German Beginnings
The roots of Ashkenazic cuisine lie in medieval Germany.
By Claudia Roden
Reprinted with permission from The Book of Jewish
Food: An Odyssey from Samarkand to New York, published by Knopf.
In medieval Europe, Jews had congregated in separate parts
of towns for protection and so as to be able to practice their religion, and
Jewish quarters grew up around synagogues. In Germany, the Judengasse (Jewish
quarters) had their own cemeteries, schools, laundries, public baths, law
courts, slaughterhouses, and bakehouses. Housewives brought their food to be
cooked in the communal oven and did their cooking at the bakehouse. Few had
cooking facilities at home. One part of the bakehouse was reserved for meat,
another for dairy. The oven and cooking utensils, including huge copper
cauldrons used for wedding feasts, were provided free by the congregation. A shohet, or slaughterer, was available. There were banqueting rooms and
dancing halls for weddings and festivals, and for getting together on the
Sabbath, and there were guest houses for travelers. A community fund provided
those who could not pay with three days’ free board and lodging.
The religious dietary laws were abided by with strict
tenacity, and this had the effect of involving Jews in food trades. Because
wine manufactured by a gentile could not be consumed and food cooked by an
unsupervised gentile could not be eaten, Jews were encouraged to produce and
sell wine and food themselves. At one time they controlled the market in wine
and grain, dealing in oil as a side line. In Southern Europe they owned flour
mills and vineyards. Jewish orchards were renowned in France. In France and in
Germany, where Jews had had vineyards along the Rhine as early as the fourth
century, they produced wine. In Germany they reared geese. Throughout Europe,
Jews were much in evidence at city markets and country fairs, selling pickles,
preserves, and pastries. Jewish bakeries were common.
There was a strong ascetic streak in German Jews, and their
lives were inclined to spirituality rather than sensual expression. Ethical
writings from medieval times are full of encouragement towards frugality and
self‑restraint in eating—“the most animal of instincts.” Rabbis expressed
distaste at the way their French, Italian, and Spanish coreligionists enjoyed
their meals and their glass of wine. In Eat
and Be Satisfied, John Cooper quotes a 13th‑century letter
reprimanding the French Jews for “studying the Talmud with their stomachs full
of meat, vegetables, and wine” and another warning that “gross overeating is as
dangerous to the body as a sword, besides that it bars one from occupation with
the law of God and the reverence due to him.” But despite all the protestations
they were hearty eaters like the Germans. They ate like the Germans—substantial
foods, warming soups thick with oats, barley, groats, and dumplings; heavy rye
and dark breads; pickled and boiled meats and sausages; freshwater fish and
salt herring, cabbage and carrots. They had a penchant for strong flavors, such
as horseradish, sour pickles, and sauerkraut, and for sweet‑and‑sour
and savory‑sweet combinations like cabbage and apple. And like the
Germans, they stuffed goose necks, chopped goose liver, and chopped and stuffed
fish.
But there were also foreign elements in their cooking,
adopted through their contacts with their European coreligionists. Noodles came
from Italy. Pasta had been introduced there by the Arabs in Sicily when the
island had a substantial Jewish community The Jews called it “grimseli” and
“vermisellish,” after the Italian vermicelli. Their mercantile activities
brought the Jews of Europe into contact with exotic ingredients and Oriental
culinary styles. Since the early Middle Ages, they had been involved in
international trade, trafficking by raft and craft down the valleys of the
Rhone, the Danube, and the Rhine, and going far afield. For their own ritual
requirements, they imported myrtle from France and citrons from the coasts of
the Mediterranean. They dealt in sugar, spices, dried fruit, and nuts, and all
kinds of foodstuffs from the East. Their role in introducing such comestibles
to Northern Europe produced an enlightened spirit in their own cooking. They
became known for their immoderate use of garlic and onion, and for their taste
for spices, fruits, and nuts (they were famous for using almond marzipan in
their pastries).
By the time Jews became segregated in their ghettos, by
edict, in the 16th century, they had developed a unique and powerful internal
social culture. As the French historian Fernand Braudel commented, the ghetto
became their prison but was also the citadel into which they withdrew to defend
their faith and the continuity of their culture. It was at that time that
ritual took an increasing hold on Jewish life. A code of kitchen and table
manners was formalized, and particular dishes were adopted to celebrate the
Sabbath and festivals. The men, who often devoted themselves entirely to studying Jewish Law and left their wives
and daughters to earn the family living, took a particular interest inthe kitchen. They became involved with the minutiae of the dietary
laws and rituals concerning food. On Thursdays and Fridays they would be seen bargainingfor Sabbath delicacies at the market, and on Fridays they helped
with cleansing the dishes and saucepans and setting the table.
It is in the cooped‑up world within the ghetto walls,
in the tall houses that met at the top and obscured the sunlight from the
narrow streets, that a set of dishes became associated with holidays and were
marked forever with a Jewish stamp. Everyday food could be desperately poor,
but the best German burgher dishes were reserved for Sabbath and religious
festivals. Braided white challah bread, sweet‑and‑sour fish,
stuffed fish, chopped goose liver, broth with noodles, meat pies, boiled
pickled beef, roast goose, and kugel—a sweet pudding made with noodles or
bread—were eaten on Friday evening.
Cholent was left to cook overnight in the communal oven for
Saturday. This dish—one of the most representative of Jewish cooking—in a
version cooked today combines different meats, sometimes including goose and
sausage, with barley or buckwheat and beans, and is cooked slowly in plenty of
goose fat. It is believed to be related to the French cassoulet, and its name
to be a combination of the medieval French words chauld (hot) and lent (slow).This interpretation is given weight by the fact that Jews in the
region of the Languedoc, where cassoulet originated, were expelled in 1394 and
headed for Germany. In Eat and Be
Satisfied, John Cooper notes that the first reference to cholent was by
Rabbi Isaac of Vienna (c. 1180‑c. 1250), who reported that he had seen it
in his teacher’s home in France at the end of the 12th century. White haricot
beans, which came to Europe from the New World, were a late addition to the
dish. They may have arrived through connections with the secret Jews from
Portugal, who were very familiar with the beans and who settled in cities in
southwestern France in the 16th century. In Spain, today, large white beans are
called judias, meaning “Jewish.” I wonder if there is a link.
Copyright 1996 by Claudia Roden. Claudia Roden is one of England’s leading
food writers; her New Book
of Middle Eastern Food is now regarded as a classic work. The Book of
Jewish Food won both the André Simon and Glenfiddich Awards.