The next time you’re at your favorite cafe, raise a
glass to the aristocrats who lost their heads so that you could enjoy
your foie gras.
France
gave birth to restaurants, but it was no civilized affair. In fact,
today’s restaurant business is actually a byproduct of the class warfare
that arose during the French Revolution.
Back in the Middle
Ages, fine dining was a privilege enjoyed exclusively by feudal lords
who had their own grand kitchens and personal chefs. The only commercial
eateries for the masses were seedy roadside inns, where strangers
crowded around mediocre buffets of tepid roasts and over-sauced legumes.
But sometime in the 1760s, the merchant class of Paris developed a
taste for healthy light broths known as restoratives, or
restaurants. By the 1780s, this new Parisian “health food” craze led to a
handful of reputable dining halls, where customers could sit at
individual tables and choose from a wide range of dishes.
Ironically,
the popularity of these restaurants grew at a time when the bulk of the
French population couldn’t afford bread. Decades of harsh winters and
oppressive taxation had taken their toll on kitchen tables. Worse still,
the greater part of the nation’s tax dollars had gone to pay for the
excesses of the aristocracy and monarchy. By 1789, the starving French
masses could no longer be controlled. Looting and riots erupted
throughout Paris, ushering in the French Revolution.
Aristocrats
fled to the countryside, leaving behind their highly skilled chefs and
the fine wines from their cellars. Suddenly, unemployed cooks and
abandoned bottles found their way to the city’s eateries, and within a
year, nearly 50 elegant restaurants had popped up in Paris. These
epicurean temples catered to the new class of French deputies and
businessmen and were featured in travelogues throughout Europe. As word
of their deliciousness spread, Parisian restaurants became tourist
attractions on par with Notre Dame.
Admittedly,
fine dining hit a rocky period during the Reign of Terror of 1793-94,
when anyone suspected of ties to the aristocracy risked facing the
guillotine. One unfortunate proprietor, Jean-François Véry, hung a sign
over his door that read, “We welcome people of the best sort.” The
elitist sentiment quickly landed him in prison. Still, Véry was the
exception. Most Parisian restaurants kept up a lively trade, their
tables replete with fine hams and pâtés. And most patrons felt safe
enough within their walls to joke about Robespierre, the grandmaster of
the Reign of Terror, and how he couldn’t afford to send his spies there.
The Restaurant King
The
restaurant business truly came into its own during the early 1800s,
after the upstart general Napoleon Bonaparte seized control of the
country and granted “freedom of pleasure” to all citizens. Napoleon
reasoned that people who were focused on Champagne and sauce reductions
probably wouldn’t conspire against him. A few years later, when
Napoleon’s military conquests brought fantastic wealth to Paris,
restaurants began to compete for customers with marble decor and
salacious entertainment. One establishment featured bare-breasted women
dressed as Amazon warriors, who were lowered from the ceiling in golden
chariots.
In the end, many more Frenchmen dined out than could
actually afford the experience. Oddly, it became almost commonplace for
customers to steal knives and spoons. One waiter at the upscale
restaurant Naudet’s spotted a patron pocketing the flatware and politely
handed him a bill that included “Cutlery, 54 francs.” The customer paid
up cheerfully, tut-tutting, “How dear things are getting these days…”
But this only goes to show how far restaurants had come. In less than a
century, fine dining went from being the exclusive privilege of people
born with silver spoons in their mouths to a must-have for people who
stole them.
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