You're Dead to Me - Alexis Soyer
Episode Date: August 16, 2024In this episode, Greg Jenner is joined in the nineteenth century by Dr Annie Gray and comedian Ed Gamble to learn all about French celebrity chef Alexis Soyer. Despite being well-known during his life...time, Soyer is virtually unknown today. His primary legacy was a portable stove, used by the British army until the Falklands War. But Soyer was a prototypical celebrity chef: he opened the Reform Club kitchen to the public so that they could watch him cook, wrote popular cookbooks, sold kitchen gadgets and branded sauces, and even took part in high-profile charity campaigns. From his birth in France to the success he found in London, via a soup kitchen in Dublin and a hospital during the Crimean War, this episode explores Alexis Soyer’s extraordinary life and culinary innovations. Hosted by: Greg Jenner Research by: Hannah Campbell Hewson Written by: Emmie Rose Price-Goodfellow, Emma Nagouse, and Greg Jenner Produced by: Emmie Rose Price-Goodfellow and Greg Jenner Audio Producer: Steve Hankey Production Coordinator: Ben Hollands Senior Producer: Emma Nagouse Executive Editor: James Cook
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is the BBC.
This podcast is supported by advertising outside the UK.
If you're hearing this, you're probably already listening to BBC's award-winning history podcast.
But did you know that you can listen to them without ads?
Get podcasts like In Our Time, You're Dead to Me and History's Secret Heroes,
plus other great BBC podcasts from news to comedy to true crime, all ad free.
Simply subscribe to BBC Podcast Premium on Apple Podcasts or listen to Amazon Music with
a Prime membership.
Spend less time on ads and more time with BBC podcasts. BBC Sounds Music Radio Podcasts
Hello and welcome to You're Dead To Me, the Radio 4 comedy podcast that takes history
seriously. My name is Greg Jenner, I'm a public historian, author and broadcaster.
And today we are tying our aprons and firing up the stove as we learn all about 19th century
celebrity chef,i Soye.
And to help us we have two very special dining companions.
In History Corner, she's an author, broadcaster and food historian specialising in food from
1600 to the present day.
That's a lot of food.
You might have heard her on BBC Radio 4's The Kitchen Cabinet or read one of her many
wonderful books including The Greedy Queen all about Queen Victoria's food tastes.
And you'll definitely remember her from our delicious episode on the history of
ice cream it's Dr. Annie Gray welcome back Annie. Thank you for having me. Lovely
to have you back and in Comedy Corner he's a comedian, podcaster, writer,
broadcaster, he's a superstar, he co-hosts the mega award-winning Off Menu
podcast, he judges dishes on the Great British Menu, he has done gags on Mock
the Week, he's had an existential crisis on Taskmaster Champion of Champions,
sorry Ed I had to mention it.
You may love his food-themed memoir,
Glutton, the multi-course life of a very greedy boy,
and you'll remember him from our episodes on Lord Byron
and Gothic vampire literature.
It's Ed Gamble.
Welcome back, Ed.
Thanks for having me back.
Delighted.
Ed, you are the foodiest comedian in the UK.
It's certainly an avenue that I've pursued, I would say. You once you get a thing you've got you've really got to lock in. I'm just
out there mopping up every single food themed job possible. And you don't even like food?
You've just found a niche. No, no, barely eat. What do you know about food history? Are you happy in the 19th century?
I mean I can't promise to offer much historically
in terms of food history.
I can barely remember what I ate last week.
Well, have you heard of Alexi Soyé?
I have not.
You know what?
I've done obviously no research for this podcast
because when I'm told that's not my job to do the research
that someone actually qualified will be here doing it.
If anything, I unlearn things for this podcast.
So what do you know?
This is where we have a go at guessing what our lovely
listener might know about today's subject.
And we all can name a celebrity chef, right?
You've got some of them are so famous.
They only need one name, Delia, Jamie, Nigella,
but Alexi Swaie probably not ringing any bells for you.
You might have dined at the fancy Reform Club in London, who hasn't of course. You
might have eaten one of his delicious creations if you did. You're probably not
gonna know about him unless you are a student of 19th century military history
or culinary history or if you're in the British Army in the Falklands War. That's
the kind of the Venn diagram of people who might know.
I'm none of those things.
Okay.
Just let you know first of all.
So who was this French celebrity chef
who found fame in Britain?
Why is he known to ex-soldiers?
Just what is a magic stove?
Let's find out, right?
Okay, Dr. Annie, first things first.
Where and when was little Alexi born and to whom?
What's his family situation?
He was born in 1810, so in what to us Brits is the Regency period, so think about Jane
Austen, Colin Firth coming out of the lake, that kind of thing. Born in France in a town
called Meux-en-Bris, which was known for its mustard and its cheese. His parents are called
Emery and Murray. They'd been grocers, but although they they always called themselves grocers they weren't actually very good ones and his
father in particular had gone through lots of different jobs, mainly unemployed.
So I think it would be kind to call Alexei working-class. He was on that sort
of liminal zone that you find so often in the Victorian period between working-class
and actually abject poverty. Something he never forgot about. He was always
desperate for social respectability
later on in life.
Normally on this show, it's like princes and kings.
Yeah.
That's a rare star for us.
But also born in Brie.
He was born in the home of Brie.
That's pretty good, isn't it?
Yeah, surrounded by cheese in the Labour Ward.
Yeah.
So he's born in Brie.
Yeah.
We might say he's destined to work in the food industry
because parents are grocers and he ends up as a chef.
But do you want to guess what his childhood professional training was? Well, you you would have thought if you're born in Brie, you're gonna be
Maybe maybe you work within dairy or cheese etc or or mustard, you know, you mustn't forget the mustard
No, we thought yeah. So yeah, maybe he's a spicy cow
He mustn't forget the mustard. No, Moutard, yeah. So yeah, maybe he's a spicy cow.
Not a spicy cow. He was training for the priesthood.
Yeah, so he was a Protestant, which is relatively rare in France at that point. So they sent him off to a Protestant seminary because he had a very good singing voice.
So one presumes he could get a scholarship. And his beginnings are quite kind of murky,
because there's lots of stories that he told about himself, the truth of which...
are quite kind of murky because there's lots of stories that he told about himself, the truth of which...anyway. The story he always told was that he was sent into this seminary and he was troublemaker,
he didn't really want to be there. So the story goes that he decided to get expelled by breaking
out of his dormitory, climbing up the cathedral tower and ringing the bells, which bearing in mind
that was also the signal for Armageddon, released all hell upon the town. So the local fire brigade came out and the local garrison. So
as you can imagine, he didn't last very long. Yeah. But what a legend. It's quite school
prank, isn't it? The other priests would have been like, man, this is such a bad boy. Yeah,
he is. Yeah, he is. He's the bad boy of the bell squad. He's a bellend. So that's the end.
Well, I mean, that's the end of his priest career. So it was bye bye Brie for teenage Alexi.
So what was next for our bolshe bell boy?
Well next he got pushed off to Paris to go and stay with his brother Philippe, who was a chef and by all accounts
he sort of decided that okay, well, yeah fine.
He'd go into chefing largely
because it was a really good excuse to drink a lot and party so he became a real
party animal this is an again another period of his life where there's no
solid evidence but a lot of stories one story involves a grand ball it's been
held by a wealthy banker and the story involves him Alexi expensive China
crockery a pair of missing trousers.
What do you think goes down?
His trousers missing?
Yes.
So his trousers go missing.
There's some expensive crockery.
Is it does he lose his trousers and then attempt to move around the party by covering his private
parts with expensive crockery?
Or steals the crockery, bags them up in the trousers,
throws them out into a bush outside and just leaves, completely Winnie the Pooh-ing it outside.
That one sounds closer to the truth, I think. We're not quite sure what happens, Annie.
No. The way he told it was that there's this party going on, it's run by a banker,
so there was a lot of money there.
And because he was something of a showman,
he had thought about going on the stage at one point. So he ended up inevitably getting
tanked on champagne. Then he started singing. At some point in the evening, he was tasked
with taking this china somewhere in a basket. So off he went, but he was very, very drunk.
So he decided to stop and have a small sleep to try and recover from the drunkenness.
When he woke up, he was wandering around with no china and no trousers.
So this was obviously hugely embarrassing for somebody who was attempting to make his
name as an outside caterer who wasn't a complete drunkard.
So there was a sort of ferrore and eventually the police did turn up with the basket of
china and hurrah!
The missing trousers!
Oh really?
Yeah, yeah. They returned him apparently. So were they together? did turn up with the basket of china and hurrah the missing trousers! Oh really?
Yeah yeah they returned him apparently.
So were they together?
The trousers and the crockery were together?
Well I don't know, maybe the police heard about this half naked man wandering around
Paris going where's my china?
Yeah I mean as a student I used to wear very very baggy kind of heavy metal jeans back
in the early noughties, sort of new metal days and you could get a couple of pint glasses in there and leave with them.
Maybe he was trying to just walk home with some very valuable china and then had a sleep.
China was quite big at that point.
In desert china in particular, you're looking at stands with handles and sort of multi-layered
arms, you know, all these epéanés and tazas and you know, a lot of it was very blingy as well
There's a lot of gold going on, a lot of really beautiful. I mean
I'm imagining the castle from Beauty and the Beast by the way
And maybe they're singing to him
Maybe it's just like that
They probably took his trousers off for him
Okay, so maybe we don't want to leave this guy in charge of the catering.
Annie, how does this chaotic celebrity singing chef with a sort of a drinking issue, how
does he end up in England?
I'm imagining he shows up naked on a boat to Southampton one night, his trousers on
his head.
Possibly, but that wasn't the way he told it anyway.
So he worked his way up through Parisian society as a lot of chefs did at that point and he ended up being a chef at the Foreign Office and this is in 1830. So this is the
French government. This is the French government. This is a very high up man in the French government
and this is France where throughout the early part of the 19th century they didn't really like to go
too long without having a revolution because you know it was fun So, 1830 there was another revolution, the July Revolution in this
case, which didn't last long but did topple the monarch at the time. They stormed the kitchens
where Soyer was in the middle of catering a banquet and this mob broke into the kitchens. They shot
two of the chefs and all hell broke loose and it was genuinely a very dangerous moment. But because
Soyer was very good at thinking
on his feet, he quickly whipped off his apron and possibly his trousers, I mean there's
a running theme of trousers here, and started singing La Masseuse.
So what actually happened was he was hoisted on the shoulders of the revolutionaries who
took him out of the kitchen singing, what a hero, what a patriot, presumably not recognising
who he was.
And then once he was out of the kitchens he scarpered.
But he then got a reputation as being this sort of shill for the monarchists, and he
was persona non grata, couldn't get a job anywhere in France. So once again he followed
Brother Philippe over to England, which was again a trident tested route for Parisian
chefs, they all sort of drifted over to England as kind of refugees, and Philippe set him
up with a job with sort of one of the minor royals at the time in Britain because there were hundreds of them. So he ended up once again working
in Britain but this time as a chef. I would like to say chastened but I don't think he
was.
He learned nothing.
No, no, no.
Okay, so he saves his life by singing the French national anthem. What song could you sing to
save your life if a crowd broke into?
Well, it depends. I mean, obviously it depends what the crowd are for, right? Because I'm happy to capitulate to any mob.
I just want to save my own skin.
I've got absolutely no ethics whatsoever.
The crowd are...
They're angry at the concept of podcasting.
They hate podcasts.
What are you going to do?
I guess I'm singing the Radio 4 picks just to let them know I am a traditionless when it comes to broadcasting.
You're doing the shipping forecast.
Yeah I'm doing the shipping forecast.
You know I like live radio, that's what I like.
Good, for American listeners that's a very funny joke.
I often have to say that.
Just to let you know that is a very funny joke.
So we've got our impromptu karaoke champion Alexis
Souayé fleeing violence going from revolutionary France into Britain in
1831 which is during the reign of, we're not at Victoria yet are we? No we're at William the
fourth. The sort of most non-entity monarchy in this period. No one's favourite king so does he walk into this job and
and then starts cooking? What's the path? Pretty much. I mean, so at the time in England, if you were an aristocrat, you wanted a French
chef, a French male chef. They were regarded as the people you wanted in your kitchens.
They were paid more than English male chefs. They were paid a lot more than women. So he
was in quite a good position anyway, just by dint of being French and having a penis.
So he worked for the Duke of Cambridge. Then he went off to go and work for a man called
the Mad Marcus of Waterford. So this was a man who...
That's a Blackadder character.
Yeah, well his hobby was getting drunk and beating up the working classes.
So you know, really good people.
And eventually he broke free of the dross and ended up working for extraordinarily wealthy
people.
He went to work at Stafford House, which was probably the grandest house in London, over
onto the Welsh borders to go and work for a family called the Lloyds, back into London, made lots and lots of connections because
he was an absolutely incorrigible networker and eventually networked his way into working
as the head chef at the Reform Club, which was a liberal gentleman's club founded by
people who had favoured the Reform Act of 1832. I mean, essentially it was a dining
club but the previous chef had only lasted three weeks. So there was a certain level of pressure. Swaer decided he was the man for the job and
he was there specifically to cook the best, most fashionable food, which was always called
at the time, rishyashi, and he was the king of the rishyashi. It's a term that's always
applied in the 19th century to the most, I would say the most pretentious cuisine actually,
because it does become a very middle-class, sort of very rich term,
but the idea is that it's something never seen before.
Usually it's the stuff that involves lots of preparations,
lots of pounding, lots of molding.
It's got to look completely and utterly crazy.
Okay, okay.
So what kind of fine dining dishes are you imagining
in this recherche style, Ed?
Well, when I think sort of classic French cuisine
I'm I'm thinking a lot of butter a lot of cream
champagne in every sauce a
Lot of verse you grapes in verse you that sort of stuff. Yeah. Yeah, that's that's what I'm imagining quite liquidy
a lot of liquid lots of liquids a lot of liquids a lot of dairy a lot of cheese the sort of food where
You see anything that looks beautiful. That's so wonderfully presented and then you have two mouthfuls of it But a lot of liquids, a lot of dairy, a lot of cheese. The sort of food where you see it
and you think that looks beautiful,
that's so wonderfully presented,
and then you have two mouthfuls of it
and you go, oh, I feel sick.
Annie, what is Alexis Soyeri cooking at the Reform Club?
Well, first of all, I should say people then
had a lot more stamina.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
A lot more stamina.
He did actually provide quite a lot of British classics.
He'd fallen in love with almost British street food while working for all these various aristocrats because he had
a habit of getting very drunk. You'll be really surprised to hear. And then at sort of four in
the morning he'd go off wandering the streets of London eating sort of scram basically. So he did
do lots of what we would call British classics. He also invented a thing called reform sauce which
was usually served with mutton cutlets which is still served at the reform club today and that's a really sort of spicy sauce that
cuts through the mutton. Really, really nice. But his big thing and the thing he became best known
for was these eye watering banquets for 2 000 people at a time, that kind of thing. And then
a thing which he did quite a few times which he also later published a recipe for called turban of
larks at a Parisienne which
I think sort of exemplifies the just stupidity of Victorian cuisine at that point because the
recipe for it starts off by taking larks and then boning them out with a pen knife because a chef's
knife is too big to bone out a lark because a lark is tiny yeah so you bone out these larks
with a pen knife and then stuff them and then lard them up and then cook them forever and ever and then you present them almost as a crown of larks.
Oh, hence the turban.
Hence the turban and they were quite popular turbans at that point but to go the extra
mile and have larks was particularly bonkers.
It is annoying when you get a bone in your lark though, isn't it?
You've got to take the time.
What's the British equivalent of a turban of larks?
Like a flat cap of pheasants or something?
I don't know. I kind of think it should be a bowler hat, shouldn't it?
A chaperon de l'or of what's the most British meat?
It has to be beef, doesn't it really? But some bit of the beef.
Like some really minor...
A top hat of street pigeons.
They're bigger than larks.
They are too big, aren't they? It doesn't really work. You want bees. A top out of bees. Is there honey in this? No it's just bees. No it's bees. And we bone them.
Okay we know now that Alexis Soyer is a he's a whiz in the kitchen but he's also a whiz
with a kitchen. Do you know what I mean by that? What in terms of running the kitchen? More than that, in terms of the technology in a kitchen.
Okay, so the equipment as well. Yeah, he's innovating in that way. It's quite interesting,
Annie. And I don't know whether he's the pioneer because I know he likes to sort of build his
part a little bit, so I don't know whether he's like really, really inventing or whether he's just
sort of popularizing, but he brings a lot of stuff into the kitchen. I think it's a mixture of both he was quite well
known for finding sort of small scale inventors and such and then buying out their invention and
kind of you know popularizing it or building on it but he was absolutely an inventor in his own
right as well he was he constantly was fiddling He was always coming up with ideas. I think one of the reasons that he's such a fascinating character is because he
was so ahead of his time with the technology. Some of the things that he did, we didn't
really start to do for another 80, 90 years after his death. So with the reform club,
he worked with the architect to put in new kitchens just after he arrived. And some of
the stuff was fine. There were separate departments for butchery and for lots of different larders. It was a huge complex of kitchens,
so far so normal. But then he did things like install sliding chopping boards and sliding
partitions so that everyone could have their own workspaces. He made sure things were the
right heights for shorter people, kitchen maids and people like that. There were supporting
columns in the kitchens that had condiments hidden within them so you always had what you needed to hand. He had proto-refrigeration,
bearing in mind at this point, refrigerators just meant something with lots of ice in.
He had constantly running water pouring over the fish counter to keep his turbot from getting
warm. And then he went all out for steam, so he had a steam table. It's steam heated,
so the dishes are staying hot. There's temperature-controlled ovens, there's a roasting range with a boiler at the back,
so you constantly have hot water. And most of all, he was this huge champion for gas.
So gas had been in for lighting for quite a long time, but very, very few people had thought about
cooking with it, partly because the size of the pipes was too small to get enough supply in.
But because he was building from new, he could make sure the pipes were made bigger so he could get this gas into the kitchens and he was this enormous champion
for cooking on gas so gas was a big big theme in his life and even more than that he did all this
stuff that's what i would expect from a french chef well it is they're very rich food very rich food
but even more than that he invited the public to come and see the kitchen so the kitchen at the
reform club very very quickly became a tourist attraction in London and anyone who went there was like
Oh, I think I'm gonna go look at mr. Sawyer's gas
He was experimenting with kitchen appliances as well. So he claims we've invented many gadgets
I'm not sure if he invents them or whether he whether he licenses
I think what I've learned about this guy so far is we can't necessarily trust what he says
You're definitely getting the hang of necessarily trust what he says. Yeah.
You're definitely getting the hang of this episode.
Thank you, Ed.
Yeah.
So which of these five gadgets, one of them's not true,
did he not invent or at least popularize?
Or claim to invent, popularize.
Okay, so mechanical kitchen timer, plug strainer,
a tendon separator for meat, an ice cream scoop,
or a cafeteria for coffee.
Which of those five was not an Alexi Soye original?
Obviously they're all big in my life, the tendon separator especially.
I'm going to go with the plug strainer.
It doesn't feel grand enough.
It doesn't feel haute cuisine enough.
There's not enough flair.
There's not enough flair for the plug strainer.
No, I'm going to go with that.
I mean, huge news, huge news if he really did invent
the cafeteria, but.
The cafeteria he does invent.
He invented it.
Yeah, so no, the one that I'm afraid of caught you out there,
ice cream scoop is not his.
Comes later, later in the century.
As far as thinking about it, the plug strainer
is almost the sink cafeteria, isn't it?
Yes. And also really important because blocked drains at that point in time, very, very difficult to clean them, Thinking about it the plug strainer is almost the sink cafeteria
Yeah, very very difficult to clean them when you don't have diner rod Yeah, yeah, and and also all that butter going down the drains right if you're cooking your lavish dishes. Yes
It's not bones
So many like that. Yes a cafeteria is one of his Wow kitchen timer pretty clever isn't it?
What is one utensil that you wish someone had invented
or perhaps you could invent right now
that desperately we need in kitchens?
Hey, look, if I could invent a kitchen utensil
that we desperately need in kitchens,
I wouldn't be here.
I'd be...
You'd be at Dragon's Den, right?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
In Back to the Future 2,
they have that sort of rehydrating oven thing
where they get a tiny pizza delivered and they put it in the oven
and hit it and then five seconds later it's a full-size pizza that's yes i'd like that yes
yes please and i know there are like you know dehydrators and whatever and all of that but i
just want something that makes food massive i mean i'm here for it yeah that's absolutely
i'd buy it yeah yeah i would like to propose my wife's ice cream glove,
which she invented for me.
I love ice cream.
I'm obsessed with ice cream.
And I love eating Ben and Jerry's straight out the tub,
but it gets too cold straight out the freezer.
So she made me a glove that slides on.
That's one of the pathetic things I've ever heard, Greg.
It slides onto my hand.
It's too hot for my hand.
My hands get cold.
It slides onto my hand and you can hold it
and it's attached to your hand permanently.
Cause it's basically like a mitten with an ice cream tub attached.
I've got a better invention for you in your house.
The bowl.
And I like it.
I like it.
Ice cream glove.
Available in all good shops from my wife.
Right, okay, let's move on.
So the ice cream scoop comes later in the century.
The others are Alexi Souye originals, caveat, maybe maybe not originals but certainly he's popularising
them and claiming them.
Yeah and everyone builds on the shoulders of others.
So I get the feeling he's fun in the kitchen but 1837 was a spicy year for him romantically
as well because this is where he meets his good lady wife.
Well he's already met her, he meets her in 1835 I think.
So Soyer as you might imagine was something of flirt, but he doesn't seem to have been
a massive ladies man. He had sort of quite a few long-term romantic relationships. He
wasn't very good at marrying people though. So in Paris, he'd already had a relationship
with a lady called Adelaide Lamain and almost certainly had a son by her, or at least later
on the son called himself Alexis Soyer and they had some lovely tete-a-tete and then Soyer forgot about him and his will so who knows. But he with typical aplomb walked into
the studio of a leading artist at one point and said I want my picture painted because
I'm Alexis Soyer and the chat went yeah right whatever. My stepdaughter can paint you. So
in comes the stepdaughter and by all accounts it was love at first sight. So Swae courted this lady who was called Emma, Elizabeth Emma Jones, and she was a very, very good portraitist.
Very few of her works survive and the catalogue entries suggest they were of that saccharine
Victorian type that involved poor people with wood. But nevertheless he courted her and in 1837
they got married. They had a really interesting
marriage because she was a career woman and he was a career man so they didn't really have what was
by Victorian standards a conventional relationship at all. She would be off traveling quite a lot,
he worked quite a lot. It does seem to have been a really lovely relationship though,
genuinely when you read about it, it's gorgeous. There are stories like she turned up at one point
to go and wait for him in his office at the reform club and he didn't turn up for an hour. So she just
sketched herself on the wall as a visiting card and left. And when he got back, he was
so entranced by this picture that he had it framed. And it's just, you know, they genuinely
seem to have had this beautiful, beautiful romance.
I think it's better just to be there on time though.
Sounds lovely and romantic, but it's a pain isn't it?
You could argue that. It did have a tragic end though. She died very young.
Very very young. So she became pregnant with their first child and about I think
it was only a couple of weeks before the child was due. So he went off to Belgium.
She told him to go. She said don't worry, don't worry, it's going to be absolutely fine. And then there was this
big storm and her maid said, well, I'm going to the theatre, but there's a big storm.
And Emma went, don't worry about it, I'll be fine. Off the maid goes to the theatre.
There's a huge crash of lightning. Emma starts to hemorrhage. She miscarries. There's
nobody there. She's all alone. And by the time anybody realises what's going on, it's
just too late. She loses the child and she herself died as well. And then he spent really the next two years planning this enormous memorial
for her and buying all of her art that had been sold across the capital and kind of buying
it back again into a collection. He built this ginormous monument in Kensal which cost
I think £500 and had classics way, it had an eternal flame lit by gas, and it just said to her on it,
this is truly stupendous piece of work, but it didn't last that long, his morning period,
he sort of got back on the horse and took up with an Italian ballet dancer who was apparently
very voluptuous and called Fanny Chewito. But yes, Emma died in 1842, so their romance was quite short, but was very meaningful to him.
It sounds like a Victorian novel, doesn't it?
It does.
The way that all builds really feels.
You're right, it is quite gothic, isn't it?
Yeah.
Does this sort of grief slow his rise, his culinary quest for stardom?
Because this is a man who's got dry, does it slow him?
Not really.
What he does instead, he moves in actually with Emma's
stepfather, so they share a kind of not quite bachelor pad together with a kind of non-existent
kitchen, but he still craves recognition and I think with the death of Emma that actually becomes
a really big theme for him because she was middle class and he was working class so he'd married up
and now without her I think he felt that he didn't have this kind of social cache anymore.
So he started really chasing glory and one of the things he did like all good chefs who
really want to make a splash is he started publishing cookery books. I always think he
needs a hug. I thought at this point in his life I just want to give him a hug and find
him a therapist. He wasn't particularly literate because of getting expelled from the Protestant
seminary rather young so he used to dictate his books, but nevertheless he had a really strong voice, so when he started
to write he quite quickly discovered it, and he ended up publishing a series of cookery books
along with a couple of other books, of which the three best known are the Gastronomic Regenerator,
which was his first one in 1846, then there was the modern housewife in 1849 and then there was the Schilling
Cookery for the People in 1854 which built on an earlier pamphlet called Swee's Charitable
Cookery and I've got copies of all of them here and you can see that they are, they decrease
in size I think it's fair to say.
Yeah we all have ideas don't we.
But also they're all aimed at different income groups.
Book one is an absolute chunk.
Book one is amazing.
Book two, mid-sized,
book three is like, ah, here's some stuff. Book three is aimed at the working classes,
we only have a shilling to spend, it needs to be small. Whereas this thing, the gastronomic
regenerator, it's not pocket-sized, is it? This is designed for the aristocrats to keep
in their libraries and copy out recipes to give to their cooks. He actually got a kitchen
made to transcribe all of the recipes that
he used at the reform club, because obviously if you use a lowly paid woman who's never
going to make chef, then it makes it a lot easier for you to be a culinary sensation.
And all of his apprentices tested it for him. So it was delegation, I would say.
With a war hole situation there, yeah.
So you wouldn't catch modern TV chefs doing that.
No.
They cook all of their stuff and they test it all themselves.
Yeah.
I mean, he did make a nod to sort of not just doing restaurant food, because most of this
is on an enormous scale and you could never even think about doing it in a normal home.
Gastronomic Regenerator sounds to me like a crap transformer.
Yeah, I'm not sure about that as a title.
That wouldn't stand up today, I don't think.
What would your 19th century cookery book be called if you were appealing to the middle classes of the 1840s?
I mean, it feels like it should be something slightly more fun than Gastronomic Regenerator.
Glutton, the title of my actual book, I think is a lovely title for a cookbook as well, you know.
But it needs to be more Victorian. So Mr. Gamble's Gluttonous Gallery.
Yeah, Mr. Gamble's Gluttonous Adventures. Oh, that's good. The Gluttonous
Adventurer. So we have Sawyer's Cookery books in front of you, Annie. They're lovely things.
The Schilling Cookery book is for the working classes. So what's in it? The conceit of Schilling
Cookery, it followed the Modern Housewife in that it purports to be a series of conversations
between people advising the poor on what they can eat. Within it you find a lot of English
recipes, a lot, he doesn't go down the high flute and French route, things like sort of
fried whiting and loads and loads of things to do with herring and potatoes and lots and
lots of puddings. He has, I think there's about 10 recipes for toad in the hole in this.
Oh, okay.
And one of them is your entire
leftover Sunday roast but put in batter. Amazing. And he even tells you if you can't get hold of
any eggs then you can just put suet into your batter and stuff like that so it's a really really
practical book and this was ultimately his best-selling book and it was critically massively
acclaimed. It's the idea that each recipe costs a shilling to cook if the book isn't a shilling to
buy. The book was a shilling to buy, so it wasn't aimed at the very poor.
Because the very poor either would have been illiterate or wouldn't have had access to the wherewithal to cook. So this was something that was bought by certainly the lower middle classes but also the working classes.
It was given a lot of the time as well. It became this kind of real Bible for people who were, I suppose, what would have been called at the time
the respectable working class. Sure, I would say that there are a couple of recipes in there that
are a little bit complicated. I don't know if it's in a different book but we've got a couple of
images to show you. Oh yeah. And I wouldn't say that this is the 19th century equipment of cheese
on toast. Do you want to describe what you can see for us? Yes, oh my goodness. These are not from the
Schilling Cookery.
I should point out these are gastronomic regenerative dishes.
Something that appears to look like a sort of a big duck
or a swan or a gull.
But is that an actual bird or are you supposed to form
whatever you're cooking into a bird shape?
And then something else which looks like a roast turkey
but also a galleon.
Yeah.
With the little birds going all the way around it i mean yeah that's not that's a nightmare to me if i turned up
somewhere and someone had done me that i'm like what a total waste of time it looks like an ai
image that someone has accidentally typed in the wrong thing yeah instead of turkish battleship
it's turkey and battleship and ai's gone oh you want a bird that looks like a boat yeah I can do that Annie what what is this? Well these are, this is Rishashay
cuisine. This is to impress people right? Yeah these are party dishes for all sorts
of people but first of all they're served cold I should point that out. So the Dan
Danua ala Nelson which is the galleon in full sail with the turkey sticking out of its
back end was one of his kind of real signature dishes and it's actually a bread galleon in full sail with a turkey sticking out of its back end was one of his kind of real signature dishes and it's actually a bread galleon. So this is a ship, full ship
made out of bread and baked in the oven. Some iterations had carrot cannons as well. And
then the thing that looks like a really angry seagull is also turkey. And this is actually
one of my favourite of his dishes because it's just so warped. I mean it looks like a seagull with kind of wings that have been tied in a knot sticking
out of it, but the tail at the back and the wings are formed out of lobster claws which
have then had turkey meat moulded round them.
Oh no.
I mean it is so insane and yet there's a sort of sly sense of humour that runs through that.
And of course it's a massive demonstration of wealth because the level of time
That must have gone into these dishes
I mean I would have I would like to see what they actually look like when they were prepared because that is a drawing
Yeah
And you know you can be kinder in a drawing. Yeah, I can't imagine that you could get that much of a sort of angry
Look into the seagulls face
Yeah, it does look like it's it's just been denied a chip.
Reality versus what people are imagining. I'd imagine there's quite a big gulf between
those two.
If you said to me, what's Turkey Alan Nelson, in my head I'm imagining a turkey dish that
Lord Nelson liked to eat, not a turkey that looks like it's sailing with Lord Nelson.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. Or Lord Nelson's ship where a turkey has crash landed on it from outer space, which is... and history's secret heroes, plus other great BBC podcasts from news to comedy to true crime,
all ad free. Simply subscribe to BBC Podcast Premium on Apple Podcasts or listen to Amazon
Music with a Prime membership. Spend less time on ads and more time with BBC podcasts.
So Alexi Soye was releasing cookery books, he was doing kitchen tours, he was letting
tourists in, he was cooking these slightly bonkers dishes, he was cooking for the very
very wealthy in the posh reform club and he was cooking for the lower classes.
But he also had other money making schemes.
Ed, what do you think they might have been?
Deliveroo.
He just pedals around the house.
Or a quick turkey galleon.
I mean I wouldn't have put it past him but I don't think he did that.
No lots of people did but not him. Not him no he went the other way he went very 21st century he went
branded merch. Wow. Yeah in the 1840s Alexei Soyer is one of the first influencers in the food space
and he invents the art form Annie. I'm coming out big for him I'm swinging for the fences with
Alexei Soyer. I think he's a pioneer in this.
Yeah, he is. Alexi decided to partner with Cross and Blackwell to produce a range of
sauces. He also did kitchen gadgets. There was a stewing pan and there was an improved
baking dish and all the various bits you've sort of heard about already, but the big thing
was the sauces. The partnership with Cross and Blackwell was a masterstroke because they
knew what they were doing in terms of production, but apparently he sort of maybe came up with the recipe, but he might not actually have come up with the recipe.
But anyway, glossing over that, Soyé's sauce was marketed in two versions.
There was a spicy one for the gentlemen and then milder one for the ladies.
You've always got to think of the ladies.
Yeah, yeah.
And their soft mouth.
Well, exactly.
Then there was Soyye's relish,
which was for general purposes, no one knows what was in this,
but it seems likely that it was a heavily garlic sauce,
so perhaps also not the most sociable of sauces,
and he marketed that as being so perfect
it would create a soul under the ribs of death,
which is a quote from John Milton.
Wow.
So, you know, he's aiming high with quotes from masters
of the English language and religion from the 17th century.
I always say that when I eat something delicious.
Yeah, he puts his face on it.
Soul Under the Ribs of Death.
It's very heavy metal.
Yeah, yeah.
I know you're into your metal.
If you heard an album title called
A Soul Under the Ribs of Death,
and then you saw a ketchup bottle on the front of it,
you'd be like, what?
I'd love it.
I'd buy that album straight away.
What's the most heavy metal name for a condiment that you can come up with?
I mean, obviously if you're looking for blood and you're looking for guts and all of this
sort of stuff, so yeah, probably some sort of just like thick blood.
I'd go Hellmouth Mustard. Hellmouth Mustard.
Hellmouth Mustard's good. Yeah. I mean, obviously there's a, most hot sources have names like that now yeah you know I've always gone by hot sauce
if I'm if I'm in America go to one of the shops and you know they're always
called like bum explode or something so the sources are called soya's sauce
succulents succulents very nice and soya's nectar sauce well nectar was a
fizzy drink or was it actor nectar was a fizzy drink.
Oh, was it?
Nectar was a blue fizzy drink.
Oh, nice.
That was, he used to use it for what were really the earliest cocktails in London as well.
So, there's people...
So he's in those gin spaces as well.
Oh, yeah, yeah, he's into everything.
This is amazing.
For the people that, I mean, today blue cocktails are a big thing.
And, you know, he was there first. So yeah, his nectar was blue and cinnamon
flavoured.
Nice. It sounds gross.
Mouth wash.
He's also got his magic stove. Ed, do you know what this is?
No, I heard you mentioned the magic stove earlier. I'm very excited. Is it a bit like
a Dutch oven?
I don't know what that is, so maybe.
It's when you fart and then push someone's head underneath the diva.
Sawyer's gas. Yeah, yeah.
Annie, is it a Dutch oven? Is it a thing?
No, actually, although I suspect if he'd been able to invent that one he would have done it as well
and marketed it as a thing, farts in a bottle.
But no, the magic stove is basically a camping stove.
So it's a miniature stove.
There was a basic version which was a spirit burner, a little ring and then a pan on top. Then there was a kind of kit version that you could buy which was a box that had
lots of pans and lots of gadgets, all of which were invented by him. Again, it wasn't his
invention per se, but he marketed it. He never took out patents on it, which is a bit of a problem
because ultimately he didn't make as much money as he could have done from them. But he loved this
magic stove. It sold phenomenally well to anyone who was camping or travelling. He made about
£6,000 from it in the first year, which was a phenomenal amount of money at the time.
And throughout his life, really, he would whip out his magic stove every opportunity,
including when he really wasn't supposed to. So, for example, you know, catering a
banquet for Prince Albert in York, and then after dinner, when the ladies
and gents separated, he was in there with the ladies whipping out his magic stove.
I'm assuming the Reform Club, where he meant he's meant to work, they must be delighted,
no? Their star chef is a superstar, bringing in the cash, everyone knows him, surely people
are queuing to eat at the Reform Club, this is a win for them.
Well yeah, but they're a members club, you don't want too many people queuing, because you don't want the Holy Ploy to get in, do you? And also, you know reform club this is a win for them. Well yeah but there are members clubs, you don't want too many people queuing because you don't want the holly ploy to get in do you? And also
you know ultimately this is a Frenchman who's working class so the idea that he's getting all
of the kudos versus all of these English male aristocrats, not all of them love it to be honest,
they think he's getting a bit too big for his boots and I will be fair he was stretching himself
a little thin. Yeah so there were various attempts really throughout the last few years of his tenure
at the Reform Club to try and oust him. He was prosecuted at one point or charged with
financial problem, financial fraud really, which he wasn't guilty of except in the way
that all chefs were because everybody took a few kickbacks at the time. He increasingly
didn't love being
a subordinate, he wanted to be the person that was the draw because he was and it all
got a little bit tense basically. And then in 1850 they kind of offered him an ultimatum,
they basically said either tow the line, start cooking here and turn up or you know go away
and do all your other things. So he went turn up and left.
Yeah, so in 1851 have you ever heard of the great exhibition?
Yes.
Yeah. What do you know about it?
I've heard of it.
Thank you for your contribution. It's sort of this grand, it's meant to be sort of a
scientific exhibition, isn't it? In some ways, it's sort of a...
It's an everything exhibition. It's a mark of global power for Britain. It's the finest
inventions from across the world. It's a huge, huge power for Britain. It's the finest inventions from across the world.
It's a huge, huge exhibition, but the point is in Crystal Palace,
which is amazing, which is designed for it. Exactly.
And Prince Albert's there to open it and it, you know, and millions of people show up.
And he runs a restaurant there.
Well, kind of. Is it a cafe? What is it?
So there was a catering contract which he was asked to reply for and he didn't, which
in retrospect was one of the bigger errors of his life, bearing in mind that Schweppes
got the contract and they went on to become a giant among fizzy drinks and he had a fizzy
drink. But, bummer.
Yeah, I can't see the blue cinnamon replacing sort of tonic water.
No.
Gin and blue please.
Oh, now you've said that, that's quite good. I could go to a pub and I'm too total and I'm tempted. But sorry I ran a restaurant outside the Great Exhibition and it was called the Symposium
of All Nations.
Was he supposed to or did he just set one up?
Is it like when you go outside of a gig and they're selling Knopf t-shirts just putting
on free of the room? Is it like when you go outside of a gig and they're selling knock-off t-shirts?
Except he took over Gore House, which was a palatial house very near the entrance, the great exhibition. He then ripped out all of the tasteful stuff that was in it and replaced it with the
world's most awful decor. There were sort of giant blue ceilings with stars on, there was a
Romany camp out the back in the garden, but it was mass catering.
And again, there was innovation hidden with all this because effectively he set up what
would become the model for diner catering and fast food catering in the future. The
problem was your ticket to the Great Exhibition only allowed you to go in and out once, so
you couldn't go in, come out and have lunch and go back in again. So they never got the
number of people that they expected to get. So while lots of people said the food was really, really good, others said it wasn't
because soye wasn't always there. And lots of people commented on how tasteless it was.
And it made a massive loss. It lost £7,000 overall. So he had to close it early with
this enormous... £7,000 is basically a lifetime's earnings for a chef.
So he made £6,000 with his magic stove. Yeah.
And then he lost 7,000.
And then he blew it all.
And not only that, because he'd brought in lots of backers
and some of them were his friends,
the fallout for it emotionally and socially
from his point of view and from his reputation
was really, really damaging.
So one thing that we haven't talked about yet
is what Alexey Soye looked like.
If I introduce him now,
if he walked into this room right now,
what are you imagining?
Well, there's two classic chef looks, right, that I'm thinking of, chefs from history. Big Fat
Red Man or Little Weasley Rat Boy.
Okay.
Those are the two.
Which one are you going? You're looking at me right now, the Weasley boy, that's me.
No, no, I was looking at you anyway because I'm talking to you Greg. Interesting because
I'm thinking of the French as well. Maybe I'm thinking I'm not thinking big fat red man
Okay, I feel like he's got so much stuff going on
He doesn't really have time to indulge all of the time. So I'm thinking more wheezy more wheezy little rap boy
Okay, here is a portrait done by his wife Emma. Okay, right. So this is through his wife's eyes. This is through
Yes, exactly. This is love for you
Okay, right. So this is through his wife's eyes. This is through. Yes, exactly. This is love for you
So Annie is he playing up to the Frenchiness here with the beret and the and the rap boy look
This doesn't give you an impression of his height He was apparently quite tall and slender and very much in the fashionable, the fashionable Victorian gentleman he votes for.
That's back in, it's a rat boy summer.
It is rat boy summer.
I like to think of him more as soon as he entered a room you'd know he was there just
because he just must have oozed this energy and this interest.
He did play up on his friendship but actually that's not a beret, that's more like a sort
of tamasanta.
So he always wore trousers. It's ongoing trousers.
Apart from that one night.
Apart from that one night. Maybe this is why he always went for trousers.
So his trousers were usually striped and often in garish colours,
possibly so he couldn't lose them again.
Yes, exactly.
Or recognise them.
Have you seen my trousers? What colour are they?
Well, actually.
They look like a texture.
He also, he really loved things cut on the bias, so la Zouk Zouk or a la zigzag as he called it
Yeah, and like it got really obsessive like his business cards were cut in a zigzag way
I mean to be fair a lot of people did actually take the mick out of what he wore because he did he drew attention
Didn't he he drew attention to himself and certain people were like this guy's a bit of a douchebag
But it's still being talked about yeah, yeah, see a la Zouk Zouk
I love is his his kind of whole that's his whole look yeah so he
didn't have any straight seams on his clothes all of his tailoring everything
is there's no horizontal or vertical lines I love yeah diagonals so he's a
stylish as Nigella as French as Raymond Blanc and also Alexis Souayé is doing
charity work he's a man of the people do you know where he did charity work in
which country what so he's going outside of outside of England? You going back to France to do charity work? It's a good guess, but no
No, no think of another country close to another country another think of another country that is not France or England
Germany, nope, Spain. No
It's Ireland. I should have guessed it. So, Ed, have you heard of the Irish potato famine?
I have.
We're a comedy show, but I think for the next two, three minutes,
a bit of a gear change.
This is a tragedy, right, Annie?
This is a million die.
Probably a million have to emigrate.
It's a devastating, horrible thing.
And he responds to it in quite an interesting way.
Yeah, he does.
So Ireland is in dire, dire straits.
This all happens in from 1843 the potato blight hits Ireland and you have
six years of awful harvests where people are digging up the potatoes and they're just turning to sludge in their fingers.
The absolutely horrific, horrific stories coming out of Ireland and the British frankly do not cover themselves in glory. The English overlords
just go, well, they're Irish, they felt they're poor, they didn't work very hard did they? And they just leave them to
it for a couple of years. And then eventually the newspapers start saying, oh hang on, you
know what, maybe it's not actually the poor's fault they're poor, maybe the fact that the
Irish are all starving is because the English have taken all their crops and sold them abroad.
Do you think you ought to do something about this? And very gradually this movement builds
which is saying that perhaps some form of poor relief should be offered and Sawyer gets to hear about this. He already
had some dealings with the idea of feeding the poor and caring for the poor. He set up
soup kitchens in Spitalfields. So you were partly right when you said France because
Spitalfields was where the Protestant French weavers were and they were in dire straits
at this point because we were starting to import silk from elsewhere. So he had already
kind of dabbled in the idea. But in 1847 he decided to set up a soup kitchen
under new principles which classic soy-a were basically factory feeding principles. So the
ideal there was this portable soup kitchen and you could feed about 5,000 people, feed 5,000 meals
a day and you had a bowl in each position, you had a chained down spoon,
so people came in, they were fed their soup, they ate it, they got out really quickly,
swabbed out the bowls, you wiped down the spoon, the next lot came in.
And he took that out to Ireland and there was a grand opening because he was never
a man to miss up an opportunity for some publicity. And he devised all these recipes,
which he said would feed people and be nutritionally really brilliant and they weren't, I think it's fair to say.
It's problematic because I think his heart was really in the right place, he genuinely wanted to do something
and I don't think he ever really thought that his soups were nutritionally sound.
What he actually said later was, well yeah, but they were better than nothing. When there was nothing on offer, these were better than zero.
The trouble was, you know, the way it worked, this queue of people that went in, sat down, went out. He
was accused of treating the poor like wild animals, which, you know, yes, he was accused
of treating the whole thing like a technical problem to be solved. Eventually the tide
turned and people started saying that actually the soup kitchen was a bad idea. You know,
when he first went out, everyone was like, great, what an amazing thing. And the British government went brilliant, we can blame it
all on him.
Yeah, I mean, he did something when the government did nothing, but it wasn't necessarily the
best thing. So that was his first effort with charity relief. He did another one. He went
to war zone.
Wow.
Do you know which war zone this might be?
Couldn't guess. All of my guesses have been rubbish so far.
You might have heard of this one, the Crimean War.
I have heard of that one.
Yeah, so that's a long way to travel. This is 1855. This is the, you know, we know about
this war because of Mary Seacole and Florence Nightingale, but for listeners who don't know
where Skitari is, which is where he went to, Skitari weirdly is in Turkey, a totally different
country to where the war was happening. 300 miles away.
Yes, but it was where the British troops who were fighting were taken to die.
Let's not beat about the bush.
They weren't meant to die there, but that's what happened.
But this is a war like every other war up to that point, but even worse,
where the vast majority of casualties were from disease, not from fighting in action.
So what would happen is the British would go out and fight.
They'd get wounded or, you know, a bit, then they'd be put on a ship and then they'd be brought over to Skitarii and
then they would be left on the dock where the rats would eat them as they died.
And eventually they converted to barracks into a hospital which is where Florence Nightingale
went out and tried desperately to reform.
I mean there was nothing there.
It was falling down, there was no furniture, there were rats everywhere, there was lice,
it was, the conditions were horrific. And for the first time, the newspapers in Britain, they
reported on this and they reported on it in very critical terms. So this became a real
thing. The British government was seen to be failing its own troops.
It brought down the prime minister.
It did. Yeah. And Soyeri heard about this and he wrote an open letter to the Times saying,
I will go out there and I will sort out the catering
and I will sort out the nutrition
and I will sort out the kitchens.
And that is what he did.
Off he went.
He was told not to as well
because this was a place really well known for its disease
where people were going out
and even if they weren't fighting,
they were coming back with what was called Crimea fever.
So he goes out there and he did a good job.
He did sort out the kitchens. he did things like, you know,
suggesting they tinned the copper rather than poisoning people with untinned copper,
stopped boiling their underpants with meat because they were tying underpants to pieces of meat
so that when they could take the meat out they could recognise which bit of meat was theirs.
What?
So he went, why don't you just use a peg with a number on it?
And they went, underpants, they're great, they add a little bit of flavour.
That is awful. Yeah I mean the Scutari barracks were disgusting when
Minflorence got there and he shows up slightly afterwards and he reforms the kitchen and
he brings his magic stove. Of course he does. Of course you know. Brings it everywhere.
It brings it everywhere but it's really useful for the soldiers it's smokeless which means
they can use it in the battlefield because it doesn't show the enemy where you are and
the British army carried on using it
until the Falklands War.
Apparently some countries still have soya stoves
tucked away in case of emergencies.
So, and the army still celebrate him.
But of course, another book deal was required.
Yeah, so he published the one book I haven't held up yet
from my collection here, which is Soye's culinary campaign,
which is beautiful.
And this was a book all about his experiences in the
Crimea. It actually reads quite well, I'm quite fond of that book, I mean it's the usual kind of
massive self-aggrandizing and lots of sort of tall stories and telling people
about how amazing he was but it did do quite well and it did I think introduce
people to the idea of war writing and the idea of the Crimea in a way that
wasn't just sort of puffs in the idea of the Crimea in a way that wasn't just
sort of puffs in the papers or endlessly tedious memoirs.
Yeah, and the tragic thing is you mentioned Crimean fever. He doesn't come back healthy.
No, he contracted Crimea fever towards the end of his time there. He also got dysentery.
So he was very, very, very ill. And then when he started to recover, he jumped straight
back on his horse and sort of touring bits of Turkey. And, you know, he wanted to go and see lots
of it. And as the troops are pulling out, he was desperate to stay there. I think he
didn't think he had much to come back to really. So he worked himself to death on top of this
illness. And then when he got back to the UK, he published his book, he kept kept working
and he'd fall from his horse and he started hemorrhaging and actually reading about his
last few weeks is really awful. He's coughing blood but he's still desperately trying to work
and produce things and then the blood turns to sort of black bile and it's very very clear he's
going to die and he he died in 1858 so he was only 48 years old. Yeah he'd achieved an awful lot. I
mean we've talked quite a lot about Alexei Soyona's career what are your sort of final thoughts before
we do the uh the quiz? Well I'm ashamed that I didn't know more about him to be honest because it seems like he's
sort of the absolute proto celebrity chef.
I love him I've talked about him a lot but no one knows who he is you know historians
know him and no one else so you know.
But even the marketing of the products and bottling his sources and doing all of this
stuff just yeah it's incredible.
Yeah.
He packed a lot into a relatively short life.
He did 48 years it's not it's packed a lot into a relatively short life. It's it 48 years. It's not it's not long
But he did achieve a lot
I mean certainly in an army context when he died
The time said he deserved a posthumous medal for what he did in skitari in particular the stove
Which really did revolutionize army catering also introduced the army catering core as well
So thousands of people bought his books. So if we're talking about celebrity, it's him.
Alexi Souye, trouser-losing genius, self-aggrandizing short, but man of the people.
You know what? On the way home, I'm going to buy a turkey, I'm going to buy some bread,
and I'm going to make myself a turkey galleon.
Turkey-lad Nelson, turkey-alligamble.
The New Ones' window!
Turkey Alagamble. Turkey Alagamble.
The nuance window.
This is the part of the show where Ed and I sit quietly and sup on our turkey lobster
for two minutes.
Well, Annie, tell us something we need to know about Alexi's soye.
My stopwatch is ready.
You have two minutes, Annie.
Take it away.
Right.
So Alexi's soye is best known in terms of his books for
Shilling Cookery for the People which was a massive bestseller, but I am going to talk about this
book The Modern Housewife which was published in 1849 and then went through subsequent editions,
and the reason I want to go through that is because he's always recognised for The Magic
Stove and for the other book, but this one to me is unique among history books because it is written
by a French chef
who was almost illiterate working through a series of secretaries and not only is it
a brilliant book from a recipe point of view but the way it is written is just magic. So
he writes this book from the point of view of two Victorian English housewives writing
to each other, Autance and Eloise.
Autance is the kind of mother figure who is advising Eloise on how she can run her
household. And it's not just, you know, here's a letter about roasts.
There are, you know, they chat to each other.
They talk about what's going on in their
neighbourhood throughout the different editions, their story changes.
So by 1853, Autance has fallen upon bad
times due to her husband speculating unwisely on
the railways and had to move from St John's Wood to Rugby, where she can now advise on
other things involving poor people's food, for example.
You know, you're really invested, you want to buy the different books, but interspersed
with that are things that are brilliant for a food historian because you can study social
history through it because of those details.
He has a picture in here which shows you apple pie, one of my favourite pictures in the book ever, apple pie as it ought to be taken from still life,
followed by apple pie as they often are. And you look at that and you think yes,
people in the Victorian times, they cocked up their food as well. This makes me feel reassured.
But also, and the final thing about it, is the recipes are fantastic. So I brought in
route biscuits. I've never managed to find a biscuit recipe
which satisfyingly moulds every single time you make it.
And as you can see from these,
they are a little biscuit, a lot like a rich tea biscuit,
and I like a rich tea, but they take a mould.
You can emboss figures onto them
and then these would have been served at balls.
So there we go, Alexi saw a fun guy, I think.
Yeah.
You know, normally on the show it's like,
oh God, here we go, another dickhead from history, but this guy's alright.
I think we said that maybe he left his son behind in France, so not necessarily the best dad.
Well, you can't be perfect, can you? I mean, you know, he had cool clothes.
He did.
Come on, for a dead white Victorian male, he's really good.
So what do you know now?
Time now for the what do you know now. This is our quick fire quiz for Ed to see how much
he has learned. Oh I forgot about this. Are you giving me a biscuit now? I know sorry.
I'm going to be rubbish at this. Previously you've averaged nine out of ten on the quizzes.
Yeah it's not going to happen this time. You're good at the quizzes,
but let's see how much you've remembered.
We've got 10 questions, here we go.
Question one, in which French town
was Saullier born in 1810?
Brie, but is that the name of the town?
Yeah, yeah, that's it, Moen Brie, very good.
Question two, why was a young Alexi
thrown out of seminary school?
What prank?
Climbed up the tower and rang the bells.
He did.
Question three, what was the name
of the posh London politicians private members club that Sawyer made his name as? Reform Club.
It was. Question four. What was the name of Sawyer's tragically short-lived wife? Emma. It was. Very
good. Elizabeth Emma Jones, but I think we mostly just said Emma on the show. Question five. What is
notable about Sawyer's 1849 book The Modern Housewife and how it's written? It's a conversation
between two Victorian housewives. It is. Eloise and Hortense. Very good. Question six.
Imagine if I'd forgotten that. We literally just heard about that. Question six. Name two kitchen gadgets that Sawyer possibly
invented. Cafeteria and plug drain. Yeah, plug strainer. Very good. Yeah, good.
A stewing pan, improved baking dish kitchen timer but yeah
question seven how did Alexi Sawyer try to help during the great Irish famine?
The mobile soup kitchen yep absolutely set up in Dublin question eight what monstrosity is
turkey Alan Nelson? Is it a big old big old turkey? No that's yeah that's the turkey with the bread
galleon yes absolutely yeah question nine what invention Because we saw the other turkey as well.
Question nine.
What invention did Sawyer take out with him to the Crimean War to help the British troops?
Magic Stove.
It was.
And this for a perfect 10 out of 10.
Can he do it?
What was distinctive about Alexi Sawyer's fashion?
Zigzags.
Yeah, the Zook Zook.
Zook Zook.
Yeah, 10 out of 10 Ed Gamble.
Happy with that.
It all went in.
It all went in.
Well done. If something's got food involved, it will stick.
There we go, there we go, you're on brand, Ed.
Yeah, yeah.
Amazing, thank you, Annie.
We had an absolute hoot.
Thank you for the biscuit too, it's very tasty.
Thank you, Ed as well for coming in.
Thanks for having me, always a pleasure.
Well, listener, if you wanna learn more
about the history of food with Annie,
check out our episode on the history of ice cream.
For more quality time with Ed in the 19th century, we've got episodes on Lord Byron and Gothic vampire literature.
Those are actually linked because of course Byron inspired the vampire. And remember,
if you've enjoyed the podcast, please leave a review, share the show with friends, subscribe
to your dead to me on BBC sounds so you never miss an episode. But I just want to say a
huge thank you to our guests. In history corner, we had the amazing Dr. Annie Gray. Thank you,
Annie.
Thank you. And in comedy corner, we have the excellent Ed Gamble. Thank you to our guests in History Corner. We had the amazing Dr. Annie Gray. Thank you, Annie. Thank you.
And in Comedy Corner, we had the excellent Ed Gamble.
Thank you, Ed.
Thank you very much.
And to you lovely listener, join me next time
as we cook up another historical feast.
But for now, I'm off to go and invent Turkey a la Wellington.
It's basically Turkey in a rubber boot.
Bye.
This episode of You're Dead to Me
was researched by Hannah Campbell-Huson.
It was written by Emmy Rose Price Goodfellow, Emmaellow, Emma Nagoose and me, the audio producer was
Steve Hankey and our production coordinator was Ben Hollands.
It was produced by Emmy-Rose Price-Goodfellow, me and senior producer Emma Nagoose and our
executive editor was James Cook.
Your Dead to Me is a BBC Studios audio production for Radio 4 comes Doe, examining the business behind profitable everyday products and what
they might be like in the future. I'm the entrepreneur Sam White. In each episode I
focus on things like TVs, hairdryers or vacuum cleaners, hearing first hand from people who
make them.
We still make products with DVD playability. You would be very surprised how many we sell.
Then our expert guests choose their favourite game changing innovations which shape the
products and the past, before we follow the money to where they're going next.
Think of the TV 98 inch or 100 inch.
Doe makes the mundane marvellous again. Listen on BBC Sounds. and history's secret heroes, plus other great BBC podcasts from news to comedy to true crime,
all ad free. Simply subscribe to BBC Podcast Premium on Apple Podcasts or listen to Amazon
Music with a Prime membership. Spend less time on ads and more time with BBC podcasts.