Lizzie Collingham
is the author of the new book The Taste of Empire: How Britain's Quest for Food Shaped the Modern World. Her other books include The Taste of War and Curry. She is currently associate
fellow of Warwick University and the Royal Literary Fund Fellow at Newnham
College, Cambridge. She is based in Cambridge, United Kingdom.
Q: How did you
come up with the idea for your new book, and how did you pick the particular meals
you describe?
A: This book was a
natural progression from my last, The Taste of War, which was about the role of
food in World War II.
Food played a more
important part in the story of the war than I had expected and as this approach
opened up a new way of looking at a familiar story, I decided to apply the lens
of food to the Empire which is a field of history I find fascinating. I began
my career as a historian researching the bodily culture of the British in
India.
Each chapter begins
with a meal and tells the story of how this particular set of circumstances
came about. The book opens with sailors eating their last meal of salt cod on
the Mary Rose the day before it sank.
And then I follow
the story of the Empire and the complex web of connections between people and
places that it wove by focusing on those people and places who allow me to show
how seemingly impersonal historical processes impacted on the daily lives of
ordinary people.
The story unfolds
by way of sugar barons feasting on beef on Barbados; Samuel Pepys taking his
wife to dine in a fancy French restaurant; revolutionaries toasting liberty
with rum in a Boston tavern; emigrants to New Zealand growing fat on plentiful
mutton; Kenyans complaining about the paucity of beans in their national dish
of irio and ends with an Empire Christmas pudding.
Q: What type of
research did you need to do, and was there anything that particularly surprised
you?
A: A book like
this, which takes in a wide range of people and places over a 450-year time span,
naturally rests on the primary research of many other scholars.
For example, in
order to reconstruct the lives of African slaves in 18th century
South Carolina I used the work of archaeologists who have excavated refuse pits
around slave cabins, genealogical research into the Simon family who owned the
Middleburg Plantation where I set the story and the ground breaking work of two
historians who work on the transfer of African plants to the Americas.
Eighteenth-century
slaves have left no written record of their lives but I read 19th century
accounts of what it was like to be a slave in the Carolinas and there are, of
course, plentiful accounts by Europeans of their observations of life along the
slave coast of West Africa and of life as a planter in South Carolina.
One particularly
fascinating manuscript was a recipe book kept by three generations of women
from a wealthy planation family. All the chapters are a synthesis of a wide
range of this kind of material.
One of the
satisfactions I find in history is coming across ideas that make sense of
aspects of daily life that are usually taken for granted.
For example, it is
possible that the popularity of sugar may be the key to understanding why the
English embraced tea. It is unclear when the English practice of sweetening tea
became commonplace. It certainly was not adopted from the Chinese who did not
put sugar in their tea.
A couple of 18th
century health manuals suggested that sugar’s harmful sweetness could be
countered by imbibing it in bitter herbal or fruit infusions. There was no
explicit mention of tea in these tracts; however, sweetened tea would have
complied with this advice. Tea drinking may, therefore, have become popular
among the genteel as it was seen as a restrained and therefore legitimate way
of consuming sugar.
Q: Did other
empires of the same period experience the same food blending?
A: Yes. It is a
characteristic of empires that they transport ideas, knowledge, people, plants,
ways of farming and eating.
The soldiers
guarding Hadrian’s Wall on the outer edges of the Roman Empire were supplied
with amphorae of garum and olive oil from the Mediterranean.
The Portuguese
were the first Europeans to find the sea route to the Indies and it was they who
first took sugar cane to the Americas and maize to West Africa. And Dutch
colonists in Indonesia also kept their pantries stocked with tinned European
delicacies.
Q: What is the
legacy today of the trends you describe in the book?
A: The British
Empire laid the foundations for the way the world eats today. For example, it
is a legacy of the Empire that East Africans think of maize as “food of the
ancestors” when, in fact, it was introduced to the region by colonial
agricultural officers.
Perhaps the most
insidious legacy of the empire is the way in which sugar is an integral part of
our diet. This is a direct legacy of the fact that the 19th century
industrial working classes relied on sugar to give them energy.
Q: What are you
working on now?
A: My new project
is part memoir, part social history. My ancestors
were stone masons and ship’s chandlers and the book will explore eating habits
over several generations and the way that food connects us to the past.
Q: Anything else
we should know?
A: Every meal
carries within it a wealth of history. After reading The Taste of Empire I hope
that even a cup of tea and a slice of bread spread with butter and jam will
resonate with new meaning.
--Interview with Deborah Kalb
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