We all like food, and as I've said before, I've never yet met a musician who doesn't like his/her victuals, especially after a concert or gruelling rehearsal.
We know from the literature that Beethoven enjoyed his nosh, and there are several anecdotes and occasional entries in the conversation books that attest to this.
One of the earliest stories I read is when he was a kid, chasing a chicken with his brother, catching it and wringing its neck and getting their mom to cook it. So he certainly liked fowl. Another one concerned entries in the conversation books where he praised the quality of this or that sausage in a given restaurant. Other stories tell us he quite liked macaroni cheese, stewed cherries and of course being from Bonn (the Rhine) he probably had his fair fill of river fish, which he is also reported to have liked.
I wonder though about the quality of food prepared in those days. Would there have been any notion of "gastronomy"? What was the quality of the cheese, meat, bread, wine and so on in those days? I'm convinced they would have eaten plenty of game (venison, rabbits, pheasants, grouse ...), but how was it prepared? Would it have been any different compared to today?
I suppose in essence I'm asking if there have been any significant changes in how we prepare food today compared to Beethoven's day, apart from hygiene aspects.
Any thoughts?
We know from the literature that Beethoven enjoyed his nosh, and there are several anecdotes and occasional entries in the conversation books that attest to this.
One of the earliest stories I read is when he was a kid, chasing a chicken with his brother, catching it and wringing its neck and getting their mom to cook it. So he certainly liked fowl. Another one concerned entries in the conversation books where he praised the quality of this or that sausage in a given restaurant. Other stories tell us he quite liked macaroni cheese, stewed cherries and of course being from Bonn (the Rhine) he probably had his fair fill of river fish, which he is also reported to have liked.
I wonder though about the quality of food prepared in those days. Would there have been any notion of "gastronomy"? What was the quality of the cheese, meat, bread, wine and so on in those days? I'm convinced they would have eaten plenty of game (venison, rabbits, pheasants, grouse ...), but how was it prepared? Would it have been any different compared to today?
I suppose in essence I'm asking if there have been any significant changes in how we prepare food today compared to Beethoven's day, apart from hygiene aspects.
Any thoughts?
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