Thanksgiving is also a harvest celebration; there is no denying that many of us will indulge in the abundance of food prepared for the Thanksgiving feast.
In the spirit of food and feasting, we decided to post some historical menus from various celebrations...some of them featuring a variety of very weird and wonderful dishes.
Archbishop Lynch's 1884 banquet was held at Rossin House, which stood at the Southwest corner of King and York streets from 1857 to 1969. Anyone for Arches of Buffalo Tongues? Aspic of Lobster a la Parisienne? Duck en surprise on Pedestal? Sweetbreads Larded, a la Financiere? |
Green Turtle Soup and Haunch of Venison? Sign me up! |
By 1944, menus for episcopal events were becoming somewhat more simple. |
We couldn't resist finding recipes for some of the more interesting dishes from these menus:
From The Gastronomic Regenerator: A Simplified and Entirely New System of Cookery (1847) by Monsieur A. Soyer, p. 427. |
From The Royal Cookery Book (1869) by Jules Gouffé, p. 490. |
From White House Cook Book: A Selection of Choice Recipes, Original and Selected (1889) by Fanny Lemira Gillette, p. 329. |
From White House Cook Book: A Selection of Choice Recipes, Original and Selected (1889) by Fanny Lemira Gillette, p. 321. |
Are you inspired to make Turkey Galantine for your family this weekend? Perhaps they would prefer Boiled Turkey with Oyster Sauce, or a Pyramid of Spring Chicken, or Arches of Buffalo Tongues.
For more historic menus, check out the Toronto Public Library's virtual exhibit Local Flavour, and the New York Public Library's What's On The Menu project.
No comments:
Post a Comment