January 2015 meeting: Food in Jane Austen’s novels (2024)

Prepared by member Cheng, with help from Anna’s notes.

It would be reasonable to assume that after the indulgences of Christmas our interest in food would have staled. Not so. Our opening meeting for the year had all the enthusiasm and happy chaos of a night at the Musgroves.

First we swapped newsy items and discoveries such as the fact that the 1st edition of Persuasion & Northanger Abbey auctioned last December 6th in Sydney sold for just over $6,000. What a bargain!We examined, reverently, an 1837 5th edition of Sense & Sensibility which had been presented to one of our members on her recent retirement and we read about it in Jane Austen Cover to Cover by Margaret Sullivan. Handling a book 178 years old and published only 20 years after Jane Austen’s death, looking at its engravings and remarking on the good condition of pre 1840’s rag based paper as opposed to later 19th c acidic wood based paper, was a rare treat.

The discussion opened with the statement that, as always, Jane Austen doesn’t waste a word – she uses food to illustrate character.

Maggie Lane was extensively quoted, from both Jane Austen in Context and Jane Austen and Food. Importantly, Lane argues, no hero or heroine or other character who enjoys the narrator’s approval ever willingly speaks about food. They merely refer to the mealtimes of breakfast, dinner or tea, etc.Any mention of a specific foodstuff in Austen is made by a character who is thereby condemned for being greedy, vulgar, selfish or trivial – Mrs Bennet boasting about her soup and her partridges, Dr. Grant salivating at the prospect of turkey are good examples of this, as is Mrs Jenkins kind-hearted concern over Elinor & Marianne’s preferences for salmon or cod and boiled fowls or veal cutlets.

However, even more nuances of social class can be read into this because Mrs Bennet is also letting it be known that she has access to a game park. Many of the subtleties of Jane Austen’s wit are lost on 21st c readers.

Emma contains the most references to food and they also have a deeper meaning. The heroine is part of an interdependent village community where some have more access to food than others. She is portrayed as caring and sharing – broth to a sick cottager, a whole hind-quarter of pork to the poor Bates’, arrow-root to Jane Fairfax. Food in Emma, its production, processing and distribution is a metaphor for neighbourly love.

However, the author also uses it as a background for some of the most amusing scenes in all her novels – the strawberry excursion to Donwell Abbey and Mr. Woodhouse’s digestive foibles.

Mr. Bingley’s white soup symbolises his wealth but at the same time his wit and generosity as he knows Mr. Hurst likes French food and Mr. Darcy can afford a French cook.

When Mr. Hurst scorns Lizzie for preferring a plain dish to a ragout he’s condemned and Elizabeth endorsed for their respective tastes by the narrator. French food was considered suspect and dishonest, just like the French, and unpatriotic.

The only meal specified in Sense & Sensibility is Willoughby’s snatched lunch at a coaching inn in Marlborough – cold beef and a pint of porter – this has a moral dimension because it shows he is behaving honourably and with feeling at last. He doesn’t foolishly starve himself in his haste to reach Marianne but neither does he waste time by ordering an elaborate dish. Some of the sterling character associated with the roast beef of old England attaches to Willoughby: he is reformed.

We strayed into related topics:

  • food adulteration, particularly in flour for bread (as possibly in the French-bread that Catherine Morland ate at General Tilney’s breakfast table), the changing size of a penny loaf and the political importance of bread to feed the people.
  • table etiquette: the extraordinary quantities of food consumed and the likelihood of actually being able to access every dish laid out.
  • mealtimes: breakfast was as yet elegant and light and consisted mainly of tea or coffee and a selection of breads, eaten on fine china. Even Henry Crawford faced a journey to London on a few boiled eggs whilst William Price ate some cold pork with mustard. Heavy hot dishes on a groaning sideboard came later, in Victorian times.

To add even more variety to the meeting, a member had brought a facsimile copy, made of hand forged steel with bone handles, of late 18th c to early 19th c cutlery of the type used in Royal Navy ward rooms. The knife was unusually large and had a very broad blade intended for carving up one’s portion of beef. We realised that eating peas with one’s knife could have been accomplished easily. However, the much smaller 2 pronged fork was intended primarily only for transferring the pieces of meat to the mouth.

In the second half of our meeting members had brought food for afternoon tea that had featured somewhere in her novels. Our task was to identify the novel and who ate the food.Apples, walnuts, olives, seed cake, strawberries, even ratafia biscuits – all had been carefully researched and the game was brisk and laughter laden.

Food from the novels

Extremely interesting was the plate of “Stilton cheese, the North Wiltshire, the butter, the cellery, the beet-root” that had impressed Mr. Elton at the party at the socially aspiring Coles’. These cheeses were only made in certain small localities (the North Wiltshire being difficult to make), had been transported a long distance and hence were considered delicacies.

These expensive cheeses signalled that not only the Coles’ were rising financially and socially but that Mr. Elton, faced with the luxuries that the rich could command, was in raptures. Jane Austen’s readers would have known immediately that he would never marry Harriet Smith!

Our meeting rounded off with a devious quiz from our Machiavellian quiz mistress– to see if we remembered what we had studied last year!!! We left feeling that we had had a particularly satisfying meeting.

This entry was posted on Friday, January 23rd, 2015 at 4:52 pm and is filed under Emma, Mansfield Park, Meeting report, Northanger Abbey, Pride and prejudice, Sense and sensibility.You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

January 2015 meeting: Food in Jane Austen’s novels (2024)

FAQs

What happens in the Jane Austen book club? ›

Summaries. Six Californians start a club to discuss the works of Jane Austen, only to find their relationships -- both old and new -- begin to resemble 21st century versions of her novels.

What is the most feminist Jane Austen book? ›

Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice.

What time is dinner in Jane Austen? ›

Dinner takes place, in Jane Austen, any time between the early hour preferred by Emma and her father, about 3 p.m., and the fashionable 6:30 p.m. favoured by the Bingley sisters in Pride and Prejudice.

What do they eat in Jane Austen novels? ›

Read on to discover food and history and Jane Austen combined one Regency dinner you can easily make yourself.
  • Why do we know what Jane Austen ate? ...
  • 1st Course (no removes) ...
  • White Soup. ...
  • Pease Soup. ...
  • Second Course. ...
  • Haricot Lamb. ...
  • Fish with Wine and Mushrooms. ...
  • Vegetable Pie.
Jun 18, 2022

What happens at book club meeting? ›

Readers can come together to talk about a specific book or discuss a topic or theme across several different book titles. Student interests, reading levels, and book accessibility may play a role in determining what titles your book club chooses to focus on.

How old is Jocelyn in Jane Austen book club? ›

Jocelyn has been best friends with Sylvia since they were eleven and introduced her to her husband, Daniel, when they were in high school. Now in her fifties, she has never married and has no children. She originally invites Grigg to the book club for Sylvia's sake, but ends up attracted to him herself.

What is the saddest Jane Austen book? ›

Persuasion is Austen's saddest and most impassioned novel, and in its blend of the public and the personal it explored both the anguish of silence and the value of hope” — Robert Morrison, author of 'The Regency Revolution'

What is considered Jane Austen's best novel? ›

Pride and Prejudice

Dive into Jane Austen's most famous novel which features the pitch perfect love story between headstrong Elizabeth Bennet and the aristocratic Mr Darcy.

Why is Mansfield Park controversial? ›

Austen's heroine, Fanny Price has generated heated controversy because of the provocative contradictions in her character which this paper argues tally with the psychoanalytic understanding of moral masochism within the masoch*stic character As a child neglected at home and then sent to a frightening new environment, ...

What is a Jane meal? ›

The meal is a strictly vegan meal that excludes all animal products. Additionally, Jain meals don't contain any onion, garlic or other root vegetables. The meal is made with fruit and vegetables that grow above the ground and also uses a variety of Indian spices.

What did Regency people eat for breakfast? ›

However a Regency breakfast was a relaxed, informal meal, eaten in the Drawing room and would have been based around cakes. Favourites included honey cake, plum cake, French bread and brioche. Popular spices used in morning cakes were caraway seeds, saffron and ground ginger.

What was breakfast like in Jane Austen's time? ›

In the Austen household, it was Jane's job to prepare breakfast for the family around 9 every morning. The Austen's breakfast consisted of pound cake, toast, tea and occasionally, cocoa. Jane often used the hour before breakfast for her own personal time.

Was Jane Austen a drinker? ›

I read in The Drunken Botanist that our dear Jane not only drank spruce beer, but she also brewed it herself. The passage also reminds us that the beer is mentioned in a conversation between Knightley and Elton in Emma.

What illness did Austen have? ›

Jane Austen is typically described as having excellent health until the age of 40 and the onset of a mysterious and fatal illness, initially identified by Sir Zachary Cope in 1964 as Addison's disease.

What food do they eat at the Regency dinner? ›

Guests who sat down to eat were faced with soup, meat, game, pickles, jellies, vegetables, custards, puddings- anywhere from five to twenty-five dishes depending on the grandeur of the occasion. The first course would have been soup, which the host would supervise the serving of.

What happens in the book club? ›

Four women have attended a monthly book club for thirty years, where they bond over the suggested literature. Vivian, who owns and builds hotels, runs into Arthur, a man she turned down marriage to 40 years prior. They begin a flirtation, but Vivian has always refused to settle down because she enjoys her independence.

What is the book club book about? ›

A deliciously addictive psychological thriller about a book club that unravels dark and scandalous secrets between one circle of neighbours. The perfect page-turner for fans of Big Little Lies and The Rumour.

What is the movie Jane Austen book club about? ›

What happens in reading Club? ›

Editorials of the newspapers and current affairs are discussed and the arrival of new books are also informed in the meetings. Serious discussions are held on editorials and current affairs. Usually, the meeting starts with a silent prayer and the secretary read out the report of the previous meeting.

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