The Hamilton Spectator

Food plays starring role in Downton Abbey movie

- EMILY HEIL

The characters of “Downton Abbey,” the long-running PBS historical drama spun into a feature film that premièred Friday, are beloved. The starchy butler Carson, the bon-motslingin­g Dowager Countess, the chauffeur-turned-familymemb­er Tom Branson ...

But food, food has always been a star, too — the teas and puddings and roasts and cakes and soufflés, around which both the downstairs servants and the upstairs British aristocrat­s banter and scheme.

That tradition continues in the new movie, where food not only serves as a lush prop painting a picture of life in an opulent country estate, circa 1927, but as a key agent of the plot, which centres on a visit by King George V and Queen Mary that upends life at Downton and convenient­ly ushers in new characters to join the soapy goings-on.

In the two-hour film, the procuremen­t, storage, preparatio­n and presentati­on of food is the crux of the action among Downton’s staff. And upstairs, as ever, the drama revolves around the table. At least twice (mild spoiler alert!), food is used as a weapon in one of the movie’s central conflicts: the battle between the Crawley family’s staff and the visiting battalion of royal servants imported to Downton for the monarch’s visit.

“A royal luncheon, a parade and a dinner? I’m going to have to sit down!” sputters Mrs. Patmore, the oft-beleaguere­d cook of the family estate, in an early scene. Another not-so-spoiler: she doesn’t sit, or at least for long, and the household is swiftly caught up in a whirlwind of preparatio­n.

So, too, was the film’s production team. When Lisa Heathcote, the food stylist responsibl­e for nearly every crumb that appears at the fictional Downton estate, first saw the movie script, she was delighted at the prominent role that food played.

And she was mindful that on the big screen, it would be even more important than in the TV series for the food to look real, a feat she accomplish­es by ... using real food, which also has the benefit of allowing the actors to munch as they see fit. She admits, though, that there is one real fake-out amid all the other actually edible dishes in the movie — but she wouldn’t cop to what it was. “I’m not going to say!” she says. “There’s only one thing. I thought, ‘Well, it’s quick and nobody will notice.’ (Otherwise) I make sure it’s all real food and it’s as it would have been.”

Downton fans, consider this a challenge.

One word in the script, though, stopped her in her tracks: soufflé. The airy, eggy dish is a known diva of the food world — so finicky and prone to collapsing that it’s a metaphor for things that deflate. And Heathcote needed lots of them, since they were served at the dinner for the king and queen.

Using the tricks in her foodwizard­ry arsenal, she faked the ones perched on the tray of a footman, who gets lectured by the kitchen maid, Daisy, to get them upstairs “before they fall!” Gelatin whipped into the mix assured they could last through multiple takes.

But in a later scene at the dinner table, after the soufflés have been served, Heathcote went with the unadultera­ted dish (since the actors had to actually eat them). She prepped hundreds of them in a food truck she parks outside of Highclere Castle, the estate that serves as Downton’s set. “I had to run from my truck across the car park with the souffles like a madwoman,” she said. “By the time I got there, they were looking very sorry for themselves.” Luckily, the scene takes place midcourse. “By that time, the soufflés would have already fallen anyway!”

Similar finessing was required for what might be the movie’s crucial food moment. As Team Downton tries to wrest control of the dinner away from the king’s supercilio­us retinue (including a French chef, who only sharpens our favourite servants’ patriotic pride), they engage in some subterfuge. A pot of sauce spilled on an immaculate shirt at an inopportun­e moment gets one character out of the way, allowing the wily Crawley loyalists to have their way.

The weaponized concoction posed a challenge for Heathcote: it had to be just the right consistenc­y to cling to the fabric onto which it was flung. “I spent a lot of time throwing things against the wall to see how it would behave,” she said. In the end, she landed on a mixture of fruit purée, syrup, water and corn flour “so it would really stick.”

Bake like Mrs. Patmore, eat like the Crawleys with this delightful ‘Downton Abbey’ cake

Madeira cake, named after the fortified Portuguese wine with which it was often paired, was a favourite throughout the 19th and 20th centuries. It has a delicate citrus flavour and a tender crumb that holds together well enough to not mar a beautiful dress. It may remind you of a lightened-up pound cake.

Dusting the pan with sugar instead of flour gives a slightly crunchy exterior. Feel free to swap in orange or lime zest for the lemon.

 ?? STACY ZARIN GOLDBERG FOR THE WASHINGTON POST ?? Madeira Cake was a favourite throughout the 19th and 20th centuries.
STACY ZARIN GOLDBERG FOR THE WASHINGTON POST Madeira Cake was a favourite throughout the 19th and 20th centuries.
 ?? JAAP BUITENDIJK FOCUS FEATURES ?? From left: Michelle Dockery, Robert James-Collier, Hugh Bonneville and Allen Leech in “Downton Abbey.”
JAAP BUITENDIJK FOCUS FEATURES From left: Michelle Dockery, Robert James-Collier, Hugh Bonneville and Allen Leech in “Downton Abbey.”

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