The Food Almanac: August 9, 2011

In The Food Almanac, Tom Fitzmorris of the online newsletter, The New Orleans Menu notes food facts and saying.

Annals of Fishing
On this date in 1593, Isaak Walton was born in England. He was to write a book that not only set down everything one could know about fishing at that time, but set the standard for books that studied any particular field. It was called The Compleat Angler. Its antique spelling lives on as a common affectation. The book was more about catching fish for food than for sport, although fun was part of it too.

Annals of Smoking
Today in 1902, King Edward VII was crowned as the monarch of England, succeeding Queen Victoria, his mother. His first official act when he appeared before Parliament was to rescind an edict of the late Queen with this line: "Gentlemen, you may smoke." He smoked a dozen cigars a day, plus a pack of cigarettes. That's why a popular line of inexpensive cigars was named for him.

Food Calendar
This is National Rice Pudding Day. Rice pudding is one of those dishes that's much loved but rarely eaten. It's brought up on the radio show six or seven times a year always with an undertone of longing for some wonderful memory of the past. It even has a cherished old French name: riz au lait.

The Old Kitchen Sage Sez
To really love rice pudding, you must be over 70.

Cookbooks Through History

This is the birthdate, in 1762, of Mary Randolph. She married into one of the most prominent families of Virginia and lived a life of privilege, until her husband fell into disfavor with Thomas Jefferson and lost his job. Their fortunes declined. Mary Randolph opened a boarding house, where her skills at running a large manor made it a success. She wrote a cookbook called The Virginia Housewife. It is considered the first major work on the subject of Southern cookery. Written for women with genteel lifestyles, it was carefully assembled, and included exact measurements of ingredientsa rare quality in recipes of the time.

Edible Dictionary
budino, Italian, n.It translates from Italian exactly into "pudding." But, like bread pudding in New Orleans, it carries connotations of specialness. It's not just pudding, but something homestyle and wonderful. It is in fact often made with bread, though that's only one of many budinos. It can be flavored with almost anything usually served sweet, from vanilla to chocolate and everything in between. It's not uncommon for it to be flavored with a liqueur. I've also heard of savory budinos, but that's another category. You always eat it with a spoon.

Annals of Public Buildings
The Superdome's first public eventa loss for the Saints against the Houston Oilers in a pre-season gametook place today in 1975. Best food: the SuperDog, created by the now-gone local King Cotton meat-packing company. The dog was indeed bigger than normal, and better, too, with an interesting spice and garlic component. . . Today in 1173, construction began on the Campanile in Pisa, Italy. Better known as the Leaning Tower of Pisa, its image is seen somewhere in three out of four American Italian restaurants. I wonder how many pizzerias with the name "Tower Of Pizza" there are around the world. We have one here, of course.

Food Namesakes
Claude I. Bakewell, former U.S. Congressman from Missouri, was born in St. Louis today in 1912. . . Baseball pro Mike Lamb was born today in 1975.

Words to Eat By
"Blessed be he that invented pudding, for it is a manna that hits the palates of all sorts of people; a manna better than that of the wilderness, because the people are never weary of it."Francois Maximilien Mission, French writer.

Words to Drink By
"Drinking is a way of ending the day."Ernest Hemingway.

Check out other Food Almanac columns by Tom Fitzmorris.