Jane Austen Regency Feast

I’m going to have my dinner after which I shan’t be thinner (Jane Austen, Juvenilia)

Last night was my local Jane Austen Society’s eighth annual midwinter feast. We started off small in 2002 as a lunch for members only but, in the last few years, we have expanded it to a night event including members’ partners, resulting in some very convivial nights. We are a small group and not everyone can make the chosen date, so our numbers vary. Last night we were 13.

This year's feasters tuck into dessert

This year's feasters tuck into dessert

Regency Feast Main Courses

Regency Feast Main Courses

Every member brings a dish chosen from the Regency era, though not all dishes are perfectly authentic: some ingredients are hard to get, some cooking techniques are not those we use now, and sometimes we just don’t exactly know how it was done. Our main sources are the Jane Austen Centre’s online magazine and Maggie Black and Deirdre Le Faye’s The Jane Austen cookbook (which presents the recipes used by  Martha Lloyd – Jane’s closest friend and confidante after her sister, Cassandra). This year our main courses were:

  • Beef and roasted vegetable ragout
  • Chicken curry in the Indian manner
  • Vegetable pie
  • Salmagundy/Salamongundy
  • Potatoes
  • Salad of greens with cucumber
Regency Feast Dessert Table

Regency Feast Dessert Table

We are slowly building up quite a repertoire: each year there are some old favourites and some new experiments. Our members enter wonderfully into the spirit and regularly give something new a try, and so each year some very nervous chefs arrive with their dishes – and each year their anxieties are proved unfounded as we dig into their dishes with relish. Past main meal dishes have included Fish in corbullion, Broiled salmon, Roast pork, and Beef-steak pudding. We haven’t yet quite got into goose and partridge but I reckon we will!

Desserts are usually trickier as original recipes often assume a lot that has now been lost – or require highly time consuming processes that most of us can’t quite commit to. However, many Regency enthusiasts have interpreted and translated recipes and we are gradually sussing them out. Past desserts have included Black Caps (aka Baked Apples Miss Bates – from Emma, you know! – style), Whipt Syllabub and Cranberry Jelly (first make your “isinglass jelly”). This year we were tempted by:

We don’t, as you can see, go hungry – and neither are we bored as we spend a few hours talking, eating, laughing and, yes, drinking. As Jane wrote (though I have to admit that these words in this particular character’s mouth have an ironic edge):

Give me but a little cheerful company, let me have only the company of the people I love, let me only be where I like and with whom I like, and the devil take the rest, say I. (Jane Austen, Northanger Abbey)

6 thoughts on “Jane Austen Regency Feast

  1. What a wonderful idea! I love it! Well done to all the intrepid culinary experimenters!

    My dinner party for 16 was as chaotic as expected- 2 toddlers who spent the evening climbing up and down our stairs, a 6 mth old, two yapping dogs banished outside, ex-students and the old school bus driver and families, some of whom didn’t speak English but we all smiled a lot; food scrambled from the table because with small kids nothing goes to plan…now it is Monday morning and the house has subsided to the peace of 4 burly plumbers who are digging up our old clay sewerage pipes and extracting truly amzing clumps of fibrous tortured willow tree root!

    I’ve escaped to the peace of the computer, with two confused small dogs who can’t understand why they can’t join in the dig.

  2. I think I’m glad I only had 13 adults! BUT then again you have more stories to tell. Glad it went well. Good luck with the pipes – have been there a few times in the past! Poor dogs…life just isn’t fair sometimes. Anyhow, enjoy your peace.

  3. Just what I need – A Jane Austen society of intelligent minds discussing every angle and story bit of Austen’s books. I wrote extensive reviews on Sense & Sensibility and Pride and Prejudice…but have yet to delve into Emma. It would be so interesting to see a follow-up here with some of your dialogues or a podcast of your dialogues around Austen’s work and personal opinions…..

    • Thanks Farnoosh … we did a lot of work on Emma last year. This year we are focussing on Mansfield Park. However, if you haven’t read Emma, it’s the one I’d do next. I’m not sure we are up to podcasting our meetings at this stage. It’s challenge enough getting blogging going! I have, since this, set up a blog for my Jane Austen group. It is called JASACT and is in my blogroll. You are welcome to look at it.

Leave a reply to Farnoosh Brock Cancel reply