Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Fancy feasting

Cookbook shows how to throw a luxe Gilded Age dinner party

- By Sharyn Jackson |

Picture the fanciest party imaginable. We’re talking Vanity Fair Oscar Party meets Met Gala, with a couple of royal weddings thrown in the mix. Fountains of champagne? Check. Platinum bracelets as parting favors? Check. A sculpture of Hercules holding a steak on his shoulders and a monkey outfitted in a tailored suit sitting at the head of the table? Welcome to the Gilded Age.

In “The Gilded Age Cookbook: Recipes and Stories From America’s Golden Era,” author Becky Libourel Diamond gives readers a peek into the opulent ballrooms, tea parties and railroad cars where the richest of the rich — socialites, debutantes, magnates and robber barons — dined in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

Recipes for Waldorf salad served in tiny cups carved out of apples, potatoes á la Parisienne, lobster fricassee spooned into puff pastry and rosewater-almond “lady cake” are her own adaptation­s of popular dishes of that time, which she tested over years as a blogger.

An era defined by extravagan­ce — a distractio­n from the corruption beneath the surface — the Gilded Age was a period of unfettered economic growth in the United States for a small portion of the population. New money flowed into society as railroads connected cities, the U.S. expanded west, natural resources were exploited, industrial­ization made a few men unbelievab­ly rich, and food became an art.

Diamond isn’t encouragin­g obscene hedonism with her book. Instead, she is offering home cooks an attainable way to host their own high-society dinner party, suitable for modern sensibilit­ies. Monkey not included.

We spoke to her about how the railroads changed what we eat, easy ways to think about presentati­on and the environmen­tal impact of all those extravagan­t dinner parties. This interview with Diamond has been edited for clarity and length.

Q: How’d you get interested in food from the Gilded Age?

A: I’ve always been a foodie, and I read in a cooking magazine that the first cooking school was in the early 1800s, in Philadelph­ia. I grew up in New Jersey and Philly was close, and I never knew that. I moved to Pennsylvan­ia, and there was a publisher right around the corner, and he liked my idea of writing about cooking schools. Then it pivoted to this first cooking school, Mrs. Goodfellow. And in researchin­g her, I just learned so much about food history and Philadelph­ia and the 19th century.

There’s so much history we can learn through food: What didn’t we eat? What did we eat? What was over consumed? There are so many different angles. So after that book (“Mrs. Goodfellow: The Story of America’s First Cooking School”), I found out about this dinner that took place in 1851 called the Thousand Dollar Dinner that was like a 19th-century “Top Chef ” competitio­n. This was the prelude to the Gilded Age, and these men of means could try to one-up each other by putting on this really fabulous meal. I wrote about these 17 courses that this meal ended up being, and it was really unbelievab­le (“The Thousand Dollar Dinner: America’s First Great Cookery Challenge”).

The whole time I’m writing these books, I was researchin­g recipes and deconstruc­ting them and making them myself. And I was blogging about it. You can’t just take a 19th-century recipe and make it as it’s written because ingredient­s are different, measuremen­ts are different. And I was learning all about that and eventually I thought, “I have all this on my blog, why not put this into a cookbook?”

Q: What are some of the defining characteri­stics of food during that era?

A: It was definitely an era of innovation and technology. The railroads really built the Gilded Age. There were other industries as well, like steel and even some food things like the cattle industry and canned goods, but the railroads really helped connect all of that and get food on the tables that maybe they wouldn’t have had before, like foods that were out of season. Food was much more of a differenti­ator than it is today. I mean, it still is now, especially with food deserts and such in big cities, but if you had these fine foods and certain things that were out of season, you were much more ahead of other people.

But I also have to preface that the Gilded Age — and I don’t want to be a downer about it — but it isn’t necessaril­y an endearing term because it was gilded on the surface and then underneath there was this layer of corruption. There were people having all these fine meals and the craziness, but then there was also the servants that were making all of that possible. And people living in tenement housing.

Q: There are a lot of rich stories — and outlandish stories — about dinner parties in your book.

Someone even brought a monkey to be the guest of honor. It just seemed like there was no limit to what was possible.

A: It was all about, “How can I one-up the person that had the last dinner?” They would hire personal chefs, and they would often steal them from each other. And that’s why women were going to these cooking schools to know what they should they be putting on their tables that would make them rise above everyone else and be talked about for months afterward. That’s when they incorporat­ed live animals into it, which was kind of bizarre. I don’t know why they thought that was a good idea.

It was all about presentati­on, too. Ornamentat­ion on foods, like having a game bird with its feathers still attached, where they would reattach them after cooking, or the head was still attached on a platter. And the gelatin dishes are the ones that are so different than we think of today. Everything would be coated in a clear gelatin, and then you would see the sparkling colors underneath. It was almost like museum pieces under glass.

Q: I didn’t notice a lot of gelatin encased recipes in your book.

A: What I wanted to do with this book is make it accessible. I knew if I included so many of the overthe-top things, nobody could make those. And I wanted it to be where people could actually enjoy them. I do have one gelatin — it’s a chocolate jelly, which is actually really good.

Q: What can we learn about food by cooking that era’s recipes?

A: One is to know that things evolve over time, like techniques. And if there is a newfangled ingredient or kitchen tool, go for it. I mean, that’s what made their lives so much easier, to have egg beaters instead of whipping eggs by hand. Baking powder changed the game for tall layer cakes because before that they just had to either beat eggs to make the cake rise or use yeast. For people to embrace technology but also be mindful of sustainabi­lity. I don’t want to be environmen­tally preachy here, but some of the dishes that they really loved so much got over consumed, like lobster and turtle, and even oysters to an extent. Luckily, we’ve been able to figure out how to replenish some of the supplies, especially seafood. But just to be mindful that sometimes it is just a special dish that we have once in a while, you know, everything in moderation. I feel like that’s something that I’ve learned researchin­g the 19th century, that we just want to make sure that things don’t become extinct because we’re eating so much.

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 ?? FRONTROOM IMAGES PHOTOS ?? Delicate Lady Cake was often served at weddings in the Gilded Age.
FRONTROOM IMAGES PHOTOS Delicate Lady Cake was often served at weddings in the Gilded Age.

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