Culture of the Fork: A Brief History of Everyday Food and Haute Cuisine in Europe
5/5
()
About this ebook
The Renaissance and the age of discovery introduced Europeans to exotic cultures, mores, manners, and ideas. That kitchen revolution led to the development of new utensils and table manners. Rebora discusses the availability of resources, how people kept from starving in the winter, how they farmed, how tastes developed, what the lower classes ate, and what the aristocracy enjoyed.
Related to Culture of the Fork
Related ebooks
Italian Identity in the Kitchen, or, Food and the Nation Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsFeasting with the Franks Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsTaste: The Story of Britain through Its Cooking Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Before Mrs Beeton: Elizabeth Raffald, England's Most Influential Housekeeper Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsRechercheÌ EntreÌes - A Collection of the Latest and Most Popular Dishes Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsEngland under the Tudors Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsOld Cookery Books and Ancient Cuisine Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsFrench Gastronomy: The History and Geography of a Passion Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsLuncheon and Dinner Sweets, Including the Art of Ice Making Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsCooks, Gluttons and Gourmets: A History of Cookery Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsA History of Cookbooks: From Kitchen to Page over Seven Centuries Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Nothing More Comforting: Canada's Heritage Food Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Feasts and All Their Finery: Elegant Dining in Old Regime France Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsLet the Meatballs Rest: And Other Stories About Food and Culture Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsAmerican Appetites: A Documentary Reader Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsWhite Jacket Required: A Culinary Coming-of-Age Story Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5London's Labyrinth: The World Beneath the City's Streets Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5The Union Square Cafe Cookbook: 160 Favorite Recipes from New York's Acclaimed Restaurant Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsBogs, Baths and Basins: The Story of Domestic Sanitation Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Kitchen Culture in America: Popular Representations of Food, Gender, and Race Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Tastes Like Chicken: A History of America's Favorite Bird Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Dinner with Mr Darcy: Recipes inspired by the novels and letters of Jane Austen Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Jane Seymour: An Illustrated Life Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsGuess Who's Coming To Dinner: Feasting Rituals in the Prehistoric Societies of Europe and the Near East Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsPasta: The Story of a Universal Food Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsMint Juleps with Teddy Roosevelt: The Complete History of Presidential Drinking Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Of Cabbages and Kings: The History of Allotments Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsThe Kingdom of Rye: A Brief History of Russian Food Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsBuon Appetito, Your Holiness: The Secrets of the Papal Table Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Food and Feast in the World of the Blue Bells Chronicles: a Gastronomic Historic Poetic Musical Romp in Thyme Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratings
Cooking, Food & Wine For You
Mediterranean Diet: A Complete Guide: 50 Quick and Easy Low Calorie High Protein Mediterranean Diet Recipes for Weight Loss Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsThe Ultimate Mediterranean Cookbook Over 100 Delicious Recipes and Mediterranean Meal Plan Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsQuick Start Guide to Carnivory + 21 Day Carnivore Diet Meal Plan Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5The Complete Medicinal Herbal: A Practical Guide to the Healing Properties of Herbs Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Plant-Based Cookbook: Vegan, Gluten-Free, Oil-Free Recipes for Lifelong Health Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Eat Plants, B*tch: 91 Vegan Recipes That Will Blow Your Meat-Loving Mind Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Korean Home Cooking: Classic and Modern Recipes Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Mediterranean Diet: 70 Easy, Healthy Recipes Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5The Carnivore Code Cookbook: Reclaim Your Health, Strength, and Vitality with 100+ Delicious Recipes Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsCooking at Home: More Than 1,000 Classic and Modern Recipes for Every Meal of the Day Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5From Crook to Cook: Platinum Recipes from Tha Boss Dogg's Kitchen Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Everything Macro Diet Cookbook: 300 Satisfying Recipes for Shedding Pounds and Gaining Lean Muscle Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Taste of Home 201 Recipes You'll Make Forever: Classic Recipes for Today's Home Cooks Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Cook Once Dinner Fix: Quick and Exciting Ways to Transform Tonight's Dinner into Tomorrow's Feast Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5The Flavor Equation: The Science of Great Cooking Explained in More Than 100 Essential Recipes Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Taste of Home Instant Pot Cookbook: Savor 111 Must-have Recipes Made Easy in the Instant Pot Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Small Apartment Hacks: 101 Ingenious DIY Solutions for Living, Organizing and Entertaining Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Back to Eden Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Salt, Fat, Acid, Heat: Mastering the Elements of Good Cooking Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Ratio: The Simple Codes Behind the Craft of Everyday Cooking Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Snoop Presents Goon with the Spoon Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Instant Pot® Meals in a Jar Cookbook: 50 Pre-Portioned, Perfectly Seasoned Pressure Cooker Recipes Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Tucci Table: Cooking With Family and Friends Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5
Related categories
Reviews for Culture of the Fork
1 rating0 reviews
Book preview
Culture of the Fork - Giovanni Rebora
CHAPTER ONE
Grain and Bread
The sixteenth century saw a remarkable growth in the European population. Obviously, there were differing rates of increase, and along with the phenomenon of urbanization itself, these variables had important consequences for the feeding of city dwellers.
Naples doubled its population (from 200,000 to 400,000 inhabitants) between the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. London experienced the incorporation of country dwellers, who became the object of well-known ordinances for the poor (which in practice were ordinances against them).
The concentration of the rural population in the capital cities was an indication of economic decline (for the poor, naturally). The closing of fields and pastureland in Great Britain excluded many from the possibility of feeding their livestock and gathering firewood and fruits in the forests. The soil became less and less fertile. People moved to the cities.
In the Kingdom of Naples the population gravitated to the capital, and assuring supplies of the usual basic foodstuffs became ever more difficult. Emilio Sereni tells how the Neapolitans—the leaf eaters,
as the Sicilians used to call them—became macaroni eaters.
From dishes of meat and greens the move was to pasta, which would lead, in Naples at least, to an entirely new form of eating.
The history of food, a discipline not as yet highly developed, in the past mostly investigated the wholesale business and commerce of the major foodstuffs. With this methodology one could divide the quantity of grain harvested (which is not the same thing as the real quantity) by the number of inhabitants (similarly harvested
) and derive from these statistics a certain quantity of grain: the presumed consumption per statistical unit of population.
Aside from the possible presence of breast-fed babies who should have been excluded from such statistical tallies, people are not just statistical units: they don’t eat wheat by the grain.
Historians thus reasoned that since grain is transformed into bread, the official price per loaf or weight should be quoted in relation to daily salaries. This led to the conclusion that the poor statistical units stuffed themselves with eight kilos of bread per day. The notion that with grain one can produce flour, from which pasta can be made by hand, seems to have occurred to almost no one, not even when confronted with evidence of imports of hard grain destined for the fabrication of dried pasta in a pasta cutter.
The same pattern held for foodstuffs such as meat and other products. The problem lay not in food itself but in the economics of marketing food products. Men have for millennia devoted most of their time to procuring food for themselves and to preparing it.
Simply to dignify the subject of culinary history or to affirm its importance no longer suffices. Basically, eating is not an art, not a literature, not even a science. How can one study a function so basic, so necessary? I seek here first of all to discover those aspects of food tied to the notion of the the superfluous.
Doing so opens a window on the history and anthropology of food. Both cuisine and the banquet are forms of communication!
The fact remains that grain is not eaten by the grain.
Grain needs to be ground, to be brought to a publicly or privately owned mill, where the miller earns his salary or a profit intended to pay him for his labor (and that of his helpers), along with a return for his investment and the upkeep of the machines. Then there are the baker’s salary and the costs of maintaining the oven (if it is a public oven). If the oven is private, you have to pay for the laborer as well as for firewood and upkeep. And there is always the tax surcharge for the Government and for rental of the premises.
Since bread belongs to the foods that in the Roman era were regulated by state allocation (the famous Annona), bread was (and still is today, albeit with obvious differences) a regulated product considered indispensable for the feeding of the people. The state was therefore compelled to involve itself by setting the price of bread and ensuring that there were no shortages, if necessary by buying grain and controlling its distribution.
Whatever economists, especially those tending toward macroeconomics, may think, the people fed themselves on cooked foods prepared and combined as the occasion and company warranted according to an alchemical process that we call cuisine. These foods gradually became known dishes that were both the sum of the separate ingredients and an integration of these ingredients.
This could all be expressed in mathematical terms. The sum of the ingredients becomes something more than a sum, thanks to the balance of the parts, to the time and method of cooking, to the addition of salt or of fats, and to the action of heat. A dish composed of inexpensive ingredients can be far more complete and nutritious than the sum of those parts ingested separately.
Of all the foodstuffs bread was, in the Roman era, by far the most widely diffused, and it became the very symbol of food. In the towns bread had to be distributed in standardized configurations to which corresponded a price set by the regulators or by the relevant lawmakers. Among the peasants bread was made at home and baked in either the family or the village ovens.
One could treat oneself to white bread made of sifted wheat flour (especially in the towns) or to black or brown bread made of a blend of various cereal flours (rye, barley, spelt, etc.) or of unsifted wheat when in adequate supply. White bread, baked daily, was intended above all for whoever could pay its price; it existed in various shapes and could be seasoned with oil, lard, milk, or other seasonings.
We need to remember that Italy, even in the early modern era, was spangled with innumerable cities big and small, governed by lords and oligarchies but all linked by communal and local traditions that even the worst princes had to reckon with. The peasants constituted the largest segment of the population and lived on the land according to agreements that varied from region to region. These contracts were certainly not favorable to the toil-weary poor, but the existence of so many cities provided a source of demand and therefore a stimulus to production. Think of small family farms whose products were not intended for a single center, a capital of the kingdom, but for tens and hundreds of small regional capitals, for the tens of more or less independent courts scattered throughout the peninsula, and for hundreds of abbeys, monasteries, and convents.
FIGURE 3
Baker, engraving from Diderot and D’Alembert, Encyclopédie; ou, Dictionnaire raisonné des sciences, des arts et des métiers (The Encyclopedia; or, Dictionary of sciences, arts, and trades) (Paris, 1772).
FIGURE 4
Breadseller, engraving from Arte per via (Bologna, 1660).
The agricultural contracts in Tuscany or Liguria indicate a substantial presence of nobility with merchant origins among the landowners. In countries outside Italy or in regions with a heavy feudal presence the contractual arrangements seem different, with a greater use of workmen, for example, than was usually agreed to in either Liguria or Tuscany.
Ownership of land by those cultivating the soil was frequent both in Liguria and in Monferrato. Inevitably, this led to the fragmentation of the property itself, which resulted in turn in smaller family farms that soon became incapable of producing revenue sufficient to sustain the farm families themselves. From this came urbanization and an indebtedness that would have consequences for the quality of such products as wine, as well as creating easy hunting grounds for those who, having lent money guaranteed by a mortgage, now demanded the land as payment.
Despite various quasi-legal strategies it proved impossible to keep farms intact. With the first succession came a division into halves (if there were two male heirs), and at the second succession each half was again subdivided.
The indebtedness of the small landowners and the grim conditions of life led to a new phenomenon: litigiousness on matters of property lines and possible profits, on rights of way and water rights, conflicts that afflicted then as now many agricultural regions. From all this arose serious difficulties, among them the abandonment of the land and poverty.
Conditions for nonlandowning peasants were hardly better: owners asked for almost everything and in the majority of cases gave nothing in return. Poor folk were badly nourished, dependent on polenta (made of spelt, beans, chickpeas). Only rarely did they eat bread, and then a bread that was almost never made of wheat.
The shortage of bread was, however, a problem that was above all urban. Each peasant was granted a kitchen garden, a strip of land along the far limits of the fields, as well as some farmyard animals and the use of different cereals from the grain harvest. The city dweller, in contrast, had to buy everything, and bread was the symbol of his life. It is no accident that the locution to earn one’s bread
has been used for so long to indicate the price of labor.
When Manzoni described the riots in Milan shortly before the plagues of 1630, he told of an attack on the ovens by the crippled.
An attack on an oven might seem quite strange. One would expect that people intent on rebellion and pillage would head toward shops that offered foods less ordinary and more expensive than bread, at least for the poor. But this attack is fraught with symbolism: if the people are hungry, the people want bread. The rulers of the ancient republics knew this well. The people want the superfluous, to be sure, but one needs first to guarantee them the necessities. If there is a bread shortage, the people rebel and create serious problems for those in power. A shortage of the superfluous, on the other hand, makes for unhappiness but does not justify subversion.
The famine that struck Sicily during that same era is well documented. Most revealing is a letter, preserved in the State Archives in Palermo, that recounts how two victims of starvation were found stretched out on the beach with grass in their mouths. This image really hit me, and from that letter sprang my interest in the history of food. The sea at Ficarazzi would have offered to any and all a quantity of food sufficient for survival, but without bread you die. A few years later, I found the same phrase in a book by G. Doria dealing with Montaldeo. He too mentions two men who starved to death with grass in their mouths. It might be mere coincidence, but I believe that this is rather a repeated, almost paradigmatic image invoked to show the seriousness of a moment in culinary history.
If in the cities bread had to be guaranteed to the people, the use of grains and greens in diverse forms of bread allowed the rural populations to survive. And thanks to demographic pressures far less extreme than those facing urban populations, the peasants did survive and in a fashion less awful than we have been led to believe.
FIGURE 5
Processing pasta, engraving from Bartolomeo Scappi, Opera dell’arte del cucinare (Works from the art of cooking) (Venice, 1570).
CHAPTER TWO
Soup with Bread, Polenta, Vegetable Stew, and Pasta
The recipe: take lots of water; cabbage, turnips, and other greens; a light fry of lard (or oil) and onions, garlic, and salt. If available, add a piece of salt pork or of beef (the cecina of the Iberian Peninsula or the Turks’ pastermé). In season, mutton or ox bones can replace the salted meat. On the stock drawn from the long cooking process float some hard, stale bread. We Italians still talk about bathing a soup
and souping up the bread.
This was tripe soup, made whenever conditions allowed; at other times, it was turnip or cabbage soup. The stale black bread crumbles up in the soup and begins to look like couscous.
When slaughtering time came for the pigs, one boiled up those parts that could not be salted or otherwise preserved. By adding ribs and a piece of fresh sausage, some turnips (which might replace potatoes), and cabbage, one could produce a soup
that in Lombardy is called cassoela. With the mythification and ennobling of paupers’ cuisine, this concoction has inspired rivers of words studded with fatuous adjectives from many a gastronome. Called a