In the Devil's Garden: A Sinful History of Forbidden Food (27 page)

Read In the Devil's Garden: A Sinful History of Forbidden Food Online

Authors: Stewart Lee Allen

Tags: #Cooking, #History, #General, #Fiction

BOOK: In the Devil's Garden: A Sinful History of Forbidden Food
4.09Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Anger

THE CIVILIZED SAUCE

The information on the Janissary army is mentioned in Clifford Wright’s massive
A Mediterranean Feast
.

THE SADISTIC CHEF

Some of the details about sadistic cuisine are mentioned in Philippa Pullar’s
Consuming Passions
, which attributes them to a lecture given by Keith Thomas to the London Guild of Food Writers in 1990. The goose recipe comes from a book titled
Natural Magick
, by John Baptista Porta and published in London in 1658. It appears to be a reprint of a similar recipe mentioned in many other publications. The birth of modern cruelty-free butchery was first made official in Switzerland in 1892. According to some, it was actually tied into the wave of anti-Semitism during that era. Certainly the German ban on cruelty to animals appears to have been a swipe at Judaic culinary/butchery traditions. At one point a bill was introduced into the New York Senate requiring that meat be labeled as “humane” or “kosher,” according to Seymour Freedman’s
The Book of Kashruth
. The bill failed.

DEEP-FRIED MURDER

The only measurement of the decibel noise experienced by an eater of crunchy foods that I was able to discover comes from food engineers Zata Vickers and Carol Christensen in the late 1970s. They got over the problem of measuring the sound experienced by the chewer by having him or her wear headphones playing noise, the decibel level of which would be adjusted according to the food the person was eating. If they could no longer hear the sound of themselves chewing, that was assumed to be the approximate sound volume experienced by the ear. Foods such as chips and carrots measured between 110 and 120, according to Vickers. Spokeswomen for Frito-Lay declined to comment on the relationship between food sound volume/crunch and aggression.

ONLY IF IT HAS A FACE

Much of the general information on the relationship between meat and violence comes from
The Heretic’s Feast
, by Colin Spencer, as well as other publications. The Hmong people of Laos have a particularly charming version of the universal tale of how a broken dietary covenant landed humanity in purgatory. According to them, the crops of the field used to pick themselves out of the soil and line up outside the farmer’s hut so he could choose which ones he wanted for dinner. One day the farmer was too hungover to get out of bed and asked them all to come back the next day. The same thing happened every day for a week, and finally the veggies said, Well, maybe from now on we should just stay in the ground, and when you’re ready to choose you can come and pick us. And so work was invented. The Jivaro are a tribe of about twenty thousand who live in the tropical area near the Maranon River in eastern Peru and Ecuador.

HITLER’S LAST MEAL

Jane Barkas’s
The Vegetable Passion
goes into more detail on this subject than any sane person could ever want to know, including Hitler’s passion for Jewish pastries (apparently the only thing that could lure him into a Jewish establishment), and how his chef secretly added bone marrow to his food. Hitler’s plan to turn Germany into a raw food cult is mentioned by Bertram M. Gordon in “Fascism, the Neo Right” in the 1987 Oxford symposium on Food & Cookery. Walter Fleiss, the veggie restauranteur who made the Gestapo’s most-wanted list, reopened his Vega Restaurant in London’s Leicester Square, where it became an institution. He even convinced the Salon Culinaire Food Competition to include a veggie category in their prestigious contests.

VICIOUS LITTLE RED MAN

It appears that pre-chili Asian cuisine used a fruit called
fagara
, or prickly ash, which is comparable to horseradish and wasabi. These, however, have only an initial burn that quickly fades, as compared to chili’s long-lasting agony. One of the more unusual uses of chili powder is in birthing—the powder is flung into the mother’s face, precipitating contractions. Most of the information on the 1997 California incident comes from newspaper clips, Amnesty International reports, and “Spring,” one of the victims who is currently suing the officers involved. All officers involved were found not guilty of any criminal offense.

STINKING INFIDELS

The two Mar’ib men’s sins are detailed in Jacques Ryckman’s
Les Confessions publiques Sabeennes
. Ryckman refers to the men who apparently committed sodomy as being guilty of “special sex.” The two men accused of bad breath actually hailed from outside Mar’ib, and only made pilgrimage when their local priests were unable to cure their disease. This entailed not only a dangerous journey but also arranging a “truce of God” between the eternally warring tribes of Yemen. It was only when they arrived in Mar’ib that they learned exactly why the Moon was so miffed with them. The question as to why garlic became so closely associated with demons might relate to the fact that its stench results from sulfide compounds, sulfur being the eau de cologne of Old Horny. The tribes in Yemen, by the way, are still squabbling away.

FEASTING TO THE DEATH

The information on the Tudor banquets comes from C. Anne Wilson’s work
Banquetting Stuffe
. Details and quotes from various potlatch ceremonies can be found in Helen Codere’s
Fighting with Property
. The Kwakiutl were so fond of the potlatch ceremonies that they refused loans from the Canadian government to replace houses incinerated during the festivities because they thought the white officials would try to limit the size of the house to prevent further parties. One amusing account of food as weaponry is told in an anonymous work from the 1700s called
Origen de los Mexicanos
which claims the Aztecs were so proud of their cuisine that they would cook dishes before besieged cities so that “the smoke will enter their city and the smell will make the women miscarry, the children waste away, and the old men weaken and die of longing and desire to eat that which is unobtainable.” This passage, mentioned in Coe, probably refers to burning chili peppers. Elizabeth David’s account of the Medici marriage feast can be found in her piece on ice molds, “Savour of Ice and of Roses,” in
Petit Propos Culinaire
.

The potlatches were perhaps the most extreme version of the eating-as-aggression phenomenon, but it also played a part in the creation of the so-called California Cuisine of the late twentieth century. According to Jesse Drew’s “Call Any Vegetable” essay in
San Francisco: History, Politics and Culture
, a group of politically motivated food activists inadvertently led to the California aesthetic. The key group was the San Francisco Food Conspiracy, which formed in the 1960s to overthrow the corporate American power structure. “There are conspiracies all over the city,” wrote San Francisco’s
Good Times
in 1972 of the group, “[intent on] breaking down the master-servant trip of grocery stores.” The conspiracy was constructed using classic Marxist guidelines for guerrilla warfare in dozens of independent cells—Uprisings Bakery, Red Star Cheese, the People’s Warehouse—that produced subversive foodstuffs for worker-owned co-ops that distributed them to the masses. The Conspiracy hoped these would replace America’s soul-less supermarkets and their Wonder-Bread-and-mayonnaise sandwiches with “real food.” This would inevitably put Americans more in tune with The People and inevitably lead to world peace, not to mention universal happiness.

The conspiracy was only one of a number of “food happenings” during the 1960s. The huge free meals thrown by the radical Diggers’ group were staged so that nine-to-five working stiffs could see them, and were as much political theater as was the “pie encampment” of Charles the Bold. Another contemporaneous group, the New World Liberation Front, even bombed Safeway supermarkets apparently to force them to stock better produce. It was curiously effective, if in an unanticipated way. The Conspiracy’s co-ops dispensed organic, fresh food, free of preservatives, with an emphasis on ethnic dishes. It was food few white people had tasted, not surprising in an era that believed that processed, packaged foods were superior to the stuff that came straight out of the dirt. Brown rice, tofu, ripe tomatoes, real cheese—every bite was a sensory rejection of everything for which 1950s America stood. These politically inspired mantras of fresh/simple/seasonal in turn became the culinary guidelines for people like Alice Waters, the great guru of California cuisine, who opened her world famous Chez Panisse restaurant during the conspiracy’s heyday. The Panisse alumni list reads like the who’s who of American cuisine—Wolfgang Puck, Joyce Goldstein, Mark Miller, Jeremiah Towers—all of whom are still chanting the culinary mantras of the original guerrillas. All they lack are the beards and red stars.

That it took this bizarre mélange of Chairman Mao and Jacques Pepin to get Americans to appreciate good food is not all that surprising since, like the Germans and the English, Americans generally feel politics to be more worthy of conversation than pleasure. Radicals appalled at this co-opting of the revolution by today’s balsamic-swilling gourmands can console themselves with the fact that the original Conspiracy stayed true to its roots; in classic leftist rebellion style, the San Francisco Food Conspiracy movement ended with a gun battle between competing factions.

BIBLIOGRAPHY

“Communique of the Polish-Soviet Extraordinary Commission for Investigating the Crimes Committed by the Germans in the Majdanek Extermination Camp in Lublin,” translated by Philip Trauring.

Ackerman, Diane.
A Natural History of the Senses.
New York: Random House, 1990.

Ackerman, Marie.
Das Schlaraffenland in German Literature and Folk
Song.
Chicago: Chicago University Press, 1944.

Acton, Harold.
The Last Medici.
London: Faber & Faber, 1932.

Adair, Nancy (ed.)
Word Is Out: Stories of Some of Our Lives.
San Francisco: New Glide, 1978.

Albert-Puleo, Michael. “The Botany, Pharmacology and Chemistry of Thujone-containing Plants.”
Economic Botany
32 (Jan. 1978).

Aldana-Benitez, Cornelia (ed).
Unmasking a Giant.
Philippines: IBON, 1992. Includes
The Silent Slaughter
by Fides Lim of Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism.

Al-Gazalli.
The Revival of Religious Learnings or Gazzali’s ihya Ulum-id-Din,
translated by Alhaj Maulana Fazlul Karim. Dacca: F. K. Islam Mission Trust, 1971.

Allen, Louis A.
Time Before Morning: Art and Myth of the Australian Aborigines.
New York: Crowell, 1975.

Allen. J. B. (ed).
First Images of America.
Berkeley: University of California Press, 1976.

Allison, Dorothy.
Trash.
Ithaca, New York: Firebrand Books, 1988.

Amnesty International. “USA: Police Use of Pepper Spray Tantamount to Torture.” Nov. 4, 1997.

Andrews, Jean.
Red Hot Peppers.
New York: Macmillan, 1993.

Archetti, Duardo.
Guinea-Pigs: Food, Symbol and Conflict of Knowledge in
Ecuador.
Oxford, England: Oxford Press, 1997.

Archives of Mairie Du Paris, 1970–95.

Aristophanes.
The Eccliszausae,
translated by Benjamin Bickley Rogers. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard Press, 1924.

Ashton, John.
The History of Bread: From Pre-Historic to Modern Times.
London: Religious Tract Society, 1904.

Associated Press. “Last Pig in Haiti Is Dead” (June 21, 1983). Astin, Alan.
Cato the Censor.
Oxford, England: Clarendon Press, 1978.

Avitus, Ecdicius Alcimus.
The Fall of Man (De spiritalis historiae gestis libri
I–III).
Edited by Daniel J. Nodes. Toronto: Center for Medieval Studies, Pontifical Institute of Medieval Studies, 1985.

Baker, Linda. “Message in a Bottle.”
In These Times
(Aug. 21, 1995).

Baker, Sophie.
Caste: At Home in Hindu India.
London: Jonathan Cape, 1990.

Baleesta, Henri.
Absinthe et absintheurs.
Paris: n.p., 1860.

Barkas, Jane.
The Vegetable Passion: A History of the Vegetarian State of
Mind.
London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1975.

Barry, Madame du.
Drame en cinq actes: la Comtesse du Barry.
Paris: n.p., 1878.

Bataille, Christophe.
Absinthe.
Paris: Arlea, 1994.

Baudet, E. H. P.
Paradise on Earth.
New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 1965.

Baum, Frank.
Ozma of Oz.
New York: Reilly & Lee, 1907.

Bauman, James. “Les Galettes des Rois: The Eating of Fine Art.” In
Petit
Propos Culinaire,
vol. 27.

Baumslag, Naomi, and Dia Michels.
Milk, Money and Madness: The
Culture and Politics of Breastfeeding.
Connecticut/London: Bergin & Garvey, 1995.

Beaumelle, L. A.
Memoire pour Madame Maintenon.
London: A. Millar, 1759.

Bell, Rudolph.
Holy Anorexia.
Chicago: Bell, 1985.

Beller, Scott.
Fat and Thin: A Natural History.
New York: Farrar, Straus, and Giraux, 1977.

Berry, Elizabeth.
The Great Bean Book.
Berkeley, Calif.: Ten Speed Press, 1999.

Beverly, Robert.
In the Historical and Present State of Virginia.
n.p., 1705.

Bharati, Agehananda.
The Tantric Tradition.
New York: Doubleday, 1970.

Bingen, Hildegard von.
Physica.
Rochester, Vt.: Hildegard Healing Arts Press, 1998.

Black, Matthew.
The Scrolls and Christian Origins: Studies in the Jewish Background of the New Testament.
Calif.: Scholars Press, 1961. From a Series of Lectures at the Union Theological Seminary in New York City.

Block, W. “The Limited Nutritional Value of Cannibalism.”
American
Anthropologist
(1970).

Bodanis, David.
The Secret House.
New York: Simon & Schuster, 1986.

Bonwick, James.
Irish Druid and Old Irish Religions.
London: Griffith, Farran, 1894.

Bordin, Ruth.
Women and Temperance: The Quest for Power and Liberty,
1873–1900.
Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1981.

Botella, Huguette, and Monique Joannes.
Les feves des rois.
Paris: Editions du Collectionneur, 1994.

Bouton, Cynthia.
The Flour War: Gender, Class and Community in Late
Ancien Régime French Society.
State College: Pennsylvania State University Press, 1993.

Bouyer, Christian.
Folklore du Boulanger.
Paris: Maisonneuxe et Larose, 1984.

Briggs, Asa.
William Cobbett.
Oxford, London: Oxford Press, 1967.

Brill, E. J.
Le Repas ritual dans le religion Sud-Arabe.
Leiden/Amsterdam: Simbolaie Biblicae ot Mesopotamicae, 1973.

Brillat-Savarin.
Physiologie du gout (Gastronomy).
London: Chatto & Windus, 1877.

Briquel, Dominique.
Chrétiens and haruspices: la religion etrusque dernier
rempart du paganisme romain.
Paris: Presses de L’Ecole Normale Supérieure, 1997.

Brookes, John.
Gardens of Paradise: The History and Design of the Great
Islamic Gardens.
New York: New Amsterdam Press, 1987.

Brothwell, D. R. “Cannibalism in Early Britain.”
Antiquity Magazine,
35:304–7.

Browning, Christopher.
Ordinary Men: Reserve Battalion 101 and the Final Solution in Poland.
New York: HarperCollins, 1992.

Browning, Frank.
Apples.
New York: North Point Press, 1998.

Environmental News Network.
Bushmeat: Logging’s Deadly Second Harvest
(April 23, 1999).

Bynum, Caroline Walker.
Holy Feast and Holy Fast.
Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1987.

Camporesi, Piero.
Anatomy of the Senses: Natural Symbols in Medieval
and Early Modern Italy.
Cambridge, England: Cambridge Press, 1994.

———.
Exotic Brew.
Cambridge, England: Polity Press, 1990.

———.
The Magic Harvest.
Cambridge, England: Polity Press, 1993.

Capua, Raymond.
The Life of St. Catherine of Siena.
Translated by George Lamb. New York: Kennedy and Sons, 1934 (Originally published mid-1400s).

Carroll, Jon. “Hold the Bird by Its Head.”
San Francisco Chronicle
(Jan. 2, 1988).

Cassion, Max. “Une Matiere a Philolgie e Fasgiole.”
Carnita du patrimoine ethnologique, no. 22.
Paris: n.p., 1983.

Charan, Bimala.
Heaven and Hell in Buddhist Perspective.
Delhi: Bhartya Publishing House, 1973.

Chavasse, Pye Henry.
Advice to Mothers on the Management of Their Offspring.
London: Royal College of Surgeons, 1844.

Cherici, Peter.
Celtic Sexuality.
London: Duckworth, 1994.

Chesterston, Gilbert.
William Cobbett.
London: Hodder and Stroughton, 1925.

Chetley, Andy.
The Baby Killer Scandal: A War on Want Investigation into
the Promotion and Sale of Powdered Milk in the Third World.
London: War on Want, 1979.

Chute, C.
Apples, Apples, Apples.
New York: Doubleday, 1971.

Climent, Don. Head of International Rescue Committee. Personal interview.

Cobbett, William.
William Cobbett’s Rural Rides.
London: A. Cobbett, 1853.

———.
Cobbett’s Weekly Political Register,
a.k.a.
Two-Penny Trash.
Periodical years 1802–12 and 1825–34.

———.
Cottage Economy,
18th edition. London: Charles Griffin, 1867.

Codere, Helen.
Fighting with Property: A Study of Kwakiutl Potlaches and
Warfare, 1792–1930.
New York: J. J. Augustin Publisher, 1950.

Coe, Sophie. “Iguana, Chocolates, Muskrats, and a Glimpse at Cochineal.”
Petit Props Culinaire. 1990,
vol. 65.

———.
America’s First Cuisines.
Austin: University of Texas Press, 1994.

———.
True Story of Chocolate.
New York: Thames & Hudson, 1996. Cohn, Norman.
Europe’s Inner Demons.
London: Chatto Heinemann for Sussex University, 1993.

Condamine, M. “Le Pain Mollet: Anecdote Historique” (Tiree du Traite de Police du Commissaire la Maree).
Almanach des muses.
Paris: Chez Delain, n.d.

Condorcet, Marie Jean Antoine Nicolas (Marquis of Condorcet).
The
Life of M. Turgot, Comptroller General of the Finances of France in the
Years 1774–76.
London: J. Johnson, 1787.

Condren, Mary.
The Serpent and the Goddess.
San Francisco: Harper & Row, 1989.

Conrad III, Barnaby.
Absinthe: History in a Bottle.
San Francisco: Chronicle Books, 1988.

Conrad, Jack Randolph.
The Horn and the Sword: The History of the Bull
as Symbol of Power and Fertility.
New York: Dutton, 1957.

Cooper, Joe.
With or Without Beans: Being a Compendium to Perpetuate the
Internationally Famous Bowl of Chili Which Occupies Such an Important
Place in Modern Civilization.
Dallas, Tex.: W. S. Henson, 1952.

Counihan, Carole M.
The Anthropology of Food and Body: Gender, Meaning and Power.
New York: Routledge, 1999.

Cunnison, Ian. “Giraffe Hunting Among the Humr Tribe.”
Sudan Notes
and Records: Incorporating Proceedings from the Philosophical Society of
the Sudan,
vol. 39 (1958).

Curiae, Amicus.
Food for the Million: Maize Against the Potato.
London: n.p., 1847.

Cushing, Frank Hamilton. “Zuni Breadstuff.”
Indian Notes and Monographs,
vol. 8. New York: New York Museum of the American Indian Foundation, 1920.

———.
Zuni Folk Tales.
New York: A. A. Knopf, 1931.

D’Aussy, Legrand.
Histoire de la vie francois.
Paris: N.p., n.d.

Darby, William, et al.
Food: The Gift of Osiris.
San Francisco: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1977.

Darnton, Robert.
The Forbidden Best-Sellers of Pre-Revolutionary France.
New York: W. W. Norton, 1995.

Darrah, Byhelen, “The Basils in Folklore and Biological Science.”
Herbarist,
38 (1972).

David, Elizabeth. “Savour of Ice and of Roses.” Oxford:
Petit Propos
Culinaire,
vol. 8.

Davidson, Alan (ed).
The Oxford Companion to Food.
Oxford, England: Oxford University Press, 1999.

Delamare.
Traite de la Police.
Paris: N.p., 1710 (and other editions).

Delay, J.
Diethylamide de l’acide d-lysergique et troubles psychiques de
l’ergotisme.
Zurich: C. R. Social Biologie, 1951.

Der Meer, L. Bouke.
The Bronze Liver of Piacenza: Analysis of a Polytheistic
Structure.
Amsterdam: J. C. Gieben, 1987.

Deslyons, Jean.
Discovrs ecclesiastiques contre le paganisme des roys de la
feve.
Paris: Sorbonne, 1664.

Detienne, Marcel.
The Gardens of Adonis: Spices in Greek Mythology.
Hassocks, England: Harvester Press, 1977.

DeWitt, David, and Nancy Gerlach.
The Habanero Book.
Berkeley: Ten Speed Press, 1995.

Diaz del Castillo, B.
The Discovery and Conquest of Mexico 1517–1521.
London: Routledge, 1939.

Diederich, Bernard. “Swine Fever Ironies: The Slaughter of the Haitian Black Pig.”
Caribbean Review,
C14, (Winter, 1985).

Donkin, R. A.
Manna: An Historical Geography.
Netherlands: Dr. W. Junk, 1980.

Douglas, Mary.
Purity and Danger: An Analysis of Concepts of Pollution and
Taboo.
New York: Frederick A. Praeger, 1966.

Drew, Jesse. “Call Any Vegetable: The Politics of Food in San Francisco.”
San Francisco: History, Politics, and Culture.
Edited by James Brook.

Du Bois, Cora. “Attitudes Toward Food and Hunger in Alor.”
Language, Culture and Personality: Essays in Memory of Edward Sapir.
Menasaha, Wisc.: Sapir Memorial Publication Fund, 1941.

Dundes, Alan (ed).
The Blood Libel Legend: A Casebook in Anti-Semitic
Folklore.
Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1991.

Duran, Diego.
Historia de las Indies de Nueva Espana.
Norman: University of Oklahoma, 1971.

Eidlitz, Rabbi E. Is It Kosher? An Encyclopedia of Kosher Foods, Facts and
Fallacies.
Jerusalem: Feldheim Publishing, 1992.

Elias, Norbert.
The Civilizing Process: State Formation and Civilization.
Oxford, England: Oxford Press, 1939.

Epstein, Barbara Leslie.
The Politics of Domesticity: Women, Evangelism
and Temperance in Nineteenth-Century America.
Middletown, Conn.: Wesleyan University Press, 1981.

Etheridge, Elizabeth.
The Butterfly Caste.
Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Publications, 1978.

Evans-Pritchard, E. “Azande Historical Texts.”
Sudan Notes and Record,
vol 37 (1956).

F. D. Bennet.
Narrative of a Whaling Voyage Around the Globe.
London: n.p., 1840.

Other books

Too Darn Hot by Pamela Burford
Kiss of Broken Glass by Madeleine Kuderick
The Winston Affair by Howard Fast
Quillblade by Ben Chandler
Hard Ride by Trixie Pierce
Horse Play by Bonnie Bryant
The Annihilators by Donald Hamilton
Sovereign by Simon Brown
My Texas Sweetheart (book one) by Acheson, Pauliena