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Historic (rec.food.historic) Discussing and discovering how food was made and prepared way back when--From ancient times down until (& possibly including or even going slightly beyond) the times when industrial revolution began to change our lives. |
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![]() One of those annoying bits of information that sticks in your mind forever asking for an explanation once you've seen it. Some time ago I saw an abstract of an article (in a journal I don't have access to, maybe _Petit Propos Culinaires_) about the promotion of one-pot cookery under the Third Reich. Somebody put me out of my misery and explain why on earth one-pot cookery was a consequence of fascist ideology? ========> Email to "j-c" at this site; email to "bogus" will bounce <======== Jack Campin: 11 Third Street, Newtongrange, Midlothian EH22 4PU; 0131 6604760 <http://www.purr.demon.co.uk/purrhome.html> food intolerance data & recipes, Mac logic fonts, Scots traditional music files and CD-ROMs of Scottish music. |
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![]() "bogus address" > wrote > One of those annoying bits of information that sticks in your mind > forever asking for an explanation once you've seen it. Some time > ago I saw an abstract of an article (in a journal I don't have access > to, maybe _Petit Propos Culinaires_) about the promotion of one-pot > cookery under the Third Reich. > Somebody put me out of my misery and explain why on earth one-pot > cookery was a consequence of fascist ideology? Something along the lines of "efficiency at the expense of culture" perhaps? By curious coincidence I picked up my copy of Elizabeth Davis's "Italian Food" today as I was unpacking my library recently arrived from Istanbul today and it fell open to the introduction of her chapter on "pasta asciutta". Here is the beginning of it. The important paragraph is the fourth one: <quote> Pasta Asciutta On the 15th of November 1930, at a banquet at the restaurant Penna d'Oca in Milan, the famous Italian futurist poet Marinetti launched his much publicized campaign against all established forms of cooking and, in particular, against pastasciutta. "Futurist cooking," said Marinetti, "will be liberated from the ancient obsession of weight and volume, and one of its principal aims will be the abolition of pastasciutta. Pastasciutta, however grateful to the palate, is an obsolete food; it is heavy, brutalizing, and gross; its nutritive qualities are deceptive; it induces scepticism, sloth, and pessimism." The day after this diatribe was delivered the Italian press broke into an uproar; all classes participated in the dispute which ensued. Every time pastasciutta was served either in a restaurant or a private house interminable arguments arose. One of Marinetti's supporters declared that "our pastasciutta, like our rhetoric, suffices merely to fill the mouth." Doctors, asked their opinions, were characteristically cautions: "Habitual and exaggerated consumption of pastasciutta is definitely fattening." "Heavy consumers of pastasciutta have slow and placid characters; meat eaters are quick and aggressive." "A question of taste and the cost of living. In any case, diet should be varied, and should never consist exclusively of one single element." The Duke of Bovino, Mayor of Naples, plunged into the fight with happy abandon. "The angels in Paradise" he affirmed to a reporter, "Eat nothing but vermicelli al pomodoro." To which Marinetti replied that this confirmed his suspicions with regard to the monotony of Paradise and of the life led by the angels. Marinetti and his friends proceeded to divert themselves and outrage the public with the invention and publication of preposterous new dishes. Most of these were founded on the shock principle of combining unsuitable and exotic ingredients: mortadella with nougat; pineapple with sardines; cooked salame immersed in a bath of hot black coffee flavoured with eau-de-Cologne; an aphrodisiac drink composed of pineapple juice, eggs, cocoa, caviar, almond paste, red pepper, nutmeg, cloves, and Strega. Meals were to be eaten to the accompaniment of perfumes (warmed, so that the bald-headed should not suffer from the cold), to be spread over the diner, who, fork in the right hand, would stroke meanwhile with the left some suitable substance-velvet, silk, or emery paper. Marinetti's bombshell contained a good deal of common sense; diet and methods of cookery must necessarily evolve at the same time as other habits and customs. But behind this amiable fooling lurked a sinister note: the fascist obsession with nationalism and patriotism, the war to come. "Spaghetti is no food for fighters." In the "conflict to come the victory will be to the swift." "Pastasciutta is anti-virile. A weight and encumbered stomach cannot be favourable to physical enthusiasm towards women." The costly import of foreign flour for pastasciutta should be stopped, to boost the national cultivation of rice. The snobbery of the Italian aristocracy and haute bourgeoisie, who had lost their heads over American customs, cocktail parties, foreign films, German music, and French food, was damned by Marinetti as esterofil (pro-foreign) and anti-Italian. In future a bar should be known as a quisibeve (here-one-drinks), a sandwich as a traidue (between-two), a cocktail as a polibibita (multi-drink), the maître-d'hôtel would be addressed as guidopalato (palate-guide) an aphrodisiac drink was to be called a guerra in letto (war-in-the-bed), a sleeping draught a pace in letto (peace-in-the-bed). Marinetti's tongue was by no means wholly in his cheek. A message from Mussolini, to be published in La Cucina Futurista (F. Marinetti, 1932), was dedicated "to my dear old friend of the first fascist battles, to the intrepid soldier whose indomitable passion for his country has been consecrated in blood." (Elizabeth David, Italian Food, 1976.) </quote> |
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bogus address wrote:
> One of those annoying bits of information that sticks in your mind > forever asking for an explanation once you've seen it. Some time > ago I saw an abstract of an article (in a journal I don't have access > to, maybe _Petit Propos Culinaires_) about the promotion of one-pot > cookery under the Third Reich. > > Somebody put me out of my misery and explain why on earth one-pot > cookery was a consequence of fascist ideology? > > ========> Email to "j-c" at this site; email to "bogus" will bounce <======== > Jack Campin: 11 Third Street, Newtongrange, Midlothian EH22 4PU; 0131 6604760 > <http://www.purr.demon.co.uk/purrhome.html> food intolerance data & recipes, > Mac logic fonts, Scots traditional music files and CD-ROMs of Scottish music. > Shortage of fuel for cooking, perhapse? -- Kate XXXXXX Lady Catherine, Wardrobe Mistress of the Chocolate Buttons http://www.diceyhome.free-online.co.uk Click on Kate's Pages and explore! |
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I think it was all part of the 'Authentic primitive German heritage'
thing - the 'original' 'pure' Aryan' Germans only had primitive cooking aparatus - in this case symolised by a single pot - and were therefor assumed to have cooked everthing in their one pot over the family fire. It was probably also supposed to foster some suitably National Socialist 'Happy Family' image, with mother barefoot & pregnant in the kitchen cooking the main family meal all day while father went out and laboured. It was probably also more than a coincidence that Germany's economy was comprehensively stuffed in the 20's & 30's, and cooking a one pot meal was economical of fuel, cooking gear & could use 'cheaper' ingredients which were stewed for a long time to make them more palatable. regards Bruce On 27 May 2004 16:35:35 GMT, (bogus address) wrote: > >One of those annoying bits of information that sticks in your mind >forever asking for an explanation once you've seen it. Some time >ago I saw an abstract of an article (in a journal I don't have access >to, maybe _Petit Propos Culinaires_) about the promotion of one-pot >cookery under the Third Reich. > >Somebody put me out of my misery and explain why on earth one-pot >cookery was a consequence of fascist ideology? > |
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