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How Carrots Won the Trojan War

Page 31

by Rebecca Rupp


  Illuminations and text from the medieval Tacuinum Sanitatis can be found online at www.godecookery.com/tacuin/tacuin.htm.

  Tomatoes

  For the detailed scoop on tomatoes, you can’t do better than Andrew F. Smith. See The Tomato in America (University of South Carolina Press, 1994) and Souper Tomatoes: The Story of America’s Favorite Food (Rutgers University Press, 2000). Also see Karan Davis Cutler’s Tantalizing Tomatoes (Brooklyn Botanic Garden, 1997) and David Gentilcore’s Pomodoro! A History of the Tomato in Italy (Columbia University Press, 2010).

  On the positive aspects of tomatine, see: M. Friedman, C. E. Levin, S. U. Lee, H. J. Kim, et al. “Tomatine-Containing Green Tomato Extracts Inhibit Growth of Human Breast, Colon, Liver, and Stomach Cancer Cells.” J. Agric. Food Chem. 57, no. 13 (2009): 5727–5733.

  Friedman, Mendel, T. E. Fitch, and W. E. Yokoyama. “Lowering of Plasma LDL Cholesterol in Hamsters by the Tomato Glycoalkaloid Tomatine.” Food and Chemical Toxicology 38, no. 7 (2000): 549–553.

  Jefferson’s Notes on the State of Virginia (1781) is available online at http://etext.virginia.edu/toc/modeng/public/JefVirg.html.

  For Andrew F. Smith’s exposé of the apocryphal Colonel Johnson, see “The Invention of Culinary Fakelore and Food Fallacies” at www.foodhistorynews.com/debunk.html#typology.

  For more on the influential Mrs. Beeton, see Kathryn Hughes’s The Short Life and Long Times of Mrs. Beeton (Alfred A. Knopf, 2006).

  The story of the Trophy tomato appears in L. H. Bailey’s The Survival of the Unlike: A Collection of Evolution Essays Suggested by the Study of Domestic Plants (Macmillan, 1896), 485–60.

  On lycopene and cooking: Dewanto, Veronica, Xianzhong Wu, Kafui K. Adom, and Rui Hai Liu. “Thermal Processing Enhances the Nutritional Value of Tomatoes by Increasing Total Antioxidant Activity.” J. Agric. Food Chem. 50, no. 10 (2002): 3010–3014.

  Unlu, N. Z., T. Bohn, D. M. Francis, H. N. Nagaraja, S. K. Clinton, and S. J. Schwartz. “Lycopene from Heat-Induced Cis-Isomer Rich Tomato Pasta Sauce Is More Bioavailable than from All-Trans Rich Pasta Sauce in Humans.” Br. J. Nutr. 98, 2007: 140–146.

  For the nutritional differences between raw and cooked vegetables, see Sushma Subramanian’s “Fact or Fiction: Raw Veggies Are Healthier than Cooked Ones” in Scientific American (March 2009). See the text online in Scientific American’s report “Science of Our Food” at www.scientificamerican.com/report.cfm?id=food-science.

  For a discussion of the square tomato (VF-145), see Raymond Sokolov’s Why We Eat What We Eat: How Columbus Changed How the World Eats (Simon & Schuster, 1991).

  For more on Radiator Charlie’s Mortgage Lifter tomato, see NPR’s “Living on Earth: Mortgage Lifter Tomatoes” at www.loe.org/shows/segments.htm?programID=05-P13-00038&segmentID=8.

  On the inestimable Charles M. Rick, founder of the Tomato Genetics Resource Center, see http://tgrc.ucdavis.edu/charlie.html and www.universityofcalifornia.edu/senate/inmemoriam/CharlesM.Rick.htm. Also see: Estabrook, Barry. “On the Tomato Trail: In Search of Ancestral Roots.” Gastronomica: The Journal of Food and Culture 10, no. 2 (Spring 2010): 40–44. For the C. M. Rick Tomato Genetics Resource Center, see http://tgrc.ucdavis.edu.

  The tomato ripening process is described by A. Karim Khudairi in “The Ripening of Tomatoes” in the American Scientist 60, no. 6 (1972): 696–707.

  On flavor in tomatoes, see Craig Canine’s “A Matter of Taste . . . Who Killed the Flavor in America’s Supermarket Tomatoes?” in Eating Well, January/February 1991: 41–55.

  On the flavorful gene for florigen, see: Krieger, Uri, Zachary B. Lippman, and Dani Zamir. “The Flowering Gene SINGLE FLOWER TRUSS Drives Heterosis for Yield in Tomato.” Nature Genetics 42, 2010: 459–463.

  For more information on transgenic tomatoes, see Belinda Martineau’s First Fruit: The Creation of the Flavr Savr Tomato and the Birth of Biotech Foods (McGraw-Hill, 2001), Alan McHughen’s Pandora’s Picnic Basket: The Potential and Hazards of Genetically Modified Foods (Oxford University Press, 2000), and Nina Federoff and Nancy Marie Brown’s Mendel in the Kitchen: A Scientist’s View of Genetically Engineered Foods (Joseph Henry Press, 2004).

  Turnips

  For the turnip as castle, see an example in Elinor Fettiplace’s Receipt Book: Elizabethan Country House Cooking (Viking, 1986), 97.

  Johannes Trithemius’s sneer at turnip eaters in his seminal cryptography book appears in Ivars Peterson’s Math Trek column “Cracking a Medieval Code” (4 May 1998). See the article online on the Mathematical Association of America’s website: www.maa.org/mathland/mathtrek_5_4_98.html.

  On marvelous and enormous turnips, see Jan M. Ziolkowski’s “The Wonder of the Turnip Tale” in her book Fairy Tales Before Fairy Tales: The Medieval Latin Past of Wonderful Lies (University of Michigan Press, 2009).

  On Woolton Pie, see Charles Lyte’s The Kitchen Garden. Oxford Illustrated Press, 1984.

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  I am deeply grateful to all of the many people who provided the help, advice, encouragement, inspiration, and information without whom this book would not have been possible.

  Special thanks go to Deb Burns, my kind and patient editor, and the wonderful staff at Storey Publishing; to Pat Stone and colleagues at GreenPrints magazine, who so beautifully combine digging and literature; to Ethan Rupp, who so generously, competently, and continually fixed my computer; and to the helpful and sympathetic librarians at the Bennington Free Library in Bennington, Vermont, the Fletcher Free Library in Burlington, Vermont, and the Bailey/Howe Library at the University of Vermont.

  INDEX

  Pagenumbers in italics indicate illustrations and photographs.

  100-mile diet, 27

  A

  abortion, celery and, 104

  absinthe, 168

  Achard, Franz, 61

  Acosta, José de, 239

  Adams, John, 255

  Aesop’s fables, 277

  alcohol, 93, 113, 122–124, 282

  Allen, Woody, 8

  American Indians

  beans and, 31, 43, 45

  corn and, 114–115, 117–118

  squash and, 278, 281–282

  Amflora potato, 267

  Andean Trade Preference Act (ATPA), 25–26

  Anderson, Mark, 102

  Andrews, Jean, 234, 237

  anthocyanins, 24, 59, 87, 327, 348

  antioxidants, 158–159, 189, 207, 327

  anti-vitamins, 74–75

  aphrodisiacs

  asparagus as, 13–15

  beans as, 37

  carrots as, 87

  celery as, 102

  eggplant as, 152

  lettuce as, 167

  sweet potatoes as, 250

  tomatoes as, 316

  Apicius, 15, 39, 57, 67, 184, 198

  Apicius, Marcus Gavius, 39

  apiol, 104–105

  Appert, Nicholas, 223

  Arabidopsis thaliana, 80

  Ashley, Anthony, 71

  asparagine, 24

  asparagus

  as aphrodisiac, 13–15

  growth of, 12–13

  history of, 15–21

  how to eat, 24

  as luxury, 21–23

  medicinal uses of, 15

  nutrients in, 24

  origin of, 19

  Peru and, 25–26

  taxonomy of, 14

  urine and, 23–24

  white, 24–25

  Asparagus! (movie), 26

  asphodel, 4

  astronauts, 240, 295

  Audubon, John James, 323

  Austen, Jane, 18–19, 346

  azote, 37

  B

  Bach, Johann Sebastian, 81

  Bacillus thuringiensis, 161

  Bacon, Francis, 92

  Bagnal, Richard, 121

  Banister, John, 285

  Barclay, Robert, 7

  Barlow, Joel, 125

  Barnum, P. T., 30

  Barry, Dave, 287

  Bat Cave corn, 116


  Bauhin, Gaspard (Caspar), 347

  Beal, William James, 130

  beans

  American, 41–42

  American Indians and, 31, 43, 45

  cassoulet and, 40–41

  Dark Ages and, 34–36

  dopamine and, 38

  fava beans, 33–34

  flatulence and, 48–49, 51

  flowers of, 32

  kidney, 42, 43

  lentils, 32–33, 39

  lima, 45–47, 49

  Pythagoras and, 33–34

  recipes for, 39–40, 44

  scarlet runner, 47–48

  string, shell, and dried, 44–45

  superstitions about, 36–38

  taxonomy of, 32

  Beaver, Hugh, 274

  Beecher, Catharine, 322

  beets

  benefits of, 59–60

  Charlemagne and, 57–58

  coloration of, 59, 60

  hatred of, 54–55

  mangel-wurzel, 62–63

  medicinal uses of, 57

  sugar, 61–62

  taxonomy of, 55–56

  bell peppers, 228

  Benton, Isabella, 324

  bergapten, 104

  Berkeley, Miles Joseph, 261–262

  beta-carotene, 88–89, 90–91, 176, 238, 335

  betacyanins, 59, 60

  betalains, 59

  Beverley, Robert, 249

  Bhaba Atomic Research Centre (BARC), 49

  biodiversity, 131, 262, 331–332

  Birdseye, Clarence, 222

  blanching, 101, 105

  Block, Eric, 203

  blush, 59, 60

  Bockenheim, Johannes, 40

  Booth, William, 321

  Borgel (Pinkwater), 150

  Bradley, Richard, 280, 318

  Brillat-Savarin, Jean Anthelme, 21–22, 169–170

  broccoli, 76–78

  Brown, Samuel, 230

  Brussels sprouts, 79–80

  Buchanan, James, 76

  Buist, Robert, 321–322

  Burbank, Luther, 263

  Burpee, W. Atlee, 62–63, 72–73, 79, 96, 101, 108–109, 145, 171, 186, 301, 325

  Burton, Robert, 48, 70

  Bush, George W., 77

  butterfly people, 127

  C

  cabbages

  Arabidopsis thaliana and, 80

  broccoli and, 76–78

  Brussels sprouts and, 79–80

  cauliflower and, 78–79

  chromosomes of, 347

  cleanliness of leaves, 73

  fruit of, 80

  heading, 70

  kale, 68

  kohlrabi, 68–69

  medicinal uses of, 67–68

  odor of, 74

  sauerkraut and, 75–76

  sugar content of, 93

  taxonomy of, 69

  Caesar, Julius, 14, 70

  Calgene, 338

  Campbell, Robert, 3

  cannibal tomato, 157

  cantaloupe, 182–183

  Canterbury Tales (Chaucer), 200

  capsaicin, 232–236, 239–240

  capsanthin, 237–238, 239

  Carlsson, Arvid, 38

  carotenemia (carotenosis), 90

  carotenoids, 88–89, 237–239, 335

  carrots

  alcohol and, 93

  butter and, 90–91

  in colonial America, 95–96

  coloration of, 87–89, 90–91

  cooked vs. raw, 89

  love of, 84–85

  modern varieties of, 97

  parsnips and, 92–93

  sweetness of, 91–94

  taproots of, 94–95

  taxonomy of, 85–86

  vision and, 89–90

  Carson, Kit, 238

  Carter, Landon, 20–21, 136, 282

  Cartier, Jacques, 71, 142, 278, 346

  Casal, Gaspar, 126–127

  Casanova, Giacomo, 102

  cassoulet, 40–41

  Castellanos, Juan de, 246–247

  Castelnaudary, France, 40–41

  Castelvetro, Giacomo, 280

  Cato the Elder, 67

  cauliflower, 78–79

  celery, 100–108

  chaconine, 250

  Champlain, Samuel de, 31, 170, 279

  Charlemagne, 57–58, 69, 76, 139, 184, 200, 298

  Chavasse, Pye Henry, 244

  chicha, 122–123

  chili, 238

  chlorophyll, 25, 174–176

  chlorophyllin, 175

  cholera, 5

  chuño, 245–246

  Cieza de Leon, Pedro, 246

  climacteric rise, 334

  Cobbett, William, 220–221, 245, 251, 258, 308, 346

  Cobo, Bernabé, 230

  Colorado potato beetle, 160–161

  color-blindness, 89–90

  Columbus, Christopher, 30, 114, 142, 170, 216, 226–227

  Colwin, Laurie, 46

  Combs, Raoul, 245

  Contained Environmental Life

  Support System (CLESS) program, 80

  Cook, James, 75–76

  Cooney, Barbara, 9

  corn

  alcohol and, 113, 122–124

  American Indians and, 31

  in breakfast cereals, 131–133

  breeding of, 128–131

  colonists and, 114–115

  coloration of, 119–121

  domestication of, 116–118

  genetic diversity, diseases and, 131

  hybrids of, 130–131

  Irish potato famine and, 260

  mythology of, 117–118

  nomenclature of, 114–115

  nutritional value of, 126–128

  popcorn and, 118–119

  processing of, 128

  sweetness of, 121–122

  taxonomy of, 117

  uses of, 112–114

  Yellow Dent, 129

  Corn Laws, 260

  Corn Palaces, 133

  Coronado, Francisco, 120, 278

  Cortés, Hernando, 315

  crop rotation, 37

  Crum, George, 266–267

  cucubitene, 239

  Cucumber King, 139

  cucumbers

  cultivars of, 145–146, 147

  cultivation of, 138–140

  dangers of, 137

  flavor of, 146

  medicinal uses of, 140

  nutrients in, 137–138

  origin of, 136–137

  pickling of, 142–144

  straightening of, 145–146

  superstitions about, 140–141

  cucurbitaceans, 272

  cucurbitacins, 146

  Cunningham, John, 90

  cyanogens, 49–51

  D

  daikon, 297–298, 301

  Dalechamp, Jacques, 153

  Dampier, William, 228

  Dana, Richard Henry, 256

  Darwin, Charles, 129–130

  Day, Charles, 126

  Defoe, Daniel, 51, 346

  Delmonico’s, 155–156

  de Mare, Anne, 26

  de Medici, Catherine, 41, 77, 216, 307

  dent corn, 120–121

  De Re Coquinaria. See Apicius

  De Re Rustica, 280

  de Soto, Hernando, 278

  desserts, carrots in, 91–92

  deterrence, directed, 235

  Deyeux, Nicolas, 62

  Dick, Herbert W., 116

  Dickens, Charles, 244, 311

  Diderot, Denis, 244–245

  Dill, Howard, 276–277

  Dillinger, John, 267

  Diogenes, 67

  Divers, George, 217

  diversity, 131, 262, 331–332

  D. Landreth Seed Company, 308–309, 321

  Dodoens, Rembert, 117, 152–153, 231

  L-dopa, 37–38

  Drake, Francis, 247

  Dudley, Paul, 272

  Durand, Peter, 223

  E

  Easter Island, 249

  Ec
o, Umberto, 34–35

  Edgar, Marriott, 22

  eggplant

  antioxidants in, 158–159

  as aphrodisiac, 152

  cannibal, 157

  coloration of, 157–158

  dangerous reputation of, 151, 153–154

  domestication of, 150–151

  origins of name, 154

  potato beetles and, 160–161

  varieties of, 159–160

  Egyptian onions, 208

  Elizabeth I (Queen of England), 42–43, 139, 250–251

  Elysium Britannicum (Evelyn), 106–107

  endozoochory, 339

  Engield, Edward, 124

  Erikson, Leif, 31–32

  ethylene, 193, 334, 336–337

  Evelyn, John, 91–92, 106–107, 166, 169, 184, 201, 307–308

  F

  famines, 259–261

  favism, 34

  Ferenczi, Alexander, 59–60

  fermentation, 93

  Feuerbohne, 48

  Fisher, M. F. K., 73–74

  flatulence, 48–49

  flavonoids, 207, 327

  Flexner, Stuart Berg, 70

  Florentine Codex, 229

  Fontanelle, Bernard le Bovier de, 22–23

  Ford, Henry, 85

  Forster, John, 256

  Francis, Richard, 95

  Franklin, Benjamin, 4, 23, 125, 144, 254

  free radicals, 50

  Fremont, John C., 124

  French fries, 265–266

  Friedman, Mendel, 317

  fruits, vegetables vs., 180–181, 323

  Fuchs, Leonhart, 114, 140, 152, 227

  G

  Galinat, Walton, 125

  Gaman, Judith and Walter, 102

  gardening, reasons for, 1–2

  garlic, 202, 209

  genetic engineering, 91, 128, 264, 267, 337–338

  geosmin, 55

  Gerard, John, 43, 48, 70, 78, 86, 92, 140, 153, 200, 227, 247, 249, 285, 299, 306–307, 317–318, 343, 348

  Gibbons, Euell, 19

  Glasse, Hannah, 218

  Goddard, Benjamin, 47

  Goldberger, Joseph, 127

  Goldman, Amy, 275

  Goodrich, Chauncey, 262

  Gosnold, Bartholomew, 216–217

  Gould, John, 287

  Graham, Gordon, 328

  Graham, Sylvester, 5–6

  Grant, Ulysses, 142

  Gray, Horace, 323

  Greene, Bert, 78, 138, 308

  Gregory, J. J. H., 263, 286

  Grimod de la Renière, Alexandre, 17

  Grizzard, Louis, 314

  Grove, Hugh, 188

  Gruskin, Benjamin, 175

  Guggenheim, Marcus, 38

  Guinness Book of World Records, 274

  Gutenberg, Johann, 252

  H

  Hamilton, Alexander, 123

  Hampl, Jeffrey and William, 127

 

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