MADDIE DAY here, delighted to bring you historian and author Elizabeth DeWolfe. Her new tale of a nineteenth-century female sky is all true but reads like a novel! The recipe she presents is significant to the story, and she's generously giving away a copy of Alias Agnes to one commenter.
Take it away, Beth!
Elizabeth (Beth) DeWolfe here, sharing a culinary
mystery that puzzled me while writing my just published book, Alias Agnes:
The Notorious Tale of a Gilded Age Spy. “Agnes” was the alias of
stenographer Jane A. Tucker who, in 1894, accepted a most unusual job for a
Victorian woman: undercover detective, or, “girl spy.” Her mission: locate and
befriend Madeleine Pollard, the former mistress of a US congressman. He had
promised (and promised) to marry her but when he chose someone else, Madeleine
sued him for “breach of promise.” The resulting trial was THE scandal of 1894 –
and Jane Tucker, alias Agnes Parker, was sneaking around behind the scenes,
having heart-to-heart conversations with Madeleine, and then sharing her
secrets with the congressman and his legal team. Her best spy tool? A whisk.
And here’s the plot twist: this is a true story!
Jane Tucker was remarkably clever and quickly learned that
offering a gift of food to Madeleine was the key to getting her to talk. Jane’s
go-to dish was Tomato Salad with French Dressing which she would whisk up
bedside each night when Madeleine returned exhausted from court. At first
glance, it’s an unremarkable snack choice – or was it? There’s the mystery: why
this meal night after night?
At the end of the century, fresh vegetable salads were a
food of the well-to-do, a symbol of the refined palate of the elite. And to the
upper class, anything French was au courant, or as we might say today,
on point. Madeleine was desperate to prove herself a legitimate member of high
society. When Jane presented her salad with French Dressing, she was paying
Madeleine a culinary compliment. She was saying “I see you. I believe you. You
can trust me.” And Madeleine ate up the compliment. “As she ate my salad, she
opened her heart to me,” Jane wrote, and then passed along Madeleine’s secrets,
stolen with a tomato and a whisk.
Now if your palate is refined, you might try this Gilded Age version of Jane’s Tomato Salad and French Dressing and if you’d like to follow Jane Tucker on her “girl spy” adventure, leave your email in the comments and one lucky winner will receive a copy of Alias Agnes.
Jane Tucker’s Gilded Age Tomato Salad with French Dressing
Ingredients
Tomatoes
Oil
Vinegar
Salt and pepper
Tomato Salad
Good Housekeeping, June 1895, offered a recipe for
Fresh Tomato Salad, “One of the prettiest and most palatable dishes for a
summer lunch,” that featured peeled tomatoes sitting atop cups of lettuce,
topped with a mayonnaise salad dressing, arranged on a round or oval dish. Another
Gilded Age recipe called for placing strained tomatoes in gelatin in round
molds, letting them set, and serving atop lettuce leaves with mayonnaise. Fixing
food bedside, Jane likely used a simpler recipe, such as this one from an 1884
cooking manual:
Slice perfectly ripe tomatoes. Arranged tastefully on a
dish. Place on ice or in a cold place. Serve with a cream, French, or mayonnaise
dressing.
French Dressing
This recipe is from “No. 8: Salad and Salad Making” by Mrs.
Emma P. Ewing (1884). Jane would have used one of the newer whisks, made of
metal.
To four teaspoonfuls of vinegar add half a teaspoon of salt
and one eighth teaspoonful of pepper; mix, and pour over salad, then add olive
oil to taste. A variation begins with half a teaspoon of mustard to which one
adds the olive oil slowly until creamy, then continues with oil alternating
with the addition of vinegar. Add salt and pepper to taste.
In my twenty-first century version of Jane’s vinaigrette, I
used far less salt but otherwise enjoyed the perfect simplicity of lightly
dressed fresh tomatoes.
Thank you for the opportunity to share this culinary mystery with you.
Readers: how has food communicated secret messages in your writing,
reading, or life?
Elizabeth DeWolfe is professor of history at the University
of New England (Biddeford, Maine) where she teaches courses in women’s history.
She is the award-winning author of works of historical non-fiction including The
Murder of Mary Bean and Shaking the Faith. In April, she published Alias
Agnes: The Notorious Tale of a Gilded Age Spy. Elizabeth makes her home in
southern Maine with her husband, a rare books dealer, and Floyd, a stray cat
turned couch potato. Her covid project was to master making macarons: it took 23
batches.
Read more about her work at elizabethdewolfe.com
Facebook Elizabeth
DeWolfe, Author https://www.facebook.com/ElizabethDeWolfeAuthor
Instagram Elizabeth DeWolfe
https://www.instagram.com/elizabethdewolfe/
Alias Agnes: In 1894, stenographer Jane Tucker spied for a US congressman. Her
target: Madeleine Pollard, the congressman’s former mistress who had sued him
for breach of promise when he failed to marry her. The trial captivated the
nation, and Jane, alias Agnes Parker, worked stealthily behind the scenes,
befriending Pollard, and stealing her secrets. Written with all the intrigue and
suspense of a detective tale, Alias Agnes reveals Tucker’s
previously unknown adventure and Pollard’s forgotten quest for justice,
together reflecting Gilded Age lives--the opportunities that beckoned women and
the challenges that thwarted their dreams.
Thank you for the recipe and chance to win your book - it sounds so engaging! Food can be a way of communicating how special someone is - I bake my husband's favorites (gooseberry or rhubarb) to remind him of my love. madamhawk at gmail dot com
ReplyDeleteFood is indeed love! Rhubarb pie is a big favorite in this house, too!
DeleteThis recipe sounds amazing. Thanks for sharing it. You are a new author to me.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Deborah! I'm happy to meet readers new to my work -- and to share a simple, but delicious summer recipe.
DeleteWill have to try your recipe with my garden tomatoes. 🍅 Your book sounds intriguing.
ReplyDeleteThank you! It was fun to research and write---especially exploring Gilded Age dining. They knew how to eat!
DeleteWhat a fascinating true story! I would love to read this book. This simple tomato salad recipe sounds delightful.
ReplyDeleteNancy
allibrary (at) aol (dot) com
Thanks, Nancy. There's nothing more "summer" than a simply dressed fresh tomato. After I took the photo, I ate them!
DeleteThank you for the yummy and simple Jane Tucker’s Gilded Age Tomato Salad with French Dressing recipe.
ReplyDeleteYes, I do think conveys a message. It can be anything from I enjoy your company so I made the special meal so we can enjoy both it and each others company to I think your sweet and on your special day (birthday, graduation, etc.) I made you this pie or cake. While hubby was working all his co-workers called me the pie lady. For birthdays I would make them their favorite kind of pie. I wanted to let them know they were special and that their birthday was special. Making a pie and delivering it on their birthday, my hope was to portray that they we special enough for me to remember both the day and the kind they loved.
To me recipes handed down through the generations show family connections, how some things do have to change through time (different resources through the generations, size of boxes and cans change, etc.) causing one to adjust to get the same results and love of food. Friendship can be shown by the willingness to share a recipe too.
Thank you for the chance to win a copy of ALIAS AGNES! It's on my TBR and I can't wait for the opportunity to read and review it.
2clowns at arkansas dot net
What a wonderful tradition--YOU are special to be so generous! My late father used to say he "never met a pie he didn't like!" At his celebration of life, we served a dozen different pies! And I have several of his Italian mother's handwritten recipes. On one she wrote "perfect as is"; on a recipe from a friend she wrote "mine is better"!
DeleteSimple recipes can be best! Thanks for joining us today, Elizabeth.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Edith, for the introduction to my guest blog! Delighted to share just a "bite" of Agnes Parker's story. Perhaps it will leave readers "hungry" for more!
DeleteThank you for the delicious recipe and the chance to win your bool baileybounce2@aatt.net
ReplyDeleteYoua re most welcome! My pleasure to share this amazing story!
DeleteWelcome to Mystery Lovers' Kitchen, Elizabeth! The tomato salad looks light and refreshing, perfect for summer. And I'm thoroughly intrigued by Alias Agnes's story... what betrayal and I love the food aspect that played a part.
ReplyDeleteI am honored to join such wonderful writers today! Betrayal is definitely the crux of the story --betrayed by a faux friend and a well-seasoned tomato!
DeleteI LOVE tomatoes like this, they are so good fresh from the garden in the summer with just a bit of salt and pepper and a little vinaigrette. And, I have the perfect plate to serve them on, it has tomatoes on it with a blue gingham-like border --- very summer-y!
ReplyDeleteNow that IS a summer-y plate!
DeleteWelcome to Mystery Lovers's Kitchen, Elizabeth! I love tomato salad and history. Who knew a simple tomato salad could be such a perfect spy tool? I have to read Alias Agnes!
ReplyDeleteThank you! Not what I was expecting when I began this research project--but what a delicious surprise!
DeleteFresh tomatoes are a gift from heaven! Food is definitely a love language and fresh tomatoes simply dressed speak to my heart. You our story sounds absolutely fascinating, can’t wait to read it. Thanks for the chance to win a copy. makennedyinaz at hotmail dot com
ReplyDeleteIt's hard to imagine that at one point in time, people feared the tomato as poisonous. Oh what delicious meals they missed! Good luck with the giveaway!
DeleteSo easy and delicious and your book sounds amazing. dortega229@gmail.com
ReplyDeleteThank you! It was definitely a project full of suprises !
DeleteI have suggested our local library (Pima County Public Library, Tucson, AZ) purchase this book to add to their collection.
ReplyDeleteThank you! Thank you! Thank you!
DeleteI, too, was thinking that sounded like too much salt.
ReplyDeleteI have mixed feelings about her spying on the woman left behind, but it sounds like a good story.
libbydodd at comcast dot net
My feelings are mixed on Jane. She fought hard to live an independent life as a single woman, and that was not easy in the Gilded Age. On the other hand, she thwarted the dream of a woman also trying to live the life she wanted, against considerable class barriers. If you read the book, see how you feel at the end . . . do their ultimate fates make you think differently of them? And enjoy those summer tomatoes!
DeleteTomato salad is healthy, appetizing, tasty and my favorite summer treat. Lovely and gives me great pleasure and enjoyment. I always have tomatoes available. saubleb(at)gmail(dot)com
ReplyDeleteI love tomatoes with fresh basil and fresh mozzarella, with a light vinagrette. The season is so short up here so it's a great treat while summer is here!
DeleteI love anything with tomatoes. Tis the season! I just had a brunch with fresh garden tomatoes and just salt and pepper with some Italian dressing. My favorite is a delicious tomato pie.
ReplyDeletelindalou64(@)live(dot)com
I've never had tomato pie -- now I'm intrigued and looking up recipes!
DeleteBeth, welcome! What a fascinating story. But I wonder if she shouldn't have been spying for Madeline??
ReplyDeleteThank you, Lucy -- and what a great comment!!! That would make a very different story (very fun to imagine!! BTW, I'm a fan of your Key West books -- we come down (almost) each January for the Literary Festival. It's a wonderful break from January cold and a great opportunity to grow my TBR list!
DeleteThose tomatoes look soooo good! Mom always made Dad a pecan pie for his birthday, rather than a cake. That was his absolute favorite dessert. I am feeling sympathetic for Madeleine. That Congressman rat promised to marry her! patdupuy@yahoo.com
ReplyDeleteAnd a promise is a promise! I felt sorry for her, too-- and then admiration. I won't spoil the ending, but I will say this: I had to go abroad to finish my research for the book~
DeleteCooking for my husband, family, and friends is a joy for me! It's the language of love. Very much enjoying all the fruits and vegetables of the summer season right now, lots of 'maters!
ReplyDeleteIsn't the fresh food of summer just divine? Right now in Maine we are enjoying blueberries. I freeze them -- come February when I'm running low I weigh very carefully whether to use them or not! It's so hard when that last berry bag is empty!
DeleteYour book sounds like a synergistic combo - strong willed women, espionage, intrigue and a real trial ! Historical fiction is my favorite genre - thanks for the chance to win your book!
ReplyDeleteYou nailed the combo! Intrigue, espionage, and strong-willed women aplenty! Good luck!
DeleteWelcome Elizabeth!!! I love the culinary mystery story that your book is based on...and the simple, healthy and delicious tomato salad recipe. As to food talking to me...it does so all the time, but my Italian ancestry has revealed itself time and time again through regional foods I have been served, or made at home. I am a foodie indeed! I must read your book, and I do so appreciate all the research you have done to make the magic happen! Congratulations. JOY!!! Luis at ole dot travel
ReplyDeleteThank you for your kind words! I learned to cook at my Italian Nana's elbow, sitting in a narrow space between the stove and counter, under a cabinet: the only grandchild that would fit! I learned from Nana that recipes are just suggestions. . .taste it, see it, smell it!
DeleteYou are a new author to me! Thanks for the chance to win your book! Thanks for the salad dressing recipe. lindaherold999(at)gmail(dot)com
ReplyDeleteYou are very welcome! It's nice to meet fellow readers of culinary mysteries -- fictional and factual!
DeleteLove reading about The Gilded Age and I'm adding your book to my TBR list. The tomato recipe looks delicious, I'll have to give it a try. I actually had a BLT for dinner tonight. Tomatoes are so good this time of year.
ReplyDeletediannekc8(at)gmail(dot)com
I have a BLT for my July birthday every year with fresh tomatoes and extra crunchy bacon. Thanks for adding Alias Agnes to your TBR list!
DeleteThe book sounds fascinating and the recipe delicious! Thanks for visiting the kitchen today, Elizabeth.
ReplyDeleteThank you, all, for inviting me into the kitchen!
ReplyDelete