In his continuing search for the more weird, wacky and
wondrous in the world of travel, Get Up & Go guest blogger David Ellis says that after Prince
Albert (husband of Queen Victoria) had hosted a slap-up dinner in London for
all of England’s Lord Mayors in 1850 to promote his pet project, The Great
Exhibition to be held the following year, his guests reciprocated his
hospitality with a bash of their own from their public purses.
Quickly becoming known as the 100 Guinea Dinner (in today’s
terms around AU$11,800) it cost just under half a guinea a head – almost the equivalent
of the-then average weekly wage – with close to half the 240 guests being the
Lord Mayors and their spouses.Held in the City of York, famous expatriate French chef Alexis Soyer was brought in from London to whip up their grand repast – at a time when the Great Famine in Ireland was claiming thousands weekly through starvation.
Chef Soyer’s menu required no less than 400 woodcocks, 100
snipes, 45 partridges, 36 quails and 36 pigeons, 24 capons and 18 poulardes
(roosters and chickens de-sexed to improve quality and flavour,) 20
pheasants, 16 regular fowls and 18 turkeys, 10 grouse, 6 plovers, 6 larks and
the heads and fins of five turtles.
It took a whole day to cook and was offered from silver
platters garnished with crayfish, truffles, American asparagus, croustades,
sweetbreads, mushrooms, French minced fish dumplings, olives, green mangoes,
cocks combs and Chef Soyer’s secret-recipe “New Sauce.” And it ended with dessert of compote of pear served with bananas, raisins, melons and muscats…
Wonder why we don’t get that at the club?
……………….
Above: Prince Albert at the Royal Table for his 100 Guinea
Dinner in York in 1850 – almost hidden by the bizarre over-the-top table decorations.

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