I
celebrated my first blog-versary at the end of 2010 with a 2-part recreation of
a dinner that was given for Mark Twain at the Player’s Club in NYC in 1906 (you
can see it HERE and HERE ).
It
seemed the right thing to do since it was the Player’s Club’s menus that
started me writing the blog in the first place and it coincided with the
release of the Autobiography of Mark Twain. All
the stars aligned. Discovering the crumpled folder filled with 100-odd years of
menus that had been languishing in a file cabinet for decades was a huge thrill
for me –– like buried treasure. I just had
to do something with them –– that’s how Lost Past Remembered was born.
It’s
no secret that I love old menus. Beyond
the fact that many of them are works of art with strikingly beautiful drawings
and graphics, they give a solid connection to the cuisine of the times and in
some cases, have the added benefit of having an attachment to history and its
major players as well. All this from what were supposed to be ephemeral trifles
–– only meant to exist for a brief moment in time. Lucky for us, some were saved.
That
brings me to one of my favorite blogs that
belongs to collector and culinary historian Henry Voight, The American Menu . The brilliant former-NYTimes critic William
Grimes was generous enough to introduce me to Henry and for that I am eternally
grateful. Henry has one of the great menu
collections that rivals the Buttolph at the NYPLibrary in its quality and scope. In
the blog, he tantalizes as he lets us see a menu or 2 and then fills out the history
with an infectious exuberance for his subject (backed up by laudable
scholarship). I can’t wait for each new
release –– they are always such a treat.
When
it comes to the art of menus, many of my favorites come from New York City’s
Lotos Club –– they had some of the best in the period around the turn of the 20th
century. Although
some are available online, I got a masterpiece from Henry’s collection when I
asked him about them (he has 15 Lotos Club menus in his collection ranging from
1876 to 1983).
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Lotus Club Bookplate from the Brooklyn Historical Society
Visiting
the Lotos Club when I first came to the city provided me with an early
introduction into NYC’s old art club society (The Players, The Salmagundi, The
National Arts Club) that I came to love and admire –– they are “history on the
hoof”. I still remember the custom
Egyptian cigarettes that they had there in a remarkably elegant lidded box with
the Lotos Club symbol engraved on the lid (bet those are long gone in this
non-smoking city).
The
name for the club came from an Alfred Lord Tennyson poem called “The Lotos
Eaters” as does the club motto: “In the afternoon they came unto a land In
which it seemed always afternoon”. Mark
Twain was one of its founding members, calling it the “Ace of Clubs” and
remained fond of it, saying: “There's the Lotos - the first New York club I was
ever a member of - my earliest love in that line.”
The
Lotos Club was founded by a group of prominent artists, writers, scholars and
journalists in 1870. In its 140 years it
has moved continually uptown from its first digs on Irving Place to 149 5th
Avenue, then to 556 Fifth Avenue in 1892 and 110 w 57th in
1909.
In
1947 it moved to its current location at 5 E 66th Street.
Its
objectives are written in its constitution:
“The
objectives of this institution shall be to promote and develop literature, art,
sculpture, music, architecture, journalism, drama, science, education and the
learned professions, and to that end to encourage authors, artists, sculptors,
architects, journalists, educators, scientists and members of the musical,
dramatic, and learned professions in their work, and for these purposes to
provide a place of assembly for them and other persons interested in and
sympathetic to them, and their objectives, effort and work.”
As a
result of its commitment to promoting the arts, it has seen many art exhibits
over its long history, and at one point maintained
a very large collection of art of its members (sadly much has been dispersed
but some fine works remain).
Perhaps
the menus are so remarkable because of the large representation of the art
community in its membership.
Many
of the names on these historical menus –– so famous then ––are unknown or
barely known today. Some of musicians, like Paderewski and writers like Mark Twain are still well known, but other names need a Google
visit to find who they were. Some of the names names are vaguely familiar –– you just needed a nudge to remember them .
Ignacy
Jan Paderewski –– pianist, composer, Politician and 2nd Prime
Minister of Poland, Library of Congress
Whitelaw
Reid, Editor of the New York Tribune and Ambassador to France and England, Library of Congress
The
Egyptian themed menu for publisher and Ambassador to France, Whitelaw Reid ––
is a great favorite of mine. I was
unfamiliar, however, with Whitelaw Reid. It turns out he was a very important figure
in politics in the 19th century and at the time of the dinner –– running for Vice President with Benjamin Harrison (they lost to Grover
Cleveland). One wonders how well our famous men will fare in 100 years… will
anyone know who Rupert Murdoch was in 2100, or Mark Zuckerberg? Do you remember
who invented the gasoline-powered automobile (Karl Benz snagged the patent in
1886)?
Perhaps
then-ambassador Reid had a liking for the style (Egyptian style had been in
fashion on and off since the time of Napoleon) but his diplomatic posts were to
France and England, not Egypt –– no matter, the wonderful colors and graphics on
the menu are arresting. The food was not
Egyptian, but rather classic food of New York at the end of the 19th
century.
I can
imagine dinners in the 5th Avenue iteration of the club –– wine-red, tasseled, gilded, and dripping with crystal –– very Victorian. The dishes on menu are
fairly recognizable today. The green turtle
soup and clams (or oysters) seemed to begin many club meals. The Penobscot is an Atlantic salmon from the
cold waters of Maine’s Penobscot river would have been baked or sautéed with a
sauce. Potatoes Parisienne are tiny potato balls, sautéed in butter then
glazed with a meat glaze (made these, they are terrible good). Bouchees
of Game are cut up bits of cooked game in a game sauce seasoned with salt
and pinch of sugar and placed into small cooked puff pastry shells (these would
be only around 2 ½” so quite small), small enough to pop into your mouth and great
for an hors d’oeuvre. Beef a la Richelieu is fairly
straightforward –– a demi glace is poured over a tenderloin and, at least at
Delmonicos Restaurant, it was served
with braised celery, stuffed tomatoes and glazed lettuce on a bed of rice with
simple potatoes and a madeira sauce.
Kirsch punch is a refreshing alcoholic slushy and palate cleanser that
would be delicious with almonds to snack on.
This was followed by Mallard Duck and a simple
salad. Ice cream was the usual finish to meals at the Lotos Club with the
ubiquitous cheese and crackers and coffee at the end.
Enrico
Caruso from the Collection of Henry Voight
You
don’t need any memory refreshment for Caruso–– he was the greatest opera singer
of the 20th century… perhaps ever.
As in the first Twain menu, the Caruso menu (courtesy of the Voight
Collection of menus) is fraught with difficulties when attempting a culinary translation. The menu follows the traditional pattern of
the other club menus you see here but the dishes are named for Caruso’s
triumphs. Henry told me that what I
thought was odd phrasing “dinner to” was short for “dinner tendered to” and was
commonly used at that time. The list of
dishes includes oysters and soups and fish and filets and squab with ices and
cakes, but only the lucky attendees would know the particulars of the courses. There’s no way to know what Samson Squab or
Radames Filet or Nemorino Ices may be. Still, it is a glorious engraving, isn’t
it? The characters, the poses… it is a
treasure… even signed by Caruso himself (this is not unusual, it was a fashion
in the day that attendees would sign the menu) –– the mystery of the courses is
part of its charm.
All
the Lotos Club menus I’ve seen do follow well-worn paths when you put them
together. Usually oysters or clams to
start, then a turtle soup, then a sauced fish, a sauced meat, some vegetables
and salads along the way with a wild bird flying in from time to time after a
refreshing punch. Then ice cream is
offered, in one form or another–– Lotos Club Ice Creams are seen most often
followed in popularity by Nesselrode pudding (I wrote about that HERE –– it’s another ice cream but a complicated mix of chestnut ice cream, liqueurs
and fruits). Sometimes there were cakes
or petit fours.
Walter
Damrosch, Conductor of the NY Symphony Orchestra, Library of Congress
The
name Walter Damrosch might ring a bell if you are a classical music buff–– he was the director of
the New York Symphony orchestra (he was the first conductor of George
Cershwin’s American in Paris) as well as a composer through the 1930’s
–– he died in 1950). The Damrosch menu had Neapolitan Ice for dessert instead
of straight ice cream or Nesselrode pudding and that encouraged some investigation
–– I wasn’t sure I knew what that was –– because the Neapolitan Ice Cream I had
as a kid was nothing to write home about.
Not to
worry, Neapolitan Ice is a classy version of the Neapolitan ice cream of my
youth (whew). It was a tri-colored (supposedly
after the Italian flag) ice cream molded into a layered loaf that often had a
fruit sorbet decoration. I used pistachio,
strawberry and vanilla, (pistachio, not
chocolate as became the later fashion, but the combination is up to you ––use your
favorites). I wanted to make it as soon as I read about its original recipe... kind of an iced, edible Spring with fruit, nuts and soft colors.
One of
my biggest food heroes, Ivan Day, showed a gorgeous tin mold that included 3
roses atop the rectangular container that were made with sorbet on his
website, Historic Food. The mold was from the same period as
the Damrosch dinner. I don’t have that
mold, but I do have a rose mold so I can make something like it. If you
don’t have an ice cream mold you could use a rose cupcake mold or just a scoop…
the flavors are amazing together. I made mine with raspberry and Aftelier's Rose Absolute (again not an historical recipe but delicious), the result was one of the most magical things I ever tasted... pure raspberry flavor and rose that melts in your mouth will have you melting with pleasure! This is definitely the best sorbet I've ever made.
You
can make your base from scratch and that is the best way of course –– OR –– you
can use a favorite cheat of mine that I started using when I wanted lemon ice
cream in a pinch years ago. Buy a quart of vanilla, let it soften and add your
fresh flavorings. In this case, divide
it into 3rds and add strawberry puree to one, pistachio to the other ( I used my favorite pistachio ice cream recipe with exotic flavorings that is not a 19th century recipe but so delicious) and leave
the vanilla more or less on its own (I added madeira). Layer it in a mold, re-freeze and you have
your dessert. The sorbet can be
purchased or you can make it yourself.
If you buy the basics you can make it in a snap, if you do it from
scratch it still isn’t a huge effort and wow, what a dessert! PERFECT FOR MOTHER'S DAY!!!
Neapolitan Ice
Vanilla base
8 egg
yolks
½ c
sugar
2 c
cream
2 c
milk
½ t
salt
1 t
vanilla
Cream
the egg yolks and sugar. Scald the milk
and cream and add it slowly to the eggs, whisking all the while. Put it back in the cooled
saucepan. Bring it up to 170º slowly,
stirring all the time. Add the salt and
vanilla and strain. Put in a bowl over a
bowl of ice to cool down then put in the fridge covered. When chilled for a few hours, put in your ice cream maker and then make
your ice cream blends.
OR
1
Quart premium vanilla ice cream (I usually use Ben & Jerrys)
Raspberry sorbet (based on Saveur recipe)
2 c
raspberries
3/4 c
sugar
2 t
lemon juice
1 drop Aftelier Rose Absolute or to taste (it is very powerful so add it lightly, too much overwhelms, just the right amount and you have heaven) OR add rosewater to taste –– up to 1 T.
Boil 1 c water and sugar to dissolve. Simmer
for 5 minutes. Pour into a container and
freeze for 15 minutes.
Purée
the raspberries with the syrup and process till well blended. Scrape through a fine sieve and toss the
seeds. Add lemon juice and rose to the
purée and put in an ice cream freezer. Fill
the flower molds with the mixture if you have them and freeze. I used 2 small molds, one raspberry rose for each),
OR
Use premium raspberry sorbet and add the Rose Absolute or the rosewater to taste
Strawberry Ice Cream
1/3 of your vanilla ice cream
1 c
strawberries
2 T
sugar
¼ t
lemon zest
2 t
lemon juice
1 T
cassis (optional)
Mash
or blend the strawberries, sugar, lemon and cassis and let sit for 1 hour. At this point you can add the mixture to your
ice cream to taste (you may want to add more or less) and put in a cold bag in the freezer ––
you don’t want it to harden or you won’t be able to spread the layer well.
Pistachio Ice Cream
1/3 of your vanilla ice cream (if you are doing this from scratch, use 1/3 of the mix before freezing)
¼ c
pistachios, chopped
1 T
jaggery sugar or light brown sugar
¼ t garam
masala
1
pinch good sea salt (optional)
Grind
the pistachios, sugar and spice to a crumble of pepper-sized pieces. If you are
making your own ice cream, this would be the one to do separately. If so, let the pistachio mixture steep with
the cooling ice cream mixture then refrigerate.
Strain before putting the mixture in the ice cream maker (if you don’t strain the pistachios, your ice cream will be grainy… your choice). If you are using vanilla ice cream, combine
with the ice cream in a food processor, then strain, pressing hard on the
solids. If you want it a little greener
you can add a tiny dot of green and yellow food coloring… but seriously TINY
dots. I put mine in some of the melted ice cream and then added a few drops of
that to get a very delicate green –– you don’t want it to be
blue/green. For me, the gold of the eggs
in the ice cream made it the perfect pistachio color. Refreeze for an hour, stirring it from time to time.
Vanilla Ice Cream with Madeira
1/3 vanilla ice cream
1 T
madeira from Rare Wine Company- Boston Bual would be perfect but an older madeira is heaven ( I used a 1920 Barbieto Malvesia Favilla Vieira that rocked my world)
Stir
the madeira and salt into the vanilla ice cream. Place in the cold bag in the
freezer to keep it softened to spread.
To Make the Neapolitan Ice:
Take a
rectangular mold (use 2 small or one large) and lay one layer of pistachio ice
cream on the bottom and freeze till firmed somewhat.
I put the other 2 ice creams in a freezer bag in the freezer so they would stay loose. Then add one layer of vanilla and top and
freeze (make sure you stir the ice cream before spreading so there is an even consistency). Make sure you check for bubbles
on the side which would spoil the clean look. Finish with one layer of
strawberry when the vanilla has hardened enough to spoon on the strawberry –– you don't want to disturb the layers. Fill 2 rose molds with the
sorbet if you have them.
Unmold
the ice cream and top with the roses. If
you don’t have the roses, top each slice with a small scoop of sorbet
For all of you who ever thought of writing a cookbook, visit Justin at Just Cook NYC, he has some great advice. He should know, he edits them!
Thanks to The Kitchn for posting my Neapolitan Ice
For all of you who ever thought of writing a cookbook, visit Justin at Just Cook NYC, he has some great advice. He should know, he edits them!
Thanks to The Kitchn for posting my Neapolitan Ice
Ah, to have lived in Old New York (with a lot of money!). Such beautiful menus. You don't see artistic style in most menus today - the only place I ever remember such care being given to the look of a menu is Chez Panisse. By the way, the Neopolitan Ice is gorgeous - a far cry from the dessert I remember as a kid!
ReplyDeleteThank you for this interesting piece of NYC history...and that elegant dessert so perfect for Mother's Day.
ReplyDeleteDeana this was such a fascinating view of old New York. I would love to see some of those menus in person. Your gorgeous molded ice cream dessert is simply exquisite...what a spectacular Mother's Day dessert that would be. I love the idea of the garam masala in the pistachio ice cream. And btw...the dish that gorgeous ice cream is sitting upon is stunning...I must say I covet many of your dishes and plates!
ReplyDeleteL~xo
I remember that post in 2010! I was fascinated then and still am captivated by your research and love of history menus.
ReplyDeleteYour photos and staging are beautiful. Due, I'm sure to your talent in movie staging!
Loved reading how you got started. My computer teacher started me....you love to cook, why don't you blog? And took me to blogspot and introduced me.
ReplyDeleteFun to be introduced to American Menu and Voight. And what an exquisite collection of reprints in your post. I so enjoyed perusing every one. The art of menus is history, I'm afraid, althougn once in a while, you come across a beauty. Your stories of old New York are always a pleasure to read; one can only dream about taking part.
What fabulous ices and ice creams. Pistachio is one of my favorites and how unusual to find garam masala in the ingredient list. For some unknown (probably something from childhood) reason, I love pistachio with angel food cake. Odd, I know.
Super post, as we've come to expect! Such research and your love and interest shine through.
This is absolutely stunning Deana! And yes you're right, perfect for Mother's Day! BTW I am going to a lunch in a few days and I thought of you. It will be a renaissance lunch with the menu set from that time! :)
ReplyDeleteNow THAT'S a Neopolitan I'd actually like to eat! I greatly enjoyed reading about the Lotos Club. Do you think their clubs were as stuffy and upity back then as the new artist clubs are today?
ReplyDeleteI'm always fascinated by these old clubs where people used to go to smoke, read and exchange ideas and old New York especially interests me. I had no idea about the link of the cration of this blog to Mark Twain so we have another thing to be thankful to him for. Thanks to you for another wonderful post and an amazing recipe. I truly think you should write a book with your lovely photos because you make such wonderful but different things. I love Neapolitan ice.
ReplyDeleteI love revisiting the hayday of an era like this...old New York culture is especially fascinating. I would have loved to have been around at that time, but at least we can still enjoy the foods that they relished. This cake is a masterpiece and I love how ethereal it looks in your photos.
ReplyDeleteIt was so much fun to read about your staging of the movie:) And Ann's board..Now I have all this interesting info and see that gorgeous Neapolitan masterpiece..It was my fave as a child:)
ReplyDeleteIt sounds magical!
ReplyDeleteLove your blog, old menus and this ice cream... yea I am following you now!!!
ReplyDeleteCome and visit if you like, I am in New Zealand, my blog is
http://alessandrazecchini.blogspot.co.nz/
ciao
Alessandra
GOOD MORNING DEAR CUISINIÈRE!
ReplyDeleteI SO REMEMBER eating this special treat as a child SOMEWHERE very special. The grocery store versions were OK, but I do know that someone in our family circle served up the real thing once and YOURS IS TOTALLY BEAUTIFUL!!
Dearest, I THANK YOU for visiting and you know that YOU, YOU would be the perfect match for a Paris link party participant! WITH YOUR VAST knowledge and flair, you could add a spectacular addition to the various styles and ideas that people will come up with! LET ME KNOW FOR SURE if you will be a part of it and I will prepare the link list!!! CIAO, Anita
I leave knowing more than when I came. I love to visit here and your unique style keeps me coming back. I loved reading of old New York and the ice is a wonder that I would love to sample. It looks truly delicious . Have a great day. Blessings...Mary
ReplyDeleteI have 59 Lotos Club Menus by Charles or Thomas Scindelar. We inherited these beautiful menus about 30 years ago. We have the Samuel Clemens, Cruso, Howard Taft, Pershing, the Prince of Monaco, Alfred E. Smith, Howard Elliott and many, many more. They used to hang on the walls of our home, but now that we are retired, moved to a small home, they are kept in portfolios. It is a shame that no one can see them anymore!!
ReplyDeleteRuthann,those are my favorites. Are you in the NYC area?
ReplyDeletefabulous post. nice post
ReplyDelete