As
most of you know, one of my favourite themes is that of mock food. I hasten to
add that I never (or maybe almost never) want to actually prepare it or eat it,
but I find it fascinating nonetheless.
One
of the things that intrigues me about mock food is the motive for making it. In
medieval times mock food played an important role during Lent, when elaborate look-alikes
for animal foods were made to fill the groaning tables of the wealthy. Mock
food was also one of the important forms of ‘subtelty’ – elaborate, fantastical,
sculptural pieces somewhere between food and entertainment that were paraded around
the hall between courses to impress the guests or impart a message of
propaganda.
In
more recent times, the preparation of mock food has been motivated by rather more
prosaic reasons – nostalgia for a food remembered but not available because of
distances in time and geography, or perhaps hard economic reality when the
desire for an expensive dish does not match the household budget. I would like to think also – for fun?
I
do always wonder, when I see a story or recipe for mock food, were the guests
fooled? Was that the intention?
I
found a recipe for the ultimate mock food recently, in a copy of Camouflage cookery; a book of mock dishes
(1918) by Helen Watkeys Moore. Would you try to fool your guests with this nice
little pre-dinner canapé?
Mock
Pâté de Foie Gras Sandwiches.
Mix boneless sardines and cream cheese to a smooth paste
and spread between slices of bread.
And
to go along with it, how about this tasty mock champagne?
To make Imitative Champagne.
Take twelve pounds of
loaf sugar;
Six pounds of sugar
candy;
Two ounces of tartaric
acid;
Six quarts of cider,
perry, or gooseberry wine;
One quart of French
brandy;
Ten gallons of
spring-water: Boil the water and sugar fifteen minutes, skim this clean, then
put it into a narrow tub, and dissolve in it the tartaric acid: before it is
cold, add some yeast to ferment it; draw it from the tub into any clean vessel;
add the other ingredients, with a quarter of an ounce of isinglass dissolved in
vinegar; stir the liquid well, and when the hissing is over bung it down tight;
keep it in a cold place four or five months, then bottle it and keep it cool
two months longer; add a lump of fine sugar to each bottle, and cork in the
Champagne fashion.
Martin
Doyle’s Common things of Every-day Life (1857)
1 comment:
I cannot imagine anything less like pate de foie gras than sardines mixed with cream cheese.
The mock champagne sounds...interesting. I hope if anyone tries making it, they let us know the result! And what the difference between "loaf sugar" and "sugar candy" is.
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