The President's Table: Two Hundred Years of Dining and Diplomacy

The President's Table: Two Hundred Years of Dining and Diplomacy

by Barry H. Landau
The President's Table: Two Hundred Years of Dining and Diplomacy

The President's Table: Two Hundred Years of Dining and Diplomacy

by Barry H. Landau

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Overview

The President's Table offers a sweeping visual history of the American Presidency as seen through Presidential entertaining from George Washington to George W. Bush.

In this lavishly illustrated history of Presidential dining, historian Barry Landau brings the backstory of the American Presidency to life. Interweaving stories of dining and diplomacy, he creates a spellbinding narrative from the early days of provincial entertaining in the capital, through the golden era of sumptuous state banquets, to the modern White House dinners of today.

With more than 300 never before seen illustrations, The President's Table provides an insightful and entertaining look at our dining habits as the nation grew through social and economic change. The book reveals the parallel growth of the United States and its Chief Executives, and the diplomatic and political interests served along with Presidential meals. The President's Table will fascinate anyone with an interest in American history and Presidential politics.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780062043627
Publisher: HarperCollins
Publication date: 12/15/2023
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 304
Sales rank: 921,910
File size: 192 MB
Note: This product may take a few minutes to download.

About the Author

Barry H. Landau is a presidential historian and one of the foremost collectors of presidential memorabilia and artifacts. He has served eight Presidents and worked with every White House since Lyndon Johnson's planning historic events. The late Arthur Schlesinger, quoted on Landau's recent book, The President's Table, said that “Landau weaves these previously missing links of Presidential history, into a fascinating tapestry and narrative of Presidential lore. The Washington Post wrote, Landau's “connections that bridge the world of politics, entertainment and theatre”….and built a network of the powerful and famous, creating a niche as a liaison between the world of politics and entertainment.”

Read an Excerpt

The President's Table

Two Hundred Years of Dining and Diplomacy
By Barry H. Landau

HarperCollins Publishers, Inc.

Copyright © 2007 Barry H. Landau
All right reserved.

ISBN: 9780060899103

Chapter One

George Washington through Abraham Lincoln

1789-1865

Salon society to people's table

At times it seemed as if the new president's mansion would never be built. Its original conception owed much to the stately vision of George Washington and his favorite federalist architect, Pierre L'Enfant, who had transformed New York City's old city hall into the noble, neoclassical federal hall, seat of the first united states government under the constitution of 1788. L'enfant selected a site and laid out an entire city along the border separating Maryland and Virginia, near the confluence of the Potomac and Anacostia rivers. Unfortunately the grandiose, extravagant promise of the new federal district was impractical given conditions in 1791 and 1792. It also ran counter to the ideals of "republican simplicity" championed by secretary of state Thomas Jefferson, who was granted supervisory powers over completion of the new "palace." L'Enfant had a gift for making enemies. When he was dismissed in early 1792, nothing more than a cellar had been excavated on the chosen spot. A year later, James Hoban, an Irish architect who had recently established himself inthe United States, won the competition to build the new president's house. Eight more years would drag by before any president could even contemplate moving in.

During the first sixteen months of Washington's presidency, he and his wife Martha lived in New York City and then Philadelphia when the nation's capital was moved there. As the new nation's first President, Washington was intensely concerned with the formal precedents he set at social and official functions. For that reason, he never dined outside his own residence in New York City except perhaps for a meal with Governor George Clinton on the day of Washington's triumphal arrival. After consultations with top advisors, Washington declared Tuesday his day for "levees" (receptions), and Thursday his day for dinner with members of Congress. Martha Washington would hold separate receptions on Fridays, while state banquets might happen on any day.

Washington employed "Black Sam" Fraunces, the West Indian owner of the New York tavern where Washington had bid farewell to his troops, as his steward and head of kitchen. A series of other cooks were hired in the first few years, but none of them quite worked out. Finally, the Washingtons decided to import their black slave Hercules from Mount Vernon to provide some continuity in the kitchen, although periodically they had to ship him back to Virginia to circumvent a recent Pennsylvania law that gave slaves their freedom after six months' residence. As for the first President's appetites, he was said to like fish particularly, and have a nostalgic fondness for Pennsylvania Dutch cooking (including Philadelphia pepper pot) from the days of his military campaigns.

Dinner time in the early years of the Republic was usually three or four in the afternoon. The meals were typically composed of three bountiful courses. The first and second featured at least a dozen different dishes brought to the table simultaneously; soup and fish or shellfish were usually included in the first, while game and desserts were part of the second. Tablecloths and glassware were changed between the first and second courses and removed entirely for the third course, which consisted mostly of an assortment of fruits and nuts. The company was almost exclusively men, although Martha Washington sometimes joined them as wife of the host, as did occasionally other women.

Extended silences and often stiff formality were typical of the levees, republican adaptations of similar European ceremonies in which courtiers presented themselves to their aristocratic superiors. In this manner, President Washington would establish himself in front of the fireplace. As officials or diplomats were announced, they took their places in a circular receiving line. The President would approach each man, bow slightly (shaking hands was considered too familiar), make a few remarks, and return to his place of honor. Here he continued standing until an aide signaled. One by one, each man would then approach the President, bow, and leave the room. The central room in the future Presidential residence (today's Blue Room) is thought to have been given an oval shape so that such circular levees could be more graciously accommodated.

Social events hosted by Washington's Vice President and successor, John Adams, were less elaborate than Washington's. Adams's Puritan heritage, the plainer cuisine of his native New England, and his lack of fortune and slaves led to meals with fewer and more basic dishes: Indian pudding, mutton, veal, peas, fried oysters, cabbage pudding, and gooseberry fool. Almost all descriptions of more fanciful repasts in Adams's extensive writings concern meals at which he was a guest, not the host.

When they moved to Washington City, a city "only so in name," according to Abigail Adams, the Adamses felt obliged to stage several major receptions and offer as much other hospitality as they could—although they received no allowance for doing so, had few servants, and little money. The immense, unfinished mansion lay in the middle of a weed-infested, rubble-strewn expanse of mud and grass. The Presidential couple had to make do with a single service staircase and an outdoor privy. Mrs. Adams hung her laundry in the huge parlor that would eventually become the East Room. Members of Congress arrived in a rainy downpour at the end of November, 1800 for the first congressional reception ever, held in the great entrance hall. Refreshments were prepared and served by John and Esther Briesler, the Adamses' longtime servants. On January 1, 1801, President Adams held a New Year's Day reception at the President's House—inaugurating a tradition that would hold for well over a century. By then, the Federalist Adams had learned the disappointing results of the 1800 election, and knew he would be vacating the "castle," as his wife Abigail called it, only four months after moving in.

Thomas Jefferson was the beneficiary of the "republican revolution" of 1800 that spelled the eventual demise of the Federalists and their "pseudo-monarchical" pretensions. Although he . . .



Continues...

Excerpted from The President's Table by Barry H. Landau Copyright © 2007 by Barry H. Landau. Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

What People are Saying About This

Arthur Schlessinger Jr.

"The President's Table offers menus that serve as storytellers of a young nation rife with social and economic change, while reflecting the growth and expansion of a burgeoning American Presidency. Barry Landau weaves these previously missing links of Presidential history into a fascinating tapestry and narrative of Presidential lore."

Henry Haller

"The President's Table presents the reader with historical Presidential menus, some of which I have prepared during my twenty-two years as executive chef at the White House. Barry Landau's collection reflects the changing entertaining styles of each Presidential administration. It is interesting to see how the menus have changed over the years."

Mike Wallace

"The President's Table brings to life an intriguing backstory of the American Presidency: how our Presidents and First Ladies have traditionally mixed diplomacy with dining. Barry Landau presents a unique perspective on American history and presidential politics."

Henry A. Kissinger

"Landau escorts the reader to the Head Table at State Dinners, from George Washington to George W. Bush, and provides a social history that is great fun to read."

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