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This 17th-century cookbook contains both recipes and propaganda.
Eat Like England's First Non-Royal Ruler With This
Propaganda-Filled Cookbook
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Eat Like England's First Non-Royal Ruler With This Propaganda-Filled
Cookbook
Opponents of Oliver Cromwell published his family recipes, with a
side of fake news.
by Anne Ewbank March 10, 2021
Eat Like England's First Non-Royal Ruler With This Propaganda-Filled
Cookbook
Copy Link Facebook Twitter Reddit Flipboard Pocket
This 17th-century cookbook contains both recipes and propaganda.
This 17th-century cookbook contains both recipes and propaganda. All
images courtesy of the Cromwell Museum, Huntingdon, UK
In This Story
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Destination Guide
England
Since January, the Cromwell Museum in Huntingdon, England, has been
selling copies of one of the strangest cookbooks ever published.
That's according to Stuart Orme, the museum's curator, who's also
written the new introduction to The Court and Kitchen of Elizabeth,
Commonly Called Joan Cromwell, the Wife of the Late Usurper.
This is no Joy of Cooking. Instead, the book begins with what Orme
calls "a very ranty essay" against Oliver Cromwell and his wife,
Elizabeth. Cromwell, as the first non-royal to preside over the
British Isles, was still a controversial figure at its publication in
1664, several years after his death. While the recipes that make up
most of the book are typical of the time, the anonymous editor
peppered the text with political, personal, and sexual slander aimed
at tarnishing the Cromwell legacy.
Elizabeth Cromwell herself had nothing to do with the cookbook, a
1665 copy of which is on display in the museum. Though she was still
alive at the time, she was, by all accounts, not a prominent figure
in society or politics. She certainly never published anything, much
less a cookbook. However, Orme believes that the recipes in The Court
and Kitchen of Elizabeth did come from the Cromwell family records.
Oliver Cromwell's legacy made his wife a target of slander, even
after his death.Oliver Cromwell's legacy made his wife a target of
slander, even after his death.
A cookbook may seem an odd vehicle for political propaganda, but
Cromwell's polarizing legacy was dominant enough to fill every
possible medium. When the book was published, Cromwell was just a few
years dead. Over his lifetime, he signed the death warrant for King
Charles I and helped establish a republic in place of England's
traditional monarchy. But by 1664, with the monarchy restored and
Charles II on the throne, royal supporters had an axe to grind.
"There was a lot of anti-Cromwell propaganda produced to blacken the
name of the Cromwells and to stabilize the Royalist regime," says
Orme. This cookbook was explicitly propaganda.
"It would be a bit like today, if you were to go out and buy a
cookery book [supposedly] written by Michelle Obama and the first
third of it was an essay by Donald Trump saying how awful Barack
Obama was," says Orme. But the writer primarily aimed his scorn at
Elizabeth, for unknown reasons. Even the full title of the book, The
Court and Kitchen of Elizabeth, Commonly Called Joan Cromwell, the
Wife of the Late Usurper, contains an insult against her. Elizabeth's
nickname wasn't Joan. Instead, 'Joan' was a term of the era for a
prostitute.
The cookbook's slanderous attacks often concern Elizabeth's household
management and cooking. For example, one anecdote has Cromwell
complaining during dinner that there isn't enough orange sauce served
with his veal. Elizabeth retorts that if Cromwell had wanted more
orange sauce, then he shouldn't have carelessly gone to war with
Spain, the source of their oranges.
A portrait of Elizabeth Cromwell, painted in 1657.A portrait of
Elizabeth Cromwell, painted in 1657.
The 102 recipes are typical middle-class dishes of the era, from
sweet pudding made with bone marrow ("which she usually had to her
breakfast") and a venison pie ("a la mode Cromwellian"). But the very
nature of these recipes, says Orme, was itself another charge leveled
at Elizabeth Cromwell. The essay in the book paints Elizabeth as a
grubby, grasping skinflint, cooking food without elegance as a
reflection of her own non-royal origins. "Part of the argument that
the editor of the cookery book makes is that the Cromwells are unfit
to run the country because, look, they were far too common," says
Orme. "It's a lot of snobbery," The recipes themselves, though, are
solid. Orme recommends the carbonnade of beef, a stew that he says is
"really nice, actually."
The cookbook has long been a source of curiosity for scholars and
visitors to the museum, which is why the institution decided to print
500 copies for distribution. Currently, it's for sale online, but not
yet at the museum, which has been closed since Christmas due to the
pandemic. While the income from the books has been modest, Orme says
that "every little bit helps at the moment." The Cromwell Museum
hopes to reopen on April 17, which is good news for those that want
to see the tome of 17th-century culinary slander in person.
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