he shared the newly discovered delight with a bartender at the Buena Vista restaurant in California, who began to promote the drink. The Buena Vista has since come to claim creation of the beverage and sells sets of stemware and the revised story of Irish coffee. Unfortunately, St. Patrick’s Day, once a day of ethnic pride, has come for many to be a cause for unbridled drinking and rowdiness, stereotypes the Irish hoped to dispel when the parades were popularized in the nineteenth century. By wearing green, the national color of Ireland and sporting shamrocks or green carnations, people proclaim themselves to be “Irish for a day.” Restaurants serve green beer, green bagels, and lime-green Jell-o. The city of Chicago has developed a unique tradition of even coloring the river water green. It started in 1962 when 100 pounds of green vegetable dye were added to its river. The tradition has continued to this day. Some cities paint the traffic stripe of their parade routes green. Savannah dyes its downtown city fountains green. Indianapolis dyes its Central Canal green. Some sports teams wear special uniforms to celebrate the holiday, a tradition started by the Boston Red Sox at spring training in 1990. Further Reading: Adair, Daryl, and Mike Cronin. The Wearing of the Green: A History of St. Patrick’s Day. New York: Routledge, 2002; Cohen, Hennig, and Tristram Potter Coffin, eds. The Folklore of American Holidays. Detroit, MI: Gale Research Company, 1987; Fallon, Michael J. The Definitive St. Patrick’s Day Festivity Book. Seattle, WA: Educare, 1997.
Dorothy Denneen Volo
Stewart, Martha For a quarter century, American domestic arts expert and media celebrity Martha Stewart has wielded unprecedented influence over home entertaining trends and consumer behavior. Stewart’s multimedia empire—offering
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“how-to” magazines and books; content for Internet, radio, and television; and mass market home décor products for all occasions—provides a broad consumer base with the techniques and tools to achieve fine living. While sometimes viewed as elitist, Stewart has branched out beyond a complicated, high-end approach to entertaining, creating a fresh perspective on everyday living that treats any social event as something worth celebrating. Stewart’s longevity, among a crowded field of competitors, is attributable to her talent at creating content for diverse audiences and embracing multiple media formats to extend her message and reach. Stewart’s approach to entertaining requires personal creativity and an appreciation of the homemade in a world that is often pre-packaged. She began her career as a caterer in Westport, Connecticut, after working as a model and stockbroker. In 1982 Stewart gained national prominence with the publication of her book, Entertaining. In the lavishly photographed coffee table edition, Stewart compiled recipes for every occasion—often for large groups—and outlined an approach to entertaining characterized by artistic presentation of food, use of antique linens, and unusual serving vessels. The cover portrayed Stewart as an elegantly dressed hostess at the center of activity (this association between her image and her brand was a trend that continued for years). Recipes were elaborate and complex, based on classic culinary techniques, and Stewart described four pillars of effective entertaining that would become the foundation for her future work—Creating an Ambience, Setting the Table, Making Food Look Beautiful, and Organization. Individual chapters portray the home as a natural place to entertain
Martha Stewart, c. 1990s. Courtesy of Photofest.
Stewart, Martha and include directions for staging kitchen parties, country buffets, holiday parties, and at-home weddings. Stewart sprinkled the text with personal anecdotes and encouraged expression of individual style in the planning and execution of parties. She preached an aesthetic of quality ingredients, impeccable culinary techniques, attention to detail, and beautiful presentation, all done amid classic celebratory settings. According to Entertaining, the hostess or host of a party should aim to design a one-of-kind social event, factoring in location, menu, music, serving dishes, utensils, and ambiance. In 1990, Stewart launched her flagship magazine, Martha Stewart Living, and packaged her entertaining philosophy in a monthly format with a more holistic approach that covered ideas for the home, garden, kitchen, and dining room. The magazine established a regular vehicle to present Stewart as a teacher of inspirational ideas, and featured the same style of beautiful photos and detailed instructions that were first seen in the best-selling Entertaining. In her columns, Stewart affirmed that beauty is a key factor in living and entertaining, and that theme was reflected in the materials, ingredients, and presentation techniques covered in the magazine. The magazine explored a wide range of social gatherings, often in more relaxed outdoor settings like skating parties, seaside dinners, lobster bakes, and birthday parties, with Stewart often depicted in the photo spread as hostess or honored guest. Good Things, Stewart’s signature tag line, was a regular section that suggested entertaining flourishes such as handmade napkin rings, place cards, table coverings, and customized ice cubes for special cocktails. The magazine produced a syndicated television show of the same name. For the 15th anniversary edition of the publication, Stewart wrote that her founding idea for the magazine was that the subject of living has no boundaries. The 1994 publication of Martha Stewart’s Menus for Entertaining extended Stewart’s original franchise but emphasized a shift from formal to more relaxed styles of entertaining. Crisp and authoritative, Stewart achieved icon status with regular exposure in print and broadcast venues. She founded a corporation, Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia. “The Martha Stewart Way” was often used to describe her distinctive style, and the magazine and K-Mart “Martha Stewart Everyday” products for the home inspired many imitators. Over time, Stewart introduced simplified options for time-starved homemakers. Everyday Food, a digest-sized publication sold at newsstands and grocery check-outs beginning in 2003, provided fast, simple recipes for weeknights that were suitable to serve company. The recipes in Everyday Food could be prepared with minimal fuss, using easily available supermarket ingredients. Regular features included stylish holiday dinner menus supplemented with shopping lists and preparation schedules. Following an extended legal battle and a conviction and brief prison term for lying to federal officials about an insider trading investigation, Stewart’s philosophy had evolved as she returned to the company she created, this time as Founding Editorial Director. In March 2005, Stewart told employees of Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia that the company may have focused
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too much on the details of entertaining and needed to put greater emphasis on the personal reasons that people entertained and decorated their homes. With the resolution of her legal situation, many questioned whether Stewart could regain her standing as a popular domestic expert, but she staged a spectacular comeback, appearing on two television shows and launching a series of DVDs and high-profile publishing projects. Stewart has remained true to her original philosophy and continues to dispense advice on every aspect of entertaining from food preparation to home ambience with her best-selling “Handbook” series—covering hors d’oeuvres, baking, and homekeeping. The marketing of Martha Stewart Signature Furniture, a joint venture with KB Homes to design custom homes, and the announcement of the “Martha Stewart Collection” exclusively for Macy’s have effectively propelled Stewart to the forefront of all segments of the home entertaining market. Further Reading: Editors of Martha Stewart Living, The. The Martha Stewart Living Cookbook. New York: Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia and Clarkson N. Potter, 2000; Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia, http://www.marthastewart. com; Stewart, Martha, and Roy Finamore. Entertaining. New York: Clarkson N. Potter, 1982; Stewart, Martha. The Martha Stewart Cookbook: Collected Recipes for Every Day. New York: Clarkson N. Potter, 1995.
T. W. Barritt
Sub-Saharan Africa In Nigerian storyteller Chinua Achebe’s classic novel Things Fall Apart, one of the oldest members of an Ibo extended family proclaims: A man who calls his kinsmen to a feast does not do so to save them from starving. They all have food in their own homes. When we gather together in the moonlit village ground it is not because of the moon. Every man can see it in his own compound. We come together because it is good for kinsmen to do so. (Achebe 118)
This sentiment applies equally well to kinswomen and to other areas of subSaharan Africa. Africa’s legendary hospitality, symbolized by words of welcome such as akwaaba in Ghana’s Akan language, or karibu in the Swahili of Kenya, extends beyond family. The essence of sub-Saharan African attitudes toward food and entertaining is to find joy in giving, in eating together, and in enjoying food in the lively company of family, friends, and guests. South African Desmond Tutu has written: “We say in Africa that a person is a person through other persons. A solitary human being is a contradiction in terms. We are made for togetherness, for friendship, for fellowship. Food is a part of that fellowship” (Samuelsson IX). Proverbs from throughout sub-Saharan Africa repeatedly bear witness to this emphasis on generosity, hospitality, reciprocity, and communality.
Sub-Saharan Africa “Wealth is not what you own, but what you give away” (Igbo); “Let the guest come so that the host or hostess may benefit [get well]” (Swahili); “If you visit someone and he entertains you with chicken soup, then it is your own chicken at home that you have eaten” ( Twi); “A visitor’s stomach is as small as the kidney of a bird” (Zulu). However, one must recognize, too, that sub-Saharan Africa is composed of some 47 countries spread across the second largest continent in the world. Moving south from the Sahara, the world’s largest desert, subSaharan Africa encompasses other deserts, semi-arid spaces, tropical and sub-tropical rainforests, rolling savannah grasslands, great fertile river and lake areas, coastal swamps, highland mountains and hillsides, and mild, temperate coastal lands. Besides its vast geographical and botanical diversity, it includes around 350 million people speaking over a thousand languages, and it has absorbed numerous cultural influences and mixes due to migration and immigration and social and technological changes. Its history stretches back beyond recorded history to the beginnings of humankind and encompasses the entertaining found in powerful ancient kingdoms alongside that of nomadic, loosely organized egalitarian societies. A common thread throughout this history is the role of hospitality, conviviality, and a communal orientation to society. The questions of who, how, what, and when one entertains are related to issues of power, social relations, inclusion and exclusion. In the context of increasing poverty, instability, and urbanization in sub-Saharan Africa, the traditional values of sharing and eating together are being challenged in new ways. One strategy for coping has been to rely on extended family and friends living outside the country, especially overseas to provide remittances home, particularly for funeral expenses. ANCIENT SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA Humankind likely originated in eastern Africa. Ethiopia was the Abyssinia of ancient times, and the legendary Nubian Kingdom of Cush was a commercial and cultural center from the early second millennium B.C. to about A.D. 350 that linked the Mediterranean and Middle Eastern civilizations with black African civilizations. Another powerful kingdom was Axum in northern Ethiopia, which was at its height from A.D. 300 to 700, and whose King Ezana converted to Christianity, sowing the seeds for the Amharic state of Ethiopia and the Ethiopian Coptic Church with its rigorous fast days and dietary prescriptions. About 3,000 years ago, the donkey began to replace the camel, which revolutionized desert transportation. Trans-Saharan trade routes flourished and aided the spread of Islam into sub-Saharan Africa by Arabs and North Africans such as the Berbers. Islam penetrated the region from the ninth century onwards. Two of the earliest accounts of the area’s food and culture come from the medieval travel writer Ibn Battuta, an Islamic scholar from Tangiers in
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North Africa. In 1331 he made an extended trip to the east coast of Africa, visiting the wealthy multicultural city-states along the Swahili coast, especially Mombasa and Kilwa. Twenty years later, from 1351 to 1352 he traveled to the powerful, cosmopolitan West African kingdom of Mali, which at its height spread over today’s countries of Mali, Mauritania, and Senegal. A Malian king converted to Islam in 1180, and the city of Jenne (Djenne) in the Mali empire was a center of learning and trade in the ancient Islamic world. Ibn Battuta enthusiastically described the foods he was given by the sultan of Maqdashaw (Mogadishu) as part of the ruler’s generous hospitality. After being greeted with betel nuts and banana leaves, he and his colleagues were given food three times a day for the three days they stayed there: Their food is rice cooked with ghee placed on a large wooden dish. They put on top dishes of ku¯sha¯ n—this is the relish, of chicken and meat and fish and vegetables. They cook banana before it is ripe in fresh milk [probably coconut milk] and they put it on a dish, and they put sour milk in a dish with pickled lemon on it and bunches of pickled chillies, vinegared and salted, and green ginger and mangoes . . .When they eat a ball of rice, they eat after it something from these salted and vinegared foods. Now one of the people of Maqdashaw habitually eats as much as a group of us would. They are extremely large and fat of body. (Hamdun and King 18)
In West Africa, Ibn Battuta was fascinated by the calabashes used for storing and serving foods: The calabashes in the land of the blacks become big and from them they make wooden dishes. They cut the calabash in two halves and make from it two dishes and they decorate them with beautiful decorations . . . the vessels from which he eats and drinks . . . are made out of calabashes. (40)
EASTERN AFRICA (ETHIOPIA, ERITREA, DJIBOUTI, SOMALIA, KENYA, TANZANIA, AND UGANDA) Influences in eastern Africa, especially along the Swahili Coast, come from Arab, Persian (today’s Iranian), Indian, and European (especially Portuguese, German, Italian, British, and French) influences, as well as those from Khoisan-, Bantu-, Cushitic-, and Nilotic-speaking peoples. There is a strong Muslim presence, which profoundly influences the diet of the region, especially seen in proscribed feast and fast days and in dietary prescriptions (e.g., eating only halaal, or lawful, meat; abstaining from alcohol). Coffee was likely discovered in northeastern Ethiopia around 600 B.C., and was originally drunk there mixed with butter, salt, honey, and/or spices. Muslims drink it instead of beer with their nyama choma (Swahili for “grilled meat”) when socializing with friends. The coffee-drinking ceremony is a highly developed art in Ethiopia. Red coffee berries are sun-dried, husked, washed, and re-dried, then roasted
Sub-Saharan Africa over coals to a dark brown, and pounded to powder with a wooden pestle. After careful preparation and heating the water, possibly burning incense to add to the atmosphere, the coffee is poured into a coffee pot, then tiny cups (siniwoch) are ceremoniously rinsed out and placed on a four-legged tray, and the scalding coffee is poured ( ye bunna sibatu, mefajetu, “the pleasure of coffee is in its burning sensation”). The first round, the abol, is sipped leisurely over conversation. Hot water is added to the pot for the second round, the huletegna. The third and final round is the bareka (blessing), when God’s blessing is invoked on the house. The classic staple dish in much of northeastern Africa, the so-called “Horn of Africa,” is the large fermented crepe-like bread called injera in Ethiopia and Eritrea, on which several stews (wats, or w’ets or alichas) and relishes are directly placed. The stews are commonly made from beef or poultry, or are vegetarian; they are occasionally made from fish. Injera is traditionally made from tef (or teff ), a special kind of millet, though it may be made also from corn, barley, sorghum, other millets, or rice. It is traditionally served on a special hourglass-shaped table called a mesob. Historically, housewives wove their families’ mesobs, which are covered circular basket tables made from grasses dyed red, green, blue, and yellow, and waterproofed with aloe. Diners gather around the table to eat from the common injera. Diners tear off a small piece from other injera folded and stacked on trays and use it to scoop up the stews. As a sign of respect and hospitality, a host may place choice pieces of meat wrapped in injera into his or her guest’s mouth, regardless of how full that guest may be.
A Kenyan woman cutting up vegetables, c. 1940–1948. Library of Congress.
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In other parts of eastern Africa, the staple starches include rice, corn, and bananas and plantains, and coconut milk is used to flavor dishes. Ugali, a stiff porridge commonly made from white or yellow cornmeal, finger or bulrush millet, or red or white sorghum, sometimes including cassava flour, has been called the most important food in East Africa. It is commonly eaten with a stew or relish, frequently made from greens, such as the popular dish sukuma wiki (“push the week”), a dish using leftovers and the greens called by the same name. In addition, a strong Indian influence is apparent: chapatis, samosas, and curries are all common along the coastal areas. For non-Muslims, alcoholic beverages play an important role in socializing as well as diet, from the honey mead tej of northeastern Africa to the beers common throughout the region, often made locally from finger millet or now increasingly brewed commercially. Among the Iteso of Kenya, the traditional greeting is “An’ajon?” which translates to “At whose house is beer being drunk today?” (Karp and Karp 101). WESTERN AFRICA (SENEGAL, THE GAMBIA, GUINEA-BISSAU, GUINEA, SIERRA LEONE, LIBERIA, IVORY COAST, GHANA, TOGO, BURKINA FASO, BENIN, NIGERIA, AND CAPE VERDE) In many parts of western Africa, a visitor is invited to be seated, possibly on a low stool, and offered a drink of water in a calabash or glass, before being formally greeted and welcomed. He or she may be given kola nuts as a symbol of hospitality, and possibly palm wine. Given the unreliability of communications technologies and transportation, visitors may arrive unexpectedly at any time and are expected to be warmly welcomed. It is important to cook more food than is necessary for the immediate family: There has [sic] to be four extra adult portions every time food is cooked. Two portions for your parents-in-law and one for your dearest friend. The fourth portion is for a stranger, an unexpected visitor. It is not that these people come each day to share the meal, but if they do come the food has to be there. (Karim Traore in Beier 95)
Meals tend to be comprised of a main starch, such as a boiled or pounded root vegetable or rice or a thick corn porridge eaten with a soup/ stew/sauce/relish. The usual utensils, as throughout sub-Saharan Africa, are hands, washed before and after the meal. Only the right hand is dipped into the bowl or platter, and items should not be handed to anyone with the left hand. Both indigenous African foods such as African yams, rice, palm fruit, guinea fowl, millet and sorghum, boabab, and okra, as well as adopted foods like corn, cassava (manioc), chili peppers, tomatoes, coconuts, plantains and bananas, citrus fruits, wheat, and pineapples, are included in meals.
Sub-Saharan Africa In addition to extending hospitality to visitors, western African entertaining revolves around life events such as weddings, funerals, births, and festivals. At such events, rather than meals being served in courses, they tend to be served buffet style, often in the open under canopies with tables and chairs set up for the occasion. The social expectation is to include anyone who comes, even strangers. While extended families are expected to assist with the costs and preparations, families of modest means may be burdened to meet the expectations of lavish entertaining. Music and dancing are often a part of such events, including funerals. A rich layer of oil on top of soup or stew is a mark of prestige, honor, richness, and generosity, as are large serving portions and ample provision of drinks. WEST AFRICAN OUTDOORINGS OR NAMING CEREMONIES An outdooring is a ceremony roughly a week after a child is born, when the infant is brought outside, introduced to the community, and publicly named. The Akan of Ghana generally place a drop of water on the infant’s tongue, followed by a drop of alcohol, and advise the child to know the difference between them, even though they look identical. Water and alcohol among the southern Akan are both important but they cannot be substituted for one another. The distinction between them symbolizes the need for integrity in life. Soup and fufu (a pounded starch from boiled yam/cassava (manioc)/plantain/cocoyam (taro) is likely to be a part of the festive meal following the ceremony for Ashanti families. The Akan and Ga people of Ghana are also likely to serve oto, a sacred dish made with hard-boiled eggs, mashed yam, and palm oil. Yoruba families in Nigeria also introduce specific foods to the infant to symbolize how the child should live and what desirable personality traits the child should have: just as water is important to people, so should the child be important to his or her family; as honey is sweet, the child should be sweet. Other symbolic foods include kola nuts, palm oil, and wine. A Yoruba outdooring feast might include pounded yam with okra soup, rice with pepper soup, and cassava (eba) mashed with egusi soup. Another spiritual aspect of public entertaining includes paying homage to the ancestors, to whom West Africans feel closely connected. This homage is often in the form of pouring libations, often of an alcoholic beverage, to ancestors before public ceremonies. CENTRAL AFRICA (DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF THE CONGO, CONGO, CAMEROON, EQUATORIAL GUINEA, CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC, GABON, ANGOLA, BURUNDI, AND RWANDA) Central Africa is also called Equatorial Africa, Middle Africa, or the heart of Africa. It was this area that the Anglo-American journalist and explorer
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Henry Stanley popularized in the late 1800s as “darkest Africa,” a name reinforced by Joseph Conrad’s 1902 novel Heart of Darkness. In discussions, its countries are often absorbed into neighboring regions (e.g., Cameroon into West Africa, Burundi and Rwanda into East Africa, Angola into Southern Africa). This is the region whose dining and entertaining history is least familiar to North Americans, despite the reality that many central Africans were carried to the New World as slaves. Central Africa includes tropical rain forests, historically impenetrable, and the largely unnavigable Congo River, the fifth longest river in the world and the second longest in Africa. Along with the rainforests, the region also includes hills, mountains, and savannah grasslands. Central Africa encompasses a diversity of lifestyles and includes some of the most urbanized, if impoverished, areas of sub-Saharan Africa. The rain forests were the home of indigenous forest peoples long known as pygmies in the West, though the ancient Egyptians called them people of the trees or dancers of the gods. Today they are often described as forest peoples or forest foragers. Their numbers have dwindled down to somewhere between 150,000 and 300,000. Though small in numbers, these hunters and foragers provide food, especially wild game, to those outside the forests, especially in urban areas. The first agriculturalists to move into central Africa were probably Nilosaharan speakers, about 5,000 years ago, followed by Bantu-speaking, iron-working agriculturalists and fishermen a thousand years later. These Bantu-speaking people established the powerful ancient kingdom Kongo by the 1300s. It was ruthlessly destroyed by the Portuguese by the middle 1500s and transformed into the Portuguese colony Angola; and used as a source of slaves, especially for Portuguese sugar plantations in Brazil and Fernando Po. Arab traders also actively exploited the area for slaves and ivory. Eventually the Belgians and the French, too, established colonies in central Africa. Despite some German and British influences (e.g., Cameroon), French is the most common Western language spoken in central Africa today. Lingala is the lingua franca in much of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Central African Republic, and Cameroon. Foods common in the area, with the exception perhaps of the foods of the forest peoples, contain similar ingredients to those in much of West Africa: palm nuts, peanuts, fish, cooked green leaves, maize, cowpeas, and cassava. Yams and rice are also eaten, but less commonly. Eastern central African locations with highlands (e.g., Rwanda and Burundi) share with eastern Africa a reliance on maize, bananas, plantains, and sweet potatoes. Some linguistic links to the New World include food words, such as the Kimbundi word in Angola for peanut, nguba, the source for the American term goober, or the Quimbundo word in Angola for palm oil, from which the Brazilian term dendê is derived. Central Africans eat fufu ( fufu in Lingala, or bidia in the Tshiluba language), but their versions include both the typical boiled and pounded root type common in much of West Africa (e.g., from plantain, yam, cassava,
Sub-Saharan Africa cocoyam, etc.) and one made from a dry flour of corn or cassava, or a combination of the two,. The result is similar to the sadza or ugali of southern and eastern Africa. Though cassava has been known in central Africa since the seventeenth century, it was originally cultivated for its leaves, not its roots. The Portuguese likely brought cassava to their colonies from Brazil and forced people to eat the tubers. Similarly, they probably introduced the complex processing techniques for removing toxic cyanogenic glucosides from tubers to make the coarse toasted cassava (or manioc) meal gari, similar to Brazil’s farofa. Special occasions include holidays like New Year’s Day and Christmas, independence days, births, christenings, weddings, engagements, funerals, the end of mourning, adolescent initiation ceremonies, the end of the school year, and special rituals of men’s and women’s societies. Food at such gatherings includes palm wine, cassava sticks ( bâtons de manioc), fish, and/or meat, as well as commercial beer, red wine (prized not only for its intoxicating qualities but also its assumed health benefits, such as “giving a person blood” and “heating one up” in the evenings), and spirits (hard liquor). Everyday foods are supplemented with prestige foods to help the hosts maintain their social status and demonstrate generosity, affluence, and masculinity. These items include expensive alcoholic drinks, thick stews rich with meat, and imported foods like rice, pasta and canned foods. The lavish show of food and drink honors the guests, even though the social expectation of lavishness is a hardship on poorer hosts. Among forest peoples, ripe banana beer or juices ( la bière de banane, umutobe, urwangwa) play a role similar to palm wine, with a mild version served to women and children, a stronger one to men. Men drink urwangwa during important discussions and ceremonies. The central African country of Cameroon takes its name from the Portuguese explorers’ name for the Wouri River, Rio de Camarões, or “The River of Prawns.” The country peacefully combines a large French-speaking area with a smaller English-speaking region. A special Sunday dish for a Douala family in Cameroon likely involves preparing ndolé, a dish made from ndolé leaves and other ingredients like beef, onions, tomatoes, peppers and dried crayfish (manjanga). Sautéed fresh shrimp and a drizzle of heated oil, or freshly ground, blanched peanuts, may be added as a garnish. In a traditional Yassa engagement ceremony in southern Cameroon a prospective bridegroom offers food and drinks to his future in-laws in three steps: he brings palm wine or red wine to the girl’s father, and then the groom’s maternal and paternal families give the future wife’s family two cartons of cigarettes, two wads of tobacco, and two bottles of whisky, to which the woman’s family responds by preparing a banquet at which to negotiate the bride price. Finally, at the “bringing in” the bride’s mother receives drinks, meat, money, and presents to share among her family. The two families then feast together, the menu possibly including a roasted, smoked forest porcupine.
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SOUTHERN AFRICA (SOUTH AFRICA, NAMIBIA, BOTSWANA, MALAWI, ZIMBABWE, LESOTHO, SWAZILAND, MOZAMBIQUE, MADAGASCAR, AND ZAMBIA) Archbishop Desmond Tutu popularized the notion of the nation of South Africa being a “rainbow nation” with a “rainbow cuisine,” given the many intertwined cultural influences in the region. These include indigenous hunter-gatherer San (Sanqua) people, formerly known as “bushmen”; cattleherding, more sedentary Khoikhoi (who the Dutch disparagingly called “Hottentots”); metal-working, cattle-rearing Bantu-speaking migrants who came to dominate, such as the Zulu, Xhosa, and Ndebele; mid-seventeenthcentury Dutch settlers who became the Afrikaners; German immigrants who followed the Dutch; Malaysian and other Asian slaves imported by the Dutch; and indentured Indian and Asian laborers who arrived in the 1860s to work on the sugar plantations. One hundred fifty French Huguenots fleeing persecution arrived in Cape Town in 1680 and established the vineyards that have flourished to become the base of today’s wine industry. Contemporary South Africa has the largest Indian population outside of India. Dutch power passed to the British by the early nineteenth century through the 1930s when the Afrikaner Nationalist party consolidated its power, and the British also established power in Rhodesia, today’s Zimbabwe. Some results of this history on the southern African countries include: the profound influence of the Portuguese, and, to a much lesser extent, Spanish, explorers who arrived at the end of the fifteenth century, and who introduced corn, cassava (manioc), peanuts, tomatoes, and hot peppers, which influenced and were integrated into diets. For example, white corn is widely consumed by all people, black and white, and is most commonly eaten as a porridge, called by numerous names, such as pap (South Africa), sadza (Zimbabwe), nsima (Zambia, Malawi), or bogobe (Botswana); cattle, and the kraal, are central to community and family life, and there is a preference for grilled and dried meat, though wild meat is being replaced by domesticated varieties; curries are prevalent and have been called a “national dish” of South Africa, both the milder Malaysian curries, part of what is called “Cape Cookery,” and the spicier curries of Durban; rice, sausages, and sauced stews using greens (called morogo in Swahili, and including leaves from beets, sweet potatoes, pumpkin, and bean plants), tomatoes, chili peppers (especially the famous fiery hot African bird’s eye peppers called periperi in Swahili), and/or peanuts are popular; there is also a preference for dairy products, including sour, or curdled, milk (amasi) and the popularity of tea including an herbal tea called rooibus (from the Afrikaans word for “redbush”). The rich gold and diamond resources of South Africa and Zimbabwe (formerly Rhodesia) fostered a huge migrant population of black workers from neighboring countries and rural areas to work at the mines. This migration has fostered the adoption of new foods and eating patterns, including, in addition to eating corn-based meals, three meals a day, different meals
Sub-Saharan Africa on weekends, Western-style breakfasts, tea, fish and chips, desserts, sweet drinks, and snacks like cakes and cookies. A main avenue of socializing among black southern Africans is beerdrinking, both in homes and at bars. While commercially brewed beers are gaining in popularity, local traditional beers brewed from corn, sorghum, or millet are the most popular. They tend to be thick-textured and bittersweet. Beer is an important part of many rituals and is drunk both on special occasions and daily. Traditionally, women generally grew the grain and brewed the beer. They were also the potters, creating both the large undecorated pots for brewing beer, and the more decorative drinking bowls. Called chipfuko in Zimbabwe’s Shona language, such containers hold one-half to one liter and are often decorated with chevron patterns. Traditionally black ground graphite powder was pressed into the contrasting red clay, and it was marked with incised chevrons or patterns of bands, V-shapes, or triangles. Today, new colors, paints, and designs are used, especially for tourist markets. Beer-drinking also occurs at rowdy, informal male-only race and classsegregated bars called shebeens in South Africa or pungwe in Zimbabwe. A popular social event in South Africa that is said to symbolize that country and foster a sense of national identity is a type of barbeque called a braai ( literally, “grilled”), or braaivleis (“grilled meat”). Braai variously refers to a grill, the act of grilling, and the get together or party itself. Once a rite of passage for white South African males, it has been adopted broadly by all South Africans and expresses the casual lifestyle of the region. A typical braai includes steaks (cooked very well-done by males talking and drinking beer while grilling them), boerwors (sausages), pap, and a tomato and onion gravy, both possibly cooked in a potjeiko (a distinctive three-legged cast iron pot that cooks slowly and evenly), maybe with a dessert of melktert. There might also be grilled fish or chicken, salads and other sauces/stews, vegetables and foil-wrapped baked potatoes, and plenty of beverages, especially beer. The outdoor setting can be anywhere from a backyard, park, kraal, or the “bush,” to a beach or restaurant. The intimate, relaxed time with family and friends may last long into the night. Further Reading: Achebe, Chinua. Things Fall Apart. London: Heinemann, 1977; Beier, Georgina, ed. “They Keep Their Fires Burning”: Conversations on food, manners, and hospitality in Africa. Bayreuth, Germany, Bayreuth African Studies Series, 72, 2005; Hafner, Dorinda. A Taste of Africa. Berkeley, CA: Ten Speed Press, 1993; Hamdun, Said, and Noel King. Ibn Battuta in Black Africa. Princeton: Markus Wiener Publishers, 1975; Harris, Jessica. The Africa Cookbook: Tastes of a Continent. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1998; Karp, Ivan, and Patricia Karp. “Social Aspects of Iteso Cookery,” In The Anthropologist’s Cookbook. Ed. by Jessica Kuper. New York: Universe Books, 1977; Katz, Solomon H., and William Woys Weaver, eds. Encyclopedia of Food and Culture. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 2002; Kiple, Kenneth F., and Kriemhild Coneè Ornelas, eds. The Cambridge World History of Food, vols. 1 and 2. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000; Kuper, Jessica, ed. The Anthropologists’ Cookbook. New York: Universe
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Books, 1977; Osseo-Asare, Fran. A Good Soup Attracts Chairs: A First African Cookbook for American Kids Gretna, LA: Pelican Publishing Company, 1993 (Note: Only the original color hardback version of the book is recommended, not the black and white paperback); Osseo-Asare, Fran. Food Culture in SubSaharan Africa. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2005; Osseo-Asare, Fran. “We eat first with our eyes: on Ghanaian cuisine.” Gastronomica, 2, no. 1 (winter 2002): 49–57; Osseo-Asare, Fran. In Hickey, Dennis, ed., Encyclopedia of Popular Culture, vol. 6 Sub-Saharan Africa. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2007; Osseo-Asare, Fran. BETUMI: The African Culinary Network at http://www. betumi.com; Samuelsson, Marcus. The Soul of a New Cuisine. Hoboken, NJ: Wiley, 2006; Traore, Karim. In “They Keep Their Fires Burning”: Conversations on food, manners and hospitality in Africa. Ed. by Georgina Beier. Bayreuth, Germany: Bayreuth African Studies Series, 72, 2005, p. 95.
Fran Osseo-Asare
Sugaring Off Party A sugaring off party centers around the annual social gathering of family, neighbors, and friends to celebrate the end of maple sugar production season. The parties are referred to as a sugaring off, a sugaring off party, and a cabane à sucre, from Québec and other eastern Canadian provinces. A variety of hearty customary foods are prepared and eaten, many doused with justmade maple syrup. Live folk music, spirited singing, and boisterous dancing add to the festivities. Historically, sugaring off parties were an opportune time for flirtation and courtship, no doubt welcomed after the isolation of a long New England or frosty Canadian winter. Food was prepared at the remote sugar-making site (sugar bush), allowing ample opportunity for all to catch up on news and hearsay, as men took on the physically demanding tasks of maple sugaring and women spent endless hours cooking and baking calorie-packed dishes to feed the hard-working group. Sugaring off events herald the long-awaited return of spring to regions primarily in the northeastern United States and southeastern Canada. Weather conditions must be favorable for sugar maple tree (Acer saccharum) sap to rise, with a westerly wind and temperatures alternating between below freezing at night and gently warming to above freezing during the day. A typical season may run from late February to early April. Among the first producers of maple syrup were the Native American Algonquin and Cree. The Algonquin people referred to maple syrup as sinzibukwud, or seensibaukwut, literally, “drawn from the wood,” and used it to flavor venison, pounded cornmeal, and other foodstuffs. For many eighteenth-century New England settlers, the laborious task of collecting sap from sugar maple trees and converting it into maple syrup provided a year’s worth of sweetener for cooking and eating, readily available and far less costly than cane sugar.
Sugaring Off Party The practice of maple sugaring in the late nineteenth century was portrayed in a series of detailed oil paintings by American portrait artist Eastman Johnson. His works expressed the spirit of rugged New England independence and resourcefulness in accord with the cyclical, restorative nature of the spring season. An ardent abolitionist, Johnson painted scenes of sugaring off as symbols of free labor during the politically contentious years of the Civil War. He chose to depict old-fashioned sugaring methods rather than labor-saving devices; his paintings are a striking commentary on the social and technological turmoil of the era. Sap is composed mostly of water and glucose and does not taste very sweet. The liquid is quite precious, since about forty gallons of sap are needed to make one gallon of syrup. The first-run sap is said to make the best-tasting maple syrup and was traditionally collected by first carefully placing one-and-one-half- to two-inch tapholes into the tree and inserting metal spouts on the south and west sun-facing sides of the tree. The sap would proceed to drip into buckets, which when full, would be collected and emptied into a gathering tub. It was transported to the sugar house (also sugar camp or shack), part of the sugar bush, the family operation that encompassed the trees and maple sugar location. Today commercial maple sugar farmers employ great lengths of plastic tubing and fittings to collect sap. Buckets have been replaced by lightweight plastic bags and sophisticated vacuum pumping systems. The sap is boiled down in large shallow rectangular evaporator pans, giving off great clouds of steam as it condenses into maple syrup ranging in shades from pale amber to a rich deep brown. Although the highest grade of syrup, Fancy or AA, is determined by the lightest color, the darkest hue, grade B has the most intense flavor and is often preferred for cooking and baking. The hot maple syrup is filtered to remove sediment, then bottled on site. To begin the sugaring off process, the maple syrup must be heated until it has thickened. This hot viscous syrup can be poured onto clean packed snow (or shaved ice if the weather is not cooperative) in a thin layer, where it immediately hardens into a very sweet caramel-flavored maple taffy. A wooden stick or (clean) finger is used to lift the sticky substance off the snow while it is twirled into an edible shape. Homemade sour pickles are served alongside sugar-on-snow, (alternately called jack wax, wax sugar, taffy on snow, toffee snowballs, leather aprons) an accompaniment which serves to tame the extreme cloying sweetness of the taffy. In the northeastern United States, sugaring off fare features doughnuts dipped in maple syrup or slathered with maple cream and rinsed down with steaming cups of black coffee. Pancake breakfasts are the norm and sticky pitchers of syrup make the rounds. At a French Canadian cabane à sucre (sugar hut, sugar cabin), the fare is plentiful, serving up substantial food fit for a rugged lumberjack. Starting with a thick pea soup, the meal progresses to filling omelets and boiled or mashed potatoes. Many recipes call for maple syrup as a key flavoring
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ingredient, essential in from-scratch baked beans, maple-glazed ham, fried pork rind, and sausage. This groaning board would not be complete without maple-sweetened pies, cakes, and crepes for dessert, certainly the icing on any sugaring off feast. Sugaring off events remain a community tradition to this day, whether a home cooked family-style supper held by the local church or a historical museum dedicated to preserving regional foodways. There are, of course, hungry tourists eager to taste real maple syrup, a true delicacy that is a far cry from the artificial pancake syrup most commonly found in supermarkets today. Further Reading: Gemming, Elizabeth. Maple Harvest: The Story of Maple Sugaring. New York: Coward, McCann & Geoghegan, 1976; Genessee Country Village and Museum. Genessee, New York. http://www.gcv.org/programsAndEvents/ sapSyrup.shtml; Ledes, Allison Eckardt. “Maple sugar as metaphor.” Magazine Antiques. Feb. 2004. http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1026/is_2_165/ ai_113189388; North Country Maturing Gardener. North Haverhill, NH. http:// ncmg.blogspot.com/2006/03/sugaring-off-party_10.html; Tobias, Pam. Hosting the sugaring off party has become a tradition at the Congregational Church. http://www.vermontmaplesyrupfestival.com; Sucrerie de la Montagne, an official Québec Heritage Site. http://www.sucreriedelamontagne.com/sugar. htm; Sugaring Off: The Maple Sugar Paintings of Eastman Johnson. The Clark Art Institute, Williamstown, MA. Resource Library Magazine. http://www.citadellecamp.com/a_faq_sai2.html; http://www.tfaoi.com/aa/4aa/4aa53.htm; What is a “Sugaring Off” party? http://geoimages.berkeley.edu/worldwidepanorama/ wwp304/html/DavidGibson.html; Sugaring off. http://www.bonjourquebec. com/qc-en/erablieres0.html.
Suzanne C. Weltman
Super Bowl Party The Super Bowl party is inextricably tied to the televised Super Bowl, the annual championship game of the U.S. National Football League that is played on a Sunday afternoon or evening in late January or early February. A predominantly American unofficial holiday, celebrated in the United States and by American expatriates, Super Bowl parties are typically held in private homes and in commercial bars, clubs, and taverns. Such parties are devoted to watching the game, eating and drinking, and chatting during commercial breaks and during slow moments of the game. Licensing fees restrict the use of the term Super Bowl for commercial purposes so bars and clubs often refer to Super Bowl events in marketing materials as “watching the big game.” The Super Bowl began in 1967 as a championship game between the then-rival leagues, the American Football League (AFL) and the National Football League (NFL). Super Bowls are designated by Roman numerals, so this 1967 championship game is identified as Super Bowl I and the 2008 Super Bowl between the New York Giants and New England Patriots as
Super Bowl Party
A group of New York City women raise their glasses in a toast during a Super Bowl party at Harglo’s Cafe on Second Avenue in New York, January 23, 1989. AP/ Wide World Photo.
XLII. In 1970, the AFL and NFL leagues merged but the championship game remained and was dubbed the Super Bowl and its day of observance, Super Sunday. The game is played in a neutral warm-weather location or indoor stadium. Today, the Super Bowl is typically the most-watched televised event of the year with ratings usually around a 60 share, meaning that 60 percent of American households tune in. Consequently, television ads shown during the game cost millions of dollars and are significantly more expensive than ads played during regular-season games or regular Sunday programming. In fact, new ads often premier during the game, and commentaries, reviews, and online discussions concern themselves not only with the game but also with the commercial advertisements. Another key feature of the Super Bowl, and an attraction of Super Bowl parties, is the musical entertainment, pre-game, and half-time shows. While originally understated, relying on marching bands at halftime and a wellknown singer to sing the national anthem, today’s Super Bowl half-time shows feature multiple A-list performers and multi-million dollar productions including dancers, pyrotechnics, and moving stages. Such productions are often engineering feats, as they require being assembled and broken down on the field entirely within the short timeframe allotted. In this way, a Super Bowl party attendee need not be a serious football fan to enjoy the event. The combination of food, drink, and company, along with a televised sporting event and concert provide something for everyone.
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From its inception, the Super Bowl provided an occasion for families and friends to gather together to watch the game, share food and drink, and chat during breaks. But the Super Bowl party as we have come to know it developed over decades, largely influenced by manufacturers and sellers of televisions and home entertainment systems, snack foods, beer, and groceries. Commercials aired during the Super Bowl showed Super Bowl parties, in which the game was being watching on new color televisions by people swigging a particular brand of beer or eating a particular brand of snack chip. These commercials created a new vision of how Super Sunday should be celebrated in the United States. A typical Super Bowl party in a home can be as simple as buying a case of beer and a pizza and inviting some friends over, as often happens in college dormitories, military bases, and other budget-conscious settings. Private parties can also be very elaborate with ticket-themed invitations, decorations, large screen televisions or television projectors purchased or rented for the occasion, catered food and drink, and themed party favors. Commercial parties in bars, clubs, and restaurants typically use the game to promote food and beverage sales but may offer football decorations and giveaways, especially when a hometown team is playing. The main event of the party is obviously the game, but at many parties, gambling related to the game is popular. The most common form of gambling is the football pool where party-goers are given or buy spaces on a grid. If the interim or final score of the game matches the name in the grid, that player wins a percentage of the pot or, in non-gambling situations, a prize. Betting on the ultimate outcome of the game, with odds determined by book makers, is also common. Other less-formal bets abound including betting on number of field goals, on the coin toss, or on which team is the first to score. It should be noted that gambling is illegal in most jurisdictions. Super Bowl parties typically begin about one hour before the kick-off time of the game, which is usually about 6 P.M. Eastern time. They usually end shortly after the conclusion of the game. The television is typically on from the beginning of the party as a nearly full-day schedule of pre-game programming is available. Early in the party betting that must conclude before the kickoff of the game is conducted, and food and drinks are served. Super Bowl Sunday represents the year’s second-highest day of annual food consumption in the United States, second only to Thanksgiving. There is no one traditional Super Bowl menu but typically fatty and salty bar-type foods are served. Such foods may include: nachos, pizza, submarine sandwiches, chili, potato chips, chicken wings, and meatballs. Since food is often eaten throughout the game rather than at a set meal time, foods that can be kept warm or those tasty at room temperature are popular. Regional variations to the menu abound. For example, grilled bratwurst may be served in Wisconsin, buffalo wings in Buffalo, and barbeque throughout the South and Southwest, to name a few. Beer and soda are the
Super Bowl Party usual beverages, though increasingly pitchers of margaritas or other sweet mixed drinks are popular. Some Super Bowl parties strive to be more upscale with fine food and wine served. Further Reading: Sports Dream Challenges. The Last Hurrah: The Ultimate Super Bowl Party Planner. Victoria, Canada: Trafford, 2006; Weiss, Don, and Chuck Day. The Making of the Super Bowl: The Inside Story of the World’s Greatest Sporting Event. New York: McGraw Hill, 2003; National Football League Web site, http://www.nfl.com; Super Bowl Web site, http://www.superbowl.com.
Jonathan Deutsch
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T Table Service, French versus Russian Prior to the seventeenth century, meals were presented in a style belatedly described as service en confusion. Platters of foods were amassed haphazardly on tables, with the only guiding principle being the unquestioned social hierarchy at the core of medieval and Renaissance society: foodstuffs were arranged according to the diners’ status, with the finest dishes placed within easy reach of the most elite and lesser dishes placed near those of humbler rank. To the extent that treatises on meal service existed, they focused on maintaining one’s health and humoral balance while obeying the dietary mandates of the Catholic Church. With a few important exceptions, such as occasional instructions for constructing the glorious subtleties of the late medieval and Renaissance table or suggestions for decorating the dining hall with seasonal flora, discussions of meal service were unnecessary, as everyone knew the rules. Starting in the seventeenth century, new approaches to the service and display of meals reflected changes in European social, political, and material culture. Hierarchical distributions gave way to commensurability, while greater amounts and varieties of tablewares appeared. Where plates and
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platters of food were placed, the sequence in which the different foodstuffs were served, the number and variety of dining implements pressed into service, and the table decorations deemed appropriate and necessary commanded the attention of those charged with supervising the tables of the great European households. This intricately choreographed dinner organization became known as service à la française, or French service, and was the predominant style of elite dinner service from the seventeenth through mid-nineteenth centuries. Thereafter, service à la russe, or Russian service, dominated well-to-do Western tables until the mid-twentieth century. No single model perfectly encapsulates the French or Russian style. The forms continually evolved and varied according to the meal’s importance or the host’s purse. Historical sources sometimes misuse terminology or employ different labels. To generalize, French service divides all of the meal’s dishes into two, or possibly three, courses and brings those multiple dishes to the table simultaneously in a preordained pattern; once the dishes are on the table, the diners largely help themselves and each other, as in familystyle dining, although servants would be available to assist. French service, however, is not to be confused with casualness, as the rules regarding menu and its display were highly prescriptive. Russian service involves a multicourse dinner in which each dish is served individually, sometimes with minor accompaniments, in a defined succession captured by the expression “from soup to nuts.” Russian service continues in elegant catering halls or restaurant tasting menus and requires bevies of servants to shuttle dishes continuously from the kitchen to the dining room. The documented origins of French service are found in the writings of the maîtres d’hôtel of aristocratic households in late seventeenth-century
A Russian restaurant. © Evgeny Dontsov | Dreamstime.com.
Table Service, French versus Russian France. Guides such as Audiger’s La Maison réglée (1692) explained the duties of the various servants in wealthy estates, with particular emphasis on the relation between the kitchen and dining room. The maître d’hôtel, or steward, was generally the most powerful servant, with a close, often daily, relationship with the master. The steward’s responsibilities included keeping tabs on the estate’s purse; consulting with the master on the needs and preferences for the table; communicating the menus to the head cook, ordering foodstuffs; supervising the kitchen, wine cellar, linens, and tablewares; and, very importantly, supervising the arrangement of the foodstuffs on the table according to French service style. The elegance of the table arrangements orchestrated by the steward declaimed the master’s good taste in a society where such display was paramount. A French style dinner arranged full serving platters, plates, bowls, footed dishes, and tureens symmetrically on the table before diners entered the room. Once assembled, the dishes were uncovered and the guests selected their dinner from the many offerings. Because fashionable display required obedience to complicated rules, books geared to elite audiences on both sides of the Atlantic supplied diagrams showing the placement, content, and relative size of the various offerings, among them Audiger’s La Maison réglée (Paris, 1692) Charles Carter’s The Complete Practical Cook (London, 1730), and Louis Ude’s The French Cook (Philadelphia, 1828). The diners could be helped by waiters lurking in the background, by their dining companions seated closer to the desired comestible, or by serving themselves from nearby platters. Depending on the lavishness of the meal, a dinner à la française might have one, two, or, rarely, three main courses of food before the dessert course. The tantalizing variety of dishes within each course was impressive and often approached one novel dish per diner in each course, although no diner was expected to like or sample them all, and plates could be refilled several times during the course. Many of the dishes were insubstantial plates of olives, radishes, pickles, salads, and slices of sausages that punctuated larger dishes and were called hors d’oeuvre, meaning that these dishes were “outside” of the main parts of the meal. The first course of an elaborate, two-course French service would include multiple hors d’oeuvres, platters of oysters, small savory pastries, stews and ragouts, furred or feathered game, hot roasts, possibly some vegetables and salads, and the essential soups and potages. Soup was eaten only at the beginning of the meal. For a fine meal, at least two soups would be offered, one clear and one thick, served from magnificent tureens that dominated most other dishes and were located by the host and hostess or important guest. As an exception to the general rule that dishes in a French service meal remained on the table throughout the course in which they were served, the tureens would be taken away once the diners were served, and would then be replaced by rélevées or “removes” to preserve the table’s symmetry. The remove was a substantial dish, possibly a large fish, such as a salmon, carp, or turbot, a large ham, or a roasted joint. The actual mechanics of serving the meal varied from location to location, subject to some general principles. Plates were relatively expensive
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in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, so that even the well to do typically used the same plate throughout each course, perhaps supplemented by a soup bowl, to enjoy a variety of dishes. One question raised in early nineteenth-century etiquette books was what a diner should do with his soiled utensils while passing his plate for another serving. Most books counseled against clutching utensils while the plate was being refilled but also frowned upon dirtying the tablecloth with them. The last option was to send the utensils with the plate, which tended to be a bit deeper than modern plates, although such passing could be awkward. As the price of fine ceramics declined in the nineteenth century, fresh plates were offered when changing foodstuffs within a single course. Once the first course was completed, the dishes would be removed in preparation for the second course; sometimes the top tablecloths, laid in manageable sections, were removed to reveal clean ones beneath. Guests typically remained at table during this process. Fresh plates would be set before each diner, and the next course of dishes would be set down, consisting of cold roasts, more vegetables and salads, sweet and savory creams, and certain pastries. Hot soufflés, an increasingly popular dish of the early nineteenth century, might be brought in from the kitchen during either of the first two services; their ephemeral nature prevented them from being set in advance. Following the second course, there would be two choices for serving dessert. The party might adjourn to another room for the sweets (following the medieval tradition of adjourning to a separate hall for sweet wine and wafers; the word dessert derives from the French deservir, meaning “to break down”) or, in the later eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, the soiled cloths again would be removed, revealing a polished wooden table for the dessert course. Dessert was a bountiful selection of fresh and candied fruits, cheeses, cakes, ices and ice creams, pastries, and sugar work. Dessert plates often were in a different china pattern from the dinner service, emphasizing the separate nature of the final course. If French service focused on food for visual display, Russian service focused on keeping food fresh. Rather than present multiple dishes within a framework of two or three courses, Russian service presents a variety of dishes individually, in a rapid succession. Dishes emerge hot from the kitchen, are quickly distributed, and then disappear to the pantry or retire to a sideboard, rather than cooling and congealing unappetizingly in front of the diners. Because platters of food no longer occupied the table (although small plates of olives, celery, bonbons, and the like were scattered throughout the main portion of the meal), centerpieces, especially elaborate fresh floral displays, were thought necessary to decorate the table. In a meal served à la russe, waiters placed clean plates and utensils in front of each dinner just before the next course appeared: platters were presented to the diner and, if accepted, a portion was placed onto the individual’s dinner plate before the platter was presented to the next guest. In its heyday, a Russian-style meal might have 20 or more courses, including several small hors d’oeuvres, oysters, soup, fish, entrées of savory pastry or ragoûts,
Table Service, French versus Russian game, hot and cold roasts, palate-cleansing spiked sorbets known as Roman punch, vegetables, salads, cheese, ices and ice creams, sweet pastries, cakes, fruits, and coffee. Diners could decline any course (except at a private dinner, where it was considered impolite to decline soup and the roast), so that the volume of food might not be as staggering as first appears. Nineteenthcentury etiquette also dictated that one leave one bite on the plate “for manners,” although many nineteenth-century feasts were Pantagruelian by contemporary standards. The origins of Russian service are murky. It is believed to have developed in Russia no later than the eighteenth century, although early Russian service lacked the many courses and the legions of flatware and dishware that identified late nineteenth-century service. Nonetheless, dinners à la russe immediately were recognized as different from their à la française counterparts. One of the earliest descriptions comes from an eighteenthcentury English visitor to the court of Peter the Great. The meal was comprised of four courses, beginning with cold foods, followed by soup and roasted meats, then a pastry course, and finally the dessert course. He noted that strangers to Russian service would have been tempted to make their dinner entirely from the first cold meat course, which he deemed more in keeping with the French style of presenting the main meat dishes in one grand course. What makes this meal Russian is the segregation of cold and hot dishes, followed by pastries in a separate course, and then desserts. How was the shift to Russian service viewed? The old guard found much valuable in French service and much objectionable in Russian. The great, romantic French chef, Antonin Carême, was intimately familiar with both styles, having spent a stint cooking for Czar Alexander I in St. Petersburg. In Le Maître-d’hôtel français (1822), Carême floridly wrote that French service was the sumptuous epitome of luxury; in addition to the visual delight of tables glittering with crystal, chandeliers, and domed platters of vermeil, the diner would be seduced by the perfume of fine cooking that suffused the room when the domes were lifted. In 1838 New York’s urbane Phillip Hone voiced several complaints against Russian service, among them that a diner never knew what else was coming, making it impossible to choose one’s food wisely, and that his conversation was constantly being interrupted by greasy platters being thrust between his head and that of his neighbor. Others acknowledged problems with French service. Notwithstanding the speed with which the dishes were arranged, and the use of domes, chafing dishes, or réchauds warmed by hot water, foods often cooled before served, compromising the quality of the meal. The goal of serving foods in peak condition culminated in the widespread acceptance of Russian service for both public and private dining in the mid- to late-nineteenth century. Soon diners saw Russian service as the easiest way to sup, as dishes came around “as if by magic,” with all responsibility for service devolved upon the waiters, rather than the diners. While a French style meal of one or two main courses plus dessert gave little opportunity to use legions of different tablewares, multi-course Russian service made all sorts of dining paraphernalia possible and desirable.
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Nineteenth-century innovations in pressing glass, decorating china, and electroplating silver made attractive tablewares affordable by the upper-middle and middle classes in the quantity needed to serve a course meal, so that Russian service, at least from the perspective of dining equipment, could be enjoyed by a broader population. Manufacturers designed implements for each course, from oyster plates to different sized and shaped wine glasses to encourage several changes of wine within a meal. American flatware manufacturers in particular exploited the new meal structure thoroughly: highly specialized utensils, especially forks, were created for nearly every course. Tiny oyster forks became de rigueur to consume the raw oysters that traditionally opened a meal and, for centuries, had been happily slurped from the shell. Ice cream forks, somewhat impractically, dealt with the melting dessert, while pie forks, with a reinforced initial tine, were thought essential to slice through tender crusts. By the early twentieth century, the manufacturer Gorham had created silver patterns with over 130 separate pieces to cover every imaginable and invented serving and eating need. Russian service declined not because of the cost of outfitting the table, but because of the impossibility of properly staffing the dining room. Domestic help was common in middle-class households until the early twentieth century, although the all-purpose maid frequently was ill-trained in, or unable to execute the intricacies of, Russian service on top of her other duties. Although hostesses in the late nineteenth century had plenty of etiquette and cookery books to explain the structure of a complicated meal à la russe, the difficulties of finding well-trained staff caused many books to advocate simpler meals for entertaining. Although less traditionally proper, simpler meals avoided the embarrassment of poorly executed Russian service. With the demise of a serving class in all but the wealthiest homes, Russian service has become a relic of an earlier age. It remains possible in formal banquets and catering halls but is impractical for daily life. Further Reading: Aron, Jean-Paul. The Art of Eating in France: Manners and Menus in the Nineteenth Century. Trans. by Nina Rootes. New York: Harper & Row, 1975; Audiger “La maison réglée” (1692) in L’Art de la cuisine française au XVIIème siècle Ed. by Gilles and Laurence Laurendon. Paris: Éditions Payot & Rivages, 1995; Brears, Peter. “À la Française: The Waning of a Long Dining Tradition.” in Luncheon, Nuncheon and Other Meals. Ed. by C. Anne Wilson, ed. Stroud: Alan Sutton, 1994; Coffin, Sarah D., et al. Feeding Desire: Design and the Tools of the Table, 1500–2005. New York: Assouline and Smithsonian, Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum, 2006; Kaufman, Cathy K. “The Dining Room.” In The Oxford Encyclopedia of Food and Drink in America. Ed. by Andrew F. Smith. New York: Oxford University Press, 2004; Kaufman, Cathy K. “Structuring the Meal: The Revolution of Service à la Russe.” In The Meal: Proceedings of the 2001 Oxford Symposium on Food and Cookery. Ed. by Harlan Walker. Totnes, Devon, England: Prospect Books, 2002; Ottomeyer, Hans. “Service à la française and service à la russe: or the evolution of the table between the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.” In Food and Material Culture: Proceedings of the Fourth Symposium of the International Commission for Research into European Food History. Ed. by Martin Schärer and Alexander Fenton. East Linton, East Lothian,
Table Settings Scotland: Tuckwell Press, 1998; Wheaton, Barbara Ketcham. Savoring the Past: The French Table from 1300 to 1789. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1983.
Cathy K. Kaufman
Table Settings At formal banquets during the Middle Ages, the host and his honored guests would sit at one side of a long, narrow table at the head of the hall. The most important people sat at the head of the table and those of lesser importance would sit toward either end. Salt was placed in salt holders or cellars. These came to be the line of status delineation. People were said to be either “above the salt” or below it. Other guests sat at long tables at right angles to the head table. In the earliest times, women were not permitted to join in the banquet and were consigned to a gallery. Eventually, the wives of the nobles were permitted to sit as a group well below the salt. Food was brought to the banquet hall with great pageantry and placed before the guests. Entertainment was provided between courses or mets. Guests were given light tidbits to eat while enjoying the performances. In time, these very public displays were replaced with more intimate dinners held in the privacy of a lord’s private quarters. The narrow table with seating on only one side was replaced by rectangular tables that seated people on all sides. The wider tables permitted more food to be placed on the table in grandiose displays of abundance. This required that the food be set upon the table prior to the seating of the guests. These private meals grew into larger banquets that were displays of wealth and status. By this point in time, women were fully participating in the dining experience. The practice of alternating women and men at the dinner table was imported to England from Holland during the 1600s and was referred to as the “Dutch style” of eating. By the time of Queen Victoria’s coronation, French cooking and serving methods became the norm throughout most of Europe. The standard method of presentation was still that of the late Middle Ages with all the food placed on the table. In the United States, from colonial times to the 1830s meals were presented in two courses, followed by a dessert course of fruits and sweets. Guests arrived to find all the food on the table. The more food there was the more elaborate was the display. At the head of the table would be the soup tureen. The remainder of the table was filled with lesser side dishes. Diners first had their soup bowls filled by their hostess and then handed around by the servants. A fish course came next, and the servants presented this dish to the host who would carve it so that the servants would again hand it around. At the same time, diners would be filling their plates from side dishes already on the table. These side dishes were referred to as entrees. Once these foods were consumed, the tureen and fish platter were removed and the
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main meat dishes were brought out. These dishes were known as removes as they were removed. Entrees were also sometimes removed. The new dishes were called Flying dishes because they were not on the table when the meal commenced. After the first course, the dishes and tablecloth were removed to reveal a second tablecloth, which would be used for the second course of birds, game, and additional side dishes. In its turn, the second tablecloth was removed and the dessert course was served. When the French style of dinning took hold during the 1840s, the first two courses were broken down into four courses. The first was fish and soup with a few entrees. Then came a second course solely of entrees. The third course was the so-called joints of meat, usually beef, with a few entrees. The fourth and final course included game, sweets, and more entrees, and was followed by fruits, ices, and nuts. As table settings evolved, so did the utensils that were used. From the earliest times people realized that various natural items helped the processing and consumption of food. Sharp stones helped to scrape and cut meat. Hollow horns and shells could hold liquids. A shell fastened to a stick extended the reach and protected the hand from steam and hot fluids. Both the Greek and Latin words for spoon have their roots from cohiea, a small spiral shaped shell. The Romans developed two types of spoons. The cochleare was a small spoon with a round bowl and a slim pointed handle used for eating shellfish and eggs. The ligula had a pointed oval bowl with a decorated handle and was used for soups and soft foods. The Roman occupation of Britain likely influenced the earliest English spoons, which like many of the utensils of northern Europe, were commonly made of wood. The word spoon comes from the Anglo-Saxon spon, which means “splinter of wood.” By the fifth century, spoons were being carved from wood, bone, shell, and stone. During the Middle Ages, hosts generally provided spoons made of horn or wood. Common spoons were provided for general table use. Wealthy families may have had silver spoons, and royalty used those made of even more precious materials. Beginning in the fourteenth century, spoons could be found made of tinned iron, brass (a copper-zinc alloy), and pewter (various alloys of base metals with low melting points). Yellow brass was expensive, but the availability of comparatively inexpensive cast pewter spoons made metal spoons more affordable to a larger portion of the population than might otherwise have been the case. Knives designed specifically for table use is a relatively new concept. When necessary, most people would have used personal knives. Both men and women carried knives on their belts into the seventeenth century. In addition to serving as a potential weapon and as handy tools used for daily chores, knives also were readily available at mealtime and could be used to spear food in order to bring it to the mouth or to cut it. Fingers were also a convenient and acceptable means of conveying food to the mouth. In 1669 Louis XIV of France banned pointed knives in a measure to discourage violence. Grinding knifepoints led cutlers to make other design changes. The blunted ends were made wider and rounder so that food could be piled on the
Table Settings knife. Many knives were designed with a handle like a pistol grip and a blade, which curved backward to make it easier to get the food into the mouth. From the late seventeenth century, it became popular for the very rich to use knife rests. With meals consisting of numerous courses but only one knife for the entire repast, the knife rest provided a place for the utensil to rest in between use, and it protected the table or tablecloth from becoming soiled. During the Victorian period knife rests were made of all kinds of materials including metal, crystal, ivory, horn, glass, or just about any combination of these materials that came to mind. The use of knife rests fell out of favor during the mid-twentieth century. The fork was used by the ancient Greeks and was mentioned in the Hebrew Bible; but it was not introduced into Western Europe until the tenth century. By the eleventh century the fork made its way to Italy, and by 1600 it had gained wide acceptance, becoming commonly used by merchant and upper classes. Dinner guests brought their own fork and spoon to the meal in a box called a cadena. Forks were slower to be accepted in England where they were thought to be a feminine utensil. The exception was the so-called sucket fork, which was a slender fork with two prongs at one end and a narrow bowl at the other. The fork end was used to spear food that was served in sticky syrup, and the spoon end was used for the syrup itself. Prior to the popularity of the fork, some people used two knives when eating. One was used for cutting, while the other was used to steady the piece of food being cut. Initially, dinner forks were made with only two tines. The widely spaced prongs were good for piercing larger food but impractical for small items such as peas and grains. They were longer and sharper than contemporary forks. Between the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries the number of tines were increased to three, and later to four. The fork also changed from a spear-like tool to a slightly curved tool that could contain finer pieces of food. During the nineteenth century fork tines were shortened and brought closer together with the utensil taking on a recognizably “modern” look. By the early seventeenth century forks were becoming more commonplace, particularly among the upper classes. Diarist Samuel Pepys noted in his 1664 journal that he had purchased that “new refinement,” a set of forks. The use of forks did not become widespread, especially in northern Europe, until the eighteenth century. Very few forks were imported to the Americas, and few colonial metal-smiths bothered to make them. Some populists among the colonials considered the fork somewhat pretentious. As late as 1779, John Adams was criticized as being anti-democratic for his use of the fork at meals. Colonists used the blunt knife to shovel food into the mouth, and the spoon was used to steady food while cutting it. The spoon was then switched to the right hand to scoop up the morsel. It is believed that this practice established itself and was continued even after forks became commonplace, becoming the distinctly American “zig-zag” method of eating where the fork is exchanged from one hand to the other and is used tines up, much like a spoon.
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Up until the mid-nineteenth century silver eating utensils were very expensive. With the development of efficient manufacturing techniques and with the discovery of vast amounts of silver in the so-called Comstock Load centered on Virginia City, Nevada, in the 1860s, silver utensils became more affordable and available. Combined with the economic growth of the era, by the 1880s silver place settings were within the reach of most of the middle class. During the Victorian era, great emphasis was placed on specialization in many areas of daily living. Rooms began to have specific uses, such as the library, the breakfast room, the children’s nursery, and so forth. Clothing too had specialized uses. There were outfits for boating, cycling, walking, dining, and more. This same sense of unique purpose was reflected in the style of silver utensils. Early nineteenth century dinner sets had a dinner fork and knife as well as tea-, soup-, dessert-, and marrow-spoons. Dessert sets consisted of a smaller knife and fork and often differed in pattern from the rest of the service. Additional specialized pieces became available throughout the nineteenth and into the twentieth centuries. Unique spoon types included: egg, demitasse, individual salt, 5 o’clock tea, fruit, rounded soup, bouillon, chocolate, grapefruit, iced tea, sherbet, chocolate muddler/soda water, café parfait, and lemonade sipper. Distinctive knives included: pickle, fish, tea, melon, orange, individual butter, crawfish, individual game, and individual cheese. Specialized forks included: individual pickle, fish, oyster, tea, pie, berry, melon, cocktail, pie, ice cream, pastry, salad, fruit, lemon, lobster, ramekin, escargot, terrapin, individual cheese, mango, corn, and individual game. The nut pick and individual asparagus tongs were also added to the panoply of specialized utensils. It is unlikely that any one family or household had all of the pieces mentioned. Many of the oldest and most established families had silver services that had been passed down from generation to generation since colonial times. These did not contain all the new specialized pieces. Nonetheless, the tremendous proliferation of silverware types became so outrageous that in 1925, Herbert Hoover, who was then Secretary of Commerce, declared that there should be no more than 55 different pieces in a silver service. Today about 20 items are commonly offered. A basic place setting consists of five pieces: teaspoon, soup spoon, salad fork, dinner fork, and dinner knife. The napkin too has evolved as an important accompaniment to fine dining. The first napkin was nothing more than a lump of dough. The Spartans called it apomagdalie. The dough mixture was cut into small pieces, and then at the table diners cleaned their fingers by kneading the dough. It is thought that this led to using a slice of bread to wipe the fingers. The Romans used two kinds of napkins. The sudarium, a pocket-sized handkerchief that was used to wipe the face during meals in the warm climate, and the mappa, a larger cloth that was spread over the couch to protect it from food bits that would drop while eating in a reclining position. The edge of the mappa was also used to blot the lips. Guests brought their own cloth to the meal, but upon leaving, they often filled them with bits leftover from
Table Settings the meal. Evidence suggests that the napkin was absent from the tables of the early Middle Ages, and diners seemingly wiped their hands and lips on whatever was convenient, be it one of their arms, their clothing, or a piece of bread. In time, the European table began to be set with several large cloths. The first was laid lengthwise at the lord’s place. A long towel was then laid over this and indicated a place for an honored guest. A third cloth served as a communal napkin that hung from the edge of the table like a swag. In the late Middle Ages, communal napkins shrank to the size of a modern bath towel and became more napkin-like. This cloth was an important part of the medieval banquet. The ewerer—a person placed in charge of dinnertime ablutions—carried a towel for the lord and his honored guests to use to wipe their hands after washing. A representation of a ewerer with his finger bowl and napkin can be seen in the Bayeux Tapestry. This position of ewerer continued symbolically into modern times with the maitre d’hotel whose napkin draped over the shoulder is a symbol of his office and rank. Servants of lower rank sported folded napkins lengthwise over their arms. A panter or pantler was in charge of the bread. He carried a folded napkin to transport the bread and knife to be used by the lord. The folded napkin was placed on the left side of the place setting. The spoon was wrapped in another napkin and a third napkin was placed over the other two. The cup-bearer kissed the towel the lord used to wipe his hands in a gesture of assurance that the water had not been poisoned. He then placed the towel over the lord’s left shoulder for use while dining. By the sixteenth century napkins had become more common although their size varied from place to place. French kings often had napkins folded into elaborate shapes by special napkin folders. These napkins were decorative only and never intended for use. This practice fell out of favor by the late seventeenth century. To protect the elaborate ruffs worn around the neck during the seventeenth century, the napkin—now a standard 35 inches by 45 inches—was tied around the neck. As the fork gained popularity, the napkin decreased in size, owing to a new emphasis on neatness while eating. By the eighteenth century the napkin had become a diminutive 30 inches by 36 inches. Napkins were tucked into the neck or buttonhole, or secured by a pin to protect the frilly neckwear. By the mid-nineteenth century hostesses were folding napkins into many shapes including “The Slipper,” “The Rose,” “The Boat,” and other designs. Etiquette manuals of the period discouraged the practice. Victorian napkins, whether for dinner or luncheon, tended to be a 36-inch square and, due to the large size, were generally folded in half before being placed on the lap. During the Edwardian period napkins came in different sizes to suit the meal. Breakfast napkins were 17 to 27 inches square. Luncheon napkins were 23 to 27 inches square. Dinner napkins were 29 to 31 inches square. By the 1920s they had shrunk to 13 to 17 inches for luncheon and 24 to 28 inches for dinner. The breakfast-sized napkin was also used for tea, although a special fringed napkin was sometimes favored.
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In family settings, napkins were sometimes used for two or three meals in a row without laundering. Napkin rings were used to identify the owner of the napkin. Families would have a set of napkin rings with some identifying item on each such as an engraved initial or a small decoration. Some sets had themed decorations such as animals. The family member could identify their napkin by the dog or horse or bird that adorned their particular napkin ring. A Victorian guest would be appalled to see napkin rings at a place setting, as it would indicate to them that the napkin had previously been used. Today, napkins vary with the kind of meal served. There are large napkins for multi-course meals; medium sized ones for smaller meals; and small ones for teas and cocktails. Napkins are generally simply folded or, for casual dining, served in a napkin ring. Napkins are sometimes folded into more elaborate shapes for special occasions, particularly at catered events. Further Reading: Giblin, James Cross. From Hand to Mouth, or, How We Invented Knives, Forks, Spoons and Chopsticks, and the Manners to Go with Them. New York: Crowell, 1987; Grover, Kathryn, ed. Dining in America 1850–1900. Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 1987; Hertzer, Linda. The Simple Art of Napkin Folding. New York: Hearst Books, 1980; Muller, Marianne, and Ola Mikolasek. Great Napkin Folding and Table Settings. New York: Sterling Publishing Co., 1990; Petroski, Henry. The Evolution of Useful Things. New York: Vintage Books, 1994; Ranholfer, Charles. The Epicurean. New York: Dover Publications, 1971; Schollander, Wendell, and Wes Schollander. Forgotten Elegance: The Art, Artifacts and Peculiar History of Victorian And Edwardian Entertaining in America. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2002; Venable, Charles L. Silver in America 1840 –1940: A Century of Splendor. New York: Harry Abrams, 1995; Visser, Margaret. Rituals of Dinner: The Origins, Evolution, Eccentricities and Meaning of Table Manners. New York: Penguin Books, 1991; Von Drachenfels, Suzanne. The Art of the Table: A Complete Guide to Table Setting, Table Manners, and Tableware. New York: Simon and Schuster, 2000.
Dorothy Denneen Volo
Tapas ¿Le pongo algo para picar? “Would you like something to nibble?” In Spain, food almost always accompanies wine, beer, or sherry, and it is rare to see someone drink alone. It is common to move from place to place to meet friends to drink and consume small bits of food, and the traditional food for such gatherings is tapas. Tapas are a way of life—a tasty means of teasing and appeasing the appetite before lunch (eaten from 2–3 P . M.) and /or dinner (eaten about 10 P.M.). At tascas, or tapas bars, people come together for tapeo, the tradition of stimulating the appetite with tapas while engaging in lively conversation with family, friends, and other patrons. That animated discourse may
Tapas consist of the day’s events, philosophy, politics, or the arts. Even business meetings have been known to be conducted over tapas. Although they may look like appetizers and may at times consist of the same foods, tapas are not appetizers. Appetizers or entrémese precede the first course of a meal, whereas tapas are not eaten as part of a meal. They are consumed between meals with a glass of sherry, wine, or beer. It is generally believed they date back to nineteenth-century Andalusia, where sherry is made. But colorful rival stories exist. One story claims that when King Alfonso X, the Wise, was ill, he was told to take small snacks between meals with some wine. Upon his recovery, he ordered innkeepers to provide some food with wine to prevent inebriation. In fact, King Felipe II did decree that tavern keepers accompany glasses of wine with a cover that included sausage to reduce public drunkenness. Some believe the tapas tradition dates back to the sixteenth century when tavern owners were looking for a way to camouflage cheap wine. In mature cheese they found the perfect foil. Others claim tapas evolved in response to the need of farmers and workers to ingest a small amount of food to tide them over, enabling them to continue working until it was time for the main meal. In winter, tapas was consumed with wine to warm the body; in the summer, especially in the south, gazpacho accompanied the tapas items being served. But perhaps the most likely origin resides in the meaning of the word itself. It is derived from the verb tapar, “to cover,” and the tradition of tapas most likely stems from the custom of covering a wine glass with a small plate in order to prevent insects or impurities from failing in. Beginning in the 1800s, tavern owners in Spain would top the plate with food. Eating a little while drinking not only helped prevent drunkenness, it promoted thirst, thus increasing sales at their tavern. In time, each tavern came to have its own specialties, often prepared by the tavern owner’s wife. Tapas originally were free, and some places in Spain still continue this tradition. The foods generally fall into three categories: cosas de picar (little things to nibble) consist of finger foods. Pinchos are tapas that require a utensil to eat, like a decorated toothpick ( banderillas). Cazuelas usually
Tapas. Dan Peretz/Shutterstock.
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Tapas-filled peppers and smoked ham. Peter Doomen/Shutterstock.
come in a sauce and are usually eaten with a larger, more common utensil such as a spoon or fork, rather than with one’s fingers. All regions of Spain have tapas, although the Basque refer to them as pintxos (from pinchar, “to prick”) because they are served with toothpicks. Ingredients vary by tradition, location, availability, and the individual establishment. Different cultures and countries have influenced tapas. Romans introduced the olive when they invaded the eastern coast of the Iberian Peninsula. Olives, along with almonds, citrus, and fragrant spices accompanied the Moors when they invaded the south of Spain. Tomatoes, potatoes, corn, beans, and sweet and chili peppers came from the New World. Tapas bars are crowded, warm, and spirited—patrons squeeze together at the bar, and then two to three people deep, they call out orders. A bodegón, derived from the word bodega meaning “pantry” or “tavern,” is a cheap restaurant that serves mostly drinks accompanied by mini-tapas. A tasca is the most typical pub or bar serving the widest variety of tapas. A mesón, or old-style inn, features a rustic décor that combines a tapas bar and restaurant. A cervecería offers beer and tapas that go well with beer, and a xampanyeria is a champagne bar that serves tapas to complement sparkling wines. Xampanyerias are common in Catalonia. Home entertaining is not common in Spain, and so taverns became the logical place for friends to get away and enjoy food, spirit, and good conversation. Tasca-hopping is a favored pastime. Tapas are consumed in small quantities while standing up, sometimes referred to as picar (“pecking” at the food). Tidbits are quickly chosen and consumed with gusto, as the diner moves on to the next choice or the next tavern. Portions are small, although large sizes
Taverns (ración) may sometimes be had. Bartenders generally keep patrons’ tallies in their heads. Each establishment commonly has 8 to 12 different types of tapas. These may be posted on a blackboard or displayed in cases. Dishes are hot and cold and are often flavored with garlic, chilies, pepper, saffron, or salt, and sometimes are bathed in copious amounts of olive oil. Popular choices include Serrano and Iberico ham, chorizo sausage, Manchego cheese, pickled and stuffed olives, tortilla española (potato omelet), albóndigas (veal and pork meatballs), fried fritters and fish or meat croquettes, and a variety of salads like salpicón de mariscos (shellfish cocktail) and remojón (orange and cod salad). Today, Spain’s fashionable restaurants have expanded the tapas repertoire to include dishes that showcase presentation and new ingredients. Madrid and other Spanish cities even host competitions known as Feria de la Tapa. Different bars have a signature tapa for a week along with their regular selection, and at the end guests vote on the best tapas. In some restaurants in the United States, the ambiance of the tapas bar has been recreated, while others offer a menu where a variety of tapas are combined to make an entire meal. Tapas have also become ideal for home entertaining, bridging the gap between a cocktail party and dinner party. Most can be prepared completely or partially in advance. Ingredients can be as simple to come by as opening a jar or can—olives, anchovies, sardines, capers, pimientos, accompanied by wedges of cheese drizzled with honey, thinly sliced Serrano or Iberico ham, and tomatoes marinated with garlic. Just place the dishes around the room to encourage mingling, and enjoy! Further Reading: Casas, Penelope. Tapas: The Little Dishes of Spain. Revised edition. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2007; Garcia, Tomas. Tapas Made Easy. London: New Holland Publishers, 2004.
WEB SITES http://www.andalucia.com /taste/tapas /home.htm http://www.arrakis.es/~jols /tapas/indexin.html http://www.catalanlife.com /index.cfm?uuid=354237ECDD http://www.cliffordawright.com/ history/tapas.html http://www.proper-spanish-tapas.com /
Stephanie Fogel
Taverns Taverns, as we know them today, first came to America with the English. The documented history of taverns as communal meeting and drinking places reaches back into the twelfth century. With the quality of drinking water
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suspect almost everywhere before the late nineteenth century, in most villages brewing and beer were as essential as were baking and bread. Certainly some basic equipment was needed to make beer or ale, principally a large cauldron, but there was nothing so sophisticated that it required a large investment of capital. Almost everywhere brewing was freely permitted, freely practiced, and largely untaxed. Even the poor could brew small beers (low alcohol), and everyone enjoyed sharing the product of their efforts among friends. This was generally not true of wines and wine production, which was often heavily controlled by the manorial lords or their taxing agents. The atmosphere surrounding wine was also a good deal more pretentious and refined than that associated with beer. The leading consumers of wine were often the upper classes, and because of climate most wines were imported into Britain (and later into British North America) from France, Spain, Italy, or Portugal. The vintners (wine sellers) often formed guilds to protect their trade from domestic interlopers. The Vintner’s Company of London, for instance, secured an essential monopoly of the retail wine trade in the city in the fourteenth century (see Gies and Gies, and Reese). Taverns came to America in the seventeenth century in the form of the so-called Puritan Ordinary, a type of public house (that is, open to public trade). A concern for the welfare of travelers and a desire to regulate the sale of intoxicating liquors to the locals seem to have been important enough reasons for the magistrates of many New England towns to counsel the opening of some kind of licensed public house in each community. In 1644, Connecticut ordered all but the smallest towns to establish an ordinary for travelers constrained for want of entertainment; and in 1656, the General Court of Massachusetts made towns liable to a fine for not sustaining a
The Old Tun Tavern, Philadelphia, in which the first lodge of Free Masons was organized in North America, c. 1904. Library of Congress.
Taverns
Raleigh Tavern in Williamsburg, Virginia, c. 1935. Library of Congress.
licensed public ordinary. By the close of the seventeenth century, the ordinaries, and the word ordinary, had largely passed into disuse in America with so-called inns and taverns taking their place. Inns were often placed at river crossings and bridges, along major roads or stagecoach lines, in ports, or in any well-traveled place. While inns provided lodgings for travelers, taverns were essentially drinking houses catering to the local population. Early taverns were located in town—often among a small cluster of public buildings, residences, and county stores. In fact, the importance of the tavern was far greater to its neighbors than to any itinerant travelers that happened upon it. It was there for the comfort of the community, for the interchange of news and opinions, and for the incidental sociability it provided among the townspeople. The tavern was often the unofficial center of community life. A tavern of this period might be a fairly substantial building of several rooms with a generous cellar for storage, or it might be a room set aside in a private residence. The bar room—an area of one room often set off by a counter and grating made of wooden bars—could be locked to keep out servants or late-night patrons. Colonial taverns were commonly furnished with a hodgepodge of small tables and unmatched chairs, stools, or benches. In some taverns a customer could purchase food in the form of pot-luck (literally whatever the tavern keeper had hanging in the fireplace pot that day), but taverns seldom offered very elaborate feasting, such as would be expected at inns.
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Christiana Campbell’s tavern garden in Williamsburg, Virginia, 1959. Library of Congress.
Many taverns had signs hung over the door to give notice that beer, ale, or rum could be purchased. These taverns often sported historical, descriptive, or comical names and images like the Admiral Benbow, the Willows, or the Belching Pig. Unlike in the drinking places favored by many other cultures, both men and women freely gathered in the English-style tavern. There they passed the evening much like modern villagers visiting the local pub. Convivial pastimes like gambling, singing, music, games, and conversation were a common part of the tavern scene, but accidents, quarrels, and acts of violence sometimes permeated the atmosphere, especially following sessions of hard drinking. Taverns were licensed establishments in most colonies, and most of the licenses were issued to men. Nonetheless, the widows of tavern keepers often continued the businesses long after the death of their husbands, and a remarkable number of licensed establishments in the colonies seemingly had no male proprietor that anyone could remember. The wives of these men had also been their business partners helping to run the establishment, providing food and clean clothing for the workmen or boarders, and sometimes maintaining the accounts. Many women, initially devastated by the loss of a husband, found that their status as a widow left them with more influence in managing the family wealth, business, or estate than might otherwise be the case. The September 2, 1732, South Carolina Gazette carried an advertisement for a tavern kept by Mrs. Peach as well as the public houses of several other ladies—Mrs. Eldrich, Mrs. Saureau, Mrs. Delamare, Mrs. Flavel, and
Taverns Mrs. Ramsey (Sprull 296). Some of these establishments were quite distinguished and appealed to members of the genteel class who preferred quiet, quality surroundings to the often questionable and crowded stagecoach inn or tap room in the tavern. Christiana Campbell’s tavern in colonial Williamsburg—one of five taverns in the town—was a favorite rendezvous for the Virginia Burgesses during so-called Court Days when the colonial assembly met. It was directly behind and just across the road from the capitol building, and it made a fine place to which to adjourn when the public business ground to a halt. Chowning’s, Shield’s, the Raleigh, and the King’s Arms were the other four taverns in town. In the eighteenth century the consumption of alcohol had not yet taken on the negative associations commonly voiced by temperance advocates in nineteenth century America. In the eighteenth century, colonial New England imported 4 million gallons of molasses each year. Half of this was distilled into a very satisfying rum in the 60 distilleries in Massachusetts, and 95 percent of the rum produced was consumed locally. Men and boys as young as 12 were allowed to buy whatever form of alcoholic beverage they wished. Besides domestically produced rum and beer, there were imported wines, brandies, and liqueurs of many types. Whiskeys, gins, and other distilled beverages were not particularly popular in America except as home brews intended to deny import duties to the Crown charged for the mere privilege of enjoying a temporary intoxication. Popular drinks included hot buttered rum (heated by the insertion of a hot poker) and a concoction of hot rum, beer, and brown sugar known as flip. Lucrative profits were also to be realized through the availability of other genial addictions, “a quiet smoke, a nice cup of tea, a sweet tooth . . . exotic rarities converted into cravings” (Schama 409). Tavern keepers often provided long-stemmed clay pipes that could be “rented” for a smoke. These have come to be known as tavern pipes. The end of the pipe stem was broken off when it became foul with tobacco tar. Literally thousands of these small pieces can be found by investigators in the “privy holes” on the sites of former taverns. Imported coffee and chocolate were also highly valued, and many business establishments catered to the “addicted” by providing coffee and chocolate in various forms. Shield’s Tavern in Colonial Williamsburg has recently been converted back into a colonial coffeehouse to better represent this facet of American life—both modern and historical. Colonials willingly spent a fair penny for their favorite extravagances, but they greatly resented paying import duties on them. The disputes surrounding these taxes would result in the American Revolution, and the taverns and coffeehouses would become the seedbeds of discussion, dissention, and rebellion. Some decades after the War for Independence, Senator Daniel Webster called one of America’s taverns the headquarters of the revolution. This was certainly not an overstatement of the facts. At a critical time in American history taverns served as a web of national unity connecting the so-called Committees of Correspondence in all 13 colonies. The firebrand patriot Sam Adams supposedly plotted the Tea Party at Boston’s Green Dragon Tavern
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(the original “Headquarters of the Revolution”), and Thomas Jefferson drafted elements of the Declaration of Independence at the Indian Queen Tavern in Philadelphia. Patrick Henry and the restless patriots of Virginia’s House of Burgesses pledged their dedication to liberty or death at the Raleigh Tavern in Williamsburg, and the Secret Committee of Congress planned for the first American navy in a private room at the Tun Tavern on the Philadelphia waterfront in 1775. The initial corps of American Marines was also raised in the Tun Tavern, and Robert Mullan, owner of the tavern, and Samuel Nickolas were made the first Captains of Marines. The Tun Tavern could be called the first Marine recruiting office in America. British Major John André, famed for his involvement with the traitor Benedict Arnold, was held during his trial at Mabie’s Tavern in Tappan, New York. A crowd of about 1,500 soldiers and onlookers witnessed the hanging of André on the hilltop behind the tavern that was owned by Casparus and Yoast Mabie. Finally, General George Washington bade an emotional and tear-filled farewell to his officer corps at war’s end at Fraunces Tavern in Manhattan. The most common sign found along the waterfront of many American cities in the Golden Age of American maritime commerce in the nineteenth century was probably the silhouette of a mug of ale or a bottle of rum. Sandwiched between the chandler’s and blacksmith’s shops, flanking the maritime outfitters or the sail lofts that dotted the entire harbor area were the sailors’ taverns. Sign boards bearing dolphins, anchors, capstans, and mermaids beckoned the sailors to groggeries with descriptive names such as the Jolly Tar, the Crow’s Nest, the Spyglass, the Admiral’s Cabin, or the Spouter. The interiors of these haunts ranged from dives with long wooden benches beneath low-beamed ceilings hung with smoky ship’s lanterns to plush, gilt halls festooned with velvet drapes. Seaport taverns were often the focus of merchants, investors, bankers, insurers, and sea officers who used them as places of business, and they served as fertile fields for hiring seamen and shipwrights. Contrary to common perceptions, the women and girls who served as so-called wenches and waitresses in taverns and alehouses rarely provided illicit entertainment of a sexual nature. This business was reserved for the bordellos and alleyways of the town. Herman Melville–—the author of Moby Dick, Billy Budd, and other nautical stories—described the waterfront as “that portion of the terraqueous globe providentially set apart for dancehouses, doxies, and tapsters, in short what sailors call a fiddler’s green” (Melville 1361). Nonetheless, street prostitutes could be brought into the tavern by patrons for as little as a dollar. The owners of the business, however, commonly frowned upon the practice as they could be fined by the authorities for running a disorderly establishment (Volo and Volo 5). The influx of German and Irish immigrants to America with their culture of social beer drinking initially bolstered the number of taverns and pubs found in cities, but the increase was also blamed for a rise in public drunkenness, wife beating, and crime. Many Americans could not escape the biased view that the decay and degeneracy of cities was due to the immigrants themselves who seemed to tolerate—if not frequent—taverns, beer halls,
Tea saloons, dance halls, gambling establishments, and houses of ill repute with amazing disregard for traditional American standards of conduct. The rise of anti-drinking and temperance causes in the nineteenth century made taverns less attractive as gathering places for public figures, who flocked instead to meet at the well-appointed public rooms of the newly popular hotels. Nonetheless, taverns continued to play a role during America’s Civil War. So common were they that it would be impossible to delineate the role of each; yet a few stand out in the historical record. The Herr Tavern on the Chambersburg Pike in Pennsylvania witnessed the very first clash of arms between Northern and Southern troops on the first day of Gettysburg, and it remains one of the most prominent landmarks along the Confederate lines on Herr Ridge. Dobbins Tavern was located very near the strategic center of the federal lines on Cemetery Ridge. Both taverns were used as hospitals during the crucial three-day battle in Pennsylvania, and both are still open for business. In May 1864, about a dozen miles north of Richmond, Virginia, Federal cavalry clashed with Southern horsemen at Yellow Tavern, a prominent landmark that lent its name to the battle. During the encounter, Confederate leader J.E.B. Stuart—the flamboyant Southern cavalry division commander who had ridden around the Union army three times in as many years to the embarrassment of the Northern horsemen—was killed. The South sorely felt his loss. Recreational drinking lost some of its luster during the temperance and prohibition crusades of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, and taverns gave way to the speakeasies and nightclubs in the 1920s. Yet modern taverns have generally been able to recapture much of the homey character, convivial warmth, and welcoming hospitality of their colonial forbearers. Modern Americans continue to visit them to watch sports, to eat food, to argue politics, and to experience cordial sociability over a large pint. Further Reading: Gies, Frances, and Joseph Gies. Life in a Medieval Village. New York: HarperCollins Publishers, 1990; Melville, Herman. Billy Budd. New York: Literary Classics, 1983; Reeves, Compton. Pleasures and Pastimes in Medieval England. New York: Oxford University Press, 1998; Schama, Simon. A History of Britain, The Wars of the British, 1603–1776. New York: Hyperion, 2001; Sprull, Julia Cherry. Women’s Life and Work in the Southern Colonies. New York: W. W. Norton & Company, 1973; Volo, Dorothy Denneen, and James M. Volo. Daily Life in the Age of Sail. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2002.
James M. Volo
Tea Tea ceremonies have their origins in China where tea’s cultivation began 4,000 years ago. During the tenth- through the thirteenth-century Song Dynasty, a style of tea drinking developed that involved using powdered
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green tea, ceramic serving bowls, and precise serving rituals. Known as the Song tea ceremony, its customs spread throughout Asia. Although the practice no longer takes place in China, drinking tea remains an integral part of family celebrations and weddings. During the holidays in particular younger generations take their elders to restaurants to have tea and pay their respects. Japanese tea ceremonies began in the thirteenth century after Buddhist monks returning from China introduced the Song tea ceremony to their countrymen. Emphasizing serenity, simplicity, and self-discipline, the Japanese version follows two schools of teaching—Omotesenke and Urasenke. Participants are expected to know the basic tenets of these schools and to exhibit the proper manners for serving and accepting tea. Both Omotesenke and Urasenke require guests to wash their hands, rinse their mouths, and remove their shoes before entering a teahouse. Once inside they are greeted by a kimono-clad host or hostess. Before the tea ceremony begins, the host may serve a small snack finished off with Japanese rice wine, sake, or an array of sweets. The host then kneels on a tatami, or straw mat, and cleans each teamaking utensil in front of his similarly kneeling, formally dressed guests. After completing this ritual, the host selects a ceremonial bamboo whisk with which he mixes hot water and powdered green tea in a ceramic tea bowl. Tea whisked, he then passes the bowl to his guests. Each person takes two or three sips before praising the drink, wiping the bowl’s rim, and, with a bow, passing the bowl to the next person. The procedure is repeated until everyone has drunk the tea. The host then cleans the utensils again. As prescribed, the tea ceremony may take between one to four hours to complete.
Making tea in a wealthy Peking, China home, c. 1901. Library of Congress.
Tea
A tea ceremony in Shanghai, China. TAOLMOR /Shutterstock.
A sense of tranquility is maintained throughout and conversation is kept to a minimum. A contrast to the Japanese ceremonies, afternoon tea in Great Britain and former British colonies acts as a means of satiating one’s appetite. British afternoon tea began in the early nineteenth century when Anna the Duchess of Bedford requested that a snack of tea, bread, and butter be delivered to her chambers in the late afternoon. She required this light meal at five o’clock because she had experienced a “sinking feeling” and could not wait for the standard eight o’clock dinner. Soon after the duchess began inviting friends to join her for this daily repast and stave off pre-dinner hunger pangs. Tea was served then as it is now, in a teapot, accompanied with milk and sugar. Over the years afternoon tea has come to include scones with jam and clotted cream, small iced cakes and pastries, and tea sandwiches, all of which are displayed on a tiered stand. Customary tea sandwiches consist of thinly sliced cucumber, egg, and smoked salmon and dill. The delicate sandwiches are served with the crusts removed and cut into triangles. A simpler version of afternoon tea, Devon cream tea omits the sandwiches and calls only for scones, jam, and clotted cream. Now taken around four o’clock, British afternoon tea is offered in homes, teashops, and hotels, consumed by patrons dressed casually or in their best finery, and with as much conversation as desired. In the United States afternoon tea appears on the menus of teashops and high-end hotels and is often mistakenly referred to as “high tea.” High tea is, in fact, an early evening meal served at six o’clock and stands as a substitute for the later evening dinner.
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Throughout much of North Africa mint tea or atay bi nahna acts as the drink of hospitality. Introduced by the British in the 1850s, green tea was quickly accepted and adapted by the North Africans. Served in a silver, ornamental teapot, the hot tea contains a generous infusion of fresh mint and sugar. Poured from the teapot held high above the table, it splashes gently into small, slender, filigree glasses. Sweet pastries can accompany it and do so during the Festival of Eid al-Fitr, which celebrates the end of Ramadan. Deemed a symbol of good will in North Africa, mint tea plays a prominent role in welcoming houseguests, conducting business dealings, bargaining for carpets, woodcrafts, or souvenirs and relaxing with friends at a café. Also thought to aid in digestion, it is served at the beginning or end of every meal. Etiquette requires that each person consume three glasses before departing a home, shop, or cafe. To decline a glass is deemed rude. Whether due to its lack of expense, comforting taste, ritualized yet simple preparation, or mildly addictive properties, mint tea has captivated this region. One cannot walk through a busy square without seeing rich, steaming tea being sipped at sidewalk cafes or in storefronts. Wherever tea is taken, lively conversation remains part of the event. Further Reading: Davidson, Alan. The Penguin Companion to Food. New York: Penguin Books, 2002; Fox, Kate. Watching the English: The Hidden Rules of English Behaviour. London: Hodder and Stoughton, 2005; Hanger, Catherine. World Food Morocco. Hawthorn, Australia: Lonely Planet Publications, 2000; Herbst, Sharon Tyler. The New Food Lover’s Companion. Hauppauge, NY: Barron’s, 2001; The Rough Guide to Morocco. New York: Rough Guides, 2004; Shulman, Martha Rose. The Food Lover’s Atlas of the World. Buffalo: Firefly Books, 2002.
WEB SITE http://www.greentealovers.com
Kathy Hunt
Tearooms in America Spurred on by the onset of prohibition, increased women’s rights, and the growth of the highway system, the American tearoom took off during the early years of the twentieth century. An alternative to the preexisting options of expensive hotel and high-class establishments, or roughshod roadside inns, the tearoom offered a more casual dining experience for all, but it catered mainly to a female clientele who had until recently been banned from unaccompanied public dining. The tearoom fad started in the larger cities and then radiated out into the surrounding rural areas, a chain reaction that mirrored the expansion of interstate roads across the country. High society embraced the city tearoom as a meeting place and a social destination during the 1900s and 1910s. Hotels, such as the Plaza and the
Tearooms in America Waldorf in New York City, and department stores, such as Marshall Field in Chicago and Wanamaker’s in Philadelphia, set aside rooms for the sole purpose of serving afternoon tea. After witnessing the success of these establishments, other hotels, stores, and individual proprietors followed suit. The Chicago Daily noted in an article in 1908 that the tearoom’s success with women was so great that it would soon “be more in vogue than it is in London or Paris.” While men constituted a small percentage of patrons, the tearooms were first and foremost a refuge for women. Rules still existed during those years that excluded unaccompanied women from dining in most restaurants. Tearooms were one of the first exceptions to these restrictions. They became a place for women to socialize, relax, and see and be seen. Tea dances became the rage in the hotels in the years leading up to World War I. Proprietors hired bands and removed tables to allow patrons space to dance. While mostly deemed respectable establishments, critics saw tearooms as places of loose morals where women smoked, danced, and in some cases, drank alcoholic beverages. The wealthy patrons of the city tearooms created the demand for the roadside tearoom in the surrounding countryside. Improved state roads and the higher rate of car ownership made day trips easy for the wealthy and as a result, enterprising women in small towns opened establishments that catered to the travelers’ needs. Proprietors renovated run down houses and abandoned barns close to major thoroughfares to serve the pleasure seeking day-trippers, resuscitating areas previously ignored during the preceding years of train travel. The simple cooking and rustic settings of these rural tearooms charmed city dwellers who were accustomed to hotel food and urban landscapes. The décor of the tearooms played an important role in their success. The Colonial style prevailed during a time period when velvet and heavy ornamentation of the Victorian era was common. The simple lines of the wooden tables, the bare floors, the decorative touches, such as a spinning wheel in the corner, were meant to connote cleanliness, simplicity, and hominess. In many cases, the furnishings and wall hangings were sold along with the tea and sandwiches. Some owners installed tea gardens, offering patrons the novelty of dining outdoors. Customers enjoyed signs of a socalled feminine touch, such as floral centerpieces, delicate china, and lantern festooned trees. While individual expression was encouraged, and in some cases, such as the bohemian Greenwich Village–inspired tearooms, expected, all followed certain guidelines. Comfort, cleanliness, and good, simple food were the promises of the roadside tearoom. The tearoom influenced change in the status quo of the restaurant industry as it existed in the early twentieth century. Restaurants at the time were almost exclusively male, both in the makeup of their owners and employees. Tearooms replaced the European standard of maitre d’ and all male wait staff with personable hostesses and well-mannered waitresses. Proprietors made every attempt to emphasize the comfort and happiness of customers over the commercial atmosphere perceived in other restaurants.
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The teahouse of the Vusper Country Club in Tyngsboro, Massachusetts, c. 1880–1920. Library of Congress.
Though men ran most hotel tearooms, middle class, often college educated women owned the smaller establishments. Universities offered programs in the domestic sciences, including courses to assist women’s entry into the catering world. Correspondence courses sold informational booklets to wouldbe owners. Newspapers and women’s magazines gave advice and guarded encouragement to women who possessed knowledge of food, a pleasing personality, and an opportune location to enter into the business of running a tearoom. The personal supervision of a female over every aspect of the dining experience contributed in great part to the tearoom’s lasting success. The advent of the female owner and the more delicate sensibilities of the clientele resulted in streamlined menus. Out were the red meat, heavy sauces, and multiple courses of other restaurants. In were fresh vegetables and salads, chicken dishes, and other light meals. Home economists encouraged this turn from heavy meals to lighter fare, armed with the new science of nutrition. Simple preparations were favored over complex, overly spiced food. This emphasis on home style cooking allowed women with little or no professional cooking experience to enter the business since they felt “it’s nothing but housekeeping on a larger scale.” By necessity, tearooms offered limited menus. Thrift was of great importance because of the limited profit margin involved in the sale of tea. The overhead cost of keeping a tearoom increased incrementally the more complicated the menu became. The simplicity of the menus also allowed tearooms to serve meals at untraditional mealtimes to the hungry tourists who made up the majority of their patrons.
Thanksgiving The tearoom’s heyday ended with the very factors that spurred them on. The repeal of prohibition in 1933 and the stock market crash of 1929 slowed down the demand for quiet, genteel places. Tearooms introduced alcoholic beverages to their menus in an effort to lure male clientele away from the newly reopened saloons. Paved roads were replaced by superhighways, which literally passed the tearooms by. Chain restaurants popped up along the highway system that copied and streamlined the many innovations of the tearooms, but at a much lower cost and at a greater savings for the consumer. Though tearooms continued to flourish well into the fifties and have enjoyed a revival in interest in recent years, the craze never returned to the heights of the early twentieth century. Further Reading: “Five O’clock Tea Popular; Chicago Women Take To It.” Chicago Daily Tribune. September 6, 1908; Cades, Hazel Rawson. “Everybody Eats.” Woman’s Home Companion, November, 1928; Whitaker, Jan. Tea at the Blue Lantern Inn: A Social History of the Tea Room Craze in America. New York: St. Martin’s Press, 2002.
Siobhan Fagan
Thanksgiving Early American colonists celebrated days of thanksgiving, which were organized in response to specific events, such as military victories, good harvests, or providential rainfalls. New England’s Puritans were particularly enamored of thanksgivings, which to them were solemn religious occasions spent in church. Not much is known about early thanksgiving dinners, if there were any. Of the thousands of the thanksgiving days observed in New England from the seventeenth to the mid-eighteenth centuries, only one church record even suggests the possibility of a feast. While the absence of references does not imply that there were no dinners on thanksgiving days, it is surprising that more records have not been found. Descriptions of sumptuous Thanksgiving dinners date to the early nineteenth century. In 1806 William Bentley, the pastor of the East Church in Salem, Massachusetts, described a two-course meal—the first consisting of turkey and other meat dishes, and the second, of pastries and desserts. Edward Everett Hale, the American author and Unitarian minister, noted that Thanksgiving dinners commenced with chicken pie and roast turkey, then proceeded to several different types of pies, tarts, and puddings, and ended with dried fruit. A New Hampshire Thanksgiving dinner of the same era began with a ham and a large roast turkey, followed by chicken, duck, celery, puddings, pies, and fruit. An 1831 Thanksgiving dinner in Geneva, New York, noted turkey, beef, duck, ham, sausage, potatoes, yams, succotash, pickles, nuts, raisins, pears, peaches, pie, tarts, creams, custards, jellies, floating islands, sweetbreads, wines, rum, brandy, egg-nog, and punch. The writer Harriet Beecher Stowe reported that thanksgiving celebrations in Litchfield,
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Connecticut, included elaborate meals composed of turkey, chicken, chicken pies, plum puddings, and four types of pie for dessert. Many influences helped transform the regional New England thanksgiving dinner into a national holiday. One major factor was migrations. New England soil was not the best for farming and many New Englanders moved to other parts of the country in search of better farmland. New York’s central valley, for instance, was largely settled by New Englanders, as was much of the Midwest. Transplanted New Englanders kept the Thanksgiving dinner alive in their new homes and urged their newly adopted communities to celebrate it as well. In addition, Thanksgiving became part of popular American culture. Thanksgiving became subject matter for songs and poems were common fare. William Wordsworth’s poem, Thanksgiving Ode was popular for decades. Lydia Maria Child, author of The American Frugal Housewife, wrote perhaps the most Thanksgiving poem best known by its first line, “Over the river and thro’ the wood.” Likewise, Thanksgiving was a day when those who were well off gave food to the poor and destitute, a practice that continues today.
THE PILGRIMS AND THANKSGIVING The first published association between the Pilgrims and Thanksgiving appeared in 1841, when Alexander Young published a copy of a letter written by Edward Winslow, dated December 11, 1621, describing an undated three-day event in the fall at Plimoth Plantation. The letter was published the following year in England as part of a larger book titled, A Relation or Iournall of the Beginning and Proceeding of the English Plantation Setled at Plimoth in New England (1622). In this letter, Winslow writes: Our harvest being gotten in, our Governor sent four men on fowling, that so we might after a more special manner re[ j]oice together, after we had gathered the fruit of our labours. They four in one day k[i]lled as much fowl as, with a little help besides, served the Company almost a week. At which time, amongst other recreations, we exercised our arms, many of the Indians coming amongst us, and amongst the rest their greatest king, Massasoit with some 90 men, whom for three days we entertained and feasted. And they went out and killed five deer which they brought to the plantation and bestowed on our Governor and upon the Captain and others.
In a footnote to the letter, Young claimed that the event described by Winslow “was the first thanksgiving, the harvest festival of New England. On this occasion they no doubt feasted on the wild turkey as well as venison.” In the same 1841 volume, Young also cited Governor William Bradford’s 1650 manuscript, which told the story of Plimoth Plantation from 1620 to 1647. Bradford made no mention of the event described by Winslow, but he did report that in the fall of 1621, there was “a great store of wild turkeys,” venison, cod, bass, waterfowl, and corn available at the colony. However, neither
Thanksgiving author used the word thanksgiving to describe this or any other event in the fall of 1621. The Puritans made no subsequent mention of it and no evidence has surfaced suggesting that it was remembered or observed in later years. The feast described by Winslow makes no mention of prayer and it does include many secular elements: the Puritans would not have considered it a day of thanksgiving. However, the idea that the 1621 event at Plimoth Plantation was the “First Thanksgiving” was picked up by others, and by the mid-nineteenth century it was generally believed in New England that the Pilgrims had started the Thanksgiving dinner tradition. Of course, Jamestown, settled in 1607, observed days of thanksgiving years before the Pilgrims landed at Plimoth Plantation, and a plaque in Jamestown marks the purported site of the real First Thanksgiving, but factual knowledge was unable to stop the fakelore from spreading. The association between the Pilgrims and thanksgiving remains a popular symbol in the celebration of Thanksgiving today. SARAH JOSEPHA HALE’S TALE The driving force behind making Thanksgiving a national holiday was Sarah Josepha Hale, who published a two-volume novel titled Northwood; or, a Tale of New England (1827). It included an entire chapter describing a Thanksgiving dinner of the time. The publication of Northwood brought Hale fame, and she was selected as the editor of Godey’s Lady’s Book in 1836. Hale commenced her campaign to create a national Thanksgiving holiday in 1846. For the next 17 years, she wrote annually to members of Congress, prominent individuals, and the governors of every state and territory, requesting each to proclaim the last Thursday in November as Thanksgiving day. In an age before word processors, typewriters, or mass media, this campaign was a daunting task.
A Godey’s Lady’s Book engraving of Sarah Josepha (Buell) Hale at Thanksgiving. Library of Congress.
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Sarah Josepha Hale believed that a national Thanksgiving holiday would help bind America together. She came close to success in 1859 when 30 states and three territories observed Thanksgiving on the third Thursday of November. During the Civil War, she was unable to communicate with many Southern states, so rather than lobby each state one by one, she approached President Lincoln, asking for Thanksgiving to be designated a national holiday. A few months after the North’s military victories at Gettysburg and Vicksburg in 1863, Lincoln declared the last Thursday in November a national day of thanksgiving, and the holiday has been celebrated ever since. TRADITIONAL THANKSGIVING DINNER Although Thanksgiving church services continued to be held in the nineteenth century, a writer in Scribner’s Magazine in 1871 proclaimed that Americans had “almost lost sight of” the religious character of the day. In cities, the author reported, no one considered attending religious services on Thanksgiving a duty, and in the country women and men attended services, but their attention was really focused on “what has grown to be considered the real event, the raison d’etre of the day, namely, the dinner.” By the turn of the twentieth century, Thanksgiving dinner had become enshrined in cookery magazines and cookbooks, which published menus for proper Thanksgiving meals and offered recipes to help the uninitiated to prepare the traditional dishes. In her Boston Cooking-School Cook Book (1896), Fannie Farmer, the principal of the Boston Cooking School, offered a Thanksgiving menu with 23 dishes. Other menus were more elaborate: the Thanksgiving Dinner in The Picayune’s Creole Cook Book (1900), a New Orleans culinary bible, for instance, featured 33 dishes among which were “Baked Red Snapper a la Creole” and “Turkey Stuffed with Chestnuts.” This book also offered a menu for “A More Economical Thanksgiving Dinner” with only 28 dishes. The cookbook also offered extensive suggestions for proper Thanksgiving decorations, which would suggest “wild luxuriance and freedom of growth, the spirit of American liberty which gave birth to this day.” Most Thanksgiving dinners were simpler. Most featured a turkey. At first, it was served with other meats. Venison and game, for instance, were common foods served at early nineteenth century dinners. But as the nineteenth century progressed, game largely disappeared from the American table—particularly in urban areas—and by the end of century it had disappeared from Thanksgiving menus. The domesticated goose, which had been the main course for the traditional English Christmas, was another important meat served at Thanksgiving during the nineteenth century. The goose, however, was smaller and cost more than the turkey and serving goose at Thanksgiving slowly went out of fashion. Beef was occasionally mentioned in descriptions of Thanksgiving dinners; it was an important meat source in New England and it was frequently cheaper per pound than poultry. But by far the closest challenger to the turkey as the center piece
Thanksgiving of the dinner was the chicken pie, a traditional English savory dish. Even this alternative to the turkey disappeared from the Thanksgiving menu by the end of the nineteenth century. The traditional American Thanksgiving that emerged consisted of the turkey as its centerpiece. The price of turkey had declined during the nineteenth century to such an extent that by the century’s end that it was less expensive than the alternatives and thus was affordable to most Americans. The central role of the turkey was exemplified by the phrase “Turkey Day,” which became a synonym for Thanksgiving by the 1880s. Turkeys were prepared in many ways—deboned and boiled, fried, baked, and roasted. Rituals of carving the turkey at the table—usually the responsibility of the senior male at the dinner—derive from the Middle Ages and continued in America until at least the mid-twentieth century. The turkey’s large body cavities presented unique opportunities for the creative cook. The recent popularity of the New Orleans Turducken—a deboned chicken within a deboned duck within a deboned turkey with stuffing placed between the layers is in fact a Renaissance way of preparing turkeys. Most cooks stuff the cavities with a wide variety of ingredients, including oysters, chopped liver, prunes, dried bread, cherries, berries, lard, artichokes, egg yolks, grated cheese, chestnuts, and onions seasoned variously with mint, marjoram, parsley, pepper, cloves, nutmeg, grated cheese, and garlic. Thanksgiving has been celebrated in many different ways. For instance, the practice of giving turkeys at Thanksgiving became common by the early
Thanksgiving dinner in Neffsville, Pennsylvania, 1942. Library of Congress.
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nineteenth century. No doubt this provided the impetus for employers to give turkeys to their staffs. It was a logical step from giving a Thanksgiving dinner for the poor. Similar events for the homeless have been in almost every city in America ever since. As the turkey took central position in the Thanksgiving feast a wide array of side dishes were also institutionalized. In the South, candied yams, sweet potatoes, and tangy relishes became important components. MexicanAmerican families often served posole, menudo, and tamales. IMMIGRANT THANKSGIVING In the 1880s immigrants from Southern and Eastern Europe began flooding into the United States. The American public education system’s major task was to create a common American heritage. One curricular need was to create an easily understood history of America. The Pilgrims were an ideal symbol for America’s beginning. Pageants celebrating the mythical First Thanksgiving were commonly conducted in schools. The Pilgrims and the First Thanksgiving became imbedded in the nation’s schools, as did the Thanksgiving feast. Immigrant families who had not celebrated Thanksgiving in their native lands readily adopted the holiday and the dinner. In the process, immigrants added to and modified the traditional Thanksgiving menu. Although not every immigrant has retained the turkey as the central feature of the Thanksgiving dinner, historian Elizabeth Pleck has pointed out that in general the turkey “became the symbol of the dominant culture, and the stuffing and side dishes, and desserts the immigrants’ contribution.” FOOTBALL DAY The entertainments on Thanksgiving extend well beyond the family gathering and the massive feast. In 1876, the Intercollegiate Football Association scheduled a championship football game on Thanksgiving Day. Whether this was the first game played on Thanksgiving is unknown, but it is clear that games continued to be played on Thanksgiving thereafter. In the 1890s, the Chicago Tribune estimated that about 10,000 high school, college, and athletic clubs played football on Thanksgiving Day. In 1893 the New York Times concluded that Thanksgiving needed to be renamed as it no longer had any religious content; “football day” was mentioned as a possible alternative. Fans gave up or postponed their Thanksgiving dinner. In 1934 NBC radio broadcast the first national Thanksgiving Day football game. Later television made it possible for fans to remain in their home, enjoy their dinner, and watch their favorite ball game. THE MASS MARKET THANKSGIVING Thanksgiving had become a gift-giving occasion in the early nineteenth century. By mid-century, merchants produced books specifically to be given
Thanksgiving as presents at Thanksgiving. Beginning in the 1880s, Thanksgiving greeting cards were manufactured for use in the same way as were Christmas and Valentine’s Day cards. Other goods—napkins, plates and candies—were also marketed. Commercial companies manufactured Thanksgiving-related products, such as cranberry sauce and boxed stuffing. By the early twentieth century, commercial companies began inserting advertisements into newspapers and magazines with Thanksgiving themes. These early attempts to commercialize Thanksgiving pale by comparison to those efforts associated with Macy’s department store. The Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade was started by Macy’s employees on November 27, 1924. The parade stepped off on 145th Street in Harlem and ended in front of the Macy’s store on Herald Square. Balloons were introduced in the late 1920s, and they have since become the signature attraction for the event. Traditionally, the last float of the parade carries Santa Claus, who officially kicks off the Christmas shopping season. Millions of visitors and television viewers watch the trademark giant balloons as they’re marched down the avenues. Many people feel that the parade and the materialistic mania it ushers in have made Thanksgiving a symbol of crass commercialism. Others watch the parade on television while they are preparing their Thanksgiving Feast or watch the film Miracle on 34th Street, which is frequently aired on Thanksgiving Day. THANKSGIVING PROTESTS Perhaps due to the national significance of Thanksgiving, many Americans promote particular causes on the day. In 1835, William Alcott, a physician, wrote that he was opposed to the feast on moral grounds as well as for medical reasons. He called Thanksgiving a carnival “loaded with luxuries not only on the day of the general Thanksgiving, but for several days afterward.” He was particularly concerned because New Englanders were also beginning to celebrate Christmas, and he claimed that the two feasts had already merged into one long period of overindulgence that caused serious health problems. William Alcott had other reasons to oppose the traditional Thanksgiving dinner: he had become a vegetarian in 1830 and was later one of the founders of the American Vegetarian Society. Few Americans paid any attention to Alcott or the vegetarians until the late twentieth century, when animal rights organizations, such as People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA), gained visibility for their beliefs around Thanksgiving. For PETA members, Thanksgiving is not a time to eat turkeys but to convince Americans to give up eating meat. PETA has sponsored petitions and published leaflets encouraging a turkey-less Thanksgivings under the slogan “Give Turkeys Something to be Thankful For!” To counteract Butterball’s Thanksgiving Talk Line, which answers questions about proper cooking techniques, PETA has encouraged its members to call Butterball’s Talk Line and tell them that there was no proper way to kill and cook turkeys. Another organization, the Farm Sanctuary, encourages Americans to celebrate Thanksgiving without eating turkey. Sanctuary also publishes “Thankful Turkey Recipes,” which “provides delicious Thanksgiving recipes that give
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the turkeys something to really be thankful for.” It also distributes a video, “The Making of a Turkey,” with “undercover footage obtained by Farm Sanctuary investigators of inhumane factory farming practices, transportation cruelties, and slaughterhouse abuses.” Variations on the “Mock Turkey” became a regular feature in vegetarian and other cookbooks. Even if turkey does not appear on their tables, turkey images frequently do. Beginning in the 1980s, vegetarians could feast on tofu turkey or Tofurkey, which is a soy-based product shaped like a turkey, instead of the traditional holiday bird. Other vegetarians prefer not to eat even turkey images or foods that are intended to taste like turkey. Yet another protest was launched by Native Americans who began calling Thanksgiving “A National Day of Mourning.” When the 350th anniversary of the Pilgrims’ arrival in Massachusetts was celebrated in 1970, Frank James, a Wampanoag leader, was invited to speak at the ceremonies. Before he delivered his pro-American Indian perspective, the text was leaked to the press, and his invitation to speak was rescinded. On Thanksgiving Day, James, along with hundreds of other Native Americans and their supporters, gathered at Coles Hill, which overlooks Plymouth Rock, and declared a National Day of Mourning. Every year since, the United American Indians of New England have sponsored similar days. James died in 2001, but his son has carried on the tradition. THANKSGIVING TODAY Today, Thanksgiving remains one of America’s most important holidays. Retailers have commercialized Thanksgiving Day as the start of the Christmas shopping season, and football games remain part of the entertainment. Illustrators, film makers, and television producers have generated new Thanksgiving images. However, the importance of the family Thanksgiving dinner has not faded, for it symbolizes a basic truth for most Americans: our nation is a land of abundance, and we owe thanks for it. Further Reading: Baker, James W., with Elizabeth Brabb. Thanksgiving Cookery. New York: The Brick Tower Press, 1994; Curtin, Kathleen, Sandra L. Oliver, and Plimoth Plantation, Inc. Giving Thanks: Thanksgiving Recipes and History, from Pilgrims to Pumpkin Pie. New York: Clarkson Potter, 2005; Pleck, Elizabeth. “The Making of the Domestic Occasion: the History of Thanksgiving in the United States.” Journal of Social History (Summer, 1999): 773–89; Smith, Andrew F. The Turkey: A Social History. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2006.
Andrew F. Smith
Theme Parties Themes give parties a focus and help organize the series of choices a host or hostess must make to guide menu, location, décor, activities, guest and
Toasts host behaviors and expectations. Many party planning services will organize, plan, and provide a package of goods and services to express one theme or another. Themes can provide verve and structure to a party. Sometimes a theme is suggested by a season, such as a fall harvest: colorful foliage can lend to the décor, and the menu could feature pumpkins, squashes, and perhaps wild game. A spring fling might call for newly budded branches, soft pastel table linens, and a menu that includes such quintessential spring foods as asparagus and lamb. Political issues or fundraising for a cause might suggest color schemes expressing political positions or nationhood. A favorite food could lead to an all chocolate brunch, including party favors of handmade truffles, an intricately designed chocolate sculpture table centerpiece, and comparative chocolate-tasting or cupcake-decorating activities. Holiday traditions or ethnic festivals, such as Halloween or All Saints’ Day, Mexican Fiesta, or Mardi Gras, offer opportunities for guests to engage with historic, cultural, and ethnic customs. Some themes structure the activities conducted during the event, such as a bowling party, casino night gaming, or disco fever dancing, complete with disco balls. Parties centered around an activity or era can easily be made into a costume party, in which guests are asked to dress up according to the era or activity. The best-known historical theme parties are masquerade balls, where guests arrive masked and in costumes. Masked guests might be more willing to behave differently than they might, if they were easily identifiable. Many novels, operas, and plays use the masked ball as the setting of choice for romances, illicit liaisons, and dramas. A story set in a masked ball often results in love or tragedy, or both. Further Reading: Nekola, Pat. Theme Parties: Just for Kids and Families too! Waukesha, WI: Kids and Families Activities Ink/Applewood Ink, 2007; Pals, Ellen M. Create a Celebration: Ideas and Resources for Theme Parties, Holidays, and Special Occasions, Activities for All Ages. Golden, CO: Fulcrum Pub., 1996; Sachs, Patty. 52 Totally Unique Theme Parties. Minneapolis, MN: Carolrhoda Books, 1993.
WEB SITES http://www.creativeimpactgroup.com http://www.eventexperts.com http://www.shindigz.com
Carol G. Durst-Wertheim
Toasts A toast is a term that most often refers to the act of honoring people, things, or ideas by having a sip of an alcoholic beverage. A toast can also refer to the person, thing, or idea that is being honored. For example, “Andy Warhol
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was the toast of New York!,” meaning that Andy Warhol was greatly respected and often toasted by those who knew of him and his work. In most cases, toasting involves several steps. Raising one’s glass almost always comes first. After one person raises their glass, the rest of the group present joins in and raises their own glasses. It is socially unacceptable in most cultures to not raise your own glass if someone has begun a toast. To not do so is a sign of disrespect to the person giving the toast and is a nonverbal way to express disagreement with the toast itself. The second step is verbally announcing the reason for the toast. This can be as simple and common as “To Lisa!,” or it can last several minutes and be funny, sad, or anecdotal, depending on the occasion at which the toast is being given. For example, on a simple night out with friends, one might toast, “To us!” or “To Donald and Lydia’s new house!” However, at a wedding a best man’s toast would be quite different. It might begin with a story of when he and the groom were young and then end with a funny joke. Regardless of its length, once the toast has been made, those in agreement will almost always verbally confirm the sentiment. If the toast was short and simple, they may do this by repeating the toast or they may show their agreement by saying, “Hear, hear!” At this point, everyone involved in the toast may touch their glass to everyone else’s glass that is within reach and then everyone takes a sip of their drink. In some groups, it is considered more sophisticated to not actually touch glasses with those around you, but doing so is more common than not. In certain situations, such as when drinking small glasses of ouzo in Greece, one might drink the entire contents of the glass instead of a small sip. In North American culture this is not typically done and when it is, it can be seen as excessive.
A bridal toast, 1905. Library of Congress.
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There are occasions, such as Some Famous Toasts after a death, that one may give a “silent” toast. This is done by sim“Let us have wine and women, mirth and laughter. Sermons and sodaply raising the glass and announcwater the day after.” —Lord Byron ing the toast in as few words as “Stir the eggnog, lift the toddy, Happy New Year, everybody.” —Phyllis possible. For example, “To John, McGinley may he rest in peace.” Those par“In the New Year, may your right hand always be stretched out in friendticipating in the toast will not vership, but never in want.” —Traditional Irish toast bally agree, but instead will simply keep their glasses raised until the person giving the toast lowers his glass and takes a sip. In some parts of the world, including many countries in Europe, it is customary to toast every time a new drink is poured. In North Men in Civil War uniforms toastAmerican culture, where a group ing with glasses of wine, 1864. will typically only toast once Library of Congress. during a gathering or celebration, toasting for every drink may be seen as excessive and unnecessary. One can toast with whatever beverage is available. Most commonly, the beverage is an alcoholic one but it is not looked down upon for someone who doesn’t drink at all to toast with something other than an alcoholic beverage. However, toasting with water is thought by some people to bring bad luck and, at the very least, is seen as insufficiently celebratory by others. Champagne is a very common drink with which to toast, especially when the champagne is opened to specifically celebrate a particular event, such as a marriage, graduation, or holiday. New Year’s Eve is one of the most common reasons for toasting with champagne. Further Reading: Dickson, Paul. Toasts: Over 1,500 Of the Best Toasts, Sentiments, Blessings, and Graces. New York: Crown Publishers, 1981.
Jessica Kokinos-Havel
Tupperware Party A new and growing middle class with an increased discretionary income emerged in the newly developed suburbs of post–World War II America. Women, who until recently had been employed as part of the war effort, found themselves pushed back into the home and into their roles as homemaker, mother, and caregiver. The Tupperware party emerged in this dynamic of newly discovered consumer culture and the revival of women’s traditional roles. Although associated by many nowadays as a stereotype
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Women gather at a Tupperware home party in 1958. AP/Wide World Photo.
of all that is kitsch, the Tupperware party in 1950s America allowed many women a chance to work again in a socially acceptable manner. Earl S. Tupper founded Tupper Plastics Co. in 1938, following his discovery of a method that purified polyethylene into a clear, durable, nongreasy plastic. Soon after, inspired by the lid of a paint can in a hardware store, Tupper invented Tupperware, a line of sealable kitchenware which promised to “lock in flavor and lock out air” (quote from Tupperware commercial, Courtesy of Prelinger Archives). The products met with limited success until Tupper’s decision in 1951 to hire a successful regional salesperson, Brownie Wise, as his vice president in charge of Tupper Home Parties, Inc., and the concurrent switch from retail sales to the home party format. While Ms. Wise did not invent the home party, her considerable abilities as a salesperson and inspirational figure helped the company to grow into a multi-million dollar corporation in a few short years. The home party traded upon women’s existing social connections and her abilities as a hostess as decisive factors to her success with Tupperware sales. No experience, education, or age restrictions applied and so what started as an American phenomenon spread throughout the world by the late 1950s. After purchasing a start-up kit, which contained the cups and bowls necessary to demonstrate the new technology, a woman invited her friends and neighbors over for a party. Entertaining at home appeared more genteel than selling goods door-to-door and disguised the ulterior purpose of sales under the acceptable outlet of socializing. Hostesses served refreshments and
Tupperware Party encouraged guests to participate in games or to sing the Tupperware theme song before getting down to the demonstration of the product and its airtight seal. While the format was not set, the in-house magazine Tupperware Sparks offered suggestions for how to hold a successful party. These parties allowed women a welcome opportunity to leave their homes and meet with other women from their community. The social pressure to not only buy, but also host a party worked, as reflected by the 100 percent increase in profits from 1953 to 1954 (Brownie Wise quote, Wall Street Journal, June 9, 1955). Not only the promise of an income, but also gifts in the form of Tupperware products and the allure of the annual Jubilee held at the Tupperware Home Party headquarters in Kissimmee, Florida, acted as incentives for higher sales. Invented by Brownie Wise, the jubilees gathered top salespeople and managers for five-day extravaganzas where women literally dug for rewards ranging from pen and pencil sets, to mink coats and brand new cars. Between inspirational classes, saleswomen dropped wishes sealed in small Tupperware containers into a wishing well; a Tupperfairy later granted a handful of these wishes for the lucky few. Wise went so far as to give away clothing from her own wardrobe. The combination of spectacle and high profits brought Tupperware to the attention of the media, landing the jubilees in pictorial stories in Life magazine and Brownie Wise on the cover of Business Week in 1954. Though Earl Tupper fired Wise in 1958 and subsequently sold the company for more than $9 million, Tupperware parties continued without them, on into today. After an unsuccessful attempt to break into the retail sector in 2002, the company returned to the direct sales format in 2003 as the main source of sales. As of 2002, Tupperware had more than a million sales consultants located in more than one hundred countries. Though the home party is now considered more of a novelty in the United States, women still meet to demonstrate and sell Tupperware at a rate of once every 2.5 seconds throughout the world. Further Reading: Brownie Wise quote. Wall Street Journal. June 9, 1955; Clarke, Alison J. Tupperware: The Promise of Plastic in 1950s America. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1999; Quote from Tupperware commercial. Courtesy of Prelinger Archives.
Siobhan Fagan
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V Valentine’s Day The identity of Saint Valentine for whom the day is named is unclear. There are several possible Valentines who were martyred or beheaded during the februa, or the Roman festival of purification held on February 15. One legendary Valentine was a Roman priest or bishop who lived during the reign of Emperor Claudius the Second. Claudius believed that married men made poor soldiers, so he banned marriage for young men who would potentially become soldiers. Valentine defied the Emperor’s decree and continued to quietly marry young couples in clandestine locations, an activity that was considered treasonous by Romans. Valentine’s secret marriage ceremonies were eventually discovered. Attempts were made to dissuade him from continuing the nuptials and even to get him to convert to paganism. Valentine refused. He was imprisoned and beheaded on February 14. Other stories tell of a Valentine who assisted Christians to escape prisons where they were brutally treated. Valentine, himself, was eventually imprisoned. While in prison, Valentine is thought to have fallen in love with the blind daughter of the jailor who visited him during his incarceration. Valentine restored her sight. Despite the jailor’s pleas for Valentine’s release, Valentine was sentenced to death. On his way to be executed he passed a note to the jailor’s daughter that read, “With love, from your Valentine.”
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Yet another Valentine suffered in an African prison along with several companions and was eventually martyred, but nothing else is known of him. All three of these Valentines are mentioned in early martyrologies for February 14. The legend surrounding Valentine is likely an amalgamation of romanticized stories about several different people. The feast of St. Valentine was dropped from the church calendar in 1969. Some see the holiday as having its roots in the Roman feast of Lupercalia, a celebration that was dedicated to Faunus, the Roman god of agriculture and that honored Rome’s founders, Romulus and Remus. It was celebrated on the ides of February. Roman priests of the Luperci traditionally sacrificed a goat for fertility and a dog for purification in the cave where twin brothers Romulus and Remus were cared for by the she-wolf. After the ceremony, boys would slice the goat hide into strips and soak them in the sacrificial blood. They would then run through the streets slapping the fields and women with the blood-soaked strips hoping to bring greater fertility for the coming year. Other events of the day included a custom wherein young women placed their names in an urn. Young men would then draw a name from the vessel and become paired with the woman for the coming year. Many of these matches ended in marriage. In time this practice was outlawed. The popular traditions of Valentine’s Day are generally traced to medieval times. February 14 was thought to be the date when birds begin to pair. In 1381, Chaucer composed a poem in honor of the engagement of Richard III and Anne of Bohemia. Following poetic tradition of the day, he linked the occasion to a feast day. His Parliament of Fowls includes the line, “For this was on St. Valentine’s Day when every fowl cometh there to choose his mate,” thus linking the engagement, the mating of birds, and St. Valentine forever. The day came to be thought upon as one that was dedicated to lovers and an occasion for sending tokens and messages of love, many of which initially were in song. The oldest known written valentine was sent from Charles, Duke of Orleans, who while confined in the Tower of London following the battle of Agincourt in 1415, composed romantic verses for his wife in France. Several years later, Henry V hired a writer, John Lydgate, to compose a valentine to Catherine of Valois. In 1640, a book titled Cupid’s Messenger appeared containing poetic verses and romantic sonnets in flowery language. By 1645 many of these verses began to be published more widely and such passionate lines could be found in periodicals and other publications. Samuel Pepys’s Diary contains an entry for St. Valentine’s Day in 1667 noting a surprise valentine he received from his wife. The handwritten message of love was written in gold on paper that had been cut out with scissors and pasted against a blue pastel paper. During the eighteenth century booklets known as writers became popular. They contained an assortment of verses and messages that men could copy into letters to their sweetheart. The book also suggested replies for ladies to
Valentine’s Day return. These messages were usually copied on to specially decorated papers with open space for handwritten messages. Prior to the nineteenth century, valentines were handmade and took a number of forms. Puzziks or puzzle purses were made from folded paper. They had many folds of verses that had to be written in a certain order. The order of the verses was usually numbered and sometimes the recipient had to twist the folds in order to determine the complete message. Rebus valentines contained romantic verses with certain words or phrases replaced by tiny pictures. For the sentence “I love you so much,” the word I would be replaced by the picture of an eye, love by a heart, you with the picture of a female sheep (a ewe), and so with the illustration of a piece of fabric with a needle and thread, leaving only the word much written out. Pinprick valentines were made by piercing tiny holes in paper with a pin or needle to create the appearance of lace. Some valentines used acrostics where the beloved’s name was spelled out by the first letter of each verse of the valentine. By 1815 most of the cities and even rural towns of England had a Penny Post. Prior to this time postage was expensive, and many valentines were either hand-delivered or left on the doorstep. The exchange of valentines increased considerably. For a brief period from 1820 to 1829 insulting valentines, known as penny dreadfuls were sent in certain circles. These cards featured insulting rhymes and unflattering illustrations. Fortunately, this practice was relatively short-lived. When uniform postal rates were introduced throughout the entire United Kingdom in 1840, the English tradition of the valentine really took off. Valentines could affordably be sent all over the country and even beyond its borders. The Victorian period brought with it the “Golden Age of the English Valentine.” Specially made papers with intricate designs became available. Cupids, doves, hearts, and other designs were printed on cards adorned with satin, silk, and netting. The decorated papers were folded into quarto size and decorated with embossed borders as well as pictorial scenes. Some were further decorated with beads, feathers, and lace paper. The paper was then folded over and sealed with wax. Lacy valentines reached their peak in popularity between the 1840s and 1860s. Valentines continued to be more innovative with mechanical valentines that moved when a tab was pulled. Pop-up valentines that lifted open to display three-dimensional scenes also became popular. In the 1870s the fashion shifted to a more pictorial look similar to those that had become popular with Christmas cards. The tradition of valentines in the United States did not become popular until the 1850s when Esther A. Howland, of Worcester, Massachusetts, began commercial production of handmade valentines. While working in her father’s stationary store, she became intrigued by the laced papers and valentines her father imported from England. She began to cut out some designs of her own, further adorning them with crepe and paper flowers and some original artwork. Her father was impressed with her creations and ordered more supplies for her work. Her brother, who traveled around the countryside promoting
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Four Victorian Valentine cards depicting cupids, cherubs, doves, and hearts, nineteenth century. The Art Archive / Private Collection.
their father’s business, took along some of his sister’s creations. They were an overwhelming success. Esther hired some of her friends to help her in drawing and copying valentine designs. She set up a production line where one young woman would paste the background, another cut out the pictures, and finally one to glue on the trim. By 1862 one New York card company bought over $30,000 worth of her valentines. During the Civil War it became popular to have valentines made of a heart split-in-two, representing the separation of the soldier from his sweetheart. Some valentines had tent flaps which when opened revealed a soldier awaiting his beloved with open arms. After the war a similar theme was used with a church and a window that opened to reveal a bride and groom. Some wartime valentines included a lock of the lover’s hair. Other valentines from the Civil War period are of the paper doll variety with elaborate trim and embroidery. By the turn of the century, valentines were generally mass-produced. Postcard valentines were especially popular during the first decade of the twentieth century. While nineteenth-century etiquette prohibited women from sending valentines, the modern times of the early twentieth century lifted the taboo. Whimsical valentines became popular. Many children would exchange
Valentine’s Day them with their friends. By mid-century, books of punch-out valentines were marketed for children. These books often even included one valentine to be given to the teacher. It was not unusual for schoolrooms to have a valentine “mailbox” to facilitate the exchange. Many children’s valentines had a cartoon quality and carried humorous messages. These were often based on puns, such as a card with a caricature of a young pilot waving from his aircraft would say, “It’s ‘plane’ to see that you are the one for me.” Traditional Valentine’s Day colors are red, pink, and white. Red symbolizes passion and deep affection. White represents purity and faithfulness and devotion. Pink signifies warmth and loving kindness. The heart is the most common symbol associated with the day. It is often paired with other symbols such as an arrow that pierces the heart, thus showing the vulnerability of expressing one’s love. Cupid is also a popular symbol. The mythological winged youth is usually depicted with a bow and quiver of arrows, which he used to transfix the hearts of young men and women. Doves are used to represent loyalty and love because they mate for life. Love knots, with a series of interwoven loops with no seeming beginning or end, symbolize everlasting love and are often incorporated into borders. The letters o and x have come to represent hugs and kisses. The o symbolizes an embrace, and the x is thought by many to have evolved from the medieval practice of those who could not write signing with an x and then kissing the x before a witness as a sign of sincerity. Flowers have long been a popular valentine’s gift. During the early 1700s Charles II of Sweden brought the Persian poetical art known as the “Language of Flowers” to Europe. Various flowers were associated with certain feelings and developed specific meanings. This permitted couples to exchange romantic secrets without ever uttering a word. Books were written detailing many shades of meaning and covered a wide variety of blooms of all sorts. The jonquil was said to mean that the sender desired a return of affection. The purple lilac represented the first emotions of love. Ivy meant fidelity and marriage. Sometimes the color of the blossom carried the meaning. The red rose was the symbol of love but the white rose indicated innocence or friendship. A yellow rose meant jealousy or even betrayal. The practice of using flowers as expressions of romantic love gained popularity, reaching its height in the late nineteenth century. The red rose remains as the most popular botanical representation of love. Candy, particularly chocolate, is another popular valentine’s gift. The custom of giving chocolate dates back to the nineteenth century when chocolate was an expensive gift. Cadbury marketed the first box of chocolates in 1868, packed in a box decorated in a sentimental Victorian style. Perugina introduced their famous Baci kisses for Valentines Day in 1922. Luisa Spagnoli, wife of the company’s founder, created the confections. It is said that she was having an affair with Giovani Buitoni, son of her husband’s partner. Luisa wrapped notes around the candies she sent him for his inspection. Buitoni decided to use the idea of a love note tucked under the foil wrapping of each bon-bon when the sweets were marketed.
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While not made out of chocolate, conversation hearts have come to be a Valentine’s staple. In 1860, David Chase, whose brother Oliver was the founder of the New England Confectionary Company ( NECCO), invented a process to print mottos on candies. Originally, the candies were small, crisp, scallop-shaped candies wrapped in colored paper printed with sayings. Sweet Hearts, which were candies with the motto inscribed directly on them, were first made in 1900. The candy was cut into shapes like horseshoes or baseballs in order to allow longer sayings such as, “How long shall I have to wait? Please be considerate.” In time the sayings became shorter and the now familiar heart shape was introduced. Original sayings include “Be mine” and “Kiss me.” Every year new sayings are added. Further Reading: Cohen, Hennig, and Tristram Potter Coffin, eds. The Folklore of American Holidays. Detroit, MI: Gale Research Company, 1987; Karl, Michele. Greetings with Love: the Book of Valentines. Gretna, LA: Pelican Publishing Company, 2003; Kreider, Katherine. One Hundred Years of Valentines. Atglen, PA: Schiffer Publishing, 1999; Staff, Frank. The Valentine and Its Origin. New York: Praeger Press, 1969.
Dorothy Denneen Volo
W Wedding Receptions As long as there have been wedding ceremonies, there have been celebrations commemorating this coming-of-age ceremony for brides and grooms as they become full-standing members in their society. In virtually all cultures feasting with members of one and another’s family and friends follows the wedding ceremony. These ceremonies often include culturally symbolic foods, dances, toasts, and traditions. In American and European weddings the most basic post-ceremony celebrations feature a cake due to the historical associations with fertility and grains. What was once a chance for new couples to kiss over a stack of baked rolls or cakes evolved into the tiered wedding cake. In the process this cake became a towering symbol of fertility and is often set on a table in a place of honor at the reception. To further enhance the cake’s place of importance the table it rests on is sometimes decorated with draped fabric or other embellishments. With today’s advances in fondant and sugar paste elaborate wedding cakes also set the tone for the reception’s theme or reflect the couple’s interests if a more whimsical cake design is selected. As weddings became more industrialized, questions of class and status became more apparent through the added flourishes such as décor, entertainment, and menu items. In time guests were feted with light luncheons
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Greek Weddings Although Greek Orthodox wedding customs vary from village to village and region to region, a few traditions remain universal. A koumbaros or koumbara, best man or woman, acts as a sponsor and performs many aspects of the wedding ceremony. At the church the koumbaros exchanges the wedding rings three times to indicate true faith, harmony, and love. Greek couples traditionally wear their wedding rings on their left hands while engaged and on their right hands once married. This placement stems from the right hand being the hand that God blesses, the hand to which Christ ascended, and the direction to which those who inherit the earth will go. The koumbaros also places the wedding crowns, or stefana, over the couple’s heads three times to symbolize unity. Made of vines and twigs, the crowns are joined together by a single white ribbon, connoting love and commitment. After drinking wine from a common cup, the couple is led around the altar three times by either the koumbaros or the priest. In early times the priest would then offer honey-dipped almonds to the newlyweds. Today the ceremony ends with jubilant guests throwing both rice and koufetta, sugar-coated almonds. The rice stands for fertility while the koufetta represents the bittersweet aspect of life. Another Greek wedding standard involves the preparation of the wedding bed, the night before the wedding. The bride’s mother and grandmother cover the bed with flower petals, coins, and koufetta to ensure love, prosperity, and fertility. They may also engage in a baby-rolling ceremony, gently rolling the babies of family and friends on the matrimonial mattress to encourage a fertile union. In some towns the koumbaros leads a pre-wedding procession from the bride’s home. Outside the church door the bride may meet and kiss the groom as he hands his bride a bouquet of flowers, which she will later throw into the expectant crowd. In hopes of a sweet marriage the bride may have hidden a small sugar cube in one of her gloves. A Greek bride and groom. Dimitri /Shutterstock.
that became dinners served in a buffet setting and eventually a seated meal. Currently most weddings feature full meals served in special facilities designed to handle large amounts of guests and the tables, linens, dishware, and so forth. In addition to the food and drink there is also entertainment featuring live music or disk jockeys ( DJs) playing music and introducing different activities. Such popular activities would be introducing the bride and groom by their new married name, announcing the couple’s first dance, the mother–son dance for the groom and his mother, as well as the father–daughter dance for the bride and her father. Another important moment is the ritualistic cutting of the cake. Brides and grooms ceremonially cut the first slice and then feed it to each other, a bite for each from that initial piece. This respectful exchange of tasting the cake is sometimes subverted by a new development where happy couples smash pieces of cake into one another’s faces, an act that sends a very different meaning as they enter into marital bliss. Other activities include games like the limbo (a game where guests tip back their head and, leading with their hips, try to shimmy forward underneath a pole; the winner is the person who can clear the pole at the lowest setting), dances like the Conga line (where guests form a long line and weave throughout the reception area to music), or the dollar dance. The dollar dance is a tradition that appears in receptions where the couple is of Polish or
Wedding Receptions eastern European descent; various male friends and family members dance with the bride and place bills of any cash amount into the gift bag or pin them to a tree of sorts (sometimes even the bride) as a way to shower the happy couple with money for a fruitful marriage. Other activities that take place during a reception are the tossing of the bride’s bouquet and the tossing of her garter by the groom, a tradition that goes back to the Middle Ages. A common custom at American wedding receptions is the clinking or tapping of glasses with silverware. This commanding sound dictates that the happy couple should kiss immediately. This comes from a legend that says the noise and locking of newly married lips would keep evil spirits at bay. During a wedding reception there will also be many toasts to the bride and groom. The highlight of the meal portion often begins or ends with the best man and maid or matron of honor’s toasts to the couple. Guests will often stand to give their own impromptu pledges of devotion, happiness, and prosperity for the couple. Originally begun in France, toasts refer to the piece of bread placed in the bottom of a glass and then topped with drink. As glasses were lifted and greetings announced the proclaimer would tilt the glass back, drink the contents, and then consume the beverage soaked piece of bread at the bottom. In Asian cultures there is a special vessel for the bride and groom to drink from. In Europe there is the Nuremberg Cup, a special vessel, named after
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Greek Orthodox priest Konstantinos Kyriakides, left, marries Juan Jose Gregory of Spain, 45, to Iryna Nesina, 24, from the Ukraine, at the Agios Mamas church in Cyprus, 2006. AP/ Wide World Photo.
On some islands the wedding ceremony ends with the bride and groom eating honey and walnuts, symbols of sweetness and fertility, from silver spoons. Walnuts are the nut of choice because they break into four parts, representing the bride, groom, and their families of origin. At the end of the reception guests receive bonbonieres, packages filled with an odd number of white chocolate–covered almonds. These favors are filled not only with sweet candy but also with rich symbolism. The egg-shaped treats stand for fertility as well as for the new life that begins with marriage. The white of the chocolate indicates purity. The odd number of almonds signifies indivisibility for the bride and groom shall henceforth exist as one. When the new bride first arrives at her in-laws’ home, she participates in a ritual known as the sweetening of the bride. In one variation the bride dips her fingers in honey then makes the sign of the cross in hopes of a good relationship with her mother-in-law. In another, the bride throws a pomegranate into her new home, the seeds of which will ensure wealth and fertility. Lastly, the bride’s mother-in-law may ply her with red-colored sweets such as pomegranates and grapes so that the bride will retain the rosy color of youth. FURTHER READING Constantelos, Demetrios J. Understanding the Greek Orthodox Church. Brookline, MA: Hellenic College Press, 1998. Kochilas, Diane. The Food and Wine of Greece. New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1990. Lonely Planet Greece. Oakland, CA: Lonely Planet Publications, 1998.
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Macomb, Susanna Stefanachi. Joining Hands and Hearts: Interfaith, Intercultural Wedding Celebrations. New York: Fireside Book, 2003. www.ask4greece.org www.greekthings.com/ bridal www.simplyfamily.com www.yasou.org.
Kathy Hunt
Open Bar The term open bar is defined as a bar at which drinks are served for free. An open bar makes a wide variety of alcoholic drinks available at no charge to the attendees of an event. In contrast, a cash bar is an arrangement that requires attendees to pay for the drinks they consume. Many events make alcoholic drinks available to guests in an open-bar format. They are most closely associated with weddings, but can be found at birthday parties, retirement celebrations, corporate events, and fund-raising parties. The concept of an open bar, or lack thereof, often reflects on the hospitality of the host. The idea of an event, particularly a wedding, having a cash bar is often seen as cheap, crass, or socially unacceptable. Asking guests to pay for drinks may offend some guests, much like asking them to pay for their meal. However, bridal couples and other hosts often struggle with the concept of having an open bar due to the expense and the possibility of drunkenness. Clearly, the cost of an open bar is borne by the hosts of the event and can put a dent in a wedding or event budget. In addition, attendees often see an open bar as a license to overconsume, which can result in erratic and improper behavior. For this reason, hosts of events must balance affordability and control with the need for social acceptance. A bar offering at an event need not be exclusively open or cash in arrangement. A host may limit the open bar to a specific time period. At some events, the bar may be open for a portion of the time and then closed, cash-oriented, or limited thereafter. Alternatively, a bar may be available to guests that may serve only beer and wine (eliminating the option of hard liquor). Some hosts give a limited number of free drink tickets to guests that they must turn in at the bar when they receive their drink—thereby limiting overconsumption by guests. Lastly, a host can always opt for a dry bar where only non-alcoholic beverages and soft drinks are available. FURTHER READING “Your Wedding 101.” Open vs. Cash Bar [Online, August 2007 ]. Your Wedding 101.com available at: http://www.yourwedding101.com / wedding-receptions /open-or-cash-bar.aspx.
Leslie A. Meyer
the city of its birth. According to legend it was created by a metalsmith in response to a challenge issued by his sweetheart’s father to make a cup that two people could drink out of at the same time without spilling any wine. The beau did this by fashioning the stem after the shape of a woman with a full skirt: her upstretched arms hold a cup overhead, from which two people can sip simultaneously. As brides and grooms leave the reception and its festivities they are sometimes showered with birdseed or other grains while en route to a car, carriage, or other form of transportation. Tossing grains of millet at the couple is a popular Asian custom while in America rice has been used. Birdseed has taken the place of these grains because it can be more easily digested and cleaned up by local birds. A new development has some American brides and grooms dashing out of ceremonies and receptions among a canopy of bubbles, blown from small wands that are repeatedly dipped in bubble-blowing liquid. Another popular American custom features cars with signs tied on to the back or in windows proclaiming the inhabitants were “Just Married.” The cars are sometimes also festooned with streamers, ribbon, empty cans, inflated balloons, or other items—even shoes. Ancient Assyrian and Hebrew cultures believed sandals served as a pledge of good faith in business dealings. Therefore tossing a shoe down served as a claim of sorts. Egyptians exchanged sandals when transferring property while Anglo Saxon custom had
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the groom tap the bride’s head German Wedding Traditions with a shoe to demonstrate his authority and her status in the • Freiersmänner (“gentlemen suitors”). When a man is ready to ask his relationship. In time guests took girlfriend to marry him, he enlists two friends to ask for her father’s to throwing shoes at the couple. permission and blessing on his behalf. Now they are simply attached to • Upon acceptance, the woman will wear the engagement ring on her the car bumpers. Since bumpers, left hand. Once married, the ring will move to her right hand. • The night (or the weekend) before the wedding, the couple gather unlike a bride’s head, represent with their friends to celebrate Polterabend, a “night of racket.” The neither bride nor groom, the shoes guests bring ceramic dishes (no glass as it is considered bad luck) of today’s weddings represent a and break them in the driveway. The couple then sweeps up the more egalitarian vision of marital debris, as a symbol of cooperation during their marriage. A more authority. As guests leave the remodern Polterabend practice has the woman “kidnapped,” taken to a bar, and her husband-to-be has to find her and pay the bill. The ception they, too, are showered male friends try to “punish” the husband by hiding the woman very with gifts. well and thereby she and her friends drink a lot. A popular custom is for the • Couples apply for a marriage license that is hung outside the Stanhappy couple to offer wedding fadesamt, or registrar’s office, to announce to the public their intenvors, a small item or memento for tion. Everyone in Germany must get married by civil ceremony. A guests to take with them after the religious ceremony is optional, has no legal bearing, and takes place after the civil union. wedding. Many companies offer • There are no ushers in a German religious wedding; guests seat items that can be monogramed themselves, knowing the first few pews are meant for the family. with the couple’s names and wedding date such as candy bars, wine Liz Tarpy glasses, and so on. Traditionally, sugared almonds, also known as Jordan almonds, are offered to guests. Almond trees are among the first to bloom in Greece and serve as a symbol for the cycle of life. They were used to shower newlyweds in the hopes that they would have lots of blossoms, like the almond tree, and that these lucky couples would have families with many children. In time guests became the lucky recipients of these sugared almonds, perhaps out of gratitude for their blessings and participation in the matrimonial ceremony. In China, as guests arrive for the celebration, they register at the reception table by signing a silk table runner imprinted with either the double happiness symbol or the phoenix and the dragon. The table runner also serves as a keepsake for the couple. As the guests sign-in they are given corsages and boutonnieres to differentiate familial status (Gong 139). During the first hour of the banquet, the guests socialize until the bride and groom are finally announced by the master of ceremonies. The newlyweds are met with applause from the guests who do not allow the couple to sit down until they kiss (Gong 130). Following the reception, couples leave for their honeymoon; a time for the newlyweds to celebrate their marriage away from the stresses of work, family, and the everyday, these trips can be anything from cabins in the country to elaborate European treks. The next day members of the wedding party, the families of the bride and groom, as well as out of town guests may meet for breakfast before leaving to return home.
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Further Reading: Ackerman, Diane. A Natural History of Love. New York: Random House, 1994; Chesser, Barbara Jo. “Analysis of Wedding Rituals: An Attempt to Make Weddings More Meaningful.” Family Relations, volume 29 (April 1980), number 2, pp. 204–209; Costa, Shu Shu. Wild Geese and Tea: An Asian American Wedding Planner. New York: Riverhead Books, 1997; Edwards, Thornton B. “The Sugared Almond in Modern Greek Rites of Passage.” Folklore, volume 107, (1996), pp. 49–56; Eicher, Joanne B., and Lisa Ling. Mother, Daughter, Sister, Bride: Rituals of Womanhood. Washington D.C.: National Geographic Society, 2006; Gong, Rosemary. Good Luck Life: The Essential Guide to Chinese American Celebrations and Culture. New York: HarperResource, 2005; Long, Becky. Something Old, Something New: 701 Creative Ways to Personalize Your Wedding. New York: Meadowbrook Press, 1997; Metrick, Sydney Barbara. I Do: A Guide to Creating Your Own Unique Wedding Ceremony. Berkeley, CA: Celestial Arts, 1992; Mordecai, Carolyn. Weddings, Dating & Love Customs of Cultures Worldwide including Royalty. Phoenix, AZ: Nittany Publishers, 1999; Morris, Ann. Weddings. New York: Lothrop, Lee & Shepard Books, 1995; Otnes, Cele, and Linda M. Scott. “Something Old, Something New: Exploring the Interaction Between Ritual and Advertising.” Journal of Advertising, volume 25 (Spring 1996), p. 33; Packham, Jo. Wedding Parties & Showers: Planning Memorable Celebrations. New York: Sterling Publishing Co., 1993; Spangenberg, Lisl M. Timeless Traditions: A Couple’s Guide to Wedding Customs Around the World. New York: Universe Publishing, 2001; Waggoner, Susan. I Do! I Do! From the Veil to the Vows—How Classic Wedding Traditions Came to Be. New York: Rizzoli, 2002; Wallace, Carol McD. All Dressed in White: The Irresistible Rise of the American Wedding. New York: Penguin Books, 2004; Westermark, Edward. A Short History of Marriage. New York: Humanities Press, 1968.
Alexa Reynolds Johnson
Wine Wine is a stimulating, aromatic alcoholic drink made from the juice of fermented grapes. A drink as old as civilization, wine has been central to dining and celebrations throughout the ages. Drinking wine is a sensual experience that engages sight, smell, and taste. Wine evokes geography, culture, and history and is served at events that are social, ceremonial, and ritualistic in nature. Perhaps more than any other beverage, wine has inspired legend, passionate devotion, controversy, and debate. A set of protocols, accoutrements and, indeed, an entire vocabulary has evolved to augment wine consumption. Wine is used as a flavor-enhancing ingredient in cooking, consumed by the glass or in a series of servings called a tasting, or enjoyed as an accompaniment to entrees or desserts. ANCIENT ORIGINS There is no definitive knowledge of the exact moment when wine was created, but historical evidence confirms its importance in celebrations and
Wine rituals throughout antiquity. The Egyptians are credited with cultivating grape vines across the Mediterranean region, and Egyptian art depicts scenes of winemaking and great royal feasts where celebrants imbibe wine. The god Osiris was associated with wine and was known as the “lord of carousing.” King Tutankhamun’s tomb contained several dozen jars of wine meant to sustain the young Egyptian ruler in the afterlife. In ancient Greece, wine was important to the economy and to religious festivals. A three-day celebration to honor Dionysus, the god of wine, coincided with the annual pressing of new wine and was commemorated with animal sacrifices, public dancing, dramatic productions, and consumption of herb-flavored wines. The Romans kept detailed records on the production of fine wines for the wealthy and everyday wines for the masses. Nearly two hundred public wine bars were discovered in the ruins of Pompeii. The existence of these bars indicates the central role of wine in the community. Ancient documents show that Romans favored sweet wines. Wines flavored with honey were served as aperitifs at dinner parties, and a recipe appears in the Roman cookery manuscript Apicius, in which a mixture of wine, honey, saffron, a puree of dates, and a bark resin called mastic is prepared over a fire. Bacchus was the Roman god of wine. In 186 B.C., the Bacchanalia festival in his honor was banned by authorities due to excessive public drunkenness. Around 600 B.C., the first wine grapes were planted by the Greeks in France in the region now known as Marseilles. Eventually, French viticulture practices—including regulations to protect the integrity of their best wines—set the standard for wine production across the globe. Wine became deeply embedded within the French culture, from the everyday wine, or the vin ordinaire consumed at daily meals, to the world-renowned wines
A first-century Roman funerary stele depicts a tavern scene with a man tapping a wine barrel. The Art Archive/ Archaeological Museum Merida Spain/ Alfredo Dagli Orti.
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produced in the regions of Bordeaux, Burgundy, and the Rhône and Loire Valleys. The Bible makes numerous references to wine in Jewish family life and celebrations. Wine was a symbol of sacrifice, celebration, and thanksgiving in ritualistic meals in both Jewish and Christian religious observances. During the fourteenth century in Great Britain, the phrase wes heil, or “be whole” was recited at the Christmas holidays with the passing of a communal cup of hot, spiced wine. The wassail bowl contained wine seasoned with cinnamon, cloves, ginger, and allspice. In the sixteenth century, wassail bowls were carried from house to house by revelers during the holiday season. Wealthy families in Colonial America served red wine such as claret with meals, and some accumulated large collections of glassware as a symbol of their status. Fortified wines like Madeira were preferred, because the added alcohol preserved the wine as it was transported to the colonies and allowed for longer periods of storage. Seventeenth-century colonists also prepared homemade wines enhanced with flavors of local fruits and berries. Martha Washington’s personal cookery receipts contained instructions for fermenting wines made with cherries, currants, lemons, gooseberries, blackberries, and elderberries. Thomas Jefferson was a noted wine enthusiast and served European vintages during formal dinners at his Monticello estate. Mrs. Beeton’s Book of Household Management, a Victorian-era domestic manual for the middle class published in Great Britain in 1861, offered etiquette for serving wine to gentlemen and ladies during a formal dinner. Author Isabella Beeton also outlined the responsibilities of a butler in maintaining the household wine cellar and discussed the benefits to family reputation that come with a well-stocked cellar. In the mid-nineteenth century, the state of California in the United States emerged as a major center for wine production. With climate and soil particularly conducive to viticulture, family-owned wineries sprang up along the Pacific coast. Between 1920 and 1933 a powerful temperance movement in the United States, that opposed the consumption of alcohol, convinced the government to ban the production, sale, and transportation of intoxicating liquor. Prohibition devastated wine production, although some wineries continued to operate by acquiring licenses to produce sacramental wines. The Prohibition Act was repealed in 1933, but it was not until the 1970s and 1980s that wine consumption and production in the United States began to increase. STYLES OF WINE Wine is an agricultural product, and the quality and flavor is influenced by the type of grape used and environmental conditions such as soil, temperature, and rainfall. There are about 25 grape varietals used in wine production throughout the world. Key winemaking regions include France, Italy, and the United States, although Spain, Portugal, Germany, Argentina,
Wine and Chile are well known for their products. Wineries in Australia and New Zealand have shown significant growth since 1990, and South African wine is gaining in reputation. Many terms have been developed to help consumers understand specific qualities and characteristics of wine. The term style describes the body or fullness of a wine, be it light, medium or full-bodied. Descriptive terms such as lean or lush refer to the flavor of a wine. The term Old World denotes classic European wines that are earthy and subtle, deriving flavor from the soil and climate in which the grape vines are planted. The term New World refers to wines produced in the United States, Australia, and Chile. New World wines are bolder in character with floral and fruity flavors developed by using techniques like barrel aging or the introduction of enzymes during fermentation. RED WINE The complex nature of red wine makes it ideal for pairing with hearty, robust entrees such as red meat or pasta. There are four classic varieties of red wine made from the dark grapes of Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Pinot Noir, and Syrah vines. The depth of color in red wine depends on the grape variety and can range from ruby red to deep purple to black. During fermentation, the juice is mixed with a combination of grape skins, seeds, and stem fragments. The length of contact with the skins and debris gives red wine its intense color. Red wine causes a variety of sensations on the palate, with a wider range of flavors discernable than in a glass of white wine. Red wines are aged longer than white wines and contain a natural substance called tannin, found in the skins, stems, and seeds of red grapes. Tannin creates a velvety sensation on the tongue and gives the wine a feeling of texture. Red wines are typically dry, because they lack the residual sugar which adds sweetness. Bold flavors are often identified in red wines such as cranberries, red currants, cherries, black cherries, black currants, blueberries, blackberries, plums, figs, raisins, prunes, black pepper, tobacco, and even chocolate. Red wines are served at room temperature to assure maximum flavor and are poured in larger glasses allowing their rich aromas to circulate. WHITE WINE White wines are far more delicate in flavor and are usually paired with lighter entrees such as white meat, poultry, or fish. White wines are made from grapes with yellow or green skins and can range from almost clear, to gold or deep amber in color. White wines have little or no contact with grape skins during the fermentation process. The classic white grape varietals include Chardonnay, Chenin Blanc, Riesling, Sauvignon Blanc, and Semillon. White wine can also be made from dark-skinned grapes if contact with the skins is limited. White wines are lighter, often sweeter, and more
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acidic, which contributes to their crisp taste. Flavors often identified in white wines include green apples, pears, citrus fruits, peaches, apricots, vanilla, or pineapples. White wine is served slightly chilled in smaller glasses. WINE CULTURE EVOLVES European countries have long maintained an enthusiastic wine culture consuming good quality table wines during lunch and dinner, but countries like the United States were slower to embrace the pleasures of drinking wine. Prohibition, global conflicts, and agricultural diseases created significant setbacks for the wine industry. However, the writings of a group of passionate wine experts would do much to revitalize interest and educate the modern world on the history of wine, its vernacular, and how to purchase and consume wine. From the point it was founded in the early 1940s, Gourmet magazine established wine as an essential complement to food, entertainment, and travel. The magazine featured essays by globetrotting writers who captured the romance of wine associated with exotic locales. Voluminous reference books appeared—like Frank Schoonmaker’s Encyclopedia of Wine; Grossman’s Guide to Wines, Beers, and Spirits; and The Signet Book of Wine: An Introduction by Alexis Bespaloff—all designed to familiarize consumers with the characteristics of wine, the lexicon associated with wine, and the history of major wine producing regions. Glossy periodicals like Bon Appetit and Food and Wine offered monthly how-to advice on home entertaining with food and wine. Amateur wine-appreciation classes grew in popularity, available through local restaurants, community centers, and culinary schools. Large educational institutions and culinary schools began to offer courses that afforded consumers the opportunity to explore the renowned wine regions of the world and improve their ability to use wine in home entertaining. Wineries, producer associations, chefs, and sommeliers have been influential in developing accessible consumer education. Over time a core set of entertaining practices emerged that included cooking with wine, pairing food with wine, wine tasting parties, serving of dessert wines, and pairing sweet wines with desserts. COOKING WITH WINE Many cooking manuals of the twentieth century contained basic primers on wine and confirm the somewhat limited knowledge that home cooks of the day had about cooking with wine and pairing it with food. A 1946 edition of The American Woman’s Cook Book placed a chapter on wine at the back of the book and promised a cursory view on the “accepted laws” for serving wine. The chapter focused on French wines, the only well-known vintages of the period. The author discussed the benefits of wine as a “seasoning of fine foods,” advised allocating a half bottle for each guest at a meal and provided a chart of French wines from 1915 to 1933 that are rated great,
Wine very good, fair, and poor. Editions of Joy of Cooking published in the 1960s and 1970s contained a wordy chapter on wine basics, and a warning to avoid serving wine with asparagus, artichokes, or salads made with vinegar. A detailed chart called “Dining with Wine” suggested pairings and service temperatures and acknowledged that rules of wine etiquette were different between restaurants and household use. They advocated choosing a napkin to wrap a wine bottle at home, instead of the restaurant practice of using a serving basket, as it provided better insulation. Julia Child’s Mastering the Art of French Cooking from 1961 encouraged home chefs to learn by direct experience which wines complement a dish and which foods accentuate and blend with the qualities of the wine. Child offered axioms like “the bigger the wine, the bigger the glass,” and provided specific wine recommendations with the main course recipes in the text. The Complete Book of Wine Cookery from 1965 contained hundreds of recipes from entrees to desserts that use wine as an ingredient. Author Myra Waldo described wine as “the greatest of all culinary aids.” Vintners looking to increase wine consumption encouraged women to cook with wine. A marketing brochure published by Shieffelin & Co. in the 1970s described Ruffino Chianti as “an elegant beverage accompaniment as well as a charming and versatile ingredient.” The text positioned Chianti as a complement to international menus, a flavor enhancement when added to stews and sauces, and even a refreshing after-dinner drink. The pamphlet contained recipes for Coc au Vin Roti, Pork in Wine Sauce, and Chianti Pot Roast, as well as recommendations for serving and directions to “inhale the bouquet and sip slowly.” MATCHING FOOD AND WINE The French gastronomic tradition assumes that food and wine is an ideal match. Even so, hosts have sometimes found complementary pairings to be a challenge. To make that look as easy as possible for the public, Blue Nun was a brand of German Liebfraumilch that was launched in 1923 and advertised as a versatile wine—compatible with all types of food—that would take the guesswork out of pairing food and wine. It was extremely popular in America in the 1950s. Traditionally, the rules of pairing were simple and specific—white wines accompanied fish and poultry, and red wines were matched with red meats and cheese. As chefs and sommeliers increased their knowledge, a greater understanding evolved of the possibilities available in food and wine pairings. Most experts now agree that there are very few rules and infinite options. Overall focus has shifted to compatible flavors found in wine and food. Acidity and body style in wine are powerful flavor enhancers and therefore better indicators of dynamic food and wine pairings. Some sommeliers, such as Andrea Immer Robinson, identify complex food flavors such as sweetness, meatiness, and fattiness that can be found in food and successfully matched against a range of wine styles. This looser style of guidelines opens
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up the unusual possibilities of pairing buttered popcorn with chardonnay or grilled cod with Pinot Noir. WINE TASTING PARTIES For several decades, tasting parties have been a convivial way for a host and guests to test their sensory skills and share their collective impressions of a sequence of wines. Procedures for wine tasting parties closely parallel the practices followed during a professional wine tasting event. A wine tasting party can be staged with a theme and some simple accessories. Five or six clear wine glasses per person are recommended, so that the color of the wine can be evaluated by each guest. The size and shapes of glasses are important to fully appreciate the bouquet. Wine glasses with deep bowls and narrow, tapered rims allow the wine to be swirled, releasing aromas toward the nostrils. A variety of wine openers are available as well as water and crackers to allow guests to cleanse their palates between wines. A host generally provides a pour bucket or a spittoon for guests who choose not to swallow every sampling of wine. Only small quantities of food are preferable, so as not to distract from the wines being served. Even cheese may be too strong an accompaniment, distracting from the wine, although wine and cheese parties were a popular trend in the 1970s. Guests can be offered sheets of paper and writing instruments to note the specific characteristics of each wine. A wine aroma wheel— with descriptive phrases printed around its circumference—was invented by a professor at the University of California at Davis in 1990 to assist tasters in selecting language that would best capture the characteristics of a particular wine. Hosts are encouraged to select a broad theme for a tasting party, or focus on a specific type of wine. A sequence of 8 to 10 wines might be served. A vertical tasting compares several vintages of the same wine. A horizontal tasting compares different types of wines from the same vintage. A comparative tasting evaluates several examples of a particular style of wine. In a blind tasting, a host hides the identities of the wines by placing them in bags and assigning numbers or letters to each bottle so guests are not influenced by label information. Once organized, the tasting party is a sensory experience and experts recommend a set of steps to evaluate and savor each wine. The taster first uses the sense of sight, examining the color and clarity of the wine against a white background. The next step involves the sense of smell. The taster swirls the wine in the glass, releasing the aromas, and inhales deeply through the nose. Guests are encouraged to describe the aromas and compare impressions. Finally, the guest tastes the wine and holds it on the tongue, identifying the initial flavors, the lingering flavors, and the residual sensations. In tasting a wine, a guest looks for five key characteristics—dryness or sweetness, acidity, tannin, oak and fruit flavors. The guest would then draw conclusions about the vintage and the overall wine tasting experience.
Wine
DESSERT WINE Although wines with higher sugar content have been produced for as long as vineyards have existed, the more recent emergence of dessert wines as a distinct wine-making style inspired a new range of entertaining possibilities. Dessert wines represent those varieties technically known as sweet wines, which have been produced for centuries, going back to ancient Rome. Most dessert wines are made from grapes that are harvested late in the season. The additional time on the vine concentrates the sugar, resulting in an intense sweetness and a higher alcohol content that can range anywhere between 14 and 24 percent. The final product is more expensive than other wines because it is produced in smaller quantities with higher production costs. There are four distinct categories of dessert wines that include frozen grape wines, late-harvested wines, fortified wines, and dried-grape wines. Dessert wines are primarily made from white wine grapes and range in color from straw to deep gold, although some red ice wines are made from the Cabernet Franc grape. Perhaps the most famous dessert wine is Sauternes, a centuries-old wine with a distinctive sweet flavor caused by fungus, which is made from Semillon grapes grown in Bordeaux, France. In Canada, ice wines made from Vidal Blanc grapes grown on the Niagara Peninsula are gaining distinction. The intense, syrupy-sweet quality of dessert wine requires that servings are small, approximately one ounce for each guest. Dessert wines evoke flavors of honey, peach, apricot, caramel, and vanilla. Dessert wines can be served alone at the conclusion of a meal, or easily paired with selections of cheese, fruits, or cookies. Dessert wines may be matched to comparable dessert flavors, so a rich, sweet dessert wine would be paired with a rich sweet dessert, or tropical fruits would pair well with wines exhibiting tropical fruit flavors. A dessert wine is served at room temperature, as chilling can inhibit its flavor. WINE FOR EVERY LIFESTYLE At the start of the twenty-first century, wine was embraced among diverse lifestyles as a mainstay of entertaining and hospitality, suitable for every occasion. A vast amount of data was now easily accessible to wine consumers, in publications and online, encouraging the consumption of wine as an affordable, everyday luxury. Consumers could find advice on how to pair wine with ordinary foods like hamburgers and condiments, macaroni and cheese, creamed chipped beef, salads, and even frozen entrees. Rose wines, sometimes referred to as pink or blush wines, rapidly gained in popularity as a refreshing beverage to complement casual, warmweather entertaining. Various consumer audiences embraced wine as a focal point of entertaining. Built-in wine cellars were becoming an essential feature in luxury homes. Women grew in prominence as the primary consumers and the dominant buyers of high-end wines, and purchasing information was specifically
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tailored for their entertainment needs. New blends of wine were designed for specific audiences, including a rose-blend for gay consumers introduced in New Zealand. Vineyards offered the public new ways to engage in the culture and process of winemaking. For a membership fee, vineyards would allow individuals the opportunity to producing their own barrel of wine, enough for more than 200 bottles of a private label. This hands-on approach afforded wine and entertaining enthusiasts their most personal connection ever to the many facets and pleasures of wine. Further Reading: Berzolheimer, Ruth. The American Woman’s Cook Book. Chicago: Published for the Culinary Arts Institute by Consolidated Book Publishers, 1943; Immer, Andrea. Great Tastes Made Simple: Extraordinary Food and Wine Parings for Every Palate. New York: Broadway Books, 2002; Immer, Andrea. Great Wine Made Simple. New York: Broadway Books, 2000; Johnson, Hugh. The Story of Wine. London: Mitchell Beazley, 2005; MacNeil, Karen. The Wine Bible. New York: Workman Publishing Company, 2001; Reichl, Ruth, ed. History in a Glass: Sixty Years of Wine Writing from Gourmet. New York: The Modern Library, 2006; Robinson, Jancis, ed. The Oxford Companion to Wine. Oxford University Press, 2006.
T. W. Barritt
World War II The period between December 7, 1941, and August 15, 1945, the years of World War II, saw dramatic changes in all aspects of daily life in America. As the war in Europe and Asia progressed, more and more American men entered the Armed Services leaving farms to be managed, industrial and transportation jobs to be filled, and social services within the country to be strengthened and maintained. Women took on all these roles in addition to their traditional roles of caring for the family and cooking nutritious meals, with the added complications of food scarcity and rationing. But this doesn’t mean that entertaining was neglected. In fact, entertaining became an important part of the war effort and was encouraged by the government and facilitated by the media. Several aspects of life in wartime America changed the focus of entertaining. The most chronicled was food scarcity and rationing, but also of great importance was the migration of large sections of the population to unfamiliar areas in order to be near military installations and defense jobs. Because of the lack of housing in areas that suddenly experienced large increases in populations, wartime households rarely had the usual make-up of parents and their children. Instead, young couples often lived in one room in someone else’s home, groups of young women lived together near their jobs, and several generations of women and their children lived and worked together in family shops or on farms. Despite these changes in the national lifestyle, the government recognized that in times of crisis maintaining traditional folkways and foodways is important in uniting the nation, and therefore, the government encouraged food-related
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celebrations of all kinds. A March 1942 article in Ladies’ Home Journal reminded readers that “good food builds morale. And that is something which is every bit as important in wartime for those of us at home as it is for the men in the army. Coping with food scarcity and rationing was the subject of most wartime magazine and newspaper articles on entertaining. As the war started, the United States was just coming out of the Great Depression, and while entertaining followed the traditions of the late nineteenth century and early twentieth century, incomes did not allow for the opulence that people would have liked. As the war progressed, this situation reversed. Incomes could have supported more elegant entertaining but luxuries were not available, and celebrations had to be planned within the possibilities of the moment. Food was not really scarce in America; no one had to be hungry. But shoppers had to settle for what was available even though it might not have been what they wanted. Well before the United States entered the war, the government began shipping non-perishable foods produced in America to Allies in Europe and this continued through the post-war period. Ships once used to import foods became a part of the war effort and carried war materials and troops. Food rationing began on May 5, 1942, with the “Sugar Book.” Coffee was next to be rationed, and in February of 1943 rationing was extended to cover meat, butter, margarine, canned fish, cheese, canned milk, fats, and oils.
World War II food rationing urged “the gospel of the clean plate” in order to reduce waste. Library of Congress.
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Wartime hostesses were encouraged to find clever ways to deal with these circumstances and offer guests an enjoyable diversion from the chaos around them. The progressive dinner was one of the ideas that became popular. Several couples would plan a dinner menu in which each course was prepared and served in a different home. This made it possible to enjoy a meal that included meat, butter, and a sweet dessert without wiping out one family’s ration books. Another similar plan was for each couple to contribute coupons toward the purchase of meat or pastries or to bring ingredients and all cook together. Hostesses were reminded that good company and just a few special hard-to-find treats made a very impressive event. A May 1942 Woman’s Home Companion article suggested serving a loaf of homemade bread with butter and coffee when friends come over. At a time when women had become too busy to bake bread, and butter and coffee were hard to come by, that was a special menu indeed. They go on to say, “Everywhere hostesses are simplifying refreshments. Some ideas gleaned from our readers . . .A huge bowl of fruit and popcorn balls. Brownies and milk. Crackers, cheese, coffee. Corn on the cob, all the butter you want.” Gourmet magazine’s unique response to wartime food supply problems was to suggest that readers plant an herb garden, serve game, and enjoy American smoked salmon and blue cheese while caviar and Roquefort cheese are unavailable. In a nation on the move, enjoying the company of people with longterm social and familial ties was not always possible. The fear and insecurity that defined personal relationships led to many young marriages, and young wives followed their husbands from camp to camp as long as they were within the United States. They tried to create a home for them in whatever space was available, often just one room, and magazine and newspaper editors helped them decorate those homes and entertain with style in them. Often the kitchen was just a series of electric appliances. A September 1944 McCall’s magazine article asks, “Ever try cooking with a Percolator? . . .With no other equipment than a large electric percolator you can turn out a variety of satisfying stews, soups and chowders.” Young working women and wives whose husbands were overseas were encouraged to get together for a “Defense Party,” in which volunteer projects and home-front programs were discussed. Many programs were organized to entertain servicemen who were far from home. The most famous was the United Services Organization (USO) canteen program in which clubs were created in large cities and near bases where hostesses (occasionally Hollywood actresses, but usually local girls who wanted to contribute to the war effort) served food and danced and talked with the men. Families were encouraged to invite servicemen from nearby camps into their homes for holidays and Sunday dinners, and churches held special parties to make servicemen feel at home in their area. And a September 1944 issue of American Home suggested that the same hospitality be offered to servicemen’s wives. They tell readers, “We open our homes to the men in service and ask them to dinner with the family—let’s do as much for the homesick women. Can you begin to imagine what it means to a soldier’s wife who has
World War II been waiting three months for a letter to be asked in for a cup of tea?” Women’s volunteer groups organized in large port cities to meet ships returning from Europe and Asia and greet servicemen with sandwiches and cookies. One of the most unique examples of American wartime hospitality involved the little town of North Platte, Nebraska. Located on the main line of the Union Pacific Railroad, North Platte was a 10-minute stop for the thousands of servicemen being transferred to one coast or the other to be sent to war. From Christmas Day of 1941 until the end of the war, the people of North Platte greeted each train, thanked the servicemen for what they were doing, and invited them into their little canteen for food, conversation, and treats to take with them. Funded entirely by donations from the townspeople, the volunteers entertained over 6 million men by war’s end. Holiday entertaining was promoted both by government programs and the media. Although stories abound of the Thanksgiving turkey fashioned from Spam, most families were able to arrange to get the real thing. Pooling coupons for rationed items was encouraged, and thrifty wartime homemakers were accustomed to saving up for a celebration. A November 1942 article in Good Housekeeping magazine titled, “Thanksgiving, Don’t Skip It This Year,” offered a hearty turkey dinner as did an article in the same month’s edition of the Woman’s Home Companion titled “For a New Kind of Thanksgiving.” That article went on to say that the holiday table, “though short on courses, is long on shining silver and Grandmother’s china. No ration on hospitality and grace.” A December 1943 Armour and Company advertisement notes, “All of us are mighty glad that our servicemen are getting first choice of America’s food supplies for their holiday dinners. Yet there will still be meat for us at home. So invite your family and friends to gather round.” The other occasion that took some finesse was the wartime wedding. Women’s magazines offered advice and simple menus for the event such as the June 1943 Good Housekeeping article that suggests, “you can marry in haste and have a wedding party, too!” They offer a menu of aspic, rolls, jam, wedding cake, and punch. But families usually pooled their resources and created a memorable celebration despite the difficulties. The wedding cake was the most important item on the menu and was often the most difficult to come by. One bride told of collecting sugar coupons from her whole family to give to the baker in order to have a wedding cake. Further Reading: Greene, Bob. Once Upon a Town: the Miracle of the North Platte Canteen. New York: William Morrow, 2002; Hayes, Joanne Lamb. Grandma’s Baking Book: World War II and the Way We Baked. New York: St. Martin’s Press, 2003; Hayes, Joanne Lamb. Grandma’s Wartime Kitchen: World War II and the Way We Cooked. New York: St. Martin’s Press, 2000; Penny, Prudence. Coupon Cookery: A Guide to Good Meals Under Wartime Conditions of Rationing and Food Shortages. Hollywood, CA: Murray & Gee, 1943; Weatherford, Doris. American Women and World War II. New York: Facts On File, 1990.
Joanne Lamb Hayes
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Z Zakuski Zakuska ( pl., zakuski) is a Russian term referring to an elaborate array of hors d’oeuvres served as the appetizer course of a Russian or Slavic meal. It is sometimes served as an alternative to a first course or, when abundant, in place of a dinner. Zakuski are served in a buffet style outside of the main dining room to standing guests. Various types of bread, cheese, dips, cured meats and fish, caviar, and pickled vegetables are served. Traditionally, zakuski dishes are served cold and accompanied with ice-cold Russian vodka. When modern zakuski are served in place of a full meal, dishes may include hot meat, desserts, and coffee or tea. The origins of the zakuska table can be traced back to Scandinavia when, in the ninth century, the dynasty beginning with the first Scandinavian Prince Rurik conquered the Slavic tribes that occupied what is now modern-day Russia. The serving of cold dishes in a casual style proved to be well suited for the Russian culture. Hospitality is one of the most important aspects of the Russian way of life. In fact, the word hospitality in Russian is khlebosol’stvo, a combination of the Russian words for bread and salt (khleb and sol), the two foods that were most essential to life. Accepting, honoring, and feeding a guest is at the heart of the Russian identity. The zakuska table
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became the perfect way to make sure that when guests arrived, they could be entertained, fed, and made to feel welcome. When Peter the Great came to power in the late seventeenth century, he made many attempts to modernize Russia. One of these attempts included adding French chefs to his court. It was during his reign that meal times became elaborate and well-planned events in Russian society. Opulent, decadent, and multi-course meals were served several times a day in wealthy households. In the early eighteenth century Peter the Great invaded Sweden and the Russians were introduced to the Swedish smorgasbord. These elaborate buffet tables, filled with many different dishes influenced the similar but more casual practice of the Russians. Zakuska tables became the elaborate affairs we recognize today and one of the hallmarks of Russian cuisine. One of the most important aspects of creating a zakuska table is going to great lengths in presenting each dish in a beautiful and appetizing way. Decorative and colorful plates are used for each dish, and some foods, like jellied meat, are shaped in grand fashion. Condiments, like butter, are softened and decorated with an attractive pattern. Butter can even be dyed different colors like red, by adding tomato paste, or green, by adding pureed spinach. The table itself is dressed and beautifully laid out with plates, napkins, and cutlery. Although the word zakuska (derived from the verb zakusit) literally means “to have a small bite,” zakuska tables can be quite plentiful. A typical zakuska table will have anywhere from 5 to 20 different dishes. For larger gatherings there can be up to 100. This makes the zakuska table an excellent way to serve a variety of different tastes and cuisines and ensure everyone can have a small bite of each. Further Reading: Goldstein, Darra. A Taste of Russia: A Cookbook of Russian Hospitality. Montpelier, VT: Russian Life Books, 1999.
Jessica Kokinos-Havel
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About the Editors and Contributors
MELITTA WEISS ADAMSON is professor in the Department of Modern Languages and Literatures and the Department of History of Medicine at the University of Western Ontario, Canada. She has written extensively on medieval food and dietetics, and has published five books on the subject: Food in the Middle Ages (1995); Medieval Dietetics (1995); Daz bouch von guoter spise (The Book of Good Food): A Study, Edition, and English Translation of the Oldest German Cookbook ( 2000); Regional Cuisines of Medieval Europe (2002); and most recently Food in Medieval Times (Greenwood, 2004). FRANCINE SEGAN is a cultural historian who has appeared on numerous radio and TV programs, including Martha Stewart Radio, NPR, NBC’s Today Show, CBS’s Early Show, and Sunday Morning with Charles Osgood. In addition she has done several specials for the History and Discovery channels and the Food Network. Segan writes a monthly column on travel and food for the Tribune Media Syndicates, which reaches over 65 newspapers across the country. She has published four books including Shakespeare’s Kitchen (2003) and Opera Lover’s Cookbook (2006), which was nominated for both James Beard and IACP awards. In addition to teaching at Sarah Lawrence College, Segan lectures on various topics, including
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About the Editors and Contributors
art history, throughout the country for organizations such as the Smithsonian Museum, Dahesh Museum, Virginia Fine Arts Museum, Norman Rockwell Museum, Museum of Natural History, and Newport Historical Association.
KEN ALBALA is professor of history at the University of the Pacific in Stockton, California. He has authored many books on food including Eating Right in the Renaissance, Food in Early Modern Europe, Cooking in Europe: 1250–1650, The Banquet: Dining in the Great Courts of Late Renaissance Europe, and Beans: A History. He is currently working on a textbook on world cuisines for the Culinary Institute of America. He has also edited three series for Greenwood Press—Food Culture around the World, Cooking through History, and Food Cultures in the United States—and has coedited with Gary Allen The Business of Food. JOAN P. ALCOCK is an archaeologist and historian who has written widely on Celtic and Roman history, local history, and food history. She is a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of London and an Honorary Visiting Fellow of London South Bank University. She is at present writing books on the pagan Celts and life in ancient Rome.
GARY ALLEN teaches at Empire State College, is food history editor at Leitesculinaria, and webmaster for the Association for the Study of Food and Society. His most recent book is The Herbalist in the Kitchen (2007). He also co-edited Greenwood’s The Business of Food: Encyclopedia of the Food and Drink Industries (2007).
LESLEY BANNATYNE is an author who writes on Halloween. She is also a journalist who has covered a wide range of subjects from Tibetan immigrants to education reform. Bannatyne’s books include a history of Halloween, a how-to, an anthology of Halloween literature from the past 400 years, and a children’s book, Witches Night before Halloween.
JOANNA BAROUCH tested recipes for and contributed to Opera Lover’s Cookbook and has also tested recipes for Cook’s Illustrated magazine. A resident of New Jersey, Joanna is a professional musician and devoted cook. She delights in travel, foreign language study, writing, and the entertainment of family and friends.
T. W. BARRITT is a food writer and communications consultant; he is a member of the Culinary Historians of New York and has studied at the French Culinary Institute in New York and Apicius, the Culinary Institute of Florence. He is also the author of Culinary Types, Stories of Food and Food Enthusiasts at http://culinarytypes.blogspot.com and http://www.culinary types.com.
About the Editors and Contributors
CYNTHIA D. BERTELSEN is a nutritionist, food historian and researcher, chair of Peacock-Harper Culinary History Friends, cookbook collector and bibliophile, author of several articles on cookbook indexing and ethnic cooking, and editor of The Virginia Culinary Thymes. She has lived and worked in Mexico, Paraguay, Honduras, Haiti, Morocco, and Burkina Faso.
TAMARA V. BIGELOW is a culinary consultant in the New York area. She develops consumer recipes and product prototypes for magazines and food companies. She was raised in Hawaii and attended the University of Michigan and the Institute of Culinary Education in New York City. She lives with her daughter in New Jersey. INA B. CHADWICK began her career as a poet with her work appearing in literary publications such as The Paris Review and The Antioch Review. Subsequently she was the managing editor of several major newspapers and trade magazines, winning awards for both writing and editing. With more than 500 bylines, she is currently a generalist in both journalism and marketing writing with a particular interest in lifestyle, trends, health, and business.
SHIRLEY CHERKASKY is a culinary historian and founding member of the Culinary Historians of Washington, DC, and the Culinary History Enthusiasts of Wisconsin. She is an active member of the International Commission on Ethnological Food Research and has compiled an international directory of more than 1,300 food and beverage museums (available on www.foodhistorynews.com). She was coordinator of public programs at the Smithsonian Institution’s National Museum of American History for many years and, since retirement, has been an independent scholar, researching culinary history. AMANDA LYNN CLARKE is a pastry chef, freelance writer, and food-stylist based in Brooklyn, New York. She is a weekly contributor to seriouseats.com and the author of New York Architecture: A History (as Amanda Johnson). Her food styling has appeared in the New York Times, TimeOut NY’s 2007 Restaurant Guide, and in special promotions for CondéNet.
JONATHAN DEUTSCH is a classically trained chef and assistant professor in the Department of Tourism and Hospitality at Kingsborough Community College, City University of New York. He is the secretary of the Association for the Study of Food and Society and the education editor of the journal Food, Culture and Society. He earned his PhD in food studies and food management at New York University and is a graduate of Drexel University and the Culinary Institute of America. He has worked as a chef in the United States and abroad.
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PEGGYANN ROGERS DÍAZ owns and operates Stir Crazy, LLC and is a full-time chef instructor at Masuk High School in Monroe, Connecticut.
CAROL G. DURST-WERTHEIM has taught and served in the administration of several New York metropolitan colleges and universities, culinary, food studies, and hospitality programs. She was the first director of the New York Restaurant School, owned a catering business, and wrote I Knew You Were Coming So I Baked a Cake. She serves on the board of WCR, has been actively involved in the New York Women’s Culinary Alliance, worked on cookbook awards and baking contests, leads “Menus at the Movies” at a local library, and recently completed her doctorate researching women in the food industry.
KATHERINE BLISS EATON has her MA and PhD in Comparative Literature from the University of Wisconsin–Madison. Her publications include: The Theater of Meyerhold and Brecht (Greenwood Press, 1985); Enemies of the People: The Destruction of Soviet Literary, Theater, and Film Arts in the 1930s (editor, 2002); Daily Life in the Soviet Union (Greenwood Press, 2004). She was twice a Fulbright Professor in Romania (1982–83 and 1990–91). From 1984–1997 she was Professor of English and ESL at Tarrant County College, Fort Worth, Texas. SIOBHAN FAGAN is a food writer and lives in New York. RIEN T. FERTEL is a native of Louisiana. Born in Lafayette, he grew up in the kitchen of his mother’s restaurant, learning to wash dishes and prep vegetables before he mastered the spelling of his own unconventional name. Later he operated a New Orleans eatery, devastatingly closed by Hurricane Katrina. Rien is now working through the years of his graduate studies in American History. With a foolish sense of pride and purpose, he wants to save New Orleans from herself. STEPHANIE FOGEL is a New York City–based writer and craftsperson. In the last few years her writing has focused on health, nutrition, and food. Of special interest are the historical, medicinal, and ethno-botanical aspects of foods. ALLISON GREEN is a graduate of the Institute of Culinary Education and holds a degree in Italian from Middlebury College in Vermont. She is a freelance food writer who has worked with Chile Pepper magazine and the Daily Star Journal of Warrensburg, Kansas.
KUSUM GUPTA was born in India and received her BA (economics honors) and post-graduate diploma in economic administration from Delhi University, India. She has been in the United States since 1966 and worked
About the Editors and Contributors at IBM for almost 25 years. Her main interest is a balanced approach to eating and living to ensure mental, emotional, and physical health. She has published two books: Hindu Spirituality: A Practical Approach Based on the Bhagavad Gita and Recipes with a Spice: Indian Cuisine for Balanced Nutrition.
W. SCOTT HAINE received his PhD at the University of Wisconsin– Madison and currently teaches at the University of Maryland University College. His books include The World of the Parisian Café: Sociability among the French Working Class, 1789–1914 (1996), The History of France (Greenwood Press, 2000, chosen by Choice as an outstanding academic title for 2001), and The Customs and Culture of France (Greenwood Press, 2006). He has contributed articles to other Greenwood encyclopedias such as Historical Dictionary of World War II France: The Occupation, Vichy, and the Resistance (1938–1946) (Greenwood Press, 1998) and Encyclopedia of Prostitution and Sex Work (Greenwood Press, 2006).
JOANNE LAMB HAYES is a New York City food writer, editor, historian, and author or co-author of more than a dozen cookbooks including Grandma’s Wartime Baking Book: World War II and the Way We Baked and Grandma’s Wartime Kitchen: World War II and the Way We Cooked. She holds a PhD from New York University’s Department of Nutrition, Food Studies, and Public Health and was on the staff of several national magazines for over 20 years. KURT HEFFERN has been a landscape designer for more than 25 years, creating majestic yards in California and Arizona. Over the years, Kurt has graduated from keg parties to tequila, once a hell raiser, always a hell raiser. Kurt resides in Arizona with his family and three dogs, Delilah, Samson, and Skii. SHANNON HEFFERN has been a registered dietitian for 20 years, working in the areas of menu development, corporate wellness, and health coaching. Heffern was raised in North Dakota, experiencing first hand how to garden and cook from her mother and grandmother. Shannon resides in Scottsdale, Arizona, with her husband, Kurt, and daughter, Jade. KATHY HUNT’s writings have been published in a variety of national newspapers and magazines including the Chicago Sun-Times, VegNews, The Sun, and Chester County Town and Country Living. She divides her time between New York and an 1801 farmhouse in suburban Philadelphia.
CHIKA M. JENKINS is a graduate of Columbia University and the Institute of Culinary Education, both in the City of New York. She has worked at Michelin-starred restaurants in Manhattan as a line cook.
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ALEXA REYNOLDS JOHNSON is a graduate of Le Cordon Bleu and holds a degree in Food Studies from New York University. She currently works for Fairway Markets. CATHY K. KAUFMAN is the chairperson of the Culinary Historians of New York and a professional chef who teaches historical cookery at the Institute of Culinary Education. She has edited or contributed to numerous encyclopedias and journals and is the author of Cooking in Ancient Civilizations (2006). She is currently writing a history of the dining room.
JESSICA KOKINOS-HAVEL is a graduate student at the Institute of Culinary Education in New York City and works as a freelance food writer.
BRUCE KRAIG is Emeritus Professor of History at Roosevelt University, Chicago, who specializes in the history and politics of food, and has published widely in the field. He is also the founding president of the Culinary Historians of Chicago and a convener of the Greater Midwest Foodways Alliance.
JOSÉ LOVERA lives in Caracas. He has traveled the whole world, especially South America. He is the author of Historia de la alimentación en Venezuela (1988), Gastronomía Caribeña (1991), and Food Culture in South America (Greenwood Press, 2005), among other books, and has published numerous articles in journals and newspapers from Venezuela and other countries. He contributed to the UNESCO General History of Latin America in food history matters. He is associate professor (retired ) at the School of History of the Universidad Central de Venezuela.
JEFFREY MAKALA is assistant special collections librarian in Rare Books and Special Collections at the University of South Carolina. His interests include the history of the book in America, contemporary book arts, and American culinary history, especially the intersections of cooking, cookbook production, and gender in the twentieth century.
WANDA MANN is an events producer in New York City and creator of the Mann About Town events newsletter. Wanda is also the founder of Frocks Rocks & Cocktails and creates events that showcase fashion, jewelry, wine, and spirits. Wanda has published articles about sports, beauty, fashion, and lifestyle. ERIN G. MARRAZZO is a freelance writer and editor. She splits her time between New York City and Bonn, Germany.
MARTY MARTINDALE is a food writer residing in Largo, Florida. She writes for many sources.
About the Editors and Contributors
LESLIE A. MEYER is a professionally trained chef, culinarian, and food writer with a passion for food and cooking. A graduate of the prestigious French Culinary Institute, Leslie currently owns and operates her own culinary consultancy that highlights her skills as a writer, teacher, and food stylist. She has worked with such notable organizations as Microplane and America’s Test Kitchen to advance their publications through research, writing, and testing.
JONATHAN MILDER has worked for the Food Network since 2003, where he is currently research librarian.
FRAN OSSEO-ASARE, MSW, PhD, is an internationally recognized authority, teacher, and author on Sub-Saharan African food and culture; a sociologist; a member of the International Association of Culinary Professionals; an award-winning instructional materials designer; and founder of BETUMi: the African Culinary Network (http://www.betumi.com) and its companion BetumiBlog (http://www.betumi.com / blog.html). ERICA J. PETERS received her PhD in 2000 from the University of Chicago and is the director of the Culinary Historians of Northern California. She has published in French Historical Studies and the Journal of Vietnamese Studies, and is currently finishing a book on food, drink, and politics in nineteenth-century Vietnam.
PIETRO PIRANI is assistant professor in the Department of Modern Languages and Literatures at the University of Western Ontario, London (Canada). He has also taught at Wilfrid Laurier University and McMaster University in Canada. His most recent research project focuses on the impact of culture on politics in Italy post–World War II.
DIANA PITTET is a graduate of New York University’s master’s program in food studies. She has worked at a cheese shop in London and has written about the history of cheese in England and the United States. A former Latin teacher, she is the assistant editor ( production) for Classical World and the editorial assistant for Alimentum. CHRISTY POPE has emerged as one of the world’s most recognized and talented people in the spirits industry today. Acknowledged for her passion for the artistry and history of the trade, she brings the “spirit” to events around the world by presiding over her and Chad Solomon’s cocktail catering company Cuff & Buttons. Christy has been featured in, or contributed to the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, the Washington Post, Food & Wine, Imbibe, The Robb Report, Lucky Magazine, and Modern Bride.
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AMMINI RAMACHANDRAN is a freelance food writer and author of Grains, Greens, and Grated Coconuts: Recipes and Remembrances of a Vegetarian Legacy. She has written for Gastronomica, Flavor & Fortune, the Food History Primer, http://www.Sallys-place.com and her own Web site http://www. peppertrail.com. Her recipes have appeared in the Providence Journal and at http://www.leitesculinaria.com. PAUL RUSCHMANN is a writer and researcher who lives in Canton, Michigan. He is one of the creators of BeerFestivals.org, an online beer festival calendar. His writing about beer has appeared in a number of print and online publications, including All about Beer magazine where he writes a regular “Beer Travelers” column. MARY SANKER is a librarian and writer in Cincinnati, Ohio. She contributed to The Oxford Encyclopedia of Food and Drink in America (2004). ELLEN M. SCHNEPEL is an independent scholar and practicing anthropologist in New York City. She has conducted fieldwork in the French West Indies and Mauritius on language politics, ethnic identity, and changing patterns of food production and consumption. Her numerous articles have appeared in academic journals, including Gastronomica: The Journal of Food and Culture. AMY SEIFRIED is a writer with a master’s degree in English. She has written on a variety of topics, including entertaining, food, theater, and legal trends. Currently, she lives and works in Brooklyn, New York.
RUTH SHIBUYA received her PhD from Purdue University. She is the founder of the Health Science Department and faculty emerita at Western Connecticut State University.
LAUREN SHOCKEY is a food writer based in New York City. A graduate of the French Culinary Institute and currently pursuing a master of arts in food studies at New York University, she has written about food for a variety of publications including the New York Times Style Magazine, Gastronomica, Elle Girl, and Zink. ANDREW F. SMITH teaches food studies and professional food writing at the New School in New York City. He is the author of 13 books, including The Turkey: An American Story and the Encyclopedia of Junk Food and Fast Food, and he serves as the editor-in-chief of the Oxford Companion to American Food and Drink. CHAD SOLOMON has emerged as one of the world’s most recognized and talented people in the spirits industry today. Acknowledged for his
About the Editors and Contributors passion for the artistry and history of the trade, he brings the “spirit” to events around the world by presiding over his and Christy Pope’s cocktail catering company Cuff & Buttons. They have been featured in, or contributed to the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, the Washington Post, Food & Wine, Imbibe, The Robb Report, Lucky Magazine, and Modern Bride.
MARIA G. STEINBERG graduated with a master of arts degree in food studies and food management at New York University. She is currently a marketing manager at a New York–based specialty food company. She also does food writing. Her work has appeared in U.S., Asian, and European publications.
LIZ TARPY is the founder of Teaberry Productions, a company specializing in culinary research, recipe testing and editing, and food writing. Her writings have appeared in the International Association of Culinary Professionals’ newsletter and on StarChefs.com. Her article on German farmhouse cooking is slated for publication in Saveur magazine in fall 2008.
KAREN LAU TAYLOR earned her BA from Tufts University in international relations and history. She began her career as a government defense consultant, honing her research and writing skills. In 2008 she earned her MA in food studies from New York University and graduated from L’Academie de Cuisine’s Pastry Arts program. Karen is now a writer based in Washington, DC. KIRSTEN TAYLOR has a PhD in chemistry from the University of Canterbury, New Zealand. Following her scientific studies she moved to New York City, where she wrote food articles and studied toward a masters in gastronomy online through the University of Adelaide in Australia. She is back in New Zealand where she and her cousin have recently started the country’s first cupcake-dedicated bakery.
MICHAEL W. TWITTY is a food historian focused on documenting and preserving the food and folk traditions of enslaved West and Central Africans and their descendants in the American South. He is author of Fighting Old Nep: The Foodways of Enslaved Afro-Marylanders 1634–1864.
EUGENIA VAN VLIET is a Seattle-based author who has degrees in cultural anthropology and classical archeology. She has written cookbooks for teenagers on American regional cooking, for Amber Books in the United Kingdom, and she is currently writing a column for the Seattle Farmers Market Newsletter on culinary history. Eugenia has taught food history of Mexico, the Caribbean, and Central and South America on the Celebrity Cruise Line and is doing culinary dinners based on different cultures and times at Cook’s World in Seattle.
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CHRISTINE VENZON is a freelance writer living in Peoria, Illinois. She specializes in food, nutrition, and educational writing. DOROTHY DENNEEN VOLO is a teacher and historian. She received her bachelor’s degree at the College of Mount St. Vincent in 1971 and her PhD from Berne University in 2002. Dorothy has been intimately involved in local history in Connecticut for many years, and she has a particular interest in the history of American education. She served as a consultant for the CSPN Yellow Bus series “CSPAN Does de Tocqueville” in 1997. Together with her husband, James M. Volo, she has co-authored almost a dozen reference works on American history. These include Daily Life in Civil War America (Greenwood, 1998), Family Life in the 19th Century (Greenwood, 2007), the Popular Culture of the Antebellum Period (Greenwood, 2004), and the Encyclopedia of the Antebellum South (Greenwood, 2000).
JAMES M. VOLO, PhD, has been teaching physics, physical science, and astronomy for the past 40 years. He received his bachelor’s degree from CCNY in 1969, his master’s from American Military University, and his doctorate from Berne University. He has taught science education for secondary and elementary schools teachers on the graduate level for more than 15 years. He is the author of several reference works regarding U.S. military, social, and cultural history, and has served as a consultant for TV and movie productions. SUZANNE C. WELTMAN is Creative Food Officer of Foodways, Inc., a culinary consulting group. With over two decades in the food industry, Ms. Weltman has worked with manufacturers, corporate test kitchens, and cookbook authors. Recipient of a Julia Child scholarship, Ms. Weltman studied at the Culinary Institute of America and Le Cordon Bleu, Paris. She earned a Master of Liberal Arts in food anthropology from the University of Pennsylvania, and taught at New York University’s Department of Nutrition, Food Studies and Public Health. Ms. Weltman was a contributor to Encyclopedia of Appalachia (2006 ) and has published numerous food feature articles and restaurant reviews.
JAN WHITAKER is author of Tea at the Blue Lantern Inn: A Social History of the Tea Room Craze in America; Service and Style: How the American Department Store Fashioned the Middle Class; and articles on the restaurant business, food science, and other aspects of commercial and consumer history. Her current research involves restaurant history.
DEBORAH WINDERS grew up on a self-reliant farm and learned about growing and preserving food early in life. She made a late start for a master’s in nutrition, circuitously earning a degree in agronomy. She has also worked in clinical pediatric, community, and long-term care. She has a passion for studying the cultural aspects of food.
Index
Page numbers in bold indicate main entries in the encyclopedia. Absinthe, 391–93 Action, Eliza, 58, 79 Adams, Sam, 503 Advent, 102 Africa: ancient, 469–70; central, 473–75; composition of, 469; eastern, 470 –72; history of, 469; hospitality and, 468 – 69; naming ceremonies of, 473; outdoor ceremonies of, 473; southern, 476 –77; symbols of, 468; western, 472–73 African Americans: bachelor parties and, 43; birthday parties and, children’s celebration of, 124–25; Juneteenth and, 333–34; soul food of, 457– 60 Africanus, 26 Afternoon tea, 507 Age, important celebrations of: Bar/Bat Mitzvah, 44– 45; birthdays, 65, 125 Agincourt, battle of, 526
Aku poke luau, 351 Albala, Ken, 118 Alcohol, 411–12, 503 Alcott, Louisa May, 64 Alcott, William, 517 Alexander the Great, 13, 15 Aliyah, 44 Alley, Tin Pan, 64 All Saints’ Day: contemporary celebration of, 451; defined, 447; festivals, 448; foods and beverages of, 449–51; history of, 447– 48; importance of, 451; medieval concept of, 450; preparations for, 449; purpose of, 449 All Souls’ Day, 109 Almack, William, 208 Almack Assembly Room, 208 America: bridal shower trends in, 92; cheese consumption in, 119–20; consumerism in, 174–76, 181– 82;
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Index
cookbooks in, 190, 192–93; culture and lifestyles in, 3–7; dance and, 180; debutante ball in, popularity of, 210; desserts in, 219; dining history of, 78; entertainment in, 173; French-style service dining rituals in, 177; Halloween in, celebration of, 296 –300; history of, 173; holiday celebrations in, 181, 512; masquerades in, 368; midday meal in, role of, 178 –79; Prohibition in, response to, 413–15; settlers of, first, 173–74; social graces of elite in, 179; taverns and public houses in, 180– 81; transportation in, 1–3 American frontier, 1–7 American Hotel, 6 American Notes for General Circulation (Dickens), 5 Ancient Greece, 7–18 Ancient Rome, 18 – 29 André, John, 504 Animals and medieval dining, fantasy, 375 Anna of Austria, 136 Anne of Bohemia, 526 Anniversaries, 29–31 Anniversary parties, 29–32 Antipasto, 32–34 Apicius, 11, 75 Apollo, 13 Appetizers, 33 Apples, 9 Arabs, 75, 102 Aranjanam, 121 Archaic Age, 8 Ariadne, 15 Aristophane, 13 Armour and Company, 547 Army Corps of Engineers, 67 Arnold, Benedict, 504 Artificial fast food, 251 Artos, 8 Ashurnasirpal II, 75 Asia: bachelor parties in, 43; desserts of, 219; entertainment and dining history of, 75–76 Asparagus, 9 Aspinwall, Marguerite, 80
Astor Hotel, 297 Athenaeus, 10, 14, 107 Athens, 8 Atole, 35 Attic honey, 10 Atticus, 23 Augustus, 23 Aunt Jemima, 139 Austin, Jane, 208 Aztec entertaining, 34 –37 Aztecs: banquets of, 36 –37; chocolate rituals of, 134–35; corn, importance of, 35; feasts of, 35–36; food sources of, 35 Baby shower, 39– 41 Bachelor party, 41– 43 Bachelors, 453–54 Baci kisses, 529 Bagel brunch, 94 Bainian, 131 Bakers, 8 Balance and dim sum, 221 Balkan Peninsula, 7– 8 Ball, New Year’s Eve, 384 Baltimore and Ohio Railroad (B & O), 2–3 Baltouf, Anna, 137 Bancroft, George, 68 Banquet of the Sages (Plutarch), 14 Banquets: Aztecs and, 36 –37; formal table settings and, 491; funerary, 28; medieval dining and, 370 –71; Renaissance, 417–18; restaurants and, 428 –29; Russian, 432 Barbaro, Hermolo, 420 Bar/Bat Mitzvah, 44– 46 Barbeque, 46 –50; concept of, 50; defined, 46; geographic differences in, 49–50; history of, 46, 48; pork, 47– 50; southern-style, 46 – 47; tidewater regions and development of, 50 Barbeque Belt, 47 Barley, 3, 8 Barn raising, 46, 50–53 Barry, Beatrice, 295 Bars, tapas, 498 –99 Bartering, 29–30 Baskets, Easter, 238
Index Battuta, Ibn, 470 Beans, 9 Beard, James, 80 Beaubien, Mark, 7 Bed and board, 3, 6 Beer halls and beer gardens, 53–57 Bees, 10 Beeton, Isabella, 57–59, 74, 79 Beeton, Mayson Moss, 58 Beeton, Samuel Orchart, 57–58 Beeton’s Book of Household Management (Beeton), 58, 74 Begué, Hypolite, 94 Begué, Madame, 93–94 Beistle Company, 298 Belching Pig, 502 Belenos, 108 Benbow, Admiral, 502 Benedict, Lemuel, 94 Beringer, Guy, 93 Berry, Chuck, 65 Bertram, Thomas, 208 Betty Crocker, 59– 62 Betty Crocker Cooking School of the Air, 60 Beverages. see Food and beverages, history of Bible, 62, 537 Bierkeller, 53 Birthdays, 62–66; cultures and celebration of, 62– 63; food and, important role of, 64; greeting cards and, 64– 65; history of celebration of, 62; new born celebrations in India and, 120 –21; parties, age-specific, 65, 122–25; pet celebrations and, 66; picture-taking during, 65– 66; purpose of, 63– 64; religious celebrations of, 63; Russian celebrations of, 444; songs and, 64; symbolic meaning of, 65 Bishop, Boy, 145 Bitters, 33 Blair, Francis Preston, 67 Blair House, 66 – 69 Blair-Lee House, 69 Blind tasting, 542 Blob’s Park, 56 Block party, 70 –71
Boat Decks, 200 Bon, Philip le, 375 Book clubs, 71–74 Books, 73 Books on entertaining and dining, history of, 74 – 81 Boston Cooking School, 60, 514 Boston Tea Party, 503– 4 Bottarga, 33 Bourbon, 3 Bowery, 54 Bradford, William, 512 Brazil, 81–89; birthday parties in, 124; cannibalistic practices in, 81– 82; carnivals associated with, 81; colonization of, 82– 83; foods of, traditional, 84; history of, 81; Portuguese relationship with, 82, 84– 86; Republic of, establishment of, 86 – 89; slaves of, 83, 84 Bread, white (artos), 8 Brethren, Arval, 24 Bridal shower, 89 –93 Bride and groom, showering of, 534 Bridewealth, 30 Brigit, 108 Brillat-Savarin, Jean-Anthêlme, 79, 119 Britain, 78, 119 Brotzeit, 94 Brunch, 93–95 Bruschetta, 33 Buddha, 63 Buffet, 95–98, 313 Bugesses, Virginia, 503 Buitoni, Giovani, 529 Bunny, Easter, 237–38 Buren, Martin Van, 67 Burgers, 259– 61 Burn, Robert, 294 Burros, Marian, 80 Business travelers, international, 400 Butler, Rhett, 49 Byrd, William II, 147 Byron, Lord, 521 Cabral, Pedro Alvares, 82 Cacao tree, 135 Cadbury, John, 139 Caesar, Julius, 23, 24
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Cafeterias, 97 Cake and candles, 99 –104; Arabian contributions to, 102; contemporary forms of, 102; food coloring and, use of, 101–2; history of, 99–100, 102–3; quality of, importance of, 101; rituals and, 103; symbols of, 99; technological improvements in, 100; traditions of, common, 103; types of, 100 –101 Calhoun, John C., 67 Caligula, 21, 22, 25 Cameras, 65– 66 Campari, 33 Campbell, Christina, 503 Candy, 529 Cane sugar, 214 Cannibalism, 81– 82 Cappadocian bakers, 8 Cardboard doilies and coasters, 229 Carême, Antonin, 78 Caribbean: bachelor parties, 43; block parties, 70 Carnivals, 81 Carpe noctem, 301 Carter, Charles, 78 Cassell, Edward P., 432 Castillo, Bernal Diaz del, 35–36 Catering, 104–6, 431–32 Catherine of Valois, 526 Catholicism, 136 –37 Cato the Elder, 21, 23, 25 Ceiba, 135 Celtic feasting, 107–13; beverages consumed during, 111–12; chieftains and, 112; entertainment during, 112; festivals and, 108 –9; food preservation and, 107; foods consumed during, 107– 8, 109; history of, 107; purpose of, 109–10; tales of, 110 –11 Centerpieces, 375–76; Chinese, 243; defined, 240; historical examples of, 240 – 42; Japanese, 243; modern, 242– 43 Central Africa, 473–75 Cereal, 8 Cervio, Vincenzo, 76 Chafing dish, 113–15 Chafing dish suppers, concept of, 114
Chai, 45 Champagne, 115–17 Champarado, 140 Chardonnay, 115 Charitable (community) cookbooks, history of, 188 Charles II, 529 Charles the Bold, 77 Charles V, 77 Charles VI, 77 Charlotte, Queen, 431 Charpentier, Jean-Baptiste, 137 Chase, David, 530 Cheese, 9, 117–20 Cheese course, history of, 117–20 Chef’s clothing, 341– 42 Chicago, Illinois, 7 Chickpeas, 9 Chic restaurants, 430 –31 Chieftains, 112 Chiffon cakes, 100 Child, Julia, 80 Child, Lydia Maria, 512 Child, Theodore, 390 –91 Childhood in South India, 120–22 Children’s birthday parties, 122–25 Children’s’ celebrations, 130, 298–300. See also Birthdays China: bridal showers in, 92; desserts of, 218 –19; edible centerpieces in, 243; entertainment and dining history of, 76; funeral foods in, 283; New Year’s celebrations in, 129–32; wedding receptions in, 535 Chinampas, 35 Chinese banquets, 126 –29 Chinese New Year, 129 –32 Chocolate, 132– 41; Aztec rituals associated with, 134–35; bar, 139; beverages, 137–38; Catholicism associated with, 136 –37; desserts, 217–18; European, 135–36; history of, 132; Mayan rituals associated with, 134–35; Mesoamerican origins of, 133–34; parlors/houses, 137–38; popularity of, 140 – 41; production of, 132–33 Chooroonu, 121 Chopsticks, 141– 43 Chretien, Jean-Loup, 117
Index Christ Child, 146 Christenings, 440 – 41 Christmas, 143–54; celebration of, 143– 49; cookies, 151– 52; food and drink of, traditional, 149–53; history of, 143; party favors, 396 A Christmas Carol (Dickens), 143 Chuck E. Cheese restaurant, 124 Cicero, 23, 25 Circus Maximus, 25 City elite, 8 Civil Rights Act of 1964, 46 Civil War, 154–63; holiday feasting during, 157–58; northern hospitality during, 158 – 62; southern hospitality during, 154–57; taverns’ role during, 505 Claudius, 25, 525 Clothing, 210 –11, 239 Clovis, 117 Clubs, social, 407 Cocktails, 163 – 68; Cosmopolitan, 167; defined, 163; history of, 163; origin of, 163– 64; Prohibition linked to, 165, 166; publications about, 164; punch, 163; Roman, 163; sales decline in, 165; symbol of, 166; types of, 164 Cocoa, 133 Coe, Sophie and Michael, 133 Coffee, 216 –17, 470 –71 Coffeehouses in London, 168 –71; characters of, 169; development of, 169; history of, 168; physical attributes of, 169; society of, 169 Coffee klatches, 171–73 “The Coffee Republic,” 86 Coliseum, 25 Colonial America, 173 – 82 Colonial Mexico, 182– 85 Columella, 21 Coming-out-party, 125 Communal dining, 428 Communal drinking, 54 Comparative tasting, 542 Complimentary cheese, 117 Confections, 529 Confucianism, 221 Conga, 532 Congressional Globe newspaper, 67
Congressional Record newspaper, 67 Constantinople, 375 Consumerism, 174–76, 181– 82 Contessa, Barefoot, 80 Continental Sunday, 54–55 Conversation hearts, 530 Convivium, 22, 23 Cookbooks: cordials and liqueurs, 195; dining and entertainment, 191–94; Food Network, 267; history of, 186 –94; soul food, 460 – 61 Cookbooks, history of, 186 –91 Cookbooks, tools for entertaining, 191– 94 Cool Whip, 101 Cordials and liqueurs, 194– 97; cookbooks, 195; defined, 194, 195; distilling of, 195; flavorings of, 196 – 97; fruits and, 196; history of, 194, 196; manufacturers of, 195; types of, 195–96 Corn, 8, 35 Cortés, Hernán, 133–34 Cosmopolitan cocktails, 167 Costumes, 365, 366 Couples, dating, 431 Court Days, 503 Courtesans, 15 Cozinheiro Nacional cookbook, 87 Crassus, 25 Crocker, William G., 60 Crop harvesting, 309 Croquet, 290 Cros, Charles, 390 Crostini, 34 Crownings, 503 Cruise ships, 197–202 Crumb trays, 264 Cunard Line, 201 Cupboards, 371 Cupid, 529 Cupid’s Messenger, 526 Cycle, Ulster, 110 Cyclops (Theophrastus of Eresus), 11 Dai, bon vivant Zhang, 120 Dairy products, 9 Dance, 180 Darius, 17 Dates, 9
583
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Dawson, Thomas, 77 Day of the Dead, 203 – 7 Death, 246, 283 Debutante balls, 207–11; clothing and, 210 –11; defined, 207– 8; history of, 208 –10; popularity of, American, 210; presentation of, 211 De Causis Plantarium (On Plant Physiology) (Theophrastus of Eresus), 11 Declaration of Independence, 504 Decurions, 24 Deepavali, festival of lights, 211–13 Degas, Edgar, 137 De Gaulle, Charles, 68 Deipnon, 12 Deipnosophistae (Athenaeus), 10 Democratic National Convention, 379 Dennison Manufacturing Company, 298 De Re Rustica (Columella), 21 De’Rosselli, Giovanni, 76 Deschamps, Leon, 390 Dessert, 213–20; Asian, 219; Central and South America, 219; Chinese, 218 –19; chocolate, 217–18; coffee, 216 –17; customs, 214; defined, 213–14; Indian, 219; Japan and, 218; Mediterranean, 219; in Middle Ages, 215–16; Middle Eastern, 219; new, exploration and development of, 216 –18; practices, 215; sweeteners, 214–15; tea, 217; technological advancements in, 220; wine and, 543 Diary (Pepys), 526 Diaz, Bernal, 113 Dickens, Charles, 5, 6 –7, 143 Digestion of cheese, 118 –19 Dim sum, 220 –24 Dinner parties, 224 –27; contemporary, 226 –27; current event types, 226; defined, 224; diversity and, 227; Europe and, ancient, 225; Greece and, 224–25; history of, 224; home, 224; presentation of, 225–26; progressive, 408–9; publications on, 227; Roman, 225; Russian, 226; sensory pleasures and, 225; Victorian, 225; women and, 226 Diogenes the Cynic, 26 Dionysus, 15
Dips, 303 Distilling, 195 Diva, Dea, 24 Diversity, 227 Dobbins Tavern, 505 Dog luau, 350 –51 Doilies and coasters, 227–29 Dollar dance, 532 Domestic manuals, 177–78 Door county fish boil, 229–32; equipment required for, 230 –31; history of, 229–30; popularity of, 230, 231–32; preparing for, 230 –31 Dough, 375 Doves, 529 Dowry, 30 Dream Whip, 101 Druisius, 27 Drunkenness, 19 Duff, Hillary, 65 Dugnad, 52–53 Duke of Edinburgh, 69 Duke of Orleans, 526 Dukes of Burgundy, 77 Dukes of Este, 76 Durum wheat, 8 Dutch treat, 56, 232–34 Dutrey, Louis, 94 Dutrey’s Coffee House, 94 D’Uxelles, Marquis, 77 Dwight, Margaret Van Horn, 4–5 Easter, 235– 40; baskets, 238; bunny, 237–38; clothing, 239; defined, 235; dinners, 239; eggs, 236 –37; history of, 235–36; hot cross buns, 238; jellybeans, 238; parades, 240; Russian, 238 –39; symbols, 239 Eastern Africa, 470 –72 Eat-local movement, 190 Eaton, H. John, 67 Edible centerpieces, 240 – 43 Education, 105, 333 Eggnog, 153 Eggs, Easter, 236 –37 Egypt, 244 – 47; cooking in, 244; death rites, 246; dining in, 244– 45, 246 – 47; food and beverages of, 244; funeral foods of, 283; music of, 245– 46
Index Einkorn, 8 Eisenhower, Dwight D., 298 Elizabeth I, 151 Elizabeth II, 68, 209 Elks’ Club, 298 El-Shuqqafa, Korn, 28 Emmer, 8 Employment, 105, 106 Engagement rings, 30 England: entertainment and dining history of, 77; medieval dining and, 374–75; Valentine’s Day celebration in, 527 Entertainment and dining history: American, 78, 172; Arabian, 75; Asian, 75–76; authors of, 79– 80; bachelor parties, 42; banquets, 75; bridal showers, 91–92; British, 78; catering, 105; Celtic feasting, 112; chafing dish, 114; Chinese, 76; cooking instructions, 75, 79– 80; dinner parties, home, 224; English, 77; English authors of, 79; French, 77–78; future of, 80; garden parties, 290; German, 76; Greek, 75; Halloween, 294; history of, 74–75; Indian, 310; Italian, 76 –77; medieval dining and, 376; Middle Eastern, 76; purpose of, 74; restaurants and, 426, 429–30; Russian, 436, 445– 46; super bowl parties and, 481; tapas and, 498 –99; women and, 80; World War II and, 547 Epigrams, 19 Epiphany, 144 Epulum, 22 Equal Rights Amendment, 379 Erie Canal, 2 Erie Railroad, 6 Esquire magazine, 454–55 Ethelred, King, 144 Etiquette: books, 247– 49; chopstick usage, 143; dim sum, 222–23 Euripides, 11 Europe: bachelor parties in, 43; catering in, 104; cheese and, 118; chocolate and, 135–36; Day of the Dead celebration of, 205; dinner parties in, ancient, 225; table settings in, 495; toasts in, custom of, 521
Evitascandalo, Cesare, 76 Ewing, Eleanor Boyle, 68 Ewing, Thomas, 68 Fales, Winnifred Shaw, 79 Family holiday, 148 – 49 Famine, 8 Fares, 405 Farinha, 84 Farley, John, 78 Farmer, Fannie, 514 Farm Sanctuary, 517 Fast food, history of, 251– 63; ancient, 252–54; artificial, 251; burgers, 259– 61; hot dogs, 256 –59; pizza, 254–56; sandwiches, 261– 63; types of, 251 Father Time, 297 Faunus, 526 Fazendas, 82 Feast of the Pheasant, 77 Feasts. see also Celtic feasting: Aztec, 35–36; during Civil War, 157–58; Feast of the Pheasant, 77; funeral foods and, 284– 85; Great Feast of the Dead, 204; Little Feast of the Dead, 204; medieval dining, 373; Nativity Feast, 143; Parentalia feast, 26; Polish Christmas Feast, 146 – 47 Feralia festival, 26 Fermentation, 539 Festival of Eid al-Fitr, 508 Festivals. see also Japanese Cherry Blossom Festival: All Saints’ Day, 448; Celtic, 108 –9, 448; Deepavali, the festival of lights, 211–13; Feralia festival, 26; Festival of Eid al-Fitr, 508; of Tlaltecuhtli, 37 Fettiplace, Elinor, 77 Fields, Alonzo, 69 Figs, 9 Finger bowls, 263– 64 Fireworks, 384 First Night celebrations, 385 First Thanksgiving, 516 Flaminius, Titus, 28 Flavorings, 196 –97 Floating restaurants, 2 Flowers, 330 –31, 529
585
586
Index
Food and beverages, history of: All Saints’ Days and, 449–51; Aztec, 34–35; birthdays, 64; book clubs, 73–74; Brazilian, 84; bridal shower, 91; brunch, traditional, 94; Celtic feasting, 107– 8, 109, 111–12; Chinese banquets, 128 –29; chocolate and, 137–38; Christmas, 149–53; coffeehouses in London, 169; coffee klatches, 172; cruise ships, 198, 200; Egyptian, 244; food coloring and, 101–2, 465; Fourth of July, 269; garden parties, 290; Inca and, 307– 8; Indian, 310 –11; Italian, 319; Juneteenth celebration, 332–33; Kentucky Derby, 338 – 40; medieval dining and, 374; Russian, 434–35; Saint Patrick’s Day, 464– 65; sugaring off parties, 479– 80; super bowl parties, 482– 83; toasts and, 521; wine and, 541– 42 Food Network, 265– 68 Food rationing, 545– 46 Football, 516 Forks, 493 Formal dining, 311, 437–38 Fortune magazine, 60 Fourth of July, 268–71 Francatelli, Charles, 79 France, 271– 83; cheese in, 120; dining rituals in, American, 176 –77; entertainment and dining history of, 77–78; history of, 271–72; Renaissance, 272– 82; table settings and, 492 Franklin, Benjamin, 72 Free French, 68 French Line, 199– 200 Frisbee, 291 Fritelle, 34 Frosting, 100 Frugoli, Antonio, 76 Fruitcakes, 150 –51 Fruits, 9, 196 Funeral foods, 283–86; Chinese, 283; cultures and, 283– 84; death and, journey of, 283; Egyptian, 283; feasts and, 284– 85; hauntings and, 284; religious, 285– 86; Russian, 444– 45
Funerary: banquet, 28; cult, 26; gardens, 28 Gaetae, tribe of, 108 Gale, Samuel, 60 Gamala, P. Lucilius, 25 Gambrinus, King, 55 Game laws, 427 Gandhi, Indira, 68 Garapa, 84 Garden party, 287–91; beverages served at, 290; defined, 287; entertainment and, 290; magazine publications concerning, 287–88; occasions for having, 290–91; outdoor, 289–90; practice of, 287; proper dining and, 290; suburban, 288–89 Gare de Avignon, 95 Gaskin, Ina, 80 Gastronomic democracy, 4 Gemütlichkeit, 55–56 General Mills, 59, 60, 61– 62, 100 Gentleman of Cortés, 134 George IV, King, 78 Germany, 53– 54, 76 Gift giving: anniversaries and, 31; Bar/ Bat Mitzvah and, 45; Chinese New Year and, 131; party favors and, 394; Russia and, 436 Gilded Age, 209 Gingerbread, 151 Glasse, Hannah, 78, 100 Globe newspaper, 67 Goethe, Johann von, 102 Golden Temple of Sikhs, 213 Gold Medal flour, 59 Goldsborough, Lillian Purdy, 80 Gone With the Wind (Mitchell), 49 “Good Morning to All” (Hill), 64 Gorham Silver Company, 113 Grace, William R., 297 Grand Prix, 117 Grape pips, 11 Grapes, 115 Great cakes, 99 Great Depression, 545 Great Feast of the Dead, 204 Great Vigil, 35 Greece: Archaic Age of, 8; culture and lifestyles of, 8 –18; dinner parties in,
Index 224–25; entertainment and dining history of, 75; peninsulas of, 7– 8; weddings in, 532 Green Dragon Tavern, 503– 4 Greeting cards, 64– 65 Gregory II, Pope, 204 Gregory VII, Pope, 204 Griddle cakes (maza), 8 Grito do Ipiranga, 84 Guadalupe, José, 205 Guild dinners, 22 Gutenberg, Johann, 64 Habitat for Humanity, 52 Hadrian, 22 “Haftarah,” 45 Hakim, Zahidul, 120 Hale, Edward Everett, 511 Hale, Sarah Josepha, 513–14 Halloween, 293 –302; American celebration of, 296 –98; carpe noctem and, 301; children’s’ celebration of, 298–300; history of, 293; parties and, 294–96; UNICEF and, 300 Hanukkah, 102 “Happy Birthday” song, 64 Harlem Renaissance, 425 Harner, Michael, 35 Harold, book of, 62 Harper’s Bazaar magazine, 150 Hataera, 15 Hauntings, 284 Hawley, Adelaide, 60 Health and nutrition, 188 – 89 Hearst, 296 Helen of Troy, 117 Helots, 16 –17 Hemphil, Mayor, 294 Henderson, Mary F., 79 Hen party, 43 Henry V, 526 Heracala, 11 Herbs, 9 Hercules, 25 Heros, 14 Hersey Company, 139 Hill, Patty and Mildred, 64 Hippocrates, 373 Hofbräuhaus, 53, 56 Homer, 12, 14
Home Service Department, 60 Honey, 9, 10 Hong bao, 131 Hope chests, 90 Horizontal tasting, 542 “Horn of Africa,” 471 Hors d’oeuvres and canapés, 302– 6; defined, 302, 303; international, 304–5; overview of, 302–3; socialization and, 305– 6 Horse transportation, 2 Hospitality, 3, 7; African, 468 – 69; during Civil war, 154– 62 Hot cross buns, 238 Hot dogs, 256 –59 Hotel/resort party planners, 402 House of Burgesses, 504 Housing shortages, 387 Houten, Conrad Van, 133, 139 Howland, Esther A., 527 Hunt, Galliard, 48 Huou, 76 Husted, Marjorie, 60 Icing, 100 Idol, Billy, 65 Iguarias, 86 Illinois Confederacy, 2 Illiteracy, 316 Illustrated London News, 56 Imbolc, 108 Immigration, 2, 516 Importation, 409 –11 Inca, 307–10 Independent party planners, 402 India, 310 –15; buffets in, 313; celebrations in, 311–13; desserts in, 219; dining practices in, traditional, 311; dressers in, 314–15; entertainment in, 310; foods of, 310 – 11; formal dining in, 311; history of, 310; vegetarians in, 313–14 Injera, 471 Inns, 501 Intercollegiate Football Association, 516 Intimate dining, 491 Invitations, 315 –19; history of, 315; illiteracy and, 316; lithography and, 317; marketplace, 315–16; mass-printed, 317; metal-plate
587
588
Index
engraving of, 317; method of, 316 –17; paper selection and wording of, 318 –19; postal system and, 316; printing press invention and, 317; verbal, 315; wealth and, 317 Ireland, 462– 63 Irupathettu, 121 Irving Berlin Broadway, 379 Italy: 319 –27; entertainment and dining history of, 76 –77; foods of, 319; historical overview of, 320 –23; holidays celebrated in, 324–27
King’s Arms, 503 Kinsley, Herbert M., 113 Kissing, 381– 82 Kitchen staff dress, 340– 43 Kit Kat, 139 Kmart, 91 Knickerbocker Magazine, 49 Knives, 492–93 Kora, 121 Küchenmeistercy cookbook, 76 Kuge, 92 Kwanzaa, 343– 46, 460
Jackson, Andrew, 67 Jade Chicken, 128 James, Frank, 518 Jamison, Cherly and Bill, 80 Japan: desserts of, 218; edible centerpieces and, 243; teas of, 506 Japanese Cherry Blossom Festival, 329 –31; flowers and, appreciation of, 330 –31; history of, 329–30 Jefferson, Thomas, 79, 504 Jellybeans, 238 Joâo VI, 84 Jocularity, 338 Johnson, Lyndon B., 379 Jubilees, 523 Judaism, 46 Juneteenth, 331– 34; African Americans and, 333–34; celebration of, 331–32; contemporary celebration of, 332; education and, 333; foods and celebration of, 332–33; growth of celebration of, 334; history of, 331 The Junto, 72 Jupiter, 22
Lager beer, 55 Lamb, Patrick, 78 Lancelotti, Vittorio, 76 Land of the Dead, 135 Lanterns, 131–32 La quinceanera, 65, 347– 49 Larvae, 26 Las Vegas, 385 Lebkuchen Baker’s Guild, 151 Lee Dining Room, 69 Lee House, 66 Lemures, 26 Lemuria, 26 Lentils, 9 Lentisk nuts, 9 Lerius, John, 81 Leslie, Eliza, 149 Le Train Bleu, 95 Life milestones, 121–22, 440 – 45 Lille (buffet), 95 Lillet (bitter), 33 Lincoln, Abraham, 2, 64, 68 Lincoln Room, 68 Lindelberg, Florence, 60 Lindt, Rodolphe, 139 Linnaeus, 132 Liotard, Jean-Etienne, 137 Lipton Company, 303 Liquamen, 11 Lithography, 317 Little Feast of the Dead, 204 Livia, 23 Livy, 20, 22 Llefelys, 109 Lludd, 109 Loading the bride, 91 Lomi lomi salmon, 351
Kaiseki Ryori, 335–37 Kalua pig luau, 350 Karl, Bernhard, 3 Kattabos, 15 Keller, 53 Kelley, Janette, 60 Kentucky Derby, 337 – 40 Kettenring, Elizabeth, 93–94 Khan, Kublai, 76 Killen, Mary, 140 Kinderfest, 123 King Cleomenes of Sparta, 14
Index Longhi, Pietro, 137 Lord of Rain and Thunder, 35 Louis XIII, 136 Louis XIV, 492 Louis XV, 137 Love knots, 529 Lovell, Joseph, 67 Löwenbräukeller, 53 Luau, 349–52 Luce, Clare Boothe, 379 Lucian, 21 Lucullus, Lucius, 23–24, 25 Ludi Romani, 22 Lugh, 108 Lugnos, 108 Lukins, Sheila, 80 Lunch counters, 3 Lydgate, John, 526 Lyon, 95 Mabie, Casparus and Yoast, 504 Mabie’s Tavern, 504 Mabinogion, 109 MacArthur, Douglas, 69 Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade, 517 Magi, 146 Magrin, Gaston, 200 Manes, 26 Manners, table, 369–70 Manuar blanco, 86 Maple sugaring, 478 –79 Marche, Olivier de la, 77 Mardi gras, 353 – 60; history of, 353, 354–55; modern, 359– 60; New Orleans and, 355–59; religious significance of, 353–54 Marie-Antoinette, 117 Marin, François, 78 Marketplace invitations, 315–16 Markham, Gervase, 77 Marriage, 441– 44 Mars Bar, 139 Marshall, Thurgood, 46 Marshall Field, 509 Marshall Plan, 69 Marshmallows, 218 –19 Martial, 19, 21 Martin Chuzzlewit (Dickens), 5 Martino, Maestro, 76 Mary, 63
Marzipan, 102 Masked ball masquerades, 364– 65, 367 Masquerades, 361–69; American, 368; authors and, 366, 367; concepts of, 367–68; contemporary, 368; costumes and, 365, 366; defined, 361; dress codes of, 366; fictional characters and, 368; history of, 361; masked ball, 364–65, 367; politics and, 361–64; publications and, 367; women and, 365 Massialot, François, 78 Mass market thanksgiving, 516 –17 Mass-printed invitations, 317 Maximus, Quintus Fabius, 25 Maximus, Valerius, 25 May, Robert, 78, 146 Mayas, 134–35 Mayson, Benjamin, 57 Mayson, Isabella Mary, 57–59 “Mazel Tov,” 45 McDonald’s restaurant, 94, 124, 125 McGinley, Phyllis, 521 McMein, Neysa, 62 Mead, 10 Medieval, 369 –76 Medieval dining: animals and, fantasy, 375; banquets and, 370 –71; beverages and, 374; centerpieces of, 375–76; concepts of, 369; decorations and, 372; England and, 374–75; entertainment and, 376; feasts, 373; manners of, 369–70; menus and, 373–74; table setting and, 371–72 Medieval paintings, 452–53 Medlars, 9 Melville, Herman, 504 Menalaus, 14 Merman, Ethel, 379 Messenger, 5 Messes, 16 Messisbugo, Cristoforo, 76, 420 Mesta, George, 378 Mesta, Perle, 376–80 Mesta Tool Company, 378 Metal-plate engraving, 317 Mexico: birthday parties in, 124; Day of the Dead celebration in, 205– 6; dining in, 184; history of, 182– 83 Mezze, 304
589
590
Index
Midday meal, 178 –79 Middle Ages, 118, 215–16 Middle East, 76, 96, 219 Milestones, 31 Milk, 9–10 Milk drinkers, 108 Millet, 8, 33 Ming, 120 Mint tea, 508 Miracle of 34th Street (film), 517 Miskawayh, Ibn, 75 Misrule, Lords of, 145 Mississippi, 2 Miss Parloa’s New Cook Book and Marketing Guide, 60 Mitchell, Margaret, 49 Mithridates, King, 25 Mix-Zoquean, 132 “Mock Turkey,” 518 Moctezuma, 35, 134 Moore, Clement, 143 Moralia (Plutarch), 14, 20 Morrison, Toni, 72 Mother Goose, 297 Mullan, Robert, 504 Mushrooms, 9 Music, 245– 46, 463– 64 Myrtle berries, 9 Naming ceremonies, 444, 473 Nanjing, 120 Napkins, 494–96 Napoleon, 78, 84 National Day of Mourning, 518 National Historic Landmarks program, 69 National Register of Historic Places, 69 National Road, 2 Nativity Feast, 143 Nazars, 372 Nebuchadnezzar, 115 Nehru, Jawaharlal, 68 Neighbors, 408 New England Confectionary Company (NECCO), 530 New England Woman’s Club, 72 New Fire Ceremony, 35 Newman vs. Piggy Park Enterprises, 46 New Orleans, 355–59 New Orleans Turducken, 515
New Year’s Eve, 381– 86; ball lowering, 384; broadcast, 383; fireworks, 384; First Night celebrations and, 385; history of, 381, 383– 84; kissing tradition, 381– 82; in Las Vegas, 385; revelers, 382; singing tradition, 382– 83; symbols, 385, 386; toast tradition, 381; Watch Night, 385– 86 New York Sorosis, 72 “The Night Before Christmas” (Moore), 143 Night Owl movement, 70 –71 Nixon, Tricia, 298 Noisemakers, 298 Northend, Mary Harrod, 79 Nullification crisis, 49 Nuremberg Cup, 532–33 The Nutcracker ballet, 152 Nuts, 9 O Cozinheiro Imperial cookbook, 85 Odysseus, 11, 12 Off-premise catering, 104 O’Hara, Scarlet, 49 Ohio River, 2 Oktoberfest, 56 Oldenburg, Ray, 55 Old World, 113 Old World Halloween, 296 Olive oil, 11 Olmecs, 134 Olympian Gods, 14 Omotesenke, 506 Open bar, 534 Oprah’s Book Club, 72–73 Orbinson, Ray, 65 Oshun, 460 Ostia, 26, 28 Outdoors. see also Garden parties: African ceremonies, 473; cooking, 70, 270 Oysters, 11 Paal paayasam, 121 Paper doilies and coasters, 228 Papier-mâché animals, 124 Parades, 240, 462, 463 Parallel Lives (Plutarch), 15 Parentalia feast, 26 Paris Exhibition, 95
Index Parisian cafés, 387– 93; absinthe served in, 391–93; contemporary, 388 – 89; history of, 387, 389–91; housing shortages and, 387; occasions held in, 387– 88 Parloa, Maria, 60 Parties. see also Dinner parties; Garden parties: bachelor, 43; birthday, 65, 122–25; block, 70 –71; Halloween, 294–96; rent, 424–25; sugaring off, 479– 80; super bowl, 480 – 83; theme, 518 –19; Tupperware, 522–23; winetasting, 542 Party favors, 393– 400; Christmas crackers, 396; defined, 394; events that use, 397; extravagant, 398 –99; gift giving and, 394; prizes, 397–98; at weddings, 394–95 Party planners, 400 – 402 Patriotism, 271 Paulaner Keller, 53 Peas, 9 Pedro I, 84 Pedro II, 84– 85 Peking duck, 128 Pelopidas, 15 Peloponnesian War, 8 Pennsylvania Avenue House, 68 Pennsylvania Brewing Company, 56 Penny dreadfuls, 527 Penny Post, 527 People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA), 517 Pepys, Samuel, 526 Pericles, 8, 14 Perugina, 529 Petronius, Titus, 24 Pets, 66 Phaedimus, M. Ulpius, 22 Philadelphia Library, 72 Philip, Prince, 69 Philip of Orleans, 117 Philippine fiestas, 402–6 Philip the Good, 77 Phillip II, 17 Phoenician bakers, 8 Piadena, Bartolomeo Sacchi di, 76 Pickett Tea Room, 431 Pilgrims, 512–13 Pillsbury Bake-Off, 101
Pine kernels, 9 Pinot Meunier, 115 Pinot Noir, 115 Pirannal. see Birthdays Pirozhki, 124 Pius V, Pope, 136 Pizza, 254–56 Pizzette, 34 Platina, 76 Plato, 14, 15, 17, 75 Playboy magazine, 454–55 Plaza Hotel, 508 –9 Pleck, Elizabeth, 516 Plimoth Plantation, 512 Pliny, Elder, 108 Plum pudding, 149–50 Plutarch, 14, 15, 16, 20 Poi luau, 351 Polish Christmas Feast, 146 – 47 Politics, 271, 361– 64 Polk, James K., 68 Pompey, 23 Poppleton, Mrs., 431–32 Pork, 47– 49 Portuguese, 82, 84– 86 Poseidonius, 107 Postal system, 316 Postwar singles, 456 Potluck suppers, 406 –8 Pradesh, Andhra, 213 Prado, Manuel, 68 Printing press, 317 Priscus, C. Iunius, 25 Private rooms, 426 –28 Privy holes, 503 Prizes, 397–98 Program line-ups, 266 – 67 Progressive dinner parties, 408 –9 Prohibition, 409 –15; beer and, 411–12; beer halls and gardens and, 56; cocktails and, 165, 166; history of, 409; importation and, 409 –11; purpose of, 412–13; response to, 413–14; tearooms and, 511 Prohibition Act, 538 Promenades, 200 Protagoras (Plato), 15 Protestant Reformation, 51 Psykter, 14
591
592
Index
Puliyoonu, 121 Pulled pork barbeque, 50 Pulque, 37 Pulses, 9 Pump Room, 431 Punch, 163 Punch magazine, 93 Puritan Ordinary, 500 Puzziks, 527 Puzzle purses, 527 P’ye-back, 43 Queen Mary 2 (cruise line), 201 Queh-queh, 43, 91–92 Rabisha, William, 78 Raeder, Ole Munch, 5 Raffald, Elizabeth, 78 Railroad transportation, 2–3, 4, 6 Raleigh, 503 Ramadan, 508 Randolph, Mary, 79, 113 Ranhofer, Charles, 94 Ratskeller, 53 Receptional drinking, 505 Reclining, 13, 20 Red wine, 539 Religion: birthday celebrations and, 63; funeral foods and, 285– 86; Mardi gras and, 353–54; Philippine fiestas and, 402; tapas and, 498 Relishes, 8 Remus, 526 Renaissance, 417–24; banquets, 417–18; cheese, 118; France, 272– 82; history, 417; wealth, 418 –24 Renoir, Pierre-Auguste, 137 Rent parties, 424–25 Republic of Brazil, 86 – 89 Restaurants, 426 –32; banquets held in, 428 –29; birthday parties celebrated at, 125; catering from, 431–32; chic, 430 –31; communal dining and, 428; cookbooks used in, 192; dating and, 431; entertainment and, 426, 429–30; game laws and, 427; history of, 426; luxury, 427; private rooms in, 426 –28; soul food, 460 – 61; tapas and, 499 Revolutionary Tribunal, 117 Richard II, 77, 144, 374
Richard III, 297, 526 Ringwald, Molly, 65 Rives, John C. and Blair, 67 Road transportation, 2 Rockefeller, J. D., 297 Romanovs, 78 Rome: cocktails in, 163; culture and lifestyles of, 18 –28; dinner parties in, 225 Romeo, 297 Romoli, Domenico, 32 Romulus, 526 Roosevelt, Eleanor, 60 Roosevelt, Franklin, 66, 379 Roses, 529 Rossetti, Giovan Battista, 76 Rossini, 78 Rothschilds, 78 Royal court brewery, 53 Russia, 432–46; banquets in, 432; beverages of, 434–35; birthdays celebrated in, 124, 444; dinner parties in, 226; Easter in, 238–39; entertainment in, 436, 445–46; formal dining in, 437–38; funeral foods in, 444–45; gift giving in, 436; history of, 432–34; holidays celebrated in, 438–40; milestones celebrated in, 440–45; sequential table service style of, 434; women’s’ role in, 436–37 Russo, Julie, 80 Sabinus, Calvisius, 20 Sahagún, Fray Bernardino, 35, 36 –37 Saint James Palace, 209 Saint Joseph’s Day, 63 Saint-Méry, Moreau de, 1, 2 Saint Nicholas’s Day, 146 Saints’ Days, 447– 52 Salami, 34 Salt cellars, 371 Samain, 109 Sandwiches, 261– 63 Santa Claus, 517 Sap, 478, 479 Saturnalia, 144 Satyricon (Petronius), 24 Sauganash Tavern, 7 Savory, 304 Saxon, Anglo, 534–35
Index Scappi, Bartolomeo, 77 Schivelbusch, 136 Schlitz Palm Gardens, 55 Schnaider’s Garden, 55 Schoonmaker, Frank, 540 Schrafft’s, 430 Scotch, 3 Seafood, 33–34 Sectionalism, 49 Seneca, 20, 21 Sensory pleasures, 225 Sequential table service, 434 Serving platters, 452–53 Sextilanus, 19 Sexuality, 456 Shang Dynasty, 76 Sharply, Stephen, 6 Shellfish, 11 Shepherds Hotel, 3 Sherman, Tecumseh, 68 Shieffelin & Company, 541 Shield’s, 503 Shipboard life, 197 Silver, 19 Simmons, Amelia, 113, 152 Singing, 382– 83 Singles, 453 – 57; bachelors and, 453–54; bachelorettes and, 454; Esquire magazine for, 454–55; history of, 456; living standards of, 455; Playboy magazine and, 454–55; population statistics of, 456 –57; postwar, 456; publications regarding, 456; sexuality and, 456 Sisters gathering custom, 92 Sisters party custom, 92 Sixteen Candles, 65 Sixteenth birthday, 65 Slaughtering, 48 Slaves, 83, 84 Smith, Eliza, 78 Smith, Margaret Bayard, 64 Smith, Mrs. E., 100 Smörgåsbord, 97–98, 304–5, 313 Socrates, 15 Solon, 8 Song Dynasty, 505– 6 Songs, 64 Soul food, 457– 61; African America, 457– 60; contemporary, 461;
cookbooks, 460 – 61; defined, 457; restaurants, 460 – 61; types of, 460 Southern Africa, 476 –77 Southern nationalism, 49 Southern-style barbeque, 46 – 47 South India, childhood in, 120 –22 Soyer, Alexis, 79 Spagnoli, Luisa, 529 The Spectator magazine, 140 Speeches and bar/Bat Mitzvah, 45 Spencer, Colin, 93 Spoons, 492 Statius, Publius, 25 Steamboats, 2, 4 Stewart, Martha, 80, 465– 68 St. Nicholas magazine, 148 Stowe, Harriet Beecher, 511–12 St. Patrick’s Day, 461– 65; ethnics and, 465; foods and beverages of, 464– 65; green food coloring and, 465; history of, 461– 62; Irish and, 462– 63; music and, 463– 64; parades and, 462, 463; purpose of, 461; symbols of, 464 Strauss, Johann, 55 Sub-Saharan Africa, 468 –78 Suburban garden party, 288 – 89 Sugaring off party, 478 – 80 Sugarplums, 152 Sulla, 23 Super bowl party, 480 – 83 Super Sweet Sixteen (television series), 65 Sweeteners, 214–15 Sweet Hearts candy, 530 Sweet sixteen, 65 Symposiarch, 13 Symposium, 12–14, 20, 75 Symposium (Plato), 14 Syriscus, Maximus, 21 Syssitia, 16 Table outfitting, 490 Table service, French vs. Russian, 485–91; approaches to, 485– 86; courses and, serving of, 487– 89; evolution of, 486, 489; origins of, 486 – 87, 489; publications regarding, 487; style of, history of, 485; table outfitting and, 490; tableware and, 489–90 Table settings, 491–96; 3; courses and, 491–92; European, 495; evolution
593
594
Index
of, 492; forks and, 493; for formal banquets, 491; for French style dining, 492; for intimate dining, 491; knives and, 492–93; for medieval dining, 371–72; napkins and, 494–96; Victorian, 494 Tableware, 489–93 Tacitus, 24 Taillevent, 373 Talkoot, 52 T’ang, 76 Tapas, 496 –99; 305; bars, 498 –99; defined, 496 –97; entertainment and, 498 –99; history of, 497; origin of, 497–98; religions and, 498; restaurants, 499; types of, 497 Target, 91 Taverns, 499–505; advertisements for, 502–3; alcohol and, consumption of, 503; Civil War and, role of, 505; history of, 499–500; inns and, 501; licensing of, 502; physical features of, 501–2; profits of, 503; public houses in America and, 180; purpose of, 500– 501; receptional drinking and, 505; social drinking and, 504–5; symbols of, 504; unity and, national, 503–4; wine and, 500; women’s’ role in, 504 Tea, 505 – 8; afternoon, 507; ceremonies, hosts of, 506 –7; desserts and, 217; Japanese, 506; mint, 508; origin of, 505– 6; symbols of, 508 Tearooms: decorations of, 509; dim-sum, 221–22; history of, 508; influences of, 509–10; Prohibition and, 511; use of, 508 –9; wealth and, 509; women as ownership, 510 Tearooms in America, 508–11 Tejate, 135 Television, 190, 340 Tender shoots, 9 Terebinth nuts, 9 Thais, 15 Thala, 121 Thanksgiving, 511–18; America and, culture of, 512; contemporary, 518; dinner of, traditional, 514–16; First, 516; football and celebration of, 516; history of, 511; immigrant, 516; mass market, 516 –17; Pilgrims
and, 512–13; protests and, 517–18; Sarah Josepha Hale’s tale of, 513–14 Theme parties, 518 –19 Theophrastus of Eresus, 11 Thompson, Eric, 135 Tiallevent, Guillaume Tirel dit, 77 Tiberius, 23 Tlaloc, 35 Tlalteccuhtli, 37 Toasts, 381, 519–21 Tobacco, 37 Tofurkey, 518 Tollund Man, 107 Torah, 44, 45 Trachanas, 8 –9 Traditional Irish toast, 521 Transatlantic travel, 197–98 Transportation, 1–3 Tricliniarch, 22 Trimalchio, 24, 28 The Trireme, 15 Trollope, Anthony, 5 Trollope, Frances (Fannie), 5, 6 –7 Trousseau, 90 Truman, 69, 379 Tubero, Quintus Aelius, 25 Tubero, Scipio Aemilius, 25 Tuna crudo, 33 Tunnel of Fudge Cake, 101 Tun Tavern, 504 Tupper, Earl S., 522 Tupperfairy, 523 Tupper Plastics Company, 522 Tupperware Home Party, 523 Tupperware party, 521–23 Tutankhamun, King, 537 Twelfth Night, 144 Twelve Days of Christmas, 144 U Fleku, 53 Ummarappadi, 122 UNICEF (United Nations International Children’s Emergency Fund), 300 Union Pacific Railroad, 547 Unity, 503– 4 University of Pennsylvania, 72 Urasenke, 506 Vala, 121 Valenciennes, 95
Index Valentine, 525–26 Valentine’s Day, 525 –30; candy, 529; colors, 529; conversation hearts and, 530; England’s celebration of, 527; flowers, 529; history of, 525; mass production of, 528 –29; popularity of, 527–28; publications, 526 –27; purpose of, 526; stories, 525–26; traditions, 526; Victorian celebration of, 527 Valle, Paulo, 87 Valrhona, 139 Vanderbilts, 296 Varenne, Pierre François de la, 77 Vayambu, 121 Vegetarianism, 189, 313–14 Vehling, Joseph Dommers, 75 Vera, Cocceia, 24 Verbal invitations, 315 Verlaine, Paul, 390 Vermouths, 33 Vertical tasting, 542 Victoria, Queen, 79, 208, 491 Victorians: baby showers and, 39; cheese and, 119; dinner parties and, 225; table settings and, 494; Valentine’s Day and, 527 Vidyarambham, 122 Vintner’s Company, 500 Virtual block parties, 71 Vocatur, 21–22 Vulso, Gnaeus Manlius, 20 –21 Wagons, 2 Waldo, Myra, 541 Waldorf Hotel, 94, 509 Wanamaker, 509 Warhol, Andy, 519–20 Washburn Crosby Company, 59, 60 Washington, George, 64, 504 Washington, Martha, 538 The Wasps (Aristophane), 13 Watch Night, 385– 86 Watering holes, 3 Water transportation, 2 Wealth: beer halls/ gardens and, 55; cruise ships and, 198 –99; invitations and, 317; kitchen staff dress and, 340 – 41; Renaissance and, 418 –24; tearooms and, 509
Webster, Daniel, 503 Wedding receptions, 531– 36; Chinese, 535; decorations, 531–33; history of, 531; party favors used in, 394–95; showering of bride and groom and, 534; traditions, 533–35 Weddings: favors, 394–95; in Greece, 532; during World War II, 547 Weizmann, Chaim, 68 West, John, 135 Western Africa, 472–73 Wheat, 8 Whiskey, 3 White House, 68 White wine, 539– 40 Wigilia, 146 – 47 Wilkes, Ashley, 49 Willows, 502 Wilson, Woodrow, 378, 379 Wine, 11–12, 536– 44; cooking with, 540 – 41; dessert, 543; evolution of culture and, 540; food and, 541– 42; history of, 536; lifestyles and, typical, 543– 44; origins of, 536 –38; red, 539; styles of, 538 –39; tasting, 542; taverns and, 500; white, 539– 40 Wineskins, 11 Winfrey, Oprah, 72–73 Winslow, Edward, 512 Wise, Brownie, 523 Women, history of: catering role of, 104–5, 106; cookbooks and, 187– 88; dinner parties and, 226; entertainment and dining history of, 80; kitchen staff dress and, 342– 43; masquerades and, 365; Russia and, role of, 436 –37; taverns and, role of, 504; tearoom ownership and, 510; Tupperware parties and, 522–23 Woodmason, Charles, 3 Woodward, Stanley, 66 Wooley, Hannah, 77 Wordsworth, William, 512 World cuisines, 194 World War II, 544 –47; entertainment and, holiday, 547; family and, 546 – 47; food rationing and, 545– 46; history of, 544– 45; socialism and, 546; wedding and, 547
595
596
Index
Yeast, 8 Yeast powders, 100 Yellow Tavern, 505 Yin, Yi, 76 Yogurt, 9 Young, Alexander, 512
Zakuska tables: defined, 549; importance of, 550; origins of, 549–50 Zakuski, 305, 549 –50 Zenophon, 15 Zeus Soter, 14