Archaeologists tell us humans have been eating crustaceans (lobsters, crabs, shrimp) from prehistoric times to present. They know this from excavating "middens," deposits of shells and bones left by early civilizations. These foods weren't "discovered" (like early people "discovered" some corn popped if placed near the fire) but noticed. The earliest hunter-gatherers took advantage of every available food resource. People who lived near water (oceans, seas, lakes, rivers) naturally took advantage of the foods offered by these resources.
About lobster
Culinary evidence confirms lobsters were known to ancient Romans and Greeks. The were highly
esteemed by the British, not so esteemed by American colonists. This sea creature enjoyed a
resurgence
of demand in the 19th century which still holds true today.
"Lobster, well-armed sea creature. Its most noticeable external traits were its long hands and
small feet' (Archestratus), its bent fingers (Epicharmus) and its dark color (Pliny). It is very
good, albeit somewhat complicated, to eat; simpler for the eventual diner if the cook minces the
meat and forms it into cakes, as described in Apicius...The lobster (Homarus Gammarus) is Greek
askakos..., Latin astacus and elephantus; the latter name is seldom attested in classical texts but
was certainly in use, since it survives in modern Italian dialects."
"So the Romans who came to Britain [43 AD] and who lived within reach of the sea must have
been very happy to enjoy the local seafhish...seafoods such as crab and lobster were taken.
Shellfish of many kinds became very popular" (p. 21)
"Lobster, crayfish and crab were greatly enjoyed [in mid-fifteenth century Britain], though they
seldom reached the inland eater...Crab and lobster were also boiled and eaten cold with vinegar,
as were shrimps." (P. 43)
"During the eighteenth century...Lobsters, crabs, shrimps and prawns continued to be enjoyed."
(p. 48-9)
"In Victorian times...Lobster, crabs, shrimps and prawns could be dressed in many ways, but the
commonest was to boil them to eat cold. After being simmered in a brine of water and Bay salt in
a fish kettle, lobsters could either be eaten immediately, or kept as long as a quarter of a year,
wrapped in brine-soaked rags and buried deep in sand." (p. 55)
"Lobster, much as today, was considered especially elegant and appropriate food for lovers, being
an aphrodesiac. There is a common perception that lobster was considered a poor man's food,
and this many have been in the case in colonial New England but not back in Europe. In fact
English man-about-town Samuel Pepys's diary records than an elegant dinner he thew in 1663
included a fricassee of rabbit and chickens, carp, lamb, pigeons, various pies and four
lobsters..Lobster was cooked either by roasting, boiling or by removing the meat from the shell
and cooking it separately."
"The American lobster (Homarus americanus) is today on of the more expensive food items on
the market, owing to the difficulty of obtaining sufficeint quantities to meet the demand. But when
the first Europeans came to America, the lobster was one of the most commonly found
crustaceans. They sometimes washed up on the beaches of Plymouth, Massachusetts, in piles of
two feet high. These settlers approached the creatures with less than gustator enthusiasm, but the
lobsters' abundance mande them fit for the tables of the poor...In 1622 Governor William
Bradford of the Plymouth Plantation apologized to a new arrival of settlers that the only dish he
"could presente their friends with was a lobster...without bread or anyhting else but a cupp of fair
water." Lobsters in those days grew to a tremendous size, sometimes forty or more pounds...The
taste for lobster developed rapidly in the nineteenth century, and commercial fisheries specializing
in the crustacean were begun in Maine in the 1840s, thereby giving rise to the fame of the "Maine
lobster," which was being shipped around the world a decade later. In 1842 the first lobster
shipments reached Chicago, and Americans enjoyed them both at home and in the cities' new
"lobster palaces," the first of which was built in New York by the Shanley brothers...Diamond Jim
Brady thought nothing of downing a half-dozen in addition to several other full courses...By 1885
the American lobster industry was providing 130 million pounds of lobster per year. So afterward
the population of the lobster beds decreased rapidly, and by 1918 only 33 million pounds were
taken."
"In 1621 Edward Winslow reported to a friend back in England concerning the Plymouth settlement that "our Bay is full of Lobsters
all the Summer." In Salem a few years later, Francis Higginson observed that "the least Boy in the Plantation may both catch
and eat what he will of" lobters. Lobsters were not only plentiful in early New England, they were large.Higginson reported some
weighing twenty-five pounds. But lobsters were not always a welcome sight on early colonial tables. As noted above, in 1623 Governor
Bradford complained of having only lobster to serve visitors...Early New Englanders would have been perplexed to find lobsters
grouped, as they were by one twentieth-century writer, with caviar and filet mignon...No delicacy, American lobsters were nonetheless
better received than many shellfish. They were soon being cooked much the same way as their smaller European counterparts, in sauces
for other fish, or as accompaniments to roasts...When not potting lobsters, baking them in pies or using them in sauces,
eighteenth- and nineteenth-century New England cooks were apt to stew or fricassee them...Boiled lobsters were served cold with dressing, not hot and "in the rough,"
as we are most likely to encounter them today. In the 1840s, [Catharine] Beecher...presented boiled lobster served in this
fashion...The American taste for lobster was on the rise...When nineteeth-century canning methods, developed around 1840 and
perfected during the Civil War, were redirected toward peacetime activities, lobsters were among the most popular canned
products. By 1880, there were twenty-three lobster canneries in Maine...Fresh lobsters, made more widely available by improved
transportation, were increasingly preferred."
Is it true that in Colonial New England it was against the law to serve lobster more than three times a week to servants? No. Food historian
Sandy Oliver elucidates:
---Food in the Ancient World From A-Z, Andrew Dalby [Routledge:London] 2003 (p.
198)
---Food and Drink in Britain: From the Stone Age to the 19th Century, C. Anne Wilson
[Academy Chicago:Chicago] 1991
---Food in Early Modern Europe, Ken Albala [Greenwood Press:Westport CT] 2003 (p.
75)
---Encyclopedia of American Food and Drink, John F. Mariani [Lebhar-Freidman:New
York] 1999 (p. 186)
[NOTE: This book has separate entries for selected popular dishes: Lobster rolls, lobster
Newburg, lobster a l'americaine, and lobster fra diavolo. If you need these ask your librarain to
help you find a copy.]
---America's Founding Food: The Story of New England Cooking, Keith Stavely & Kathleen Fitzgerald [University of
North Carolina Press:Chapel Hill NC] 2004 (P. 102-4)
"The lobster and salmon story is one of the most frequently told about New England seafood. It generally goes like this: Salmon and lobster "used to be so abundant that, it is said, " pick one---the apprentices, servants, boarders, lumbermen, occupants, prisoners, and slaves of-pick another--Newcastle, England, Boston or Lowell, Massachusetts, Puget Sound, Bristol, Rhode Island, Islesboro, Maine, the Maine State Prison, or the South-refused to eat either lobsters or salmon, more than twice a week. Recent versions of the story usually feature lobster, but the vast majority of accounts prefer salmon.
All the stories have in common some group of people who have no control over their food choices, people who have to eat what is served them. The stories all explain that these sufferers had a meeting to form a complaint presented to an official in charge. The story, substantiated only by reference to an alleged expert who "has it on good authority" or words to that effect, is usually put in the context of former natural abundance. So the tale is reported second hand, refers to a time from fifty to one hundred years earlier than the usual late 1800s publishing date. The most common sources for this particular tale are town histories which abounded in the nineteenth century often written by a local antiquarian, though it appears also in George Brown Goode's The Fisheries and Fishery Industries of the United States published in 1887. Lack of primary evidence is the main reason to doubt this story. No minutes of these indignation meetings, nor ordinances outlawing sea food more than twice a week, have ever emerged. But why salmon, why lobster, why twice a week?
The stories appear when salmon or lobster are becoming historically scarce, when the author wants to recall a distant, more abundant past. Twice a week was for
many in early England or the colonies, the number of fast days a week on which one customarily ate fish. As Protestantism neglected religious fasts marked by fish
consumption, the idea of having to eat fish more than one's religion formerly required sounded like an imposition on people who always preferred meat to fish."
SOURCE: The Truth About Spices, Lobsters, and Flaming Ladies,
Sandy Oliver
About Maine lobsters
Lobsters:Everything You
Wanted to Know/Maine Dept. of Marine Resources
---history, statisitcs, biology, environmental impact, laws
Maine Lobster Promotion
Council (history, statistics, trends)
The Lobster Institute, University of Maine.
Recommended reading: Lobster: A Global History, Elisabeth Townsend [Edible Series, 2011]
Rock lobster (aka crayfish)
Rock lobster is another name for spiny lobster, a popular warm-water crustacaen. In some parts
of the world it is also known as crayfish or crawfish, which accounts for the confusion between
rock lobster and American crawfish. Notes here:
"Rock lobster. Apparently Americans find the name crawfish a gastronomic turn-off, for when
theis crustacean appears on restaurant menus or is canned or frozen for sale, it often goes under
the disguise of rock lobster (originally an alternative name for the spiny lobster)."
"Spiny lobster, the correct name for crustaceans of the family Paniluridae, is prefereable to the
name crawfish which is sometimes used by invited confusion with crayfish. Needless to say, using
the name crayfish or cray, as sometimes in Australia, is even more likely to cause confustion. The
spiny lobsters are indubitably lobsters, bu they differ from the archetypal lobsters of the N.
Atlantic in having no claws and in belonging to warmer waters. Indeed they are most abundant in
the tropics...Their size and the excellence of their meat ensures that they are in strong demand,
although the question whether they are better than or inferior to the common lobster is and will no
doubt for ever be debated. Such debate is complicated by the fact that the established recipes for
the Atlantic lobster, generally speaking, have been those of classical French cuisine plus the more
robust tradtitions evolved in N. America; whereas the spiny lobster, with its worldwide range in
warmer waters, has attracted to itself a large number of recipes involving tropical or subtropical
ingredients."
"...millions of other lobsters come from South Africa, South America, Mexico, Australia, and
elsewhere, usually in the form of "spiny lobsters," sometimes called "crawfish" but distinct from
the true native freshwater crayfish...Spiny lobster. (Panlirus argus). A favorite Floridian species,
the spiny lobster ranges from the Carolinas to the Caribbean and is related to a Californian
species., P. Interruptus. At market, spiny lobsters are often called "rock lobsters."
"Rock lobster. A market name for the spiny lobster. Large quantities of South African and
Australian "rock lobsters" are imported to the U.S. annually, as our demand exceeds the local
supply. They are also imported from Chile and New Zealand. Although these imports represent a
different genus (Jasus), they are of the same family and form a culinary standpoint are no different
from a spiny lobster taken in North American waters...Spiny lobster: In the western Atlantic the
spiny lobster...ranges from North Carolina and Bermuda to Brazil, through the southern Gulf of
Mexico and the Caribbean Sea. It is most abundant in Florida, Bahamas, Cuba and British
Honduras...Closely related species occur in California. Sometimes called crawfish, and
misleadingly crayfish, the spiny lobster like other members of this family (Palinuridae) has 5 pairs
of legs but no claws. Thus, its tail portion provides the bulk of the meat. Compared to the
American lobster its texture is coarser but of good flavor and tender when freshly prepared.
Although 6 species of spiny lobster occur in the western Atlantic, the differences are taxonomical
rather than culinary, and they are all generally similer in appearance; numerous spines cover the
body, with 2 large, hooked horns over the eyes...It is a beautifully marked crustacean with
browns, yellows, orange, green and blue mottled over the upper parts and underside of the
tail...Spiny lobster tails can be boiled, steamed, deep-fried or broiled, or the raw meat can be
removed for the shell and used in any of the prepared dishes such a scurries, thermidors,
newburgs or salads. Never bake it, as the musculature will tighten like a drumhead."
Rock lobster vs spiny lobster/U.S.
FDA
Rock lobster, biology
& habitat/Dept. of Fisheries, Western Australia
ABOUT AMERICAN CRAYFISH & CRAWFISH
"Crayfish. Also, "crawfish," "crawdad," crawdaddy," and "Florida lobster." Any of these various
freshwater crustaceans of the genera Canbarus and Astacus. Although considerably smaller, the
crayfish remembles the lobster, and there are 250 species and subspecies found in North America
alone. The name is from Middle English crevise, and, ultimately, from Frankish krabtija. Crayfish
formed a significant part of the diet of the Native Americans of the South and still hold their
highest status among the Cajuns of Louisiana. Louisanans have an enourmous passion and
appetitie for what they call "crawfish" (a name used by Captain John Smith as early as
1615)...The crayfish figures in Louisiana folklore, and the natives hold "crayfish boils" whenever
the crustacean is in season. Breaux Bridge, Louisiana, calls itself the "Crawfish Capitol of the
World" and to prove it, cooking up crayfish in pies, gumbos, stews, and every other way
imaginable. Yet one would not easily find a crawfish on restaurant menus in Louisiana much
before 1960 because they were considered a common food to be eaten at home. Crayfish are
commercially harvested in waters of the Mississippi basin, most of them of the Red Swamp and
white River varieties, with the season running approximately form Thanksgiving Day to the
Fourth of July..."Cajun popcorn" is a dish of battered, deep-fried crayfish popularized by Cajun
chef Paul Prudhomme in the 1980s."
Breaux Bridge Crawfish Festival
A SURVEY OF LOBSTER RECIPES THROUGH HISTORY
[1AD, Ancient Rome]
[1475, Italy]
[1685, London]
[1747, London]
[1845, London]
[1884, Boston]
[NOTE: all of the above sources are recently published and readily obtainable through your local
public
library.]
Lobster Fra Diavolo
Where did Lobster Fra Diavolo originate? Like many popular Italian-American dishes, there are several theories. What is
the true evolution of Lobster Fra Diavolo? Our survey of historic recipes suggests it might have been a complicated
mix of Italian ingenuity inspired by French fare demanded by American customers.
Why? Traditional Italian "diavolo" recipes employ chicken but not tomatoes. French
"diable"-type recipes combine chicken and tomato puree. Lobster American style employs (in French, Englsih and American cookbooks)
demands tomatoes in some form. Most, but not all, rely on cayenne pepper to invoke the *devil*. About devilled foods.
"Lobster Fra Diavolo. A recipe of elusive origin. I'd always thought lobster Fra Diavolo Italian, probably southern Italian, but I do not pretend to be an expert on
thee cookingof that extraordinary country. Then, just as I was putting this book to bed, along comes a New York Times article (May 29, 1996 p. C3) suggesting
that this rich dish--chunks of lobster, still in the shell, bedded on pasta and smothered with a spicy tomato sauce--was created early this century by Italian
immigrants in or around New York City. Like spaghetti and meatballs...Florence Fabricant...doesn't proclaim that lobster Fra Diavolo is American. Instead, she
queries the experts, such respected writers on and teachers of Italian cooking as Marcella Hazan...Hazan remembers eating Lobster Fra Diavolo in 1940 at Grotta
Azzura, a restaurant opened in New York's Little Italy in 1908..."I remember the dish clearly," Farbicant quotes Hazan as saying, "because it was so heavy and
typical of Italian cooking in America. We con't eat like that in Italy." Anna Teresa Callen concurs. "It's not an Italian dish,"..."It's really another Italian-American
invention. I have never seen it in Italy and suspect that it came from Long Island." Bugialli, like Hazan and Callen, scoffs at the notion taht Lobster Fra Diavolo is an
Italian classic. "We don't even have American lobsters in Italy,"..."And a heavy tomato sauce with hot peppers, seafood, and pasta all in one dish is not Italian
cooking. I think it came from a restaurant that was near the old Met, around Thirty-eighth Street and Broadway. Would that have been the old Mama Leone's?
It opened behind the Met in 1906. Restauranteur Tony May, a Neapolitan, says he never heard of Lobster Fra Diavolo until he arrived in New York in 1963. He
thinks Veusvio, a midtown Manhattan restaurant, might have invented it. But Frank Scognamillo, the owner of Pastys'...begs to differ. His father, Pasquale,
emigrated from Naples to New York in the early 1920s and opened Patsy's in 1944, Lobster Fra Diavolo was a house specialty...Scognamillo says his father told
him Lobster Fra Diavolo was a Neapolitan dish, and that like many other spicy, tomatoey recipes of southern Italy, it was handed down for generations....With all
due respect to Scognamillo and Davino---I tend to think Hazan, Bugialli, Callen "and company" nearer the mark."
"Lobster fra diavolo. An Italian-American dish whose name translates as "Lobster Brother Devil" made with lobster cooked in a spicy, peppery tomato sauce. It
was a creation of Southern Italian immigrants, who did not have American lobsters in Italy (in Itlay dishes termed "alla diavolo" indicate on made with a good deal of
coarsley ground black pepper), and became a popular dish in Italian-American restaurants in New York by the 1940s."
The oldest print reference we have for serving Lobster fra Diavolo indicates the dish may have been served in New York City, 1908:
"One of the most discussed questions on gastronomy is the case of lobster a l'americane. For a long time specialists have maintianed,
since no American dish has ever seen the fire of French stoves, that this dish must be called lobster a l'armoricaine, "Armorique"
being the ancient name for Brittany. Now it would appear that if by definition a regional dish is one composed of local
products--the vegetables, the fish, and the wines--it is difficult to understand why Brittany, with its scarcity of
tomatoes, not too plentiful Cognac, supplying only the lobster, could claim the credit for the dish. Also, the great chefs have
continued to baptize the dish homard a l'americaine. If we believe the latter version, accepted in the realm of
Good Cheer, this fanciful name was one invented on spot to suit the occasion. This dish apparently saw the light of day before
1870, in Noel Peter restaurant in Paris, where chef Fraisse commanded the cooking brigade after the dinner hour and just before
closing, demanding and insisting that Peters serve them dinner. The only things the kitchen could provide at this late hour
were some live lobsters--and there was no time to cook them in court-bouillon. A flash of inspiration, and a new dish was
born. The enthusiastic and grateful guests demanded to know the name of this new dish. Peters, still under the influence of hsi
recent trip to America, replied off-hand and with out thinking: "Le homard a l'americaine."...it is now proven and accepted
that a Parisian restaurant was the cradle of this dish..."
Knife and Fork in New York: Where to Eat-What to Order, Lawton Mackall [Doubleday & Company:Garden City NY] 1949 (2nd edition) confirms Mr.
Mariani's observations. This books was the "Zagats" of its day. It is interesting to note entries for Enrico & Paglieri's, Vesuvio's, Leone's or Paty's
(see Jean Anderson's reference above) do not mention this dish. Fra Diavolo menu items were noted in these restaurants:
Serving up these recipes for your examination:
[1869:France]
[1884:USA]
[1891:Italy]
[1908]
[1919]
[1939]
[1949]
"Lobster Fra Diavolo
[1950]
[1955]
[1961]
"Lobster a L'Americane (Serves 4)
"Broiled Lobster
[1967]
Lobster Newberg
"Lobster Newberg. Also "lobster a la Newburg"...The dish was made famous at Delmonico's
Restaurant in
New York in 1876 when the recipe was brought to chef Charles Ranhofer by a West Indies sea
captain
named Ben Wenberg. It was an immediate hit, especially for after-theater suppers, and owner
Charles
Delmonico honored the capatain by naming the dish "lobster a la Wenberg." But later Wenberg
and
Delmonico had a falling-out, and the restauranteur took the dish off the menu, restoring it only by
popular
demand by renaming it "lobster a la Newberg," reversing the first three letters of the captain's
name. Chef
Ranhofer also called it "lobster a la Delmonico," but the appelation "Newberg" (by 1897 it was
better known
under the spelling "Newburg") stuck, and the dish became a standard in hotel dining rooms in the
United
States. It is still quite popular and is found in French cookbooks, where it is sometimes referred to
as
"Homard saute a la creme."...The first printed recipe appeared in 1895."
Ranhofer's recipe, Lobster a la
Newberg or Delmonico, circa 1894
Fannie Merritt Farmer's 1896 cookbook distinguishes between
Lobster a la
Delmonico and Lobster a la Newburg: (select "next page" for Newburg recipe)
Lobster rolls
Sometimes...the simpler the recipe the more complicated the history. Such is the case with lobster
rolls. When it comes
to lobster rolls, food historians generally agree on two points:
1. There is no one single recipe for lobster rolls.
What is a lobster roll?
"ON A ROLL...
Temperature's rising, the surf's pounding, the lobster harvest is at an all-time high. Bring on the
lobster rolls!
The roll: It must be a stand-alone hot-dog bun, rectangular, flat on both sides, coming to a crisp
right angle at the flat base. If it's oval or toasted, do not touch it. If it's not buttered, do not even
look at it.
The meat: It must be fresh and predominantly from the tail. It must be at least three inches
wide at the top, extending at least an inch above the crest of the bun. No less than a
quarter-pound of lobster per sandwich. Some joints boast that they use a full lobster in each
sandwich, but it takes nearly five lobsters to get a pound of meat.
The dressing: The lobster may be mixed with a thin lather of mayo but not salad dressing. Dick
Henry, co-owner of the Maine Diner, believes in naked lobster. "All meat," he says. I, however,
will accept celery, if finely chopped. "It gives a hint of the taste," agrees Billy Tower, who has
sold lobster rolls for four decades at Barnacle Billy's restaurant.
The temp: Like a hot-fudge sundae, the ideal lobster roll is a contradiction of temperatures:
warm bun, chilled meat. "I'm 60 years old, and that's the way I've always been told it should be,"
says Georgia Kennett of Five Islands Lobster Co. But it has become quite respectable to serve the
meat hot, in which case the lobster should be covered with drawn butter, not mayonnaise, and
eaten with a fork and knife."
A survey of current online menus confirms there is no distinct geographic boundary that separates
the two versions. You can find both versions in restaurants from the top of Maine to the tip Long
Island.
When did lobster rolls begin?
"Lobster rolls...because they are made with hamburger buns, they are definately twentieth century
(soft, hamburger yeast buns were first maufactured in 1912)."
---The American Century Cookbook: The Most Popular Recipes of the 20th Century, Jean
Anderson [Clarkson Potter:New York] 1997 (p. 345)
"About 1966-67 Fred Terry, owner of the Lobster Roll Restaurant...in Amagansett, New York,
produced a recipe containing mayonnaise, celery, and seasonings; mixed with fresh lobster meat
placed on a heated hot-dog roll that has come to be known as the "Long Island (New York)
lobster roll"...According to Carolyn Wyman...lobster meat drenched in butter and served on a
hamburger or hot dog roll has long been available at seaside eateries in Connecticut and may well
have originated at a restaurant named Perry's in Milford, where owner Harry Perry concocted it
for a regular customer named Ted Hales sometime in the 1920s. Furthermore, Perry's was said to
have a sign from 1927 to 1977 reading "Home of the Famous Lobster Roll."
"The lobster roll is a tradition, though not a very old one. My 75-year-old father, who has lived all
his life in Maine, says he doesn't remember eating a lobster roll until sometime after World War II.
''It was down around Tenants Harbor,'' he said. ''Some people named Cook had a stand down
there where a lobster roll cost 35 cents.''"
A survey of historic New England cookbooks confirms lobster salad was popular in the 19th
century. This is the first recipe we find that suggest serving lobster salad with toast:
Lobster Thermidor
"Thermidor. The name of a lobster dish created in January 1894 at Marie's, a famous restaurant in
the
Boulevard Saint-Denis in Paris, on the evening of the premiere of Thermidor, a play by Victorien
Sardou
(according to the Dictionnaire de l"Academie des Gastronomes). Other authors attribute it
to Leopold
Mourier of the Cafe de Paris, where the chef Tony Girod, his assistant and successor, created thte
recipe
used today...The name 'thermidor' is also given to a dish consisting of sole poached in white wine
and fish
fumet, with shallots and parsley, and covered with a sauce made from the reduced cooking liquid
thickened
with butter and seasoned with mustard."
"Thermidor. A designation given to a method of preparing and cooking lobster in which the
creature (up to
this point alive) is cut in half and grilled, has its flesh sliced up and returned to the half shell in
bechamel
sauce with various added flavourings, and is then browned under the grill again and served. It
commemorates the play Thermidor by Victorien Sardou, for the first-night celebration of which it
was
created in Paris in 1894."
Escoffier's recipe, circa 1903:
"2124 Homard Thermidor
About crabs
According to the Encyclopedia Americana [1995 edition] there are approximately 4,500
different
species of
crabs living on Earth. They are distributed throughout the world. This means? It is probably
impossible to tell
for sure who (much less where!) ate the first crabs. Food historians tell us crabs were known to
ancient
Greeks and Romans. How do they know? Art and literature. Historians also tell us crabs were not
well liked
by these ancient Mediterranean people as food.
"Crab, group of water creatures characterised by their hard, round, flat shells. Several of the
larger kinds
are very good to eat, but ancient sources do no suggest they were eaten enthusiastically. The
various
classical names cannot be confidently attached to individual species; they varied in their reference
across
the ancient world and through time."
Crabs in Great Britain
"Prehistoric period...Crabs are thought to have been taken from the deep waters off Oronsay and Oban by means of plaited baskets."
The Romans who came to Britain and who lived within reach of the sea must have been happy to enjoy the local seafish, and British fishermen would have had a
good market for their catches...Nearer inshore, seafoods such as crab and lobster were taken."---ibid (p. 21)
"Medieval period...The distribution of the more usual forms of fish was carried out mainly by the fishmongers, who had their own guild in London by the middle of
the twelfth century. The varied range of their merchandise can be gathered from the accounts of Daniel Rough, who was the common clerk of Romney, Kent from
1353 to 1380 , and a fishermonger as well. His stock included 'oysters, crabs, trout, sprats, porpoise, salmon, haddock, lampreys, mackerel, codling, conger eel,
shrimps, red and white herrings, whiting, "pickerelle" [young pike], stockfish, gunards, whelks, tench and "strinkes of pimpernelle" [small eels]'."---ibid (p. 38)
"Renaissance...Lobster, crayfish and crab were greatly enjoyed, though they seldom reach the inland eater. At formal meals they presented difficulties. 'Crab is a slut
to carve and a wrawde wight [perverse creature]. By the the the carver in a noble household had finished picking the meat out of ever claw with a knife-point, had
piled it all into the 'broadshell', and had added vinegar and mixed spices, the tepid crab had to be sent back again to the kitchen to be reheated before he could
offer it to his lord. Crab and lobster were also boiled and eaten cold with vinegar, as were shrimps."---ibid (p. 43-4)
"Eighteenth century...Lobsters, crabs, shrimps and prawns continued to be enjoyed."---ibid (p. 49)
Crabs in America
"The early history of crab consumption reflects highly regional tastes...Because of the
labor-intensive effort of harvesting crabs, in colonial times the meat was used in small amounts (as
was
most shellfish) in soups, stews, sauces, and, like other flaked fish, in small fried cakes. Some
recipes suggested that other shellfish could be substituted for crab. Blue crab fanges from
Delware to Florida but that from Chesapeake Bay is most famous...Snow crab, sometimes called
queen-crab...from the colder waters of the North Atlantic and North Pacific oceans, appeared on
the market in the 1960s...Alaska king crab is highly prized for its large meaty claws and
legs...Dungeness crab is found on the Pacific coast from Mexico to Alaska...Rock crab ranges
from Labrador, Canada to Florida."
"Outdoor "crab feasts" are common enough on Maryland's Eastern Shore, the live hard-shell
crabs being forced into a makeshift container...to be steamed in hotly spiced vinegar
vapor...Charleston and Savannah both lay claim to the invention of she-crab soup, one of the most
delicious of the region's springtime specialties...The soup is based on a combination of the meat
oand roe of the female blue crab, which is recognizable by its broad "apron" on the underside of
the shell...She-crab soup used to be perpetually on the menu of Charleston's Fort Sumter
Hotel...Crabs--in greater variety than on any other continent--were found by settlers on both
coasts of North America. Stone crabs, common from North Carolina to Texas, remain abundant
in Florida and the Keys, and are trapped around Beaufort, North Carolina, and Charleston, South
Carolina. There antebellum cooks used to stew them in white wine lace with vinegar; then with a
seasoning of nutmeg and anchovy the cook would heat the crab with a good deal of butter and
egg yolks, serving it on a large crab shell as a second course...In whatever way it comes to the
kitchen, crab meat moves inventive cooks to improvise and sometimes to include extenders
among the ingredients for a crab dish...Soft-shell crabs are another matter. They are the blue crabs
of Long Island Sound, the Eastern Shore, or to the Gulf of Mexico in that biological state when
they have molted on shell and have not yet grown a new one..."
[1884] Crabs , Boston Cooking School Cook Book, Mrs. D. A. Lincoln
Crab cakes
"Crab cake. A sauteed or fried patty of crabmeat. The term dates in print to 1939 in Crosby
Gaige's New York World's Fair Cook Book, where they are called "Baltimore crab cakes,"
suggesting they have long been known in the South. A "crabburger" is a crab cake eaten on a
hamburger bun."
The earliest print references we find for "crab cakes," were published in Maryland (and surrounding area) newspapers. They were
generally restaurant advertisements; not recipes. Sample here:
"Dolls' and City Hotel Cafes...crab cakes..."---News [Frederick MC], April 24, 1899 (p. 3)
The proliferation of commercial canned crab products promoted recipes: Sample here:
"Crab Meat in Cans. The clean, white meat, picked out and packed by the Tangier Packing Co., by reputation the best in their
line. Directions on each can for preparing...crab cakes."---Trenton Times [NJ], November 1, 1909 (p. 4)[NOTE:
recipe not included in the advertisement.]
Crab cake recipes through time
[1685]
[1747]
[1792]
[1870]
[1880]
[1887]
[1902]
[1930]
[1932]
[1932]
About shrimp
"Squilla" is the Latin word for shrimp. According to the food historians, both ancient Romans and
Greeks
had ready access to very large specimens and enjoyed their shrimp prepared many different ways.
Apicius,
an ancient Roman author, collected these recipes in his cookbook.
"Shrimp and prawn, group of small river and sea creatures. The larger species are easily cooked
and very
easily eaten...In Italy, if Marital is to be believed, the shrimp was at its best in the tidal reaches of
the River
Liris in southern Latium. This river reached the sea at Minturnae. Now it was at Minturnae,
according to
legend, that Apicius lived--eighty years before Marital's time--and enjoyed the local magnificent
shrimps,
which grow bigger than the shrimps at Smyrna, bigger indeed than the lobsters at Alexandria' to
quote
Athnaeus...Pliny the Younger boasted of good shrimps a little further north, at his Laurentan villa.
Shrimps
danced when roasted on the coals, Ophelion tells us...The were served honey-glazed at the dinner
described by Philoxenus, and in general in ancient cuisine they were roasted, or fried in a skillet,
rather than
boiled."
"There have always been customers for shrimp ready to fall upon them whenever and wherever
they could
be delivered. In the ancient Mediterranean world, where fishing was on an artisanal scale and
almost
everybody lived close to the water, the Greeks preferred the larger types of shrimp even to
lobster, and
cooked them wrapped in fig leaves. The Romans made the finest grade of all their all-purpose
sauce,
liquamen, from shrimps. When Apicius heard that there were particularly large, luscious ones in
Libya, he
chartered a ship to sample them on the spot himself, but he was so much disappointed by the first
ones
brought to him aboard ship that he sailed home without ever setting food on shore."
Recipe
for
scillas (modernized version)
"The word shrimp derives from Middle English shrimpe, meaning "pygmy" or the crustacean
itself. Shrimp
harvesting was known as early as the seventeenth century in Louisiana, whos bayou inhabitants
used seine
nets up to two thousand feet in circumference. Only after 1917 did mechanized boats utilize trawl
nets to
catch shrimp."
Shrimp vs. prawn?
" Shrimp...a term which always refers to certain crustceans...in the order of Decapoda Crustacia...but which, with the assocaited
term 'prawn', is used in different ways on the two sides of the Atlantic--and in other parts of the world, depending on whether
the use of the English language has been influenced by the British or by Americans. Since the FAO (Food and Agriculture Organization
of the United Nations) has taken the trouble to produce a comprehensive Catalogue of Shrimps and Prawns of the World (Holthuis,
1980), they may be allowed to explain: 'we may say that in Great Britain the term 'shrimp' is the more general of the two, and is
the only term used for Crangonidae and most smaller species. 'Prawn' is the more special of the two names, being used solely for
Palaemonidae and larger forms, never for the very small ones. In North America the name 'prawn' is practically obsolete and is
almost entirely replaced by the word 'shrimp' (used for even the largest species, which may be called 'jumbo shrimp'). If the
word 'prawn' is used at all in America it is attached to small pieces."
"Prawn. A Crustacean in the order of Decapoda. Prawns differ in the appearance from shrimps in having more slender abdomens and
longer leags but the names are used synonymously in commercial trade. Unfortunately, at market "prawn" is univerally applied to
any off the larger marine shrimps. The less familiar term "freshwater prawn" refers to paleamonid shrimps, specifically
Macrobrachium of which there are more than 100 species on a world basis. The giant Malaysian prawn (M. rosenbergii) is
perhaps the bes known and is widely cultured in southern Asia as well as Hawaii and more recently in Puerto Rico. The
Tahitian prawn (M. lar) is also widely distributed in the western Pacific Islands, and other species are indigenous to India, the
Philippines, Africa, Central and South America. A large native from (M. acanthurus) is found in southern U.S. from the Neuse
River in North Carolina to Texas. However, freshwater prawns are only utilized on a local level by individual fishermen at present.
Stricly speaking, prawns are andromonous and not totally freshwater curstaceans, but they are harvested in rice fields, ponds and rivers....
Prawns are more perishable than marine shrimps and must be iced or flash frozen immediately after capture. Only the tail portion
is eaten. The always sweet meat is comparable to lobster in texture and flavor."
"Prawn (Macrobrachium acanthurus). A Crustacean similar to a shrimp but with a more slender body and longer legs. The name is from
Middle Englsih prayne. At market the term prawn is often used to describe a wide variety of shrimp that are not prawns at all. The
only native American species is found in the South, ranging from North Carolina to Texas. Prawns are cultivated in Hawaii."
"The terms "shrimp" and "prawn" are used almost interchangeably. Americans primarily use the word "shrimp" for large and
small crustaceans in the Penaeidae and Pandalidae families. Elsewhere in the world "prawn" usually describes a smaller
creature."
First shrimp/prawn recipes?
These modernized recipes originally appeared in Apicus, Book II: Minces. They were served as starters or side dishes. The original [transliterated] text does not specifically state prawn
or shrimp. Recipes specify sea-onion, crab, lobster, cuttle fish, ink fish, spiny lobster, scallops and oysters. Presumably prawns/shrimp could have been treated similarly. Book IX
[Seafood] offers recipes for boiled lobster and minced lobster tail meat. These might have been "main" courses.
"Prawn Balls in gydorgarum, Apicius 2.1.1
Shrimp cocktail
Oysters were original the "cocktail" shellfish of choice. Shrimp variations were popular in
Cajun/Creole cooking before they begin to show up in "mainstream" cookbooks. Presumably this
is because oysters were "wildly" popular with Americans during the late 19th century. Shrimp,
less so. Tabasco, a common ingredient, is also a product of Louisiana. Avery Island, to be exact.
Incidentally, "cocktail" appetizers (think fruit cocktail, shrimp cocktail) were extremly popular
during the 1920s, the decade of Prohibition. In the 1920s, these appetizers were actually served in
"cocktail glasses" originally meant to hold alcoholic beverages. It was a creative way to use the
stemware!
What was the popular brand we used to buy in supermarkets?
According to the records of the US Patent & Trademark Office, Sau Sea shrimp products were introduced to the American public
December 12, 1948. The inventors of this product were Abraham Kaplan and Ernest Schoenbrun, based in New York City.
Company & product history
here. Product
photo.
The company & brand (individual seafood cocktails packed in glass) remain viable. Our local food store in northern NJ sells the product next to
the imitation crab and lobster products. You can also purchase
online.
A sampler of early recipes
[1924]
General Recipe for Cocktail Sauce (Individual service)
The oldest reference to shrimp cocktail in the New York Times is this advertisement:
"Pride of the Farm Tomato Catsup. Cocktail Sauce for Christmas Dinner. Start you dinner with
an appetizer. An oyster, clam or shrimp cocktail gives tone as well as relish...For shrimp cocktail,
mix the shrimp and catsup together and serve in small glass dish at each place."
Shrimp scampi
Scampi has two meanings: the name of a shrimp (Italian word) and the name of the dish. Shrimp
scampi,
as we Americans know it today, became popular after World War II. This was when many Italian
dishes
went "mainstream." According to our sources, "scampi" is not one set recipe, but a generic name
applied to
several dishes variously composed of shrimp. Notes here:
"What is scampi?"...is asked frequently of this department, and a quick check disclosed that it is
also asked
of fishmongers and Italian restauranteurs. Although the answers received will probably vary with
every
source consulted, they do fall into two basic categories: a type of shrimp or a preparation of
shrimp.
Howevever, the ramifications within these two categories are bewildering. In an effort to get an
unromantic,
unbiased definition of the word; Italian dictionaries of all sizes were consulted. Unfortunately they
were
peculiarly silent on the subject...Italian cookbooks yielded more relevant, but scarcely more
helpful
information. Most offered recipes for "scampi" or "shrimp scampi style" and such recipes
generally (but not
always) called for jumbo shrimp, olive oil, garilc and parsley.
"Preparation varies. The methods of cooking, however, varied from boiling to broiling and
from frying to
baking. Some called for shelling the shrimp in advance; others recommended serving the dish only
to
"people who are willing to remove the shells at table." Some called for marinating the shellfish in
advance;
others did not. One even introduced a bread crumb topping. All this would seem to point to the
fact that
scampi is not, after all, a particular method of preparing shrimp. Some cookbooks and most
persons
consulted agreed with this and generally (but, again, not always) deveined scampi as shellfish
native to the
Adriatic (notably the Bay of Venice) that are not available in this country. But the specifications
of the
shellfish varied from that of a small shrimp to that of a lobster tail and a flavor from similar to
Mexican
shrimp to unlike anything else. The most authoritative answer came from Mrs. Hedy
Giusti-Lanham, who
styled herself "practically a scampo--alothough not quite as pink as I should be--because the best
ones
come from Venice, where I am from."
"Plump little beasts. "What are scampi?" she asked rhetorically..."The are like shrimps in this
country,
only smaller. The larger ones, like the jumbo here, are called scampi imperali; but the normal
scampi are
quite small. The are plump little beasts and are quite round when they sit on the plate, because the
tails
curl in close." "No one where I come from would put a heavy sauce on top, like in shrimp
cocktail." she
commented. "They are usually thrown into heavy boiling water, then deveined and shelled and
served
lukewarm. Or they may be broiled by basting the shells with oil and putting them under the broiled
or over
charcoal and basting them while they cook. The shells get very dark and crack when the inside is
done.
They are served with their shells on. You put a little olive oil and a little lemon on them as you
take them out
of the shells, and a little pepper--but no salt. Garlic? Oh, no, no, no. They have such flavor that
anything
else would be an insult." Asked whether there was a great difference between scampi and
American-style
shrimp, Mrs. Guisti-Lanhan replied: "They are a similar type of person but the accent is very
different."
"Scampi. A Venetian term, dating in English print to 1920, that isn America refers to shrimp
cooked in garlic,
butter, lemon juice, and white wine, commonly listed on menus as "shrimp scampi." The true
scampo
(scampi is the plural) of Italy is a small lobster or prawn, of the family Nephropidae, which in
America is
called a "lobsterette.""
"Scampi. We seem not to have discovered this simple Italian way of cooking shrimp until after
World War II.
Certainly scampi weren't familiar beyond big metropolitan areas."
"In the latter part of the 20th century the Norway lobster became a standard item on British
menus, usually
under the Italian name scampi. This reflects the fact that Italians in the Adriatic had for long
appreciated it,
and had many recipes for scampi cooked in this or that way, which became famouns to
tourists."
"Scampi is the plural of the word scampo, 'shrimp', a word of unkown origin. It started to filter
into English in
the 1920s, but it was not really until the 1950s and 1960s that it began to make headway. This
coincided
with a boom in popularity of a dish consisting of large prawn tails coated in breadcrumbs and
deep-fried:
scampi and chips became a staple on cafe and restaurant menus. Soon scampi had well and truly
ousted
the native English Dublin Bay prawns."
Shrimp wiggle
The first print
Shrimp Wiggle recipe we have (so far) was published by Fannie Farmer in 1898. Ingredients and method confirm this is a
convenience dish.
Our survey of historic USA newspapers uncovered references to the
resurgence of "old-fashioned" chafing dish cookery in every decade from the 1920s forward. The connecting thread is the "wow" factor. What better way to
combine simple (generally leftover or canned) ingredients yet impress your guests?
About Shrimp Wiggle
"Shrimp Wiggle...Around the turn of the century college girls kept chafing dishes in their dormitory rooms and cooked on the sly. A favorite production was Shrimp
Wiggle: canned peas and shrimp heated in a basic white sauce, then served on toast. If the girls were living dangerously, they might sneak in a little 'cooking sherry.'
The dish remained a ladies' lunch staple well into this century with crisp patty shells replacing toast points."
Why call it "wiggle?"
"Shrimp Wiggle. A dish of creamed shrimp especially popular in New England and the Midwest. The reason for the name is not known, though it may refer to the
ease and quickness with which the dish is made."
This gives us license to explore the possibilities presented by "educated guess." The Oxford English Dictionary (2nd edition, online edition) tells us the word
"wiggle" acts as both verb and noun. The primary definition, in both cases, to lightly move in either a side to side or irregular motion. Such movement applies to the
general cooking method for accomplishing Wiggle recipes in the chafing dish apparatus. Definitions here:
VERB: "1. intr. To move to and fro or from side to side irregularly and lightly, to waggle; to walk with such a movement, to stagger, reel, also to waddle (now
dial.); to go or move sinuously, to wriggle."
Historic recipes & notes
[1909] citings, courtesy of
Barry Popik.
Oysters
"The beginnings of mollusc culturing is lost in antiquity, and although it has been suggested by some that the Chinese were the first to cultivate oysters, it is to the
Romans that we must look for good evidence. Indeed, there seems little doubt that their energies in cultivating both oysters and snails had an important bearing on the
food interest of later peoples in these molluscs."
"Oyster, bivalve shellfish which has been an article of food on Mediterranean coasts since prehistoric times. Heaps of oyster-shells were found by Heinrich Schliemann in
his excavations at Mycenae. The classical Hellespont was rich in oysters, the city of Abydos in particular, according to Archestratus. Latin poets agree...The oysters of
Britain, which must have been very new to Rome in Mucianus's time, came fro the Kent coast, as they do now...Oysters were a rich man's dish...and wealth was
demonstrated by the consumption of large numbers of them...The fact that British oysters were available in Rome shows that they were preserved--presumably in brine, in
barrels or earthenware jars--for dipatch on the long journey from the Channel coast."
"Oyster-farming is only one branch of shell-fish farming in general, which covers the culture of all edible shellfish...From the dawn of time to the middle of the nineteenth
century, the coasts of France had an almost uninterrupted succession of natural oyster beds; you had only to gather what you wanted. At the time of the Roman
occupation they oyster culture was so well described by Ausonius in the fourth century had reached a degree of technical perfection almost the equal of today's. Then,
with the barbarian invasions, both Atlantic and Mediterranean oyster farming ceased. Gastronomic history remains silent on the oyster for 1000 years, but the natural beds
provided part of the everyday diet of coast-dwelling people. In large inland cities shellfish, difficulty and expensive to bring to market fresh, were the perrogative of the rich
from the fourteenth century onwards. Pickled oysters were not to be despised, though...Whether as a result of thoughtless plundering of the beds (100 million oysters a
year were gathered at Treguier and Cancale around 1775), or of a series of destructive storms around 1850 even diligent searching could produce only 83,000 dozen
oysters. In 1852 Monsieur de Bon, the naval paymaster of Satint-Servan, had the idea of re-seeding the oyster beds in his sector by trying to collect the oyster spawn, or
'spat', with makeshift catchers. He succeeded, and set up new oyster beds on the emerging reefs."
"Oyster cookery flourished on both sides of the Atlantic in the 19th cetnury, when oysters were plentiful and cheap in both Britain and N. America. Dishes such as
oyster stews and soups, fried oysters, oysters on skewers with bits of bacon, and oyster fritters were common."
RECOMMENDED READING
Oysters in America
"In Britain, oysters have been eaten, and undoubtedly loved, since prehistoric times. There were a
particular favorite of the Romans. In fifteenth-century London, oysters were "plentiful, very
popular and on the whole inexpensive."...a sixteenth-century traveler to England said that the
oysters "which were cried in every street" were better than any he had seen in Italy. Oysters were
brined by seventeenth-century husbandmen, who bought them fresh to insure quality. The shells,
rich in lime, were used as fertilizer...As with other fish in medieval and early modern England,
oysters were often baked in heavily spiced pies, or stewed. Like other small fish, fresh oysters were
sometimes fried immediately to prevent spoilage...Despite being inexpensive, oysters were enjoyed
by all classes...Oyster-eating quickly became an American pastime...Oysters were served in
colonial taverns, along with the usual tavern fare of fowl, beefsteaks, ham, and hot bread...Oysters
only became more popular in the nineteenth century...Oyster houses, or saloons as they were often
called, specialized in quick, fresh oyster meals. Richard Pillsbury states that they "began appearing
in the late eighteenth century as some of the first freestanding restaurants in the nation." Advertised
with red and white balloon-shaped signs, they were popular in every coastal city, frequented by
lunchtime crowds of men. Some oyster saloons did set aside curtained booths or special rooms for
women and faminlies. Commercial oyster eateries were organized along class lines...Nineteeth-century New England cookbooks abounded with "escaloped" oysters, oyster sauce, oyster soup, pie,
and patties, stewed oysters, roasted oysters, and fried oysters. Nut oysters were also used in more
esoteric recipes. For instance, Mrs. Lee offered "Oyster Attlets," which was a sweetbread, cut into
small pieces, a slice or two of bacon, and oysters, seasoned with parsley, shallot, thyme, salt and
pepper, then skewered, covered with bread crumbs, and broiled or fried. Oysters also became a
condiments...Yankee tavern owners went to great lenghts to have supplies of oysters on hand
throughout the winter months. In late autumn they stocked their cellars with oysters...burying them
in beds of damp sea sand mixed with cornmeal. To theel their buried treasures alive, they watered
the beds twice a week. The mollusks would be dug out of the pile as needed. Oyster pies and patties
were favorite ways of serving cellar oysters, perhaps becuase oysters that ascended from the tavern
depths were not as fresh as those from the briny deep...At midcentury, oyster parties were the rage
among New England aristocracy, as they were in every sophistiscated metropolis...Like many
popular foods, oysters were also considered medicinal...Despite the low price of oysters, recipes for
mock oysters, made of salsify, the "vegetable oyster," as Lydia Maria Child called it, or of corn,
often seasoned with mace, appeared in cookbooks throughout the nineteenth century...The oyster's
association with New England, while never exclusive to the region, was strong enough to endur in
nostalgic cookbooks."
"Oysters have long been considered a delicacy and have been cultivated for at least two thousand
years. The American Indans of the coastal regions enjoyed them as a staple part of their diet, and
the earliest European explorers marveled at oysters that were up to a foot in length. Cultivation
began soon afterward, and Virginia and Maryland have waged "oyster wars" over offshore beds
since 1632. Although the oyster may have been an expensive delicacy in Europe, it was a common
item on eveyone's table in America. Bt the eighteenth century the urban poor were sustained by
little more than bread and oysters. Coonia citizens dined regularly on chicken and oysters, and the
mollusk was an economical ingredient for stuffing fowl and other meats. By the middle of the next
century English traveler Charles Mackay could write in his book Life and Liberty in America
(1859) that "the rich consume oysters and Champagne; the poorer classes consume oysters and
large bier, and that is one of the principal social differences between the two sections of the
community." Americans were oyster mad in the nineteenth century, and as people moved and
settled westward, the demand for the bivalves in the interior regions grew accordingly. This
demand was met by shipping oysters by stagecoach on the "Oyster Line" from Baltimore to Ohio,
followed after the opening of the Erie Canal in 1825 by canal boats laden with oysters. Canned or
pickled varieties were available as far west as St. Louis, Missouri, by 1856...Every coastal city had
its oyster vendors on the streets, and "oyster saloons," "cellars," or "houses" were part of urban
life...Throughout the middle of the century oysters remained plentiful. Even when other foodstuffs
were scarce in the Civil War, Union soldiers in Savannah sated their hunger with buckets full of
oysters brought to them by the slaves they had liberated...Nowhere was the oyster more appreciated
than in New Orleans, where several classic oyster recipes...were created...The demand for oysters
was so high that by the 1880s the eastern beds began to be depleted."
"The changing role of that oysters played in American cuisine, from the wigwams of the
Wampanoags to the famous New York City oyster saloons and gradually to the dining rooms from
Boston to San Francisco, is a saga that progressed from sheer necessity to serendipity. The Indians
taught the colonists to harvest and cook oysters in a stew that staved off hunger, and in 1610 food
shortages in Jamestown, Virginia, led settlers to travel to the mouth of the James River, where
oysters sustained them. Two centuries later, a feature of the American diet became a between-meal
snack at a vendor's stand, and a dozen or two half shells became a prelude to a more substantial
oyster pie or, on the West Coast, an oyster omelet known as Hangtown fry. Another dish utilizeing
the mollusk was roasted fowl stuffed with oysters. By 1840, annual shipments of oysters from the
Chesapeake Bay to Philadelphia had reached four thousand tons. By 1859, residents in New York
City spent more on oysters than on butchers' meat. The oyster craze of the nineteenth century
spread across the country by stagecoach, by boat when the Erie Canal opened to barges, and by rail
when the railroads traveled westward. By the 1880s the demand for oysters was so great that the
beds that stretched along the Atlantic and Gulf coasts began to be depleted..."
Union Oyster House/Boston
Related foods: oyster stuffing, Oysters Kirkpatrick
& Oysters Rockefeller.
"The angels are oysters wrapped in rashers of bacon, cooked quickly under the grill, and riding on slivers of toast. The dish
is a British contribution to gastronomy, and it was popular as a hot savoury postlude to a meal in the later nineteenth
century and early part of the twentieth century. It seems first to have been mentioned in the 1888 edition of Mrs.
Beeton's Book of Household Management, which gives an alternate French name, anges a cheval. Now that oysters are
decidedly on the luxury list, angels on horseback are often encountered in more downmarket version as party
snacks, with cocktail sausages substituting for the shellfish."
"English and American cookery in particular make good use of oysters--in soup, as a sauce, or as Angels on Horseback."
USA [1893]
USA [1901]
France [1903]
UK [1909]
USA [1914]
USA [1936]
UK [1952]
"Devils on horseback are an adapation of angels on horseback...The diabolical version replaces the oysters with prunes or plums. The
name first appears in thh early twentieth century, and right from the beginning it seems often to have been used simply as a
synonym for angels on horseback."
"One of the British savouries which was popular for a time bore the name Devils on horseback and consisted of prunes stuffed with
chutney, rolled up in rashers of bacon, placed on buttered bread and sprinkled with grated cheese, and cooked under the grill.
The absence of cayenne pepper or other hot condiments suggests that in this instance the word 'devil' was introduced as a counterpart
to 'angel' in Angels on horseback..."
"Oysters Kirkpatrick. New Orleans, with its Oysters Rockefeller, has nothing on us, with our Oysters Kirkpatrick. This dish was named in honor of John C. Kirkpatrick, onetime manager of the Palace, in San Francisco. It was, of course, conceived in their kitchen. Like all recipes of renown, this one has many versions--but who am I to quibble with the Palace Hotel's own recipe, graciously sent for inclusion in this book.
"Open oysters on deep shell, put in oven for about 3 or 4 minutes until oysters shrink, Pour off the liquor, then add small strip of bacon and cover with catsup and place in a very hot oven for about 5 or 6 minutes (according to oven) until glazed to a nice golden brown."
Here's another way it's done, or am I quibbling? Allow pieplates or deep ovenproof plates, one for each serving, and fill them with rock salt within an inch of their tops. Put them into the oven to become very hot. The oysters, usually 6 to a serving, are opened and left in their deep shells, which are placed in little indentations made in the hot salt. On top of each oyster is spread a spoonful of tomato catsup whcih has been mixed with finely minced green pepper. On this goes a piece of partially cooked bacon, next some grated cheese, awith a small dab of butter as the finishing touch. The pans are returned to the oven (450 degrees F.) until the cheese is nicely browned.
NOTE: Apparently this entire--and very good-business of roasting oysters in a pan of salt was originally just that--an oyster salt roast. But chefs were bound to
add their distinctive touches, it's the artist in them. One was called "Oysters a la Mali," and was a bit more elaborate than most. A sauce made with 1/4 cup of
cooked chopped spinach, a tablespoon of minced parsley, a tablespoon of minced tarragon, a clove of garlic, 1/4 cup of butter, a teaspoon of salt, and a cup of
white wine, was mixed with 12 ground and drained poached oysters. This mixture was spread on the oysters in their shells (see above). They were then sprinkled
with buttered crumbs and baked until brown."
"Oysters Kirkpatrick. A dish of baked oysters, green pepper, and bacon. The creation of this dish is credited to chef Ernest Arbogast of the Palm Court (later the
Garden Court) of San Francisco's Palace Hotel. named after Colonel John C. Kirkpatrick, who managed the hotel from 1894 to 1914, the dish was already well
known by the end of his tenure, when Clarence E. Edwards wrote in Bohemian San Francisco (1914) that the dish was merely a variation on the "oyster salt roast"
served at Mannings' Restaurant on the corner of Pine and Webb streets."
"Oysters Rockefeller. A dish of oysters cooked with watercress, scallions, celery, anise and other
seasonings. It is a specialty created in 1899 by Jules Alciatore of Antoine's Restaurant in New
Orleans...The original recipe for oysters Rockefeller has never been revealed...There does appear a
recipe, however, in a 1941 compilation by Ford Naylor called the World Famous Chefs' Cook
Book, in which the author contends, "Every recipe in this book, with few exceptions, is a secret
recipe which has been jealously guarded..." The recipe for "Oysters a la Rockefeller" is given above
the name "Antoine's Restaurant, New Orleans"..."
"Oysters Rockefeller was created in 1899 by my great-grandfather Jules Alciatore. At that time there
was a shortage of snails coming from Europe to the United States and Jules was looking for a
replacement. He wanted this replacement to be local in order to avoid any difficulty in procuring the
product. He chose oysters. Jules was a pioneer in the art of cooked oysters, as they were rarely
cooked before this time. He created a sauce with available green vegetable products, producing a
richness that he named it after one of the wealthiest men in the United States, John D. Rockefeller. I
have estimated that we have served over three million, five hundred thousand orders--quite a large
number, considering that they have all been served in a single gourmet restaurant. The original
recipe is still a secret that I will not indulge. As many times as I have seen recipes printed in books
and articles, I can honestly say that I have never found the original outside of Antoine's."
Why the name? In Alciatore's own words: "Oysters Rockefeller was one of his most famous dishes, named, he told his patrons, 'because I know no
other name rich enough for their richness.'"---Jules Alciatore, obituary, Associated Press, New York Times,
September 13, 1934 (p. 23)
Might this be the "secret" recipe?
"Huitres en Coquille a la Rockefeller--Raw oysters whtih a dressing made as follows, the quantity of the ingredients to
depend upon the size of the order. One bunch of shallots, one bunch of parsley, two pounds of butter, one bottle of Spanish walnuts, half
a bunch of tarragon leaves, two stale loaves of French bread, salt and pepper, and a liberal sprinkling of tabasco sauce. All of
these things are pounded into a pulp in a mortar, and then ground in a sausage machine, the mass being finally passed through a
needle sifter. The oysters on the half shell are covered with the sauce and then placed in a hot oven to bake just three minutes.
The oysters must be served at once."
Friday Franks
Tuna hot dogs? Certainly! Aka Tunies, Sea Dogs, Tuna Franks, Ham of the Sea. This 20th century novelty meat hasn't quite caught on, but not for lack
of trying. Target market appears to be thrifty households and observant Catholics. The earliest
mention we find in an American source is this brief note published in the New York Times circa
1949:
"The American hot dog is going to sea. A Gloucester firm said today a fish-filled version of the
hot dog will soon be on the market. Tuna fish will be the basic ingredient. The company lists
these proposed names: "Sea dogs," "fish dogs," "Friday Franks" and "tuna maid frankfurters.""
"'Friday Franks', a tuna fish hot dog claimed by its sponsors to look and taste like the conventional beef and pork frankfurter--
will hit the retail food market today. "Friday Franks" are composed of 100% tuna meat with a small amount of vegetable oil and spices
for flavoring. No filler is added. The franks can be eaten either hot or cold. The tuna now being used is caught in New England
waters. First National Stores has obtained exclusive distribution rights for the first two weeks in its more than 1,000 outlets in
New England and eastern New York. A 12-ounce can of "Friday Franks" trade name for the product contains about nine tuna frankfuters and retal for
59 cents. Davis Bros. Fisheries Co. Inc of this city [Gloucester Mass] is currently producing and canning around 500,000 sea dogs a day. John F. O'Hara, president of
Davis Bros. said that with consumption of regular hot dogs running between two million and five million pounds daily but tropping to 500,000
pounds on Friday, the need for a meatless variety was apparent, he asserted. The idea for a sea dog originated with two
Bostonians, Robert A. Poling, a spice expert and Pasquale Fraticelli, and attorney. Davis Bros., acquired the rights to the product
and further developed the process of spicing and smoking the tuna meat."
Maybe these were a *hit* in Gloucester. But in Greater New York? Ten years later we see them
again being rolled out as *new*:
[1959]
TUNIES
"A new idea from the seafood industry is Tunies--hickory smoked skinless frankfurters made of tuna fish. They lend themselves
beautifully to hot dog buns and mustard, as well as to casserole dishes, omelets and vegetables. Made from lins of tuna, the product
contains no meat, cereal, or other filler. The Tunies are high in protein and low in calories. The are packed in colorful cans on the west
coast by manufacturers of Breast O'Chicken products."
"NANCY G., PALATINE, IL: Hi Bob! I remember "Tunies," the tuna fish hot dogs that
came in a can. We had so many of them - YUKK!! Can you give me any info on who made
them, if they still exist, and where? I think my grandmother made them all millionaires. We
had so many cans that they swelled up with bloat before we were forced to eat them. Being
a Catholic family you couldn't eat meat on Friday years ago and they were our supper
almost every Friday night. There were five children in our house and four adults. They
must have been dirt cheap because as I said my grandmother and father bought tons of
them. All of us "kids" hated them. We grew up in Chicago, IL. We always make jokes
about them and were trying to prove to our kids that they really existed like with a label or
picture of one. BOB: yeah that was some ugly and nasty food! Tunies are long gone. I think
they were only in business for a short while in the late 50's because everybody felt about
them like you and I do. No info on who made them...they're probably still in hiding! I'm
getting grossed out just thinking of them. By the way, I wonder what ever happened to all
the people who went to hell for eating meat on Fridays!Those who ate Tunies instead of
meat on Fridays should be sitting at the highest level in Heaven!!"
Print references to tuna franks exist through the 1960s, then stray from the radar. Tuna franks
resurface (again, as *new*) in the late 1980s. "Bounty of the Sea" and "Ham of the Sea" were
catchy names but not enough to hook the American palate. Notes here:
BOUNTY OF THE SEA
"Tuna hot dogs just didn't float. Bounty of the Sea, a publicly traded company based in Sugar
Land, claimed it had the potential of luring health-conscious consumers into spending $ 25
million a year on hot dogs and lunch meats made from -- of all things -- tuna fish. Jerry Grisaffi,
a
former manager of a Houston car dealership, says he trolled venture capital sources for $ 1.2
million in start-up money. Supermarkets in Texas started selling the smelly food stuff in late
1988. And an over-the-counter offering later surfaced on the pink sheets pricing the company at $
1.75 a share. But neither the company nor its products caught on. Consumers turned their noses
up at tuna wieners. And, by and large, investors didn't bite at Bounty's stock. Now the company's
odd
selection of tuna dogs and tuna bologna is gone from the supermarket shelves. Although the
company's president says he wants to avoid bankruptcy, correspondence filed with court
documents indicate the tuna business has considered filing for Chapter 7 liquidation. And
shareholders are squabbling in court."
HAM OF THE SEA
Related food? Chickenfurters!
Mollusks & snails
"There is certainly plenty of evidence that prehistoric men took full advantage of this high protein food [mollusks],...A very
considerable number of sites throughout the world have yielded shells, both of terrestrial and marine molluscs."
"Snail. Escargot. The common name for a land gastropod mollusc. It was highly prized as food as far back as Roman times. The
art of fattening snails is said to have been discovered by a Roman named Fulvious Lupinus. In France, the vinyard snail is the most
popular."
"Snail, group of terrestrial molluscs. Numerous species are native to Europe, some much bigger and better to eat than
others. An early sign of their use for human food is the pile of discarded snail shells at Franchthi, dated around 10,700
B.C. Snails were also eaten at Minoan Akrotiri, perhaps imported there from Crete as a luxury item. Romans took snails
seriously; their was probably the first civilisation in which snails were kept and fattened for the table. The made a suitable
gustus or appetiser, as Apicius shows. Snails were also a common food among Greeks of the Roman period, according to Galen; however, Greeks
rather seldom wrote about eating snails...Snails were fattened on emmer meal mixed with grape syrup."
"The first French snail recipe was given around 1390 (by the author of the Menagier de Paris [a
cookbook]), but was not echoed in other medieval French cookery texts such as the Viandier of
Tallevent. The only reference to snail-eating in the 15th century seems to imply that it was
practised in Lombardy rather than in France. In the 16th century there are numerous signs of a
more positive attitude and it is clear that they were served at banquets. Of particular note is their
inclusion in a little booklet published in 1530, whose title translates as A Noteworthy Treatise
Concerning the Properties of Turtles, Snails, Frogs, and Artichokes by Estienne Laigue. The
author criticized four foods that he felt were all equally bizarre but popular with his
contemporaries. Of the four, he was kindest to this snail...After 1560 snails went into a decline
for about 90 years, culminating in a virtual banishment from refined tables for almost 200 years
thereafter. The evidence for this was abundant. If a cookery book gave a recipe for snails, it
would be with an apology for introducing such a distasteful foodstuff...not a single one of the
best restaurants in Paris in 1815 had snails on the menu...although snails were absent from
Parisian tables at the beginning of the 19th century, they were being eaten in the eastern
provinces...When the great comeback began, in the 1840s, and turned into what, despite the slow
locomotive habits of snails, might be called a flood in the 1850s and 1860s, it could be seen to be
linked to the spread of brasseries in Paris; and there were typically opened by Alsatians,
neighbours who doubtless shared the taste of the snail-eaters in Lorraine...Certainly, the
comeback was very noticeable and achieved so complete a reinstatement of the snail that it has
stayed in place ever since."
Escoffier offers five escargot recipes in his famous Guide Culinaire [19907]: a la Mode d'A'bbaye (onions, cream, egg yolks), a la Bourguignonne
(buttered-stuffed with white bread crumbs), a la Chablisienne (white wine, shallot, butter), a la Dijonaaise (white wine,
challlot, butter, pepper, cloves, garlic, truffles) & Beignets d'Escargots a la Vigneronne (deep-fried with butter, chopped
shallot, garlic, salt).
If you are looking for mollusk/snail information and recipes connected with a particular place/period/people please let us know. Happy to research
and share.
Sea snails & periwinkles
What is a sea snail?
About periwinkles
"Periwinkle. These are small snaillike mollusks belonging to the family or Littorinidae. There are
nearly 300 species known throughout the world but relatively few of these reach edible sizes.
Winkles livein large colonies in freshwater, brackish and marine environments...The common
edible marine periwinkle...was originally found in the European Atlantic but has spread around the
eastern coast of North America from canada during the apst two centuries, passing Cape Cod a
little over 100 years ago. It now occurs as far south as Delaware Bay...Roasted in the shell, winkles
were once hawked on the streets of London, and they are still purveyed both in cooked and
uncooked form in Great Britian's markets...Northern European countries utilize about 5,000t tons
annually. Periwinkles are generally and collectively known as bigorneauxz (plural) in French
cuisine, but provincially the mollusk is called vognot in Brittany and brelin in
Normandy...Periwinkles are delicious when simply boiled in salted water until the "lid" of thes
shell, or operculum, falls open. The meats can be picked out with a pin and dipped into melted
butter. Also known as Bigorneau (France), Bigaro (Spain), Burrie (Portugal), Chiocciola di mare
(Italy), Strandsnegl (Denmark & Norway), Strandsnacka (Sweden), Strandschnecke (Germany),
Puzic (Yugoslavia), Tamakibi (Japan).
[London:1859]
[London:1874?]
"Periwinkle. Littorina littoria is pre-eminently the periwinkle of the British coasts. Immense
quantities are brought to the London market, and form a considerable article of food among the
poorer classes. After being boiled, the animal is picked out of the shell with a pin.
"Periwinkles, boiled, --Wash the periwinkles in several waters, and then let them soak in plenty of
fresh water for half an hour; when that is done, wash them again. These precautions will be found
necessary to cleanse the fish from the mud and sand which adhere to them. Before boiling, shake
them up to make them withdraw into their shells. Put them into a saucepan, and cover with boiling
sea-water that has stood a little while to settle, and then been poured off from the sediment. Boil
quickly for twenty minutes, and serve, accompanied by brown bread and butter. Probably cost, 2d.
A pint. Suffiecent for three or four persons."
About culinary research & about copyright.
---An A to Z of Food & Drink, John Ayto [Oxford University Press:Oxford] 2002 (p.
284)
---Oxford Companion to Food, Alan Davidson [Oxford University Press:Oxford] 1999
(p. 747)
---Encyclopedia of American Food and Drink, John F. Mariani [Lebhar-Friedman:New
York] 1999 (p. 186-7)
---The Encyclopedia of Fish Cookery, A.J. McClane [Holt, Rinehart and Winston:New
York] 1977 (p. 177-9)
---ibid (p. 105)
Apicius (1st-4th century AD) includes recipes for broiled lobster [398], boiled lobster with cumin
sauce
[399], Another lobster dish--mince of the tail meat [400], boiled lobster (with pepper, cumin, rue,
honey
vinegar, broth and oil) [401] and lobster with wine [402].
---Apicius Cookery and Dining in Imperial Rome, edited and translated by Joseph
Dommers
Vehling [General Publishing:Ontario] 1977 (p. 210-211)
Platina offers instructions for cooking sea lobsters.
---On right Pleasure and Good Health, Platina, critical edition and translation by Mary Ella
Milham
[Medieval & Renaissance Texts & Studies:Tempe AZ] 1998 (p. 449)
Robert May's Accomplist Cook includes these lobster recipes: To Stew Lobsters, To Hash
Lobsters,
To Boil Lobsters to eat cold in the common way, To keep Lobsters a quarter of a year very good,
To Farce
Lobster, To marinate Lobsters, To broil Lobsters, To broil Lobsters on paper, To roast Lobsters,
To fry
Lobsters, To
bake Lobsters to be eaten hot, To pickle Lobsters, To jelly Lobsters, Craw-fish, or Prawns.
---The Accomplisht Cook, Robert May, facsimile 1685 edition [Prospect Books:Devon]
2000 (p. 401-409)
Hannah Glasse was one of the most popular cookbook authors on the 18th century. Her lobster
recipes
included: buttered, fine dish of, in fish sauce, pie, potted and roast.
---The Art of Cookery Made Plain and Easy, Hannah Glasse [Prospect Books:Devon]
1995 (p. 61,
94-5, 115, 117)
Eliza Acton wrote cookbooks for the new Victorian middle class. Her lobster recipes include: to
boil,
boudinettes of, buttered, cutlets, cutlets, Indian, fricasseed, hot, patties, potted, salad,
sausages.
---Modern Cookery of Private Families, Eliza Acton [Southover Press:East Sussex] 1994
(p. 91-4,
133,136)
Mrs. D. A. Lincon authored the first Boston Cooking School Cook Book. Her index lists:
Lobster
bisque, chowder, creamed, croquettes, curried, cutlets, devilled, plain, salad, sauce, scalloped,
soup, and
stewed. She also include instructions for choosing and opening lobsters. Her book is online,
full-text.
---The American Century Cookbook, Jean Anderson [Clarkson Potter:New York] 1997 (p. 117)
[NOTE: In fact, the oldest recipe we have specficially titled "Lobster Fra Diavolo" comes from a Long Island cookbook, c. 1939. See below.]
---Encyclopedia of American Food and Drink, John F. Mariani [Lebhar-Friedman:New York] 1999 (p. 187)
"One of the best restaurants in the city specializing in Italian food--and one of the oldest, since it was founded in 1908, is Enrico & Paglieri, 66 West Eleventh Stree,
in Greenwich Village...Back in the days when Enrico and his partner, Paul Paglieri, who died many years ago, started their venture, the menu seldom varied from
minestrone, lobster diavolo and chicken. This was a concession to the customers of the time, who clamored for those dishes, Enrico explains, and how, incidentally
paid only 55 cents for a complete meal, including a bottle of wine."
---News of Food: Italian Meals Served in Outdoor Setting in Restaurant Opened in 'Village' in 1908, New York Times, June 24, 1946 (p. 34)
[NOTE: Is it possible Enrico & Paglieri's
was referring to French cuisine when he said his customers were clamoring for *this* type of food? James Beard's classic
1961 recipe (see below) offers a compelling argument.]
---Traditional Recipes of the Provinces of France, selected by Curnonsky, translated and edited by Edwin Lavin
[Les Productions de Paris:Paris] 1961 (p. 24)
"Lobster a L'Americaine
Cut some broiled lobster tails into scollops 1/4 inch thick; set them in a circle in a silver casserole;
Make some sauce as follows:
Wash and chop some shalots; fry them in butter for two minutes; moisten with French white wine; and cook them;
The add equal quantities of Espagnole Sauce, and Tomato Puree, and a little Cayenne pepper; and reduce the sauce for five
minutes;
Fill the centre of the casserole with the fleish of the claws cut in small dice, and mixed in some of the sauce; pour the
remainder of the sauce over the scollops; put the casserole in the oven for ten minutes, to warm the lobster; and serve."
---The Royal Cookery Boook, Jules Gouffe, translated by Alphone Gouffe [Sampson Low, Son, and Marston:London] 1869
(p. 446)
Lobster a l'Americaine, Boston Cooking School Cook Book, Mrs. D.A.
Lincoln
"Pollo al Diavolo (Chicken Devil Style)
It is called this because it is supposed to be seasoned with strong cayenne pepper and served in a very spicy sauce, so that whoever
eats it feels his mouth on fire and is tempted to send both the chicken and whoever cooked it to the devil. I shall give a simplr,
more civilized way to prepare it: Take a cockerel or young chicken, remove the head, neck and feet, and, after cutting it open
all the way down the front, flatten it out as much as you can. Wash and dry it well with a kitchen towel, then place it on
the grill. When it begins to brown, turn it over, brush with melted butter or olive oil and season with salt and pepper. When the
other side begins to brown, turn the chicken over again and repeat the procedure. Continue to baste and season as necessary until
done. Cayenne pepper is sold as red powder, which comes from England in little glass bottles."
---Science in the Kitchen and the Art of Eating Well, Pellegrino Artusi, originally c. 1891, translated by Murtha Baca and Stephen
Sartarelli [Marsilio Publshers:New York] 1997 (p. 377)
"Lobster, American Style.
procure two good sized freshly boiled lobsters and split them, removing all of the meat very carefully, and cut it up into pieces
about an inch in length; and have in readiness a pan on top of a range half full of good olive oil, and when the oil has become
very hot add pieces of the lobster. Chop very fine one peeled onion, one green pepper, and half a peeled clove, some sound
garlic, place it with the loster and cook for five minutes, stirring all the time; season with a pinch of salt and half a
saltspoonful of red pepper, to which add half a wineglassful of white wine. After two minutes' reduction add one gill of tomato
sauce and a medium sized peeled tomato, cut into small dice. Continue cooking for ten minutes, gently stirring the while, then
pour the whole into a hot dish or tureen and serve."
---The Cook Book by "Oscar" of the Waldorf, Oscar Tschirky [Saalfield Publsihing Company:Chicago] 1908 (p. 100)
Chicken With Sauce Piquante (Pollo
alla Diavolo), Italian Cookbook, Maria Gentile, published in New York City (quite possibly the inspiration?)
"Lobster Diavalo, Renato
1 Lobster
3 tablespoons olive oil
1 tablespoon parsley, minced
1 clove garlic
1/2 cup Italian peeled tomatoes
Oregano (Italian thyme)
Plunge the live lboster in salted furiously boiling water for 15 minutes; drain. Pick out meat, cook for 3 to 4 minutes in the olive oil. Add then the parsley, garlic,
tomatoes and oregan; let simmer for 6 to 8 minutes. Serve piping hot."
---Long Island Seafood Cook Book, J. George Frederick, recipes edited by Jean Joyce [Business Bourse:New York] 1939 (p. 205)
"How shall this delicately flavored crustacean come to dinner?..Italian restaurants in several sections of this city, including a favorite, Da Cinta, have convinced us
that hot peppers and plum tomatoes, garlic and olive oil, also are possible flavorings. In other words, if there are plenty of finger bowls, napkins and generous bibs,
and if the day is not too hot for this spicy dish, then why not lobster fra diavolo?
1/4 cup olive oil
1 clove garlic, chopped
2 cups canned plum tomatoes
2 tablespoons chopped parsley
1 teaspoon oregano
1/4 teaspoon crushed red pepper seeds
Salt and pepper to taste
3 one-pound ("chicken") lobsters
1. Heat oil and brown garlic in it. Add other ingredients, excluding lobster. Simmer about ten minutes.
2. Place lobsters on their backs and with a sharp knife cut in half lengthwise from head to tail. Spread open. remove small sac just back of the head. Crack large
claws.
3. Arrange lobsters flat in casserole, flesh side up. Pour tomato sauce over them. Bake at 400 degrees F. fifteen to twenty minutes. Yield: three to four portions."
---"News of Food: Fresh Lobsters Plentiful but not Cheap," Jane Nickerson, New York Times, May 26, 1949 (p. 37)
"Lobster Fra Diavolo
1 medium-sized lobster ( 1 1/2 lbs.)
1 clove garlic
1 cup tomatoes
1 tablespoon parsley chopped
4 tablespoons olive oil
1 pinch red pepper seeds
1/2 teaspoon oregano
Salt and pepper
Place lobster on back and slit lengthwise. Spread open and clean. Crack claws. Place in flat baking pan. Pour olive oil in separate
pant and brown garlic. Add tomatoes, pepper seeds, parsley, oregano, salt and pepper. Cook slowly about 10 minutes. Pour sauce
over lobster and bake 25 minutes in moderate oven (350 degrees F.)."
---Love and Dishes, Niccolo de Quattrociocchi [Bobbs-Merrill:Indianapolis] 1950 (p. 242)
"Lobster Alla Diavolo
2 medium lobsters (boiled)
2 tablespoons olive oil
2 tablespoons butter, melted
1/2 cup vinegar
1/2 teaspoon pepper
5 red pepper seeds (optional)
1 teaspoon meat extract, dissolved in 1 cup boiling water
1 teaspoon tomato paste
1 tablespoon butter
1 teaspoon flour
Cut lobster in half lengthwise and place shell side down in baking dish. Sprinkle with oil and butter and bake in hot oven 20 minutes. Serve with sauce made in the
following manner: Place vinegar, pepper and red pepper seeds together in saucepan and simmer until vinegar is reduced to half quantity. Add meat extract in hot
water and tomato paste to vinegar and cook 10 minutes. Mix together butter and flour, blending well, and add slowly to sauce. Mix well, add mustard and pour
over baked lobsters. Serves 2 to 4."
---The Talisman Cook Book, Ada Boni, translated and augmented by Matilde Pei, special edition printed for Ronzoni Macaroni Co., Inc [Crown Publishers:New York] 1955 (p. 53)
"Lobster Fra Diavolo (Serves 4)
2 2-pound lobsters
1/2 cup of olive oil
4 tablespoons of chopped parsley (Italian parsley, if available)
1 1/2 teaspoons of oregano
Pinch of cloves
Pinch of mace
Salt and pepper
1 medium onion, chopped
1 clove of garlic, chopped
2 1/2 cups of canned tomatoes
1/3 cup of cognac
Prepare the lobsters as for Lobster a l'Americane...Heat the olive oil in a large kettle and add the lobster pieces. Using tongs, toss them about in the hot oil until the
shells are red and the meat seared. Lower the heat and let the lobster simmer gently for about 10 minutes. Add the chopped parsley, the oregano, the cloves, mace
and salt and pepper to taste. Peel and chop the onion and garlic very fine and add these. Add the canned tomatoes. Mix these ingredients, cover the kettle and
cook for about 15 minutes, stirring frequently to be sure the flavorings blend. Place the lobster in the center of a large heat-proof planter and surround it with
mounds of rice. Pour the sauce over the lobster and pour cognac over this. Ignite and blaze."
---The James Beard Cookbook, in collaboration with Isabel E. Callvert [E.P. Dutton:New York] 1961 (p. 149)
This is a famous, classic seafood dish served in Paris and in outstanding French restaurants in New York. It's not easy to prepare but the finished product is elegant.
1 2-pound lobsters (live)
2/3 cup of olive oil
4 tablspoons of butter
1 medium onion
6 shallots or small green onions
1 clove of garlic
8 medium-sized ripe tomatoes
4 tablespoons of chopped parsley
1 1/2 tablespoons of chopped fresh, or 1 1/2 teaspoons of dried, tarragon
1 1/2 teaspon of thyme
1 bay leaf
2 cups of dry white wine
4 tablespoons of tomato puree
Salt, pepper, cayenne
1/3 cup of cognac
Kill the lobsters, then split and clean according to the directions under Broiled Lobster...The remove the claws and cut the tails in sections, cutting through where the
shells are jointed. Wash well. Heat the olive oil in a very large kettle and when hot add the pieces of lobster in shell. Toss them about in a hot oil, using a pair of
tongs, until the shells are colored red and the lobster meat is seared. Remove the lobster pieces to a hot platter and add the butter to the oil in a kettle. Peel and
chop the onion, shallots and garlic. Saute in the hot butter and oil until lightly colored. Peel, seed and chop the tomatoes and add these to the onion mixture. Add
the parsley, tarragon, thyme, bay leaf and wine and simmer gently for 30 minutes. Add the tomato puree and season to taste with salt, pepper and cayenne. Pour
the cognac over the lobster pieces and ignite to blaze. Then return the lobster to the kettle to cook in the sauce, cover tightly and simmer for 20 minutes. Serve
over rice."
---ibid (p. 148)
Allow a 1 1/2- to 2 -pound lobster for each person. Have your fish dealer split and clean them for you (but you must cook them very soon after) or do it yourself.
To clean: place the live lobster on a work board or table and using a heavy, sharp knife and mallet, insert the point of the knife between the body and tail shells and
drive it through to sever the spinal cord. When the lobster stops moving, turn it over on its back and split it lengthwise from thead to tail, cutting it into two parts.
Remove the stomach and intestinal tract but leave the grayish colored liver and the row, or "coral," if there is any. Brush the flesh of each half with plenty of melted
butter and broil in a heated broiler for 12 to 15 minutes. Baste frequently with additional butter as the lobster cooks or it will dry out. Season to taste with salt and
pepper and serve with melted butter and lemon wedges."
---ibid (p. 147)
"Lobster Fra Diavolo
4 lobsters (1 1/2 to 2 pounds each)
8 fresh parsley sprigs, leaves only
1 clove, mashed
1/2 cup fresh sweet butter
1/4 cup olive oil
3/4 pound onions, peeled and diced
Pinch of salt
1/4 teaspoon crushed red pepper
1/3 teaspoon greshly ground black pepper
4 cups warm Marinara sauce (p. 94)
1 pound spaghettini
Split the lobsters lengthwise down the middle. Renmove head sacs and intestinal beins and discard. Chop parsley and garlic together. Combine
butter and olive oil in a large skippet and heat. Add onions and sautee slowly to medium brown. Ad lobsters, meat side down, and saute for
10 minutes. Turn lobsters, add parsledy and garlic, and stir well. Cook for 10 minutes. Add salt, red and black pepper, and marinara
sauce. Stir, cover, and cook for 10 minutes longer. Uncover and cook slowly for another 20 minutes. Have boiling salted water
ready; add the spaghettini and cook for about 10 minutes, or until done to your taste. Serve spaghettini on same plate with the
lobster and spoon the sauce over all. Serve a chilled Chiaretto del Garda or Soave. Serves 4 to 6."
---Leone's Italian Cookbook, Gene Leone [Harper & Row Publishers:New York] 1967 (p. 119)
Lobster Newburg first surfaces in the 1890s. Its was among the most popular dishes served in the American Pavilion at the
Paris Exposition of 1900. Where did this dish originate and who is "Newberg?"
---Encyclopedia of American Food and Drink, John F. Mariani [Lebhar-Friedman:New
York] 1999 (p.
187-8)
2. Lobster rolls, as we know them today, are probably a 20th century invention because they
require soft hot dog buns.
There seem to be two primary versions of the lobster roll: one is a mayonnaise-based lobster salad
sandwich and the other is simply composed of hearty chunks of fresh lobster meat drenched in
butter. Both are traditionally served in long (hot-dog type) buns which may be toasted. Pickles
and chips are the usual accompaniments. Both are considered standard menu items with
shore-based restaurants, diners and lobster shacks (inexpensive family-style outdoor eateries).
---"On a roll," David Shribman, Fortune, 8.13.2001 (p. 198)
---Encyclopedia of American Food and Drink, John F. Mariani [Lebhar-Friedman:New
York] 1999 (p. 188)
---"Fare of the Country: In Maine, Lobster on a Roll," Nancy Jenkins, New York Times,
July 14, 1985 (section 10, p.6)
"Curried Lobster
Take the meat from a medium sized boiled lobster and cut in small dice. Put into the chafing
dish...one rounded tablespoonful of butter. When hot add a tablespoonful minched onion, and
cook until it reaches the yellow stage, but not a moment longer. Mix one rounded tablespoonful
flour with a teaspoonful (or more, according to taste) of curry powder and stir into the hot butter.
Add a cup hot milk or thick cream and stir until it thickens and is smooth and creamy. Add two
cups of the diced lobster meat, and as soon as thoroughly heated serve on delicately browned
slices of toast crisped crackers."
---New York Evening Post Cook Book, Emma Paddock Telford [New York:1908] (p.
20)
---Larousse Gastronomique, completely revised and updated edition [Clarkson
Potter:New York]
2001 (p. 1208)
---An A to Z of Food and Drink, John Ayto [Oxford University Press:Oxford] 2002 (p.
342)
Split the lobster in half lengthways, season and gently grill, then remove the flesh from the shell
and cut into
fairly thick slices on the slant. Place some Sauce Creme finished with a little English mustard in
the bottom
of the two half shells, replace the slices of lobster neatly on top and coat with the sauce. Glaze
lightly in a
hot oven or under the salamander."
---The Complete Guide to the Art of Modern Cookery, Escoffier, 1903 edition, translated
by H.L
Cracknell and R.J. Kaufmann, [Wiley:New York] 1979 (p. 249)
---Food in the Ancient World from A to Z, Andrew Dalby [Routledge:London] 2003 (p.
105)
---Food and Drink in Britain: From the Stone Age to the 19th Century, C. Anne Wilson [Academy Chicago:Chicago 1991(p. 17)
---Oxford Encyclopedia of Food and Drink in America, Andrew F. Smith editor [Oxford
University Press:New York] 2004, Volume 1 (p. 485-6)
---American Food: The Gastronomic Story, Evan Jones, Second edition [Vintage
Books:New York] 1981 (p. 133-5)
[1911] Crabs & canned crab meat,The Grocer's Encyclopedia, Artemis Ward
Crab cakes, as we Americans know them today, are most often associated with Maryland and the
Chesapeake Bay area.
They are considered a popular traditional specialty. How did this recipe evolve? Food historians
tell us the practice of
making minced meat cakes/patties (seafood/landfood) is ancient. Minces mixed with
bread/spices/fillers came about for two reasons: taste and economy. Primary evidence suggests
recipes for crab-cake types dishes were introduced to the colonies by English settlers. About rissoles and croquettes.
A survey of historic American cookbooks confirms crab recipes were popular from colonial days
forward. In the 19th century crab recipes proliferated. Many of these combined bread crumbs and
spices; some were fried. These recipes are variously called "to stew crabs," "to fry crabs," "to
dress crab," "crab patties" or "crab croquettes." Sometimes they stand alone, others they are
noted as possible variations under similar fish/shellfish recipes. The phrase "crab cake" appears to
be a 20th century appellation. Notes here:
---Encyclopedia of American Food and Drink, John F. Mariani [Lebhar Friedman:New
York] 1999 (p. 103)
"To fry Crabs
Take the meat out of the great claws being first boiled, flour and fry them and take the meat out
of the body strain half if it for sauce, and the other half to fry, and mix it with grated bread,
almond paste, nutmeg, salt, and yolks of eggs, fry in clarified butter, being first dipped in batter,
put in a spoonful at a time; then make sauce with wine-vinegar, butter, or juyce of orange, and
grated nutmeg, beat up the butter thick, and put some of the meat that was strained into the
sauce, warm it and put it in a clean dish, lay the meat on the sauce, slices of orange over all, and
run it over with beaten butter, fryed parasley, round the dish brim, and the little legs round the
meat."
---The Accomplist Cook, Robert May, facsimile 1685 edition [Prospect Books:Devon]
2000 (p. 412)
[NOTE: This book contains several crab-cake type recipes.]
"To Dress a Crab.
Having taken out the Meat, and cleaned it from the Skin, put it into a Stew-pan, with half a Pint
of White Wine, a little Nutmeg, Pepper, and Salt over a slow Fire; throw in a few Crumbs of
Bread, beat up one Yolk of an Egg with one Spoonful of Vinegar, throw it in, and shake the
Sauce-pan round a Minute, then serve it up on a Plate."
---The Art of Cookery Made Plain and Easy, By a Lady (Hannah Glasse) facsimile reprint
with essays [Prospect Books:Devon] 1995 (p. 95)
"To dress a Crab.
Boil the crab well in sat and water, and when cold break it up, mix the meat in the inside of the
shell well together, break the large claws, take out the meat, and cut it fine, lay it over the
shell-meat as handsome as you can in the shell, put it in the dish, split the chine in two, and put at
each
end, crack the small claws and put them round; mix some oil and vinegar, a little mustard, pepper,
and salt, and put it over the meat in the shell; garnish with parsley."
---The New Art of Cookery According to Present Practice, Richard Briggs [Printed for
W. Spotswood, R. Campbell and B. Johnson:Philadelphia] 1792 (p. 99)
Crab and Lobster Cutlets, Jennie June's American Cookery Book, Jane Cunningham Croly
"Soft-Shell Crabs.
Lift the shell at both sides and remove the spongy substance found on the back. The pull off the
"apron," which will be found on the under side, and to which is attached a substance like that
removed from the back. Now wipe the crabs, and dip them in beaten egg, and then in fine bread
or cracker crumbs. Fry in boiling fat from eight to ten minutes, the time depending upon the size
of the crabs. Serve with Tartare sauce. Or, the egg and bread crumbs may be omitted. Season
with salt and cayenne, and fry as before. When broiled, crabs are cleaned, and seasoned with salt
and cayenne; are then dropped into boiling water for one minute, take up, and broiled over a hot
fire for eight minutes. They are served with maitre d'hotel butter or Tartare sauce."
---Miss Parloa's New Cook Book and Marketing Guide, [Estes & Lauriat:Boston MA]
1880 (p. 129)
Crab croquettes, White House Cook Book, Fannie Lemira Gillette, 1887
Crab Croquettes
These are precisely the same as lobster cutlets. Form into pyramid shaped croquettes, dip in egg
and bread crumbs, and fry in hot fat."
---Mrs. Rorer's New Cook Book, Sarah Tyson Rorer [Arnold and
Company:Philadelphia] 1902 (p. 121)
"Crab Croquettes
1 cup milk
2 tablespoons flour
2 eggs
2 heaping cups of cooked crab meat
1/2 small onion
Cracker crumbs
Salt and pepper to taste.
Blend the flour wtih a little cold milk, mix in the yolks of the eggs and the salt, pepper, and the
little bit of onion, then add the milk, and put on the fire to cook slowly. Stir constantly. When it
begins to thicken, add the crab meat and last of all the beaten whites of eggs. Cool and shape into
croquettes, dip in cracker crumbs and fry in deep lard. Decorate the dish with parsley and cubes of
lemon."
---Old Southern Receipts, Mary D. Pretlow [Robert M. McBride:New York] 1930 (p.
23-4)
"Crab Cakes Baltimore.
Take one pound of crab meat for each four crab cakes. Put crab meat into mixing bowl, add one
and one-half teaspoons salt, and two teaspoons white pepper, one teaspoon English dry mustard
and two teaspoons Worcestershire sauce, one yolk of egg and one soup spoon cream sauce or
mayonnaise, one teaspoon chopped parsley. Mix well, making four crab cakes, press hard
together, dip into flour, then into beaten eggs, then into bread crumbs. Fry them in hot grease
pan.--Mr. W.L. Jackson, Managing Director, Lord Baltimore Hotel, Baltimore."
---Eat, Drink & Be Merry in Maryland: An Anthology From a Great Tradition, compiled
by Frederick Philip Stieff [G.P. Putnam's Sons:New York] 1932 (p. 44)
"Crab-Flake Cakes (Baltimore)
2 cups crab meat
1 cup milk
yolk 1 egg
2 tablespoons flour
1/2 teaspoon onion juice
2 tablespoons butter
1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce
salt and pepper
bread crumbs
rich cream sauce
Melt the butter in a saucepan and add to it the flour; when well mixed, add the milk gradually,
stirring constantly until smooth. Add the egg yolk beaten up with Worcestershire sauce and onion
juice, and the crab flakes, seasoning with salt and pepper. As soon as this mixture is cool enough,
put it in the icebox to get very cold. Form into flat cakes; dredge in finely sifted bread crumbs and
fry on both sides in either lard or butter. Serve on a hot platter with Rich Cream sauce poured
over the cakes. Crab meat used must be from the body part of the crab, and must be very carefully
picked over."
---The National Cookbook: A Kitchen Americana, Shiela Hibben [Harper &
Brothers:New York] 1932 (p. 112)
Shrimp to some, prawns to others. These curious crustaceans have been enjoyed by humans from prehistoric
times forward. Cooking methods (boiling, grilling, steaming, deep frying, stir fry), recipes (cold mayonnaise salads,
spicy cocktails, popcorn-style, cassererole sauce) and meal position (appetizer, sauce, main course, street food) vary through time and culture.
Where did it all begin?
---Food in the Ancient World from A to Z, Andrew Dalby [Routledge:London] 2003 (p.
301)
---Food: An Authoritative and Visual History and Dictionary of the Foods of the World,
Waverley
Root [Smithmark:New York] 1980 (p. 460)
---Encyclopedia of American Food and Drink, John F. Mariani [Lebhar-Friedman:New
York] 1999 (p. 294)
The difference between these two items appears to be contextual. There are biologic, semantic and legal definitions. General descriptions here:
---Oxford Companion to Food, Alan Davidson [Oxford University Press:Oxford] 2nd edition, 2006 (p. 720)
---The Encyclopedia of Fish Cookery, A.J. McClane [Holt, Rinehart and Winston:New York] 1977 (p. 247-8)
---Encyclopedia of American Food& Drink, John F. Mariani [Lebhar-Friedman:New York] 1999 (p. 255)
---Oxford Companion to American Food and Drink, Andrew F. Smith editor [Oxford University Press:New York] 2007 (p. 536)
Presumably, prawns have been consumed from prehistoric times forward. Although written recipes did not exist in the earliest times, we can assume prawns were
boiled (perhaps with seasoning) similar to lobsters and other crustaceans. It is possible tiger (jumbo) prawns were eaten by themselves or as protein part of soups and
stews.
The earliest print recipes (Apicius, Ancient Rome) confirm boiling and add mincing (combined with spices, fillers to achieve patties) as popular ways for preparing seafood.
Squill or Prawn Patties (Apicus 44)
...Patties of squills or large prawns: The prawns or squills are removed from their shells and ground in a mortar with pepper and the finest garum. Patties are formed with the meat.
1 3/4 lb (800 g.) prawns, squills, or shrimp (shelled weight)
1 Tbs. garum
pepper to taste
pork caul fat
These seafood patty recipes are all fairly similar, differing mainly in the type of fish used. This recipe for squills or prawns (you can also use shrimp) is particularly delicate. Scald the
crustaceans in boiling water so that the heads and shells can be easily removed. grind the meat in a mortar with the garum and pepper and form patties from this mixture. I suggest
wrapping each of these in caul fat...so that the patties do not fall apart. The boil or fry in a bit of olive oil."
---A Taste of Ancient Rome, Ilaria Gozzini Giacosa, translated by Anna Herklotz [University of Chicago Press:Chicago] 1992 (p. 132)
The prawn balls are cooked in a special cooking sauce made with fish sauce and water known a hygrograum. A modern counterpart would be a 'court bouillon' designed for poaching.
This hydrograum is flavoured simply with celery leaves and pepper.
300 g raw king prawns
2/3 tsp lovage seeds
1 level tsp cumin
pinch asafoetida resin or powder
generous freshly ground black pepper
1 egg
2 desserts poons soft bread crumbs
For the hydrogarum:
1 coffee cup of fish sauce
7 coffee cups of water
a small handful of celerly leaves
freshly ground black pepper.
Peel and clean the intestinal tract from the prawns. Pound or process into a paste. Roast and grind the three spices, mix them with the pepper and add to the prawn paste with the egg
and bread crumbs. Process until combined. In a small, deep frying-pan place 1 measure of fish sauce to 7 measures of water using a small coffee cup. To this add the green leaves from a
head of celery. Bring to a simmer. Check the seasoning, adjust with more pepper if necessary. Using two large teaspoons, make egg shaped balls by scooping the mixture from one spoon
to the other. Drop them in the simmering hydrogarum and gently cook until they have set (no more than 4-5 minutes). Serve warm with salad leaves dressed with an oenogarum."
---Cooking Apicius: Roman Recipes for Today, Sally Grainger [Prospect Books:Devon] 2006 (p. 49)
If you are studying ancient prawns in a different culture (Maori?) or period (18th century?) your best bet is to examine period cooking
techniques/vessels. Prawns might have been steamed, roasted, &c. In the absence of prawn references, substitute crab, lobster & scallop. Shrimp,
of all sizes are generally treated in the same manner.
Although people have been combining fish with spicy sauces since ancient times, the "shrimp
cocktail," as
we Americans know it today, belongs to the late 19th/early 20th century. A survey of American
cookbooks
confirms the combination of shellfish (most typically oysters) and a spicy tomato-based sauce
(usually
ketchup spiced with horseradish, tabasco, and cayenne) served in tiny cups as appetizers was
extremely
popular in the early part of the 20th century. There are several variations on this recipe.
Sau Sea brand shrimp cocktail was the brand we all remember. Individual portions packed in thick, reusable glasses. Some
of us still have them!
[1909]
"Shrimps in Tomato Catsup
Chevrettes a la Sauce Tomate.
100 River Shrimp
2 Tablespoonfuls of Tomato Catsup
3 Hard-Boiled Eggs, Salt, Pepper and Cayenne to Taste.
Boil the shrimp and pick. Put them into a salad dish. Season well with black pepper and salt and a
dash of Cayenne. Then add two tablespoonfuls of tomato catsup to every half pint of shrimps.
Garnish with lettuce leaves and hard-boiled egg and serve."
---Picayune's Creole Cook Book (second edition), facsimile reprint 1909 edition [Dover
Publications:New York] 1971 (p. 67)
Savory Cocktails
Savoury cocktails are usually made of raw fish, although combinations of raw and smoked fish are
sometimes used, and in rare instances good-sized bits of broiled mushrooms and sweetbreads are
used instead of the fish. These savoury cocktails should be properly served in cocktail glasses,
which are in turn imbedded in cracked ice-soup plates or the new glass oyster plates being used
for the service. If the cocktail is mixed with the sauce in the glass, a bit of parsley may top it, or
pieces green may be placed, wreath fashion, around the cocktails. If you do not posses cocktail
glasses, hollowed-out green peppers or tomatoes may be used, or the cocktail sauce with the
savoury ingredient may be thoroughly chilled and served in ordinary small cocktail glasses. In this
case the green is placed at the base.
1/2 tablespoonful tomato catsup or chili sauce
1/2 tablespoonful lemon juice
2 drops tabasco sauce
1/4 teaspoonful celery salt
3 drops Worcestershire sauce
Combine the ingredients in the order given, mixing them well. If desired, a half teaspoonsful of
olive oil may be added....Lobster, Shrimp or Crabmeat Cocktail: Allow to each person one-third
cupful of diced lobster meat, diced cooked or canned shrimps, or shredded crabmeat; combine
with cocktail sauce and serve as directed."
---Mrs. Allen n Cooking, Menus, Service, Ida C. Bailely Allen [Doubleday, Doran &
Comapny:Garden City NY] 1924 (p. 112-3)
[NOTE: This book also contains recipes for Oyster Cocktail, Clam Cocktail and Sea-Food
Cocktail. It also provides instructions for Frozen Fish Cocktails.]
---New York Times, December 15, 1926 (p. 30)
---"Food News: Italian Ways With Scampi," Nan Ickeringill, New York Times, November
17, 1964 (p.
44)
---Encyclopedia of American Food and Drink, John F. Mariani [Lebhar-Friedman:New
York] 1999 (p.
286)
---American Century Cookbook: The Most Popular Recipes of the 20th Century, Jean
Anderson
[Clarkson Potter:New York] 1997 (p. 139)
[NOTE: The earliest reference to shrimp scampi in the New York Times is a restaurant
advertisement published May 9, 1956 for The Tenakill Restaurant in Englewood NJ]
---Oxford Companion to Food, Alan Davidson [Oxford University Press:Oxford] 1999 (p.
541)
---An A-Z of Food & Drink, John Ayto [Oxford University Press:Oxford] 2003 (p. 303-4)
Food historians confirm savory quick-cooked combinations of protein, vegetables, sauces and spices have been consumed from ancient times forward. These dishes are economical, portable, flexible and creative. Recipes vary according to culture and cuisine. "Wiggle" recipes, combining minced canned pre-cooked protein (shrimp, salmon, lobster, chicken), white sauce, and peas are generally placed in late 19th-early 20th century United States. The dish's rise (& fall) is connected with the chafing dish, a "dainty" table-top cooking apparatus introduced in late Victorian times.
Chafing dishes powered by canned combustibles (sterno, etc.) appealed to cooks for several reasons. (1) Ornate design entranced stylish hostesses serving the latest food trends. (2) Portability appealed to cooks without access to kitchens. (3) Adaptability empowered both finicky gourmets, economical cooks, & boarding students to easily create foods of their choice.
Chafing dishes, like crock pots and casseroles, enjoy cyclical popularity.
---American Century Cookbook: The Most Popular Recipes of the 20th Century, Jean Anderson [Clarkson Potter:New York] 1997 (p. 119)
[NOTE: Primary sources confirm the college/boarding girl references. These cooks more likely busted for use alcohol use than "unapproved" dormitory cooking. Pretty much same as today.]
Our survey of food history books, cookbooks, and historic newspaper articles confirms many interesting notes regarding the genesis and cyclical popularity of this
dish. It did not, however, shed light on the origin of the name. Food writers, if they acknowledge the name at all, gently state they do not know its origin.
---Encyclopedia of American Food & Drink, John F. Mariani [Lebhar-Friedman:New York] 1999 (p. 295)
NOUN: 1. An act of ‘wiggling’, a light wagging or wriggling movement. to get a wiggle on (U.S. slang), to hurry, bustle. 1816 J. K. PAULDING Lett. from South I. 235 They suffered their hair to grow into a mighty bunch behind, and walked with the genuine Rutland wiggle; that is to say, on tiptoe, and with a most portentous extension of the hinder-parts. 1869 L. M. ALCOTT Little Women II. xxiv. 355 Rob's footstool had a wiggle in its uneven legs. 1896 Inlander Jan. 147 Get a wiggle on you, hurry up; bestir yourself. 1894 Educator (Philad.) Feb. 279 Every fleeting expression of their faces or wiggle of their bodies. 1903 A. ADAMS Log Cowboy iv, Hasn't the boss got a wiggle on himself to-day! 1904 E. ROBINS Magnetic North xvii. 298 You can bunk early and get a four a.m. wiggle on."
[1898]
"Shrimp Wiggle
Melt four tablespoons butter, add three tablespoons flour mixed with one-half teaspoon salt and one-eighth teaspoon pepper. Pour
on gradually one and one-half cups milk. As soon as sauce thickens, add one cup shrimps, broken in pieces, and one cup canned
peas, drained from their liquor and thoroughly rinsed."
---Chafing Dish Possibilities, Fannie Merritt Farmer 1898 [Little, Brown:Boston] 1902 (p. 66)
"Lobster Wiggle. Into the chafing-dish put two tablespoons of butter and two tablespoons of flour. Stir together till like a paste, add one cup of cream or rich
milk, half a teaspoon of salt, a dash of paprika, one teaspoon of lemon juice and chopped parsley. Beat till creamy with a whisk, add one and one-half cups of
lobster meat cut into small cubes. Cook for a few minutes with the lid on. Just before serving add half a can of French peas. Pour over fingers of buttered toast."
---Good Housekeeping's Woman's Home Cook Book, Isabel Gordon Curtis [Reilly & Britton:Chicago] (p. 254)
Archaeolgical evidence suggests oysters were consumed from the dawn of humanity forwards. Easy to collect, nourishing and tasty, these versatile molluscs were
consumed raw, cooked, and preserved. Recipes varied according to place and taste. General notes here:
---Food in Antiquity: A Survey of the Diet of Early Peoples, Don Brothwell and Patricia Brothwell [Johns Hopkins University Press:Baltimore] 1969 (p. 65)
---Food in the Anceint World from A to Z, Andrew Dalby [Routledge:London] 2003 (p. 245-246)
---History of Food, Mauguelonne Toussaint-Samat, translated by Anthea Bell [Barnes & Noble Books:New York] 1992(p. 396)
---Oxford Companion to Food, Alan Davidson [Oxford Univeristy Press:Oxford] 2nd edition, 2007 (p. 565)
---America's Founding Food: The Story of New England Cooking, Keith Stavely & Kathleen
Fitzgerald [University of North Carolina Press:Chapel Hill] 2004 (p.104-8)
---Encyclopedia of American Food and Drink, John F. Mariani [Lebhar-Friedman:New York] 1999
(p. 226-7)
---Oxford Encyclopedia of Food and Drink in America, Andrew F. Smith, editor in chief [Oxford
University Press:New York] 2004, Volume 2 (p. 224-5)
Angels on horseback
Food historians confirm oysters have been enjoyed since ancient times. Recipes flourised in the 18th and 19th centuries.
Angels on Horseback [aka Pigs in Blankets, Oysters and Bacon], a popular 19th century savory appetizer, can be found in
French, British and American cookbooks. Devils on Horseback
is a later recipe, substituting stuffed prunes for oysters. Notes here:
---An A to Z of Food and Drink, John Ayto [Oxford University Press:Oxford] 2002 (p. 6)
---Larousse Gastronomique, completely revised and updated [Clarkson Potter:New York] 2001 (p. 825)
Survey of historic recipes
USA [1884]
What about Devils on Horseback?
Pigs in Blankets
Little Pigs in Blankets
"Oysters and Bacon
[Huitres Bardees.]
3 Dozen Oysters. Thin Slices of Breakfast Bacon. Minced Parlesey. Sauce Piquante.
Wrap each oyster in a very thin slice of breakfast bacon. Lay on a broiler over a baking pan in the hot oven. Remove when the bacon
is brown. Each must be fastened with a wooden toothpick. Serve with minced parsley and pepper sauce, or Sauce Piquante."
---Times Picayune Creole Cook Book, facsimile 1901 edition [Dover Publications:Mineola NY] 1971(p. 60)
"4918. Anges a Cheval--Angels on Horseback
Take some nice large oysters and roll each in a thin slice of bacon. Impale them on a skewer, season them and grill. Arrange
on toasted bread and at the last moment, sprinkle with fried breadcrumbs and a touch of Cayenne."
---Complete Guide to the Art of Modern Cookery [Le Guide Culinaire 1903], A. Escoffier, translated by H.L. Cracknell
and R.J. Kaufmann [John Wiley:New York] 1979 (p. 577)
"Angels on Horseback
Ingredients.--12 oysters, 12 small thin slices of bacon, 12 small round croutes of fried bread, 1/2 a teaspoonful of finely-chopped
shallot, 1/2 a teaspoonful of finely-chopped parsely, lemon-juice, Krona pepper.
Method.--Beard the oysters, trim the bacon, cutting each piece just large enough to roll round an oyster, season with
Krona pepper, sprinkle on a little shallot and parsely. Lay an oyster on each, add a few drops of lemon-juice, roll up
tightly, and secure the bacon in position with a large pin. Fry in a frying-pan or bake in a hot oven just long enough
to crisp wth bacon (further cooking would harden the oysters), remove the pin and serve on the croutes.
Time.--20 minutes. Average cost, 1s 9d to 2s. 9d. Sufficient for 8 or 9 persons. Seasonable from September to March."
---Mrs. Beeton's Every-day Cookery, Isabella Beeton, new edition [Ward, Lock & Co.:London] 1909 (p. 148)
Toasted Angels
"Pigs in Blankets.
Prepare the oysters as directed on page 201. Wrap a thin slice of bacon around each oyster and
fasten with a toothpick. Arrange on a rack on a dripping pan. Bake in a hot oven (425 to 450
degrees F.)
---Good Cooking, Marjorie Heseltine and Ula Dow, new edition, revised and enlarged [Houghton
Mifflin Company:Boston] 1936 (p. 211)
[NOTE: this is very similar to British Angels on Horseback. see below for notes.]
"Angels on Horseback
These are oysters rolled in bacon, fastened with a skewer, and either grilled or baked in a quick oven 5-6 minutes. Two rolls may
be allowed per person and they are served on hot buttered toast."
---Constance Spry Cookery Book, Constance Spry & Rosemary Hume [Pan Books:London] 1956 (p. 36)
---An A to Z of Food and Drink, John Ayto [Oxford University Press:Oxford] 2002 (p. 1-9)
---Oxford Companion to Food, Alan Davidson, 2nd edition edited by Tom Jaine [Oxford University Press:Oxford] 2006 (p. 248)
"Devils on Horseback
Related food? Pigs in Blankets (pastry wrapped sausages)
12 large prunes or French plums
1/2 bay-leaf
water or red wine to cover
stuffings of:
(a) a fillet of anchovy curled round an almond , or
(b) chopped mango chutney, or
(c) an olive stoned and stuffed with pimento
1/2 thin rasher of bacon for each prune
buttered toast
watercress
Pour boiling water or hot red wine over prunes; leave half an hour. Simmer in same liquid with half a bay-leaf till tender.
If wine is used allow it to be absorved by the prunes until it has practically disappeared. Cool prunes and stone. Fill with any
one of the fillings given. Flatten each half-rasher on a board and wrap round a prune. Set on a tin, bake in a hot oven 7-10 minutes.
Set each on a piece of hot buttered toast. Arrange a buch of watercress in the centre of the dish."
---Constance Spry Cookery Book, Constance Spry & Rosemary Hume [Pan Books:London] 1956 (p. 36)
(p. 35-6)
Oysters Kirkpatrick
Modern food historians generally agree the dish called "Oysters Kirkpatrick" was first served in San Francisco's Palace Hotel in the second decade of the twentieth
century. Of course, most dishes are not invented. They descend from a long line of related items. Recipes combining broiled oysters and bacon were very popular in
the late 19th and early twentieth centuries. They range from traditional fare (Angels on Horseback) to spicy selections (Devilled oysters). Oysters Kirkpatrick fall
neatly between the two extremes. Notes & recipes here:
---West Coast Cook Book, Helen Brown, 1952 facsimile reprint [Cookbook Collectors Library] (p. 148-9)
---The Encyclopedia of American Food and Drink, John F. Mariani [Lebhar-Friedman:New York] 1999 (p. 228)
[NOTE: Mariani's book offers this recipe for Oysters Kirkpatrick which is "supposedly the original" :Combine 1 c. ketchup, 1 c. chili sauce, 1 t. Worcestershire sauce, 1/2 t. A1 sauce, 1 t. chopped parsley, and half a small chopped green pepper. Cut bacon slices into thirds, and cook halfway. Shuck oysters, dip them into sauce, and place them in shells. Place oysters on a bed of rock salt, cover with bacon, and sprinkle on Parmesean cheese. Bake at 400 degress F. until bacon is crisp."]
[1934]
"Oysters Kirkpatrick
This secret was divulged to us by Chef Theodore Hohl of the University Club, and is about the best ever. Make a sauce, using two-thirds
as much chili sauce as horseradish. Place the oysters in the half shell, pour the sauce over them with a strip of bacon over
each. Bake in the oven until the edges of the oysters curl."
---"Requested Recipes," Marian Manners, Los Angeles Times, November 17, 1934 (p. A7)
Oysters Rockefeller
Oysters figure prominently in traditional New Orleans cuisine. They are featured in a variety of
recipes. Oysters Rockefeller is attributed to Jules Alciatore of Antoine's. Notes here:
---Encyclopedia of American Food and Drink, John F. Mariani [Lebhar-Friedman:New York] 1999
(p. 228)
---Antoine's Restaurant Since 1840 Cookbook, Roy F. Guste, Jr. [Norton:New York] 1980 (p. 32)
"To dine at Antoine's is, after all, to learn by contrast that you would rather have simpler things, but that a name means a
great deal when it comes to foods...We had had oysters Rockefeller elsewhere, but the ony recipes we brought away with us were the
one for this and one for the soup we had. These were the only ones printed on the great sheet, giving a history of the house,
which we received as a souvenier. The last section of this begins: 'Monsieur Jules has invented many dishes which have added to the
name of his house, chief among them being huites en coquille a la Rockefeller. Rockefeller's name sugests the golden flavor, that's
why it was added to the huitres, which is French for oysters....Jules is extremely reluctant about giving away the secrets of
his kitchen, but after some coaxing he was induced to part with the following while slowly sipping his cognac after
luncheron.
---"French Specialties," Jane Eddington, Winnipeg Free Press [Canada], March 27, 1912 (p. 9)
---"Fish-Filled 'Hot Dog' To Be Put on Market, New York Times, September 27, 1949 (p. 34)
---"Tuna Fish Hot Dog--"Friday Franks"--Hits Retail Market Today, Wall Street Journal, December 2, 1949 (p. 10)
"Tuna Fish Frankfurters. Meatless frankfurters, shaped like the familiar hot dog but stuffed with
tuna fish, are being introduced this week in Food Fair stores here. These are a frozen product;
there are about ten in a one-pound package costing 79 cents."
---"Food: New Products," June Owen, New York Times, June 8, 1959 (p. 24)
"New Tuna treat: Tunies. Tuna with the new exciting Taste. Tuna in the new convenient form. Hickory-smoked for an exciting new taste,
Tunies have all the nutritive values of seafood in tempting snacks, salads and main dishes that are quck and easy to prepare. Best of all-
Tunies are inexpensive, and there is no waste. Tunies are made only from select fillets of tuna...they contaion no meat or meat
derivatives, no cereal or other filler. And Tunies are skinless. High in protein, low in calories, Tunies are the most
outstanding food buy in years. Chop them for casseroles. Mince or grind them for sandwiches. Slice them for salads. Bargecue them-
Fry them. Boil them. Serves 4 to 6 people...Tunies are Packd by the Processors of Famous Brest-O-Chicken Tuna, Quality Packers for
Over a Half-Century."
---Display ad, Los Angeles Times, December 4, 1958 (p. 25)
---"'Round the Food Stores: For a look at the latest ideas," Lois Baker, Chicago Daily Tribune, March 20, 1959 (p. A7)
Source
"Houstonian Jerry Grisaffi has hooked a publicly traded shell company that he plans to use to flip
his local tuna hot dog company onto the Over-The-Counter exchange. Grisaffi's privately held
Bounty of the Sea expects to complete the acquisition of publicly traded Falcon Investment Co.
before the end of this month. Falcon is a Delaware corporation without ongoing operations,
whose stock trades in the pink sheets. Bounty of the Sea will be the surviving name of the
combined companies, and Grisaffi hopes to list his stock under the symbol BOTS or, possibly,
TUNA. As soon as the acquisition is completed, Bounty of the Sea will conduct a public offering
of 2 million new shares through which Grisaffi hopes to raise $ 3.5 million...Bounty of the Sea
was formed in late 1987 to manufacture and sell a line of hot dogs and assorted cold cuts made
from tuna fish. Grisaffi got the idea for the product on a Caribbean fishing trip when a local cook
served him fish that had been spiced and reshaped to look like ham. Nutritionally, tuna franks
contain twice the protein, half the calories and 70 percent less fat than hot dogs made from beef
or pork. The company also sells a tuna luncheon loaf and a tuna bologna and plans to debut a line
of tuna breakfast sausage in June. Grisaffi plans to market his tuna meats to the public through
retail grocers and to the institutional health market through major food brokers. His tuna franks
have been available in selected Houston grocery stores since the end of 1988, but the company's
products were only picked up last month by two major suppliers to the institutional food trade."
---"Entrepreneur Taking Local Tuna Dog Company Public," Laurel Brubaker Calkins, Houston
Business Journal, April 10, 1989, Vol 18; No 44; Sec 1; pg 15
--- "Tuna Dogs Sink in Sea of Troubles," Doug Miller, Houston Business Journal, March 19,
1990, Vol 19; No 42; Sec 1; pg 1
"For years, canned tuna, frozen fish sticks and pickled herring constituted the bulk of processed
seafood products available to consumers. Today, more imaginative offerings are being introduced
by both domestic and international firms eager to capitalize on the public's heightened interest in
fish. Many such new and unusual items debuted at Sea Fare '88, a recently concluded trade show
at the Long Beach Convention Center. The latest entries ranged from exotic tropical fish species
to the next generation of surimi, the highly processed seafood analog used primarily for imitation
crab. Certainly, the most ingenious new brand name to surface was Ham of the Sea. At present,
the line consists of tuna frankfurters and a ham-like luncheon meat made entirely from fish. The
frankfurters are a blend of the yellow fin and skipjack tuna varieties while the deli-style meat is
made from mahi-mahi. The products, manufactured in Costa Rica, are both low in calories,
sodium and fat. Jerry Grisaffi, Ham of the Sea president, said he just came up with the
catchy title without so much as mentioning that somewhat similar-sounding brand of canned
tuna. Response to Ham of the Sea, he said, was extremely positive. And to prove the point,
Grisaffi claims the U.S. Navy has agreed to become one of his first customers. The rest of the
country can expect to see Ham of the Sea by April."
---"New Seafood Ideas are Catching on; Consumers Get Hooked on Tuna Franks, Ham of the Sea,"
Daniel P. Puzo, Los Angeles Times, March 3, 1988,
Food; Part 8; Page 2; Column 2
Food historians confirm oysters are the most popular mollusks consumed by humans from the preshistoric
times to present. Snails (both terrestrial and sea) arguably come in second. Think: escargot and periwinkles. Able to survive in both fresh water and seas, hot climates and cold,
mollusks required little effort to harvest, compared to game. High in protein and consumable in both raw and cooked states,
it is no wonder mollusks played an important role in global cuisine.
---Food in Antiquity, Don Brothwell and Patricia Brothwell, expanded edition [Johns Hopkins University Press:Baltimore MD]
1998 (p. 59)
---Larousse Gastronomique, Prosper Montagne [Crown Publishers:New York] 1961(p. 882)
---Food in the Ancient World from A to Z, Andrew Dalby [Routledge:London] 2003 (p. 305)
---Oxford Companion to Food, Alan Davidson [Oxford University Press:Oxford] 1999 (p. 727,
729)
There are several types of edible sea snails. One of the most popular is the periwinkle, originally a "poor man's" food
now served by some fine restaurants.
"Sea snail." 1. A name for various marine gasteropods...2. A fish of the family Liparididae, esp. the
Liparis vulgaris, or unctuous sucker."
---Oxford English Dictionary.
[NOTE: The earliest print reference cited by the OED to this word dates to 1000 (definintion 1),
and 1672 (definition 2).]
"There are over 300 species of this conical, spiral-shelled univalve mollusk...but few are edible.
Periwinkles, also called bigaros, sea snails or winkles, are found attached to rocks, wharves,
pilings, etc. in both fresh and sea water. The most common edible periwinkle is found along the
Atlantic coasts of Europe and North America. It grows to about 1 inch in size and is gray to dark
olive with reddish-brown bands. Periwinkles are popular in Europe but rarely found in the United
States. They're usually boiled in their shells, then extracted with a small pick." (p. 460)
"Periwinkle. Littorina littorea, an edible mollusc living in a small single shell...widely distributed
on both sides of the N. Atlantic. Periwinkles, or winkles as their vendors commonly call them, are
now eaten much more in Europe than America, although the middens of American Indians testify
to their use there in the past. Prehistoric mounds in Denmark, Scotland, and elsewhere show that
they have been a popular European food for a very long time; and the diveristy of vernacular
names, such as kruuk'ls in Zeeland, points to continuing popularity in more recent centuries. Now,
however, they are becoming a grander food, being served as amuse-greules in expensive
restaurants. Species of Littorina are found around the world...It is usual to cook periwinkles for
about 10 minutes in boiling, salted water, and then to pick them out of their shells with a pit. The
cooked winkles can be eaten thus; but in some places they are dressed with a sauce, and then have
an egg or two cracked over them to be left to fry or else scrambled."
---Oxford Companion to Food, Alan Davidson [Oxford University Press:Oxford] 1999 (p. 596)
---The Encyclopedia of Fish Cookery, A.J. McClaine [Holt, Rinehart and Winston:New York]
1977 (p. 229)
"The perwinkle (Turbo littoreus) is more extensively used as food than any of the other testaceous
univalves. It owuld hardly be supposed that so triffling an article of consumption as periwinkles
could form a matter of extensive traffic; but the quantity consumed annually in London has been
estimated at 76,000 baskets, weighing 1,900 tons, and valued at L15,000. This well-known
mollusc is found on all the rocks and shores of our own islands which are left uncovered by the
tide, and also in America and other countries. The cockneys and their visitors are deeply indebted
to the industrtious inhabitants of Kerara, near Oban, for a plentious treat of this rather vulgar
luxury; and the Kerarans are no less obliged to the Londoners for a never-failing market, for what
now appears to be their general staple article. They are gathered by the poor people, who get 6d. A
bushel for collecting them. From Oban they are forwarded to Glascow, and thence to Liverpool, en
route to London. Very few are retained in transit, better profits being obtained in London, even
after paying so much sea and land carriage. Every week there are probably 30 tons or more of this
insignificant edible sent up to London, from Glasgow, all of which are collected near Oban, and
must be a means of affording considerable employment, and diffusing a considerable amount
weekly in wages, amongst the numerious persons employed. The periwinkles are packed in bags,
containing from two to three cwt. Each, and keep quite fresh until they arrive at their utimate
destination. In London they sell at 3d. A pint."
---The Curiosities Of Food, Peter Lund Simmons, facsimile 1859 edition with introduction by
Alan Davidson, [Ten Speen Press:Berkeley] 2001 (p. 344-5)
---Cassell's Dictionary of Cookery [Cassell, Petter, Galpin & Co.:London] 1874? (p. 537)
About these notes: Food history can be a complicated topic. These notes are not meant
to be a
comprehensive treatment of the subject, but a summary of salient points supported with culinary
evidence. If you
need more information we suggest you start by asking your librarian to help you find the books
and articles cited in these notes. Article databases are good for locating current recipes, consumer
trends, and new products.
Have questions? Ask!
Research conducted by Lynne
Olver, editor The Food
Timeline. About this site.