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"Wyvern", ( Colonel A.R. Kenney-Herbert)
600pp; 210x130mm; paperback
ISBN 978-1-903018-53-8 £15.00
click here for a PDF of the
title pages and introduction |
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Today we are publishing this most excellent volume by ‘WYVERN
’, the pseudonym of Arthur Robert Kenney-Herbert, a not-so-crusty colonel
in the Indian army impassioned by food and cooking. His quite remarkable
book first appeared in 1878 and this is a facsimile of the 1885 edition
with a nicely turned introduction by LESLIE FORBES.
Elizabeth David called this book ‘meticulous and clear’, one that ‘anyone
with a taste for Victorian gastronomic literature ’should ‘snap up’. She
was absolutely correct. It is a fine exposition of cookery both in India
and at home in England at the end of the 19th century. It contains both
a realistic assessment of the trials and tribulations of memsahibs, close
instructions on making a full-flavoured curry and on ‘camp cookery ’when
out for jaunts, as well as a sound description of good French cookery in
which he imagined the lady of the house might instruct her slightly surprised
native servants. This may have been written 130 years ago, but its observations
are still helpful to the modern reader.
The colonel is mindful of the difficulties for Europeans making a home
in India: the problems of communication, the variations in ingredients,
the need to take advantage of the fledgling food-processing industry (cans,
industrial production, cooking equipment). But his recipes never ignore
or cheapen the essence of fine cooking, whether classical French or Anglo-Indian.
The book started out as a series of newspaper articles, an unlikely
spare-time project for a serving officer, although once he retired, the
colonel opened a cookery school in London and wrote many other manuals
of the same high quality. |
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‘Wyvern ’was a colonel in the Indian Army, long resident in Madras,
who whiled away his spare time writing about cookery in the Madras Athenaeum
and Daily News. The upshot of his interesting hobby was this book,
which set out to instruct the memsahibs of the day in the best ways to
cope with Indian kitchen staff and cooking arrangements and in how to produce
decent English and French food with local ingredients and imported supplies.
It is a fascinating hybrid, for it tells the modern reader a great deal
about Anglo-Indian cookery and gives a matchless description of Victorian
haute
cuisine. There is possibly no better introduction to good cookery than
this book. So talented a teacher was ‘Wyvern ’that eventually he came home
to Britain and set up a cookery school in London. His subsequent books,
most notably Commonsense Cookery, were also models of their type,
though in many respects never improved on his first attempt published here.
Leslie Forbes has contributed a bravura introduction. She has herself
travelled widely in India and wrote an excellent book on Indian cookery
as well as a highly regarded radio series on the topic. The chapters cover
every aspect of the kitchen, from the cook and his management, the store-room,
and the batterie de cuisine, to all dishes suitable for dainty dining,
as well as excellent chapters on ‘Our Curries ’‘Camp Cookery ’and ‘Our
Kitchens in India ’. There are extensive model menus for parties of six
or eight people, or for ‘Little Home Dinners’. Elizabeth David once said
of this book: ‘I should recommend anyone with a taste for Victorian gastronomic
literature to snap him up… His recipes are so meticulous and clear, that
the absolute beginner could follow them, yet at the same time he has much
to teach the experienced cook.’
Leslie Forbes has worked in London as a writer, artist and broadcaster
for over 20 years. She is the author of four award-winning travel books,
including the worldwide bestseller A Table in Tuscany and the presenter
of many celebrated BBC radio series, several based in Italy. Her first
novel, Bombay Ice, published in 1998, was an international bestseller
and her second, Fish, Blood &Bone (2000) was nominated for the
Orange prize.
Review in The Economic Times (Bombay)
Garam Masala: Culinary Jottings for Madras
Vikram Doctor, Chennai, 2/5/2008
I first came across Colonel Kenney-Herbert while reading Elizabeth David.
This British writer who has near Goddess status in food writing was an
admirer of the Colonel, praising his Culinary Jottings for Madras
particularly in her study Spices, Salts and Aromatics in the English
Kitchen. That was some recommendation and I was also intrigued because
I had just moved to the city that was still to be called Chennai. Who was
this culinary genius who had flourished in such apparently unpromising
surroundings?
Madras at that time was hardly the Raj city of the Colonel, but vestiges
still existed in grand old buildings, in Higginbotham's booksellers which
had published his Jottings, and the cavernous halls of the old Spencer's
department store which would have supplied him with the imported tinned
food whose over-use he deplored, but which he was often forced to use in
order to produce what he felt was an acceptable standard of dining. These
were just vestiges, and I thought the Colonel's book would bring them to
life so I searched hard for it. I asked second-hand booksellers and checked
old libraries, but no one had a copy. Finally, a few years back, I got
one thanks to Mr.S.Muthiah, Madras' historian, who had himself made a copy
from a book found in a British library. Promising to return it soon, I
fled to a photocopying shop and made my own copy from it.
It was worth the trouble. The Colonel's Jottings, which he published
under the name 'Wyvern' (which I'll use for brevity) is wonderful for many
reasons, of which nostalgia is just one. Its certainly interesting reading
anecdotes from his career which spanned from 1859, just after the Rising,
to 1892, near the apogee of the Raj, but the book was never meant to be
a memoir. It really is, as he explained with full Victorian floridness:
"A Treatise in Thirty Chapters on Reformed Cookery for Anglo-Indian Exiles
Based Upon Modern English and Continental Principles with Thirty Menus
For Little Dinners Worked Out in Detail."
To deconstruct this imposing subtitle one has to understand the culinary
history of the period Wyvern wrote in. Coming to India in 1859, as a young
man he would have known many British residents from the East India company
days when it was acceptable to adopt many Indian customs including eating
mostly Indian food. Wyvern fondly recalls a "fine old servant of honest
John Company" who would host 'tiffin' parties where he served "eight or
nine varieties of curries with divers platters of freshly-made chutneys,
grilled ham, preserved roes of fishes, &c."
But Wyvern's time in India saw the end to this world of Anglo-India
(the phrase used to mean literally the British in India, and not the mixed
race community that took on the name later) and the establishment of an
Empire where British and Indians were rigidly divided. This was reinforced
was by the insistence that the British live in a style identical (just
grander) to what they would have lead back home. So curry might be acceptable
for breakfast or lunch or a private meal at home, but for formal public
purposes it had to be British. As Wyvern notes in his introduction, he
no longer saw any use for a curry based cookbook for the "Anglo-Indian
in England"; what was needed was to make food fit for "the Englishman in
India."
The problem was that what this meant wasn't too clear since English
food itself was undergoing profound change. The country based cooking of
the past was being abandoned as England industrialised, and its new wealth
drew foreign chefs like Francatelli and Soyer to London to set a new French
influenced style. But there was a lot of confusion and poor execution,
and this is what Wyvern wanted to correct. He clearly had plenty of experience
of the new cooking, yet he didn't go to the fashionable extreme either
and denigrate all English cooking. He notes approvingly how a French waiter
only coats salad leaves with the lightest vinaigrette dressing ("The thing
to avoid is a sediment of dressing"), but also goes into the details
of how to make a good English bread sauce or brown gravy.
Nor, despite his subtitle, does Wyvern disdain curries. He points out
that because they are falling out of fashion people are forgetting how
to make them properly, so have no idea of how good they can be. Naturally
he's well aware that all curries aren't in the Northern style that others
assumed was standard for all curries, and he emphasises the value of typically
South Indian ingredients like tamarind and coconut milk. His appreciation
for Indian vegetables is also quite unlike the British (or many Indians
for that matter): "With cold cooked country vegetables, I have made capital
salads; young brinjals, the mollay-keerai, bandecai, country beans, greens
of all kinds and little pumpkins gathered very young, are all worthy of
treatment in this way." He even recommends snake-gourd, 'podolong-cai',
cooked in brown gravy as "well worth trying when vegetables are as scarce
as they always are in hot weather."
That's an interesting way to look at snake-gourd, a vegetable most people
turn up their noses at, and it shows another reason to value Wyvern. The
Jottings fall into an interesting category of books on how to make
foreign food in India, written by foreign writers based over here (Tarla
Dalal on Mexican food does not count), so there is both authenticity and
practical applicability. The entertaining Italian cookbook Food Is Home
by the Goa based chef Sarjano is one example, and then there's The Landour
Cook Book from American missionaries based in that hill station, a
book on Vietnamese cooking by the Vietnamese wife of an erstwhile director
of the Alliance Francaise in Chennai, and other such books by the wives
of diplomats. Their great value is to show us how to look at available
ingredients here differently, as Wyvern does with coconut flowers: "A very
superior dish… The white stalks of the flower, if quite young, can be served
exactly like asparagus. I.e.: - boiled, laid in a very hot dish, with plenty
of butter melting over them…"
Parts of the Jottings, it is true, can make one squirm since
Wyvern didn't escape the British prejudices. A running theme in the book
is to talk about 'Ramasamy', meaning the standard native cook, whose abilities
he acknowledges, but whose many shortcomings are deplored especially in
comparison to 'Martha', a standard plain English cook. Ramasamy's shortcomings
include lack of cleanliness, love of shortcuts like using tins and taste
for dubious decorations like country parsley (coriander leaves). It easy
to get annoyed by this, until one considers how often we've heard upper-class
housewives in India say exactly the same thing about their cooks. Wyvern
is also fair, and his real point about Ramasamy's failings is that they
are due to employers who don't get involved with their kitchens, leaving
the cook directionless, yet faulting him when problems inevitable rise.
Wyvern's basic message is that we need to think intelligently and without
prejudice about the food we eat. This is conveyed in a manner that is detailed
without being boring, stern without being forbidding, and leavened with
a bluff, military sense of humour and an unselfconscious appreciation of
the joys of food. It's not far from Elizabeth David's own style, so one
can see why she appreciated him. The good news now is that Culinary
Jottings for Madras has been reprinted by Prospect Books, the specialist
food book imprint set up by the late Alan Davidson. Tom Jaine, who has
revised and extended Davidson's magisterial Oxford Companion to Food,
now runs Prospect and very kindly sent me a copy of the reprint (their
second, after a first in 1994), which has an introduction by Leslie Forbes
with details of Wyvern's subsequent life.
This is a facsimile of the fifth edition for which Wyvern added on a
fascinating essay on Indian kitchens, which for some reason was dropped
for the seventh edition which is what I had earlier. Wyvern seems to have
fiddled around quite a bit with his editions and given how interesting
he always is, it would have been nice to have an appendix with all the
major changes. But that's a detail, compared to the joy of having him back
in print at all. Sadly Prospect doesn't have an Indian distributor so those
who want the book will have to order directly from their website at www.prospectbooks.co.uk
I hope an Indian distributor will take up Wyvern's book, which should never
have vanished from our book and kitchen shelves. |
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