|
Home
Bookstore
On
the Road with
Mother Linda
In
the Kitchen with
Mother Linda
On
the Farm with
Mother Linda
At the Movies with
Mother Linda
Seeking Health with
Mother Linda
Olde World Shoppe
Press Releases
Recipes
Linda's Links
About
Contact
me
Register for my
Free
Updates


|
Of Cabbages and Emperors © Mother Linda's
After twenty-one stressful years as Roman emperor, Diocletian retired to the peaceful gardens of his hometown
of Split, Croatia to grow cabbages.
|
 |
|
A view of the southern
facade of Diocletian's palace from the Adriatic, Split, Croatia. |
From the palace walls, Diocletian watched his
garden in Salonae, where what he cultivated with his own hands gave him more
satisfaction than when he ruled his huge empire. When Maximinus' ambassador
begged Diocletian to become emperor for a second time, he answered, "If you
could show the cabbage I planted with my own hands to your emperor, he
definitely wouldn't dare suggest I replace the peace and happiness of this place
with the storms of a never-satisfied greed." H.
Stieglitz, 1845
When Stieglitz, a German scholar, wrote these words after his travels in Istria and
Dalmatia, two provinces of modern-day Croatia, he was probably paraphrasing
Eutropius, a Roman scholar who lived in the second half of the fourth century.
Stieglitz and Eutropius may have somewhat romanticized the situation, but their words capture the spirit of Diocletian's love for cabbages.
Historians believe that Diocletian, Roman emperor from A.D. 284 to 305, returned to the Dalmatian coast when he retired in order, at least in part, to grow them. Domesticated brassicas were a staple in patrician cuisine, and when he returned to the area now known as Split, he brought with him knowledge of Roman foodways. It is also speculated that
he considered cabbages especially healthy fare. (Today we know that cabbage is a natural healer of the stomach and intestines.)
Diocletian, born Diocles, was the son of an emancipated slave. Having little or
no formal education, he gained his status from soldiering in an age of wars and
eventually worked his way up through the ranks to become emperor. When he
began to think about retiring, he built a behemoth palace in Split, just a few miles
from his birthplace in Salonae (Solin). It took ten years (a.d. 295--305) to complete
the palace, which resembled a military fort. Once it was finished, he started working
his gardens in Salonae. In Diocletian's time, it was a city of sixty thousand
inhabitants and the largest Roman town on the Balkan peninsula.
It's hard to know exactly what kind of cabbages he grew, but Romans did not
know head cabbage. The original Mediterranean wild cabbages resembled
modern-day loose-leafed kale. Peasant farmers eventually produced cabbages with
leaves that curled in on themselves to form a head. Both white and red head
cabbages were familiar by the twelfth century, as recorded by Saint
Hildegard of Bingen.
The Croatian word kupus, probably originating from the Latin caput, is used in
several ways but usually refers to a head, or head cabbage. The Latin word
verzot
might refer to curly cabbage, or what we call kale, and cyma to savoy cabbage.
Cabbage seems to be universally popular and infinitely varied in Croatia. On a
previous trip to Korcula--one of Croatia's wine islands--I first saw a "stick cabbage"
whose tobacco-sized leaves grew at the end of a foot-long vertical stalk and were
not tightly compacted into a head.
When I visited Split last September, the farmers market sold several kinds of
cabbage, kale, brussels sprouts, broccoli, and fresh sauerkraut--which jovial ladies
fished out from huge barrels by hand. I was told that the fertile fields along the Cetina
River in nearby Sinj were famous for growing brassicas during Roman times.
Seventeen hundred years later, locals still ask for and value Cetina cabbages.
The oldest part of Split lies inside the ancient palace walls and has been
designated a UNESCO world heritage site. It's unique in that citizens have the right
to live within the palace walls, making it the only inhabited Roman ruin. (It is not
uncommon to see laundry artistically draped in open windows.) The palace was
deserted from the time of Diocletian's death in 313 until Julius Nepos came to Split
after the Roman Empire collapsed. In the seventh century, nearby Salonae was
destroyed by Avars and Slavs. Around this time ordinary citizens started occupying
the palace, building homes in the existing spaces their descendants still occupy
today.
In medieval times, some palace stones were stolen for other buildings. By the
eighteenth century, some palace inhabitants had moved outside the protective walls
and were renting their apartments to richer families, a pattern that continues today
with some families selling their street-level apartments to make space for new
businesses. The result of all the clamoring for space makes the core of Split a
pleasing hodgepodge: Retrofitted apartments and businesses are squeezed into
former barracks of Diocletian's soldiers and above the emperor's first-floor living
quarters, which overlooked the sea. Coffee shops--the mainstay of social life--are
crowded, especially on the seaside esplanade along the palace's southern facade.
Unfortunately, there are no hotels or bed-and-breakfasts within the palace walls.
The palace's remarkable preservation is most likely due to centuries of
habitation. When the city fathers started to restore Diocletian's residence, they had
to dig through and examine tons of petrified garbage--which turne d out to be an
archaeological treasure trove. For generations, if not centuries, residents had
dumped the garbage from their apartments above Diocletian's abandoned quarters
into the palace's cellars. Today, the cellars are slowly being excavated and
transformed into an underground museum that shares space with vendors.
If you tour the museum, you will see a huge, two-colored marble mensa, used in
Diocletian's time as a communal table. Tests show that the marble is not from the
nearby Croatian island of Brac, source of the marble used for the White House. It
may have come from Nicomedia, on the coast of Turkey, where Diocletian once
centered his administration. Professor Igor Fiskovich, head of the medieval art
department at the University of Zagreb, says the table's excellent condition attests
that it was used by the royal court.
A Stroke of Luck
I traveled to Split to research cabbage recipes and found it ever welcoming. Its
mixture of limestone streets and ancient ruins juxtaposed against modern stores
was intriguing. The residents speak a lilting and mellifluous Croatian that sounds
almost like Italian. These linguistic tendencies are no surprise if you take history into
consideration--this port town was once the flourishing Venetian city of
Spalato. (Fiskovich told me that one popular theory is that Spalato got its name from
aspalathos, the Greek name of an indigenous species of acanthus, a plant whose
distinctive leaf shape is used as a decorative motif on Corinthian columns.)
By a great stroke of luck, the day before I arrived the local paper had run an
article about five school friends, now in their fifties, who had written a cookbook
about Diocletian entitled What Split's First Inhabitants
Ate. I hunted down one of the
authors--Milorad Kresic--and spent an evening talking about history and food.
Luckily he was willing to part with a cookbook--one of only seventy-seven copies.
The next morning, Ante Duplancic, an articulate, self-appointed palace historian,
called to ask if he could interview me for the local paper. I thought this curious (the
interviewer being interviewed!) but agreed to meet him at the Luxor Caf? Located in
the peristyle across from Diocletian's mausoleum, it was my favorite meeting place.
Although the café doesn't serve American-style coffee, the atmosphere created by
the surrounding architecture--which includes an Egyptian black granite
sphinx--offsets this disappointment. And if you sit under one of the tabletop
umbrellas long enough, you will see the world pass by as camera-laden German
and American tourists mingle with the locals and returning expatriates.
After our chat, Duplancic offered me a "culinary" tour of Diocletian's quarters.
From the mausoleum, it was just a two-minute walk to what had been the center of
imperial life during Diocletian's time: the emperor's dining hall, called the
Triclinium.
Now it's just an open space in the sun, though you can still make out the cruciform
arrangement of chambers around the central hall. Without a guide you wouldn't know
you were standing where Diocletian dined. Nor would you notice the kitchens
nearby--the only clue being the vestiges of great ovens now spray-painted with
graffiti. Despite their fallen state (UNESCO offers no money for restoration, just
doles out the coveted designation), it wasn't too hard to imagine Diocletian and his
entourage enjoying a raucous meal here.
Knocking on
Doors
Historians believe that Diocletian always entered the city through the Golden
Gate at the north and walked south to his residence along Cardo Street. (Cardo as
the main north-south street and Decumanus as the main
east-west street was a
common configuration of Roman military architecture.) So I persuaded Duplancic to
be my interpreter as I knocked on some doors just off Cardo and the main square.
One address we visited was the home of the Grisogono family, who had
resided in the same spot at the corner of the main square since 1404. Unfortunately,
when it came to cabbage, the lady of the house didn't do more than boil it and
occasionally make a raw salad. Combined with some visits a few nights before, my
recipe hunt yielded no outstanding historical recipes in daily use save one--a dish
called Arambasich--a traditional regional dish made by wrapping spiced meat in
cabbage leaves.
Luckily, Kresic and his colleagues made my search easier: They had spent
several years codifying and testing recipes for their book, no doubt drawing from
Apicius de re Coquinaria, the most ancient of European cookbooks. Many of the
recipes include exotic ingredients such as garum, a Roman condiment made from
fermented mackerel intestines. Fortunately, a perfect substitute is Vietnamese fish
sauce, which is also made from fermented fish guts. But go easy, this stuff is strong
and smelly. A little too much will overpower all other tastes. Worchestershire sauce
can also be used as a substitute for garum, but I think less perfectly.
Before I left Split and Diocletian's palace, I walked north along Cardo Street to
the Golden Gate and journeyed outside the palace walls on a mandatory pilgrimage.
A huge statue of a Croatian saint by famed sculptor Ivan Mestrovic dominates the
scene. Passersby stop to touch the saint's golden toe in hopes of engendering
good luck. I did the same and asked for good health, which I plan to encourage by
ingesting ample quantities of cabbage.
Diocletian's Boiled Cabbage
No one is exactly sure how Diocletian's kitchen prepared cabbage, but it was
most likely cooked in a traditional patrician way with good olive oil, garum (a Roman
fish condiment), wine, and spices. Some of the spices in this recipe are a bit
esoteric for American larders. Lovage is a perennial herb in the carrot family that is
familiar to the English; Germans know it as Liebstockel, and the Romans called it
ligusticum. Rue is a strong-scented woody perennial whose bitter leaves are used in
medicine. You can find it with medical herbs at a good health food store, but one
might be tempted to leave it out.
1 bunch kale,
or, if you prefer,
1 head green cabbage
1 tsp. ground cumin
1/4 tsp. ground black pepper
2 tsp. lovage
1 tsp. mint (your choice)
1 tsp. rue
1/2 tsp. ground coriander
3/4--1 cup white wine
3 Tbsp. olive oil
2 Tbsp. Vietnamese fish sauce"
Chop the kale into bite-sized pieces and boil in salty water until
just soft (not
overdone); drain well and then season with the spices, wine, olive oil, and fish
sauce. Simmer for five minutes to combine the flavors.
Kale With Leeks
I choose a dark kale for this dish, so when mixed with the leeks the color
contrast makes a very handsome dish. Lacinato is a dark green heirloom kale from
Tuscany. Its blistery leaves have given rise to innovative names like "dinosaur" kale,
but the Italians simply call it cavolo lacinato, or curly kale. It is sweet and delicious
and so hardy it can be harvested under a foot of snow.
1 bunch Lacinato kale
2 leeks
2 Tbsp. olive oil
3/4--1 cup white wine
2--3 Tbsp. oil to fry leeks
3 Tbsp. Vietnamese fish sauce
1 tsp. ground cumin
1 tsp. ground coriander
salt as desired
Chop kale into 1 1/2-inch pieces and steam or boil until soft. Drain and put in a
bowl with the olive oil and half the wine. Set aside. Using the whole leek (both white
and green parts), cut stalks in half lengthwise and wash very well. Slice again
lengthwise and then cut into 1-inch pieces. Fry leeks in oil until just soft; add fish
sauce, spices, and salt to taste. Serve as a side dish.
Arambasich
Stuffed Sauerkraut Rolls
This dish is a regional favorite from Sinj, a town thirty miles northeast of Split
situated on the Cetina River. Its fertile fields produce wonderful cabbage. In Croatia,
this recipe calls for full heads of sauerkraut or a whole pickled cabbage, but this is
impractical for most kitchens, so I suggest steaming a whole head of cabbage as a
substitute. I've punched up the flavor of the stuffing a bit by adding paprika.
1 head cabbage
1/4 lb. smoked bacon
1 medium onion, chopped
1 1/2 lbs. ground beef
3/4 lb. ground pork
3--4 garlic cloves, crushed
1/8 tsp. nutmeg
1/4 tsp. cinnamon
2 cloves, crushed
1 Tbsp. paprika
1/2 tsp. black pepper
1 tsp. salt, or to taste
1 egg
1 Tbsp. lard or oil
Finely dice the bacon and fry in a medium frying pan; add the chopped onion
and continue frying until it's translucent. Add the ground beef and pork, brown for
about five minutes but not until completely done; let cool slightly. Add the garlic,
spices, and egg. Stir to moisten.
Steam a whole head of cabbage to soften the leaves. Pull the leaves off the
head one by one, carving some thickness off the central stems. Place a spoonful of
the meat mixture in the center of each leaf and roll it up, beginning from the stem. As
you do, tuck in the sides to secure the meat. Put lard or oil in the bottom of a large
saucepan and cover with a few whole cabbage leaves. Arrange the rolls, seam side
down, on top of the leaves. If desired, weigh the rolls down with a plate. Pour in
enough water to cover the rolls, cover the pan, and simmer over low heat for about
three hours.
Additional Reading:
Ivanka Bilus et al., Croatia at Table: The Aromas and Tastes of
Croatian Cuisine, Alfa, Zagreb, 1997.
Milorad Kresic et al., Sto Su Jeli Privi Splicani (What Split's First Inhabitants
Ate), Split, 1999.
|
Mark Grant, Roman Cookery: Ancient Recipes for Modern
Kitchens, Serif, New
York, 1999. |
|
|
|
|
|
Joseph Dommers Vehling, trans., Apicius: Cookery and Dining in Imperial
Rome, Dover, New York, 1977. |
|
|
|
|
|
Stephen Williams, Diocletian and the Roman Recovery, Routledge, New York,
1997. |
|
|
|
|
|
Clifford Wright, A Mediterranean Feast, William Morrow and Co., New York,
1999. |
|
|
|