The Roses of Heliogabalus, Leo Reiffenstein, 1891
Laura from Silk Road Gourmet has made garum (she discusses garum brilliantly HERE and the process of making it HERE) and and aged it for nearly a year before sending it out to a lucky few who have been asked to make something with it. The lucky few includes some rather remarkable
food historians like Ken Albala, Charles Perry (he's already written his contribution –– Pullus Frontonianus) and Sally Grainger, I am so
honored to be included in this illustrious group –– WOW.
Now I get to come closer to the flavor of ancient Rome than I
ever thought possible because I have real garum to season my dishes. For the record, garum was a condiment used in
Greek, Roman, and Byzantine cuisine. It
was a kind of fermented fish sauce that employed the digestive juices of the innards
of the fish to make a refined product.
It’s those juices which makes it different from the fish sauce we find
in Asian cuisine today. Mixed with wine
(oenogarum) or water (hydrogarum) it was used on everything. It was even considered a cure for ailments
and was used as an ingredient in some cosmetics. The finished product contained
amino acids, minerals and B vitamins as well as monosodium glutamate –– it added an umami flavor to boot. Its factories were the original bad
industrial neighbors –– no one wanted to live downwind of a garum factory. Residue of a garum container found in Pompei
revealed that the garum made there was made from Bogues, a summer-swarming fish
of the family of sea breams like porgies in the US. I believe each region used
their local fish to make their own garum and that styles varied with regions and
their picean populations.
After making murri (that I wrote about HERE), I know what an ancient condiment can do for the taste of a dish… it is revelatory.
But what to make to honor the gift of this
fabled ancient fish sauce/seasoning? I decided
to take a detour from the pages of Apicius and go Imperial to get me in the
mood for cooking with such a treat –– just a little off the well-known Roman
path –– taking a journey inspired by a painting.
When you imagine cuisine during the last gasps of the Roman Empire,
most people think of mad Emperors and their insane parties before they think of
the recipes and elegant entertaining of the legendary gourmand, Apicius. Of course it is only through those writings
that we have a clearer idea of what was probably
eaten at those wild orgies that only unlimited power (so no consequences for
obscene indulgence), bottomless reasources and centuries of inbreeding could
invent. Most people know about the
delusional Nero (37-68) of course and
equally delusional and cruel Caligula (12-41)
(thanks to the glorious I Claudius PBS show in the 1970s) but not many know
about a later emperor, Heliogabalus (also
known as Elagabalus)
(203-22) and that is too bad. He was
quite a piece of work.
The Roses of Heliogabalus, Lawrence Alma-Tadema, 1888
I first discovered him through the painting, The Roses of
Heliogabalus, by Alma-Tadema many years ago and thought the work was
charming –– a rose petal dinner ––
glorious excess, right?
Wrong. A year ago, I came across the painting again but this time
looked up Heliogabalus/Elagabalus (thank you, Wikipedia). Boy, was I wrong. The painting depicts Emperor Heliogabalus suffocating his guests to
death in rose petals for fun… yes, for fun.
Not so charming after all, but quite a legend. Did it happen?
Elagabalus on a wall painting at Castle Forchtenstein, 17th
c
The more I read history and live through it, the more I know
that there is no way to say “accurate history”.
Some facts are accurate (like someone died on such and such a date), but
commentary on history’s players is insanely subjective even when done in the
moment (just think Fox News vs The New York Times). Done much later, it can be pure fiction and
events become grander or more horrific like the telling of any ancient ‘fish
story’ that goes from catching a 2 pound salmon to a death match with a 200
pound leviathon –– and that’s just within one or two generations of a story over
a lifetime or two, not centuries!
Members of the Decadent Movement in the late 19th century ( I love the Decadent Movement, btw, the art and the
writing) took an unearthly shine to Heliogabulus
and wrote books, plays and operas as well as painting a good deal of/about him
and his outré lifestyle. Lara Marks in
Beauty and the Beast:
Christina Rossetti, Walter Pater, R.L. Stevenson and their contemporaries, writes that “Many decadent aurthors have
paid attention to the child emperor Heliogabalus:
Lorrain, Lombard, Huysmans, George, Wilde (who devotes a few sentences to him
in Dorian Gray), Gautier, Flaubert, D’Annunzio, and Gourmont, amongst
others. According to several historians
from antiquity, the aesthete and hedonist Heliogabalus
was a sadist, a masochist, a practitioner of tranvestism, and someone who was
continually in search of new pleasures, strange as they perhaps might appear to
us.”
Simeon Solomon, Heliogabalus, 1866
He did wear “the garb of a Syrian priest, a long
sleeved tunic down to his feet that was easily confused with female dress: and
he made up his face and danced around the altar to the sound of cymbals and
drums.” said Judith Weingarten. All this exoticism was too much for the Romans
who got rid of him fairly quickly. Still,
the most virulent commentaries on his escapades were written in the 4th
century work, Historia Augusta, 200 years after his death.
A contemporary of
Heliogabalus, Cassius Dio, did
mention a comment by an enemy of the emperor. He said Macrinus wrote to the senate that Heliogabalus was a boy and that he was mad –– but this guy was
hardly going to be fair and balanced about someone he wanted to take out. Cassius
Dio also reported that Heliogabalus
married and divorced 5 women including a Vestal Virgin (a monstrous deed that
horrified Rome) but that his most lasting relationship was with a chariot
driver named Hierocles whom he
referred to as his husband.
The later histories go into the insane parties, reports
that Heliogabalus was a transgendered
soul who wanted female parts attached to him, that he prostituted himself not only in
brothels but in the Imperial palace itself. Kurt Vonnegut tells a favorite story of Heliogabalus that involves a metal bull
at the Emperor’s dinners into which a person was placed and locked inside. Then a fire was lit beneath it so that the
screams that issued from the open mouth of the bull were the sound track to the
dinner –– one would imagine invitations to these events were looked upon with
dread. Oh yes, it is said he invented the whoopee-cushion (put the screams
and raspberries together in your head for the worst party-mix tape ever). However, this story was written centuries
after his death and it is probable that it was utterly apocryphal.
It is true that Damnatio memoria (a state-issued erasure from history)
was decreed after he was killed and his body tossed unceremoniously in the
river, but for what exactly we will never know for sure. In his case the fiction that arose after the
censure was probably wilder than the truth. At the very least his foreign ways
and foreign gods won him no friends (he installed a woman in the Senate –– an
innovation that went away the moment he did).
Still, Imperial parties must have been something. Even before Heliogabalus and his rose parties, Petronius in 60AD talked about oil rubdowns
before dinner, olives served from bags on a life-size bronze donkey, dormice
dipped in honey and rolled in poppyseeds. Everyone knows about dining on hummingbird
tongues and other wildly exotic creatures that were ingested at these Imperial
feasts but the fact is that most of the time Emperors probably ate many of the same
things that appear in Apician cookbooks (that I wrote about HERE). And why not? The food is so remarkably good, sophisticated
and modern in so many ways. It would
shine at any banquet with or without the golden dishes, bushels of rose-petals
and silk cushions (whoopee or otherwise).
The green sauces for the chicken are not unlike a more
complex pesto that would become ubiquitous in Italian cuisine a milennium or so
later. The Romans loved sauces and I loved the many recipes for the sauces so
much, I just couldn’t stop at one so made 2, both are fabulous. Although I could only guess at the
proportions, one turned out slightly sweet and the other slightly tangy. They are delicious with salmon.
The asparagus ‘quiche’ is brilliantly flavored and accessorized
with meat ( I did take the liberty of substituting grouse meat for ‘figpeckers’
but duck breast would work well as would chicken tenders if you wanted a milder
flavor) and reminded me of the subtle beauty of the Japanese custard dish,
chawan mushi (that I wrote about HERE .
Just a note for ingredients.
As you may have surmised, herbs like lovage and rue are not on
supermarket shelves. I sent for mine
(and they arrived in 4 days) from a wonderful resource I found last year when I
needed hyssop and pennyroyal for medieval recipes. The Grower’s Exchange in Virginia has a
remarkable selection of unusual herbs and beautiful plants. The arrive in perfect condition and after 3
deliveries I can say that with confidence.
Hyssop is one of my favorite discoveries and tastes like many sweet
herbs all in one plant, pennyroyal is an incredibly sweet mint that is
wonderful and lovage is a good-sized perennial that looks like giant parsley
and tastes like celery… you only need a bit to flavor a dish. Rue is interesting,
bitter and bad for you in large quantities (like pennyroyal). It has been used for thousands of years in
cooking and as a medicine for everything from insect repellant to eye wash.
The recipes (written in capitals) that follow are taken
verbatim from Apicius. After that are my
versions.
[222]
ANOTHER [sauce]
ALITER
PEPPER, LOVAGE, PARSLEY, CELERY SEED, RUE, PINE
NUTS, DATES, HONEY, VINEGAR, BROTH, MUSTARD AND A LITTLE OIL.
Sauce
1 Aliter
1 date, seeded
3 T broth
½ t pepper
2 t chopped lovage
2 t chopped rue
2 T toasted pine nuts
½ t powdered mustard
2 t honey
1 T garum or fish sauce
½ t celery seed
¼ c chopped parsley
3 T vinegar
1 to 2 T oil to taste
Warm the broth and soak the date in it till softened.
Puree in a blender with the stock. Add
the herbs and nuts and spices, puree. Add the vinegar and oil and blend.
225]
ANOTHER SAUCE FOR FOWL
ALITER IUS IN AVIBUS
PEPPER, LOVAGE, PARSLEY, DRY MINT, FENNEL
BLOSSOMS [1] MOISTENED WITH WINE; ADD ROASTED NUTS FROM PONTUS [2] OR ALMONDS,
A LITTLE HONEY, WINE, VINEGAR, AND BROTH TO TASTE. PUT OIL IN A POT, AND HEAT
AND STIR THE SAUCE, ADDING GREEN CELERY SEED, CAT-MINT; CARVE THE FOWL AND
COVER WITH THE SAUCE.
Sauce 2, Aliter Ius in
Avibus
1 t pepper
2 t lovage
¼ c parsley
2 t mint
½ t fennel pollen
2 T wine
1 T garum or fish sauce
¼ c roasted hazelnuts
1 t honey
2 T vinegar
2 T broth
2 T oil
½ t celery seed
1 t catmint or catnip or pennyroyal, chopped
Put first 8 ingredients into a blender and blend ingredients including the
hazelnuts, then toss in the rest and grind.
Perfect Simple Roast Chicken
1-4 pound chicken, trussed
1 T garum or fish sauce
1 t pepper
1 -2 t salt (Thomas Keller recommends liberal salting for a crisp skin… it
works)
Preheat oven to 450º
Rinse the chicken and pat dry. Leave
on a rack in the fridge for 1 hour, uncovered.
Remove then rub the chicken with garum and sprinkle with salt and
pepper.
Place on the rack in a pan and fill pan ½” full with stock or water (use
the drippings for a lovely gravy on the side)
Cook for 1 hour to 1 hour 15 minutes.
Allow to rest 15 minutes before carving for crisp skinned but very juicy chicken.
132] ANOTHER COLD ASPARAGUS
[and Figpecker] DISH
ALITER PATINA DE ASPARAGIS FRIGIDA
COLD ASPARAGUS PIE IS MADE IN THIS MANNER [1]
TAKE WELL CLEANED [cooked] ASPARAGUS, CRUSH IT IN THE MORTAR, DILUTE WITH WATER
AND PRESENTLY STRAIN IT THROUGH THE COLANDER. NOW TRIM, PREPARE [i.e. cook or
roast] FIGPECKERS [2] [and hold them in readiness]. 3 [3] SCRUPLES OF PEPPER
ARE CRUSHED IN THE MORTAR, ADD BROTH, A GLASS OF WINE, PUT THIS IN A SAUCEPAN
WITH 3 OUNCES OF OIL, HEAT THOROUGHLY. MEANWHILE OIL YOUR PIE MOULD, AND WITH 6
EGGS, FLAVORED WITH ŒNOGARUM, AND THE ASPARAGUS PREPARATION AS DESCRIBED ABOVE;
THICKEN THE MIXTURE ON THE HOT ASHES. THEREUPON ARRANGE THE FIGPECKERS IN THE
MOULD, COVER THEM WITH THIS PURÉE, BAKE THE DISH. [When cold, unmould it]
SPRINKLE WITH PEPPER AND SERVE.
Asparagus Custard with
Grouse Breast
8 Asparagus cut into stalks and tips
2 T stock
2 T wine
2 T oil + 2 t oil
1 t pepper
4 eggs
1 T garum
breasts from 1 grouse (you can get Scottish Grouse from D'Artagnan), or a D'Artagnan duck breast or even
chicken breast
S&P
Steam the asparagus tips for 5 minutes and the stalks
for 8. Chop the stalks and puree with 2
T stock.
Warm the oven to 375º
In an ovenproof skillet, warm the pepper, oil, wine
and stock for a few minutes.
Whisk 4 eggs with the asparagus puree and the garum
Pour into the skillet and heat on the stovetop over
medium heat for a few minutes until the eggs are slightly set on the bottom. Put in the oven for 10 minutes.
Salt and pepper the breasts and sauté in 2 t oil for a few
moments on each side and remove. Let rest for a few moments. Slice
into 3 or 4 slices each and reserve.
After the first 10 minutes,
remove the skillet from the oven and lay the reserved asparagus tips and meat
into the eggs which should be nearly set.
Put back in the over for 5 more minutes or until set. Serve hot or cold.
Thanks again to my friend Linda at Statewide Marble in Jersey City for the gorgeous piece of stone.
Thanks again to my friend Linda at Statewide Marble in Jersey City for the gorgeous piece of stone.
19 comments:
As always an interesting post. I love the idea of the Asparagus Custard with Grouse Breast, lots of asparagus coming up in the garden at the moment so guess what I will be trying quite soon. Keep well Diane
Another beautifully researched and exquisite dish. I'm so impressed with your work.
This is so decadent. You have access to such amazing ingredients. I wish I lived closer.
Hi lostpastremembered I just love your blog. Everytime I come here I learn something new. I just love how you mix food with history. That makes both much more interesting.
Any man (even in those times) who danced around to cymbals and drums, in female garb wearing makeup, divorcing 5 women (assuming this was in 4 years?!), smothering people in rose petals AND roasting guests in an iron bull just might be a tad suspect in the sanity department. If indeed his 4 years were unproductive politically, it appears he was veryn busy in the decadance arena. What a charmer. (Whether fact or fiction.)
I can always count on a fantastic read when I visit you, Deana! Don't you love how research leads you from one thing to another?
Love your link to The Growers Exchange. They sound enormously helpful, especially to someone who requires unusual herbs in their cooking.
Loved reading the ingredients in the sauces and the asparagus custard looks divine. The grouse substitution is perfect (agree duck would be fabulous), in that I don't think I've seen any figpecker on D'Artagnan's mail order form. Bet they would be sweet from eating figs, however. Are they smaller than humingbirds I wonder?
I don't quite believe that upon a midday in autumnal E Australia I have been privileged to have been part of this learning curve. The knowledge will be 'devoured'! Thank you!!
Amazing!
Quite right about how slippery history can be, ancient history especially. But boy, it makes for quite a story!
Funnily I was discussing what the Romans had for dinner recently with someone so thanks for your interesting and insightful post. I discovered the book and series of I Claudius last year and find it wonderful, though of course, Graves wanted to entertain us. The colours and presentation of your dishes are simply wonderful and I'd never have considered asparagus custard.
Your post is, as always, an interesting read.
However, as an early student of Latin (high school - two years), and later, a professor of Psychology and of Higher Education, one should be very careful of believing the modern-day spin on the leaders of the ancient world.
Perhaps your husband, a professor of history, has already addressed that issue.
As a Septuagenarian, I have learned to sit back, enjoy the views of the younger generation(s), and hope that they do not become intellectually lost in their perceived fantasies of the past.
Again, another WOW post that blows my mind away, my dear. To research and actually UNDERSTAND what our ancient ancestors ate and HOW they prepared it takes painstaking hours of fine study and testing! How you do what you do is impressive to me my dear. And your thoughts of educating the young are deep and much appreciated. YES.....LET THEM FIND THEMSELVES and not mirror you..we the teachers are the key holders that unlock the portals to the world to them. One of the parts of the job however, is taking the criticism along with the praise and that is what I encountered. I have met up with this before, but I am tired and ready to call it quits. Onward to other adventures, but I do know I made a difference is several childrens' lives. BRAVO TO YOU MY DEAR FOR ANOTHER CHEF-D'OEUVRE! Anita
Deana your lovely photos are only matched by your interesting words!
Garum factories and rose petal suffocation - what fun times they had back then ;) Actually, I love reading about ancient Roman times and wish they hadn't cancelled the HBO series Rome!
What a delicious fowl you made and I am so impressed that you actually used garum in the sauce! I must remember the trick about liberal salting to get the crispy skin.
Your commenters are almost as interesting as your research! My little guys love reading about Rome, and the youngest just did a research paper about the Coliseum. It's amazing how little various sources agree with each other, even on something solid like that. Chicken sounds like a good alternative to duck or grouse, although I'd wonder if the skin would dry too much by being salted.
Your point about history is right on. As science fiction writer William Gibson says, it is just another form of speculative history. He writes that since time moves in one direction and memory in another, we construct artifacts to counter the natural flow of forgetting. History is obviously a construct, subject to revision....
Wow - umami from the tables of antiquity, seasoned with a little dash of Roman excess! I sometimes wonder what an "ordinary" meal looks like at your house. Do you ever eat peanut butter? (Smile)
What an interesting blog. You just won me over. Great research and recipes.
For lovage, try an Eastern European grocery. It's also *very* easy to grow yourself (but it is a large plant, so don't try to grow it in a pot).
As for rue, be careful, some people react very unpleasantly to it.
Awesome things here. I’m very happy to look your article.
Thank you so much and I’m taking a look ahead to touch you.
Will you please drop me a e-mail?
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