There seems
to be no doubt that the big bird is the protein of choice for the big holiday
gatherings such as Thanksgiving and Christmas – but how long, really, has this
has been the tradition?
In the case
of Thanksgiving in America, it seems to have been so since the very first
celebration in 1621, which is not surprising given that the turkey is
indigenous to the New World. As for Christmas, Americans were certainly regularly
serving the bird on the big day in the later decades of the eighteenth century,
although it was over a hundred years before it was sanctified by an expert as
the ideal focus of the dinner. The expert was Miss Caroline L. Hunt of the
Bureau of Home Economics of the Department of Agriculture, and her suggestions
for the ideal Christmas dinner were reported in an article in the New York Times of December 19, 1915. She
specifically recommended a stuffing of ‘stale bread, chestnuts, bay leaves, a
dash of cayenne, some fresh (not cooked) celery, and a trace of onion’, and the
accompaniments of giblet gravy and cranberry jelly.
The Old
World first became aware of the turkey in the early sixteenth century, and it
soon found a place on the feasting table. Again, however, it was not until much
later – around the mid-nineteenth century – that it convincingly usurped the
other favourites such as the goose, and became the standard Christmas bird.
In the wake
of Thanksgiving and Christmas of course, the domestic caterer has the not
insignificant problem of what do with the leftovers. Whether you call it
secondary cookery, cold-meat cookery, or camouflage cookery, or even if you posh
it up and call it rechauffé, the
challenge is the same – avoiding both kitchen waste and family protest by
becoming the master or mistress of creativity and disguise. Can we get any
inspiration from nineteenth century kitchen gurus?
Eliza Acton,
in her wonderful Modern Cookery in all
its Branches (1847) has no recipes using cold roast turkey, nor does Queen
Victoria’s one-time cook, Charles Elmé Francatelli include any in The Modern Cook (1846). The celebrity
chef Alexis Soyer does, however, include an idea for the remains of the turkey
in The Gastronomic Regenerator (1847) – one glamourised with a French
name, which his perhaps a good tip with any dish of leftovers. Here it is:
Emincée
de Dinde a l’Italienne
Is made with
the remains of a turkey from a previous dinner, cut large slices from the
breast-part, as much as you may require, and put them into a stewpan with six
gherkins cut in long slices, have ready a pint of good sauce Italienne, and
when boiling pour it over; warm them gently, but do not let them boil, and
serve in a dish with very small croquettes de pommes de terre round.
Naturally, Isabella
Beeton’s incredibly comprehensive The
Book of Household Management (1861) includes several recipes for leftover
turkey meat. I particularly like this one:
Croquettes of Turkey (Cold Meat Cookery).
Ingredients. — The remains of cold turkey; to every ½ lb. of
meat allow 2 oz. of ham or bacon, 2 shalots, 1 oz. of butter, 1 tablespoonful
of flour, the yolks of 2 eggs, egg and bread crumbs.
Mode.—The
smaller pieces, that will not do for a fricassée or hash, answer very well for
this dish. Mince the meat finely with ham or bacon in the above proportion;
make a gravy of the bones and trimmings, well seasoning it; mince the shalots,
put them into a stewpan with the butter, add the flour; mix well, then put in the
mince, and about 4 pint of the gravy made from the bones. (The proportion of
the butter must be increased or diminished according to the quantity of mince.)
When just boiled, add the yolks of 2 eggs; put the mixture out to cool, and
then shape it in a wineglass. Cover the croquettes with egg and bread crumbs,
and fry them a delicate brown. Put small pieces of parsley-stems for stalks,
and serve with rolled bacon cut very thin.
Time.— 9
minutes to fry the croquettes.
And last,
but by no means least, as an American representative we have Fannie Merritt
Farmer, author of The Boston Cooking-School
Cookbook (1896), which includes this extremely minimalist recipe for turkey
soup - which is really turkey stock.
Turkey Soup.
Break turkey
carcass in pieces, removing all stuffing; put in kettle with any bits of meat
that may have been left over. Cover with cold water, bring slowly to boiling
point, and simmer two hours. Strain, remove fat, and season with salt and
pepper. One or two outer stalks of celery may be cooked with carcass to give
additional flavor.
NOTE: Previous
posts have included other ideas for leftover turkey. You can find them HERE and
HERE.
Quotation for the Day.
Johnny Carson
As Kathleen Wall at Plimoth Plantation will attest, turkey may NOT have been on the table at the harvest celebration of 1621. It most certainly was not the main dish. Turkey really only became THE thing to serve in the latter part of the 19th century, around the time Thanksgiving was made a national holiday; prior to that, it was little celebrated, other than in New England (for more details, see the FB & blog postings from Kathleen & Plimoth Plantation during the past couple weeks). Same for Christmas; it was not universally celebrated in the US until the late 1800s, maybe even the early 1900s (hence the article you quote). It was hardly celebrated in America at all before then (it was even banned in some areas!). The "traditional" American Christmas is really quite modern. Anyway...that's my two cents worth.
ReplyDeleteAmen, Johnny.
ReplyDeleteThanks for your comments, carolina. You are right, of course. As I said in my response to the Thanksgiving post - how long does something have to be eaten on a particular occasion for it to be 'traditional'?
ReplyDelete