One of
the recurring myth-tories of food history relates to Henry IV, King of France
from 1589 to 1610. In 1598, after decades
of religious wars across France formally ended with the Edict of Nantes, “Good
King Henry” turned his attention to restoring the country to peace and order.
He is famously said to have had as a goal "A chicken in every peasant's
pot every Sunday." I have been unable to find any actual authenticated
reference to this statement – perhaps if I could read sixteenth century French
it would help! – but I live in hope that one of you with knowledge in the area
can shed some light on the story.
Authentication
is not necessary for the perpetuation of an intriguing or amusing story
however, as we are all too well aware. The idea has been attributed, and has stuck,
and an amazing number of recipes for Henry’s Poule au Pot are given in online and paper sources.
One of
these completely unauthenticated ‘authentic’ recipes caught my eye recently
because it is a rather anomalous inclusion in a book of recipes for boiled
beef. The book is called 99 practical
methods of utilizing boiled beef and the original recipe for stewed chicken,
by the pseudonymous ‘Babet,’ was ‘translated from the French by A.R.’ and
published in New York in 1893. The justification for including King Henry’s Poule au Pot, as well as the choice of
99 for the number of recipes, is elegantly explained in the Preface by a Mme. de
Fontclose:
ARE you
fond of boiled beef? Your only answer is a slight grimace. Words are
superfluous. I can interpret your looks. And you, sir? you, madame? you,
mademoiselle? you, baby?
Unanimously
you reply, "No," a thousand times no, we do not like boiled beef, the
bouilli as we call it at home. Yet —
oh, the miseries of this life — we force ourselves to eat it at least once a
week, with a resignation that our utmost endeavors fail to render a smiling
acquiescence to the duty of economy. The pot-au-feu
is truly delicious. As soon as it appears upon the table, our faces become
illumined with expectation. We taste it; how savory it is, how delicately
odorous. This is a dainty morsel, we exclaim. But suddenly monsieur's face
loses its blissful expression; madame and mademoiselle suppress a sigh; baby
makes a grimace; — to each has occurred the thought of the bouilli, the horrible bouilli,
which is the price to be paid for the golden bouillon that makes our eyes
shine, brings joy to our olfactories, and whets our appetite. Under the
oppression of this sudden thought, all joy is banished, and the meal is
finished in gloom.
The
situation is trying. It is certainly hard that lovers of the pot-au-feu who cannot bring themselves
to relinquish this savory and wholesome dish, should have to pay penalty for
the indulgence by eating dry, tasteless, stringy meat, as offensive to the eye
as to the palate. Some solution of the problem was
needed. Babet has discovered it. Long life to Babet!
… In this book, monsieur, you will find
revealed a secret which will make you wish to have pot-au-feu every day of the week. No more gloomy looks will greet
the appearance of the meat which follows the soup. "What is this?"
you will exclaim when the cook triumphantly places before you a dish whose
savory odor proclaims its worth. Madame or mademoiselle smile mischievously,
being already in the secret, if not the real cordons-bleus of the house, and only await your favorable verdict
to announce that this is but one of many recipes, and that you need not
eat boiled beef prepared in the same
fashion twice in the whole year. You cry in joyful amazement, "Truly this
Babet is a marvel ! "
The suit
is won. Readers of this little book will not, like the Bishop of Chalons referred
to in the Memories of Saint-Simon, be forced to eat boiled beef au naturel for every meal, and be
therewith content. All vegetables, condiments, and seasonings have been invoked
to lend their aid in making the dish a delicious one,
and after tasting Babet's seasonings, you will follow my example in modifying
an old proverb to read : Seasoning makes the bouilli and the fish.
Babet
deserves the thanks of all who found the pot-au-feu
undesirable because of its cost, and because of the necessity of eating the
insipid meat from which it was prepared. Babet has opened a new world to school-boys,
boarders, soldiers, convalescents, heretofore condemned to perpetual boiled beef. Babet has lent
material aid to the thrift of small households, by showing them how to utilize
every scrap of the detested beef; and better yet, to Babet belongs the glory of
having banished ill-temper from the family board, and contributed to the gaiety
and laughter so essential to good health and well-being. Could humanitarian theories
find a better application?
But, Madame, methinks you are puzzled
over the number 99. Why not 100 recipes? you ask. Because, most charming of
housekeepers, to you is reserved the privilege of completing the series by the
invention of the one hundredth recipe.
And here
is the recipe you have been waiting for:-
King Henry the Fourth's Recipe for Stewed Chicken.
(The Poule-au-pot)
The
poule-au-pot, which good King Henry desired to have form the Sunday dinner of
every peasant in the land, is a succulent dish too much neglected in these
days, when dainty living is tending to replace the rustic cooking of the good
old days.
But as
the mere suggestion of a dish usually arouses a desire to taste it, we will
give the recipe for the famous chicken, which, in spite of its apparent
simplicity, is a choice morsel.
Get a
good, fat hen, and buy it alive if possible, or at least, not drawn. Put aside
the liver, gizzard, heart, lungs, head, neck, and wings, and any eggs which it
may contain. Bone the head, neck, and wings, and mince the whole with ham,
lard, bread crumbs dipped in milk, salt, pepper, spices, sweet herbs, parsley,
and garlic, for we must remember that Henry the Fourth was a Béarnais, and that
garlic is found in all the cooking of that part of the country.
When the
hash is ready, add the yolks of eggs and put the stuffing into the hen.
(Chestnuts and slices of truffle may also be put in the stuffing, but are not
in the ancient, classic recipe.) Sew the opening, tie with string, and cook as
follows:
All is in
readiness for the pot-au-feu. Skim it, add the vegetables, and put in the
chicken, which you allow to cook gently. Withdraw it before the flesh loosens
from the bones, which would occur very quickly in the case of a young bird.
From time to time lift it on a skimmer and prick with a knife, to ascertain the
degree to which it has cooked.
Prepare
upon a platter a bed of parsley, or, better yet, of cress. Take the hen from
the pot, remove the strings, and lay it on the platter, sprinkling fine salt
over it. It should be eaten very hot. The stuffing should be firm enough to cut
in slices. The bouillon obtained by this process is exquisite, and the fowl
loses none of its flavor. Taste it, and become convinced of King Henry the
Fourth's solicitude for the well-being of the peasants of France.
King Henry might have been full of solicitude for the peasants of France, but aside from the unlikelyhood of their becoming well-enough off to be able to slaughter a chicken every week, to make this (rather interesting, I must admit) recipe they'd also need lard and ham. Pretty well-off peasants indeed!
ReplyDeleteSandra
I would love to see some of those boiled beef recipes!
ReplyDeleteI did a bit of research about Poule au Pot last year, and while it's not a definitive answer you might be interested to read what I found https://turnspitandtable.wordpress.com/tag/poule-au-pot/.
ReplyDelete