Showing posts with label new england. Show all posts
Showing posts with label new england. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 11, 2023

The Origins of Frappes & Milk Shakes

It's often said that New Englanders eat more ice cream than any other region of the country. And New Englanders enjoy ice cream year round, even during the winter. It's also said that in New England, a frappe is made with ice cream while a milk shake is not. Around the rest of the country, it's said that the opposite is true, that milk shakes, not frappes, are the ones made with ice cream.

Numerous articles have mentioned this difference, such as this recent article, yet none of these have been unable to determine why New England is different in this regard. They also often make assertions without providing any historical evidence. I decided to do my own research into this issue and have found some intriguing information which may bring more clarity to these issues. It's a complex matter, and more research is warranted so consider this article to be a work in progress as I continue digging into this matter.  

Let’s begin our historical exploration of frappes and milk shakes with a brief etymological item. The term “frappe” is derived from a French word which roughly translates as “chilled.” This term also derives from an Old French word “fraper” which meant “to hit or strike.”

The first mentions of “frappe” in U.S. newspapers, across the country, were in the 1840s, referencing “champagne frappe.” The earliest mention may have been in the New York Daily Herald (NY), December 8, 1842. In the 1850s, there were also mentions of Champagne frappe in newspapers in Great Britain as well. These mentions would continue to occur for the next hundred+ years, although in more modern times, the nature of the champagne frappe changed. 

During the 18th century, and into the 19th century, The Widow Clicquot by Tilar J. Mazzeo (2008), noted that “In fact, dry—or what the specialists call brut—champagne, like the word champagne itself, did not become popular for another sixty years. It certainly wasn’t served as a predinner aperitif. Instead, people drank champagne as a dessert wine, sometimes so cold that it was almost frozen slush. And it was shockingly sweet.”

So, the Champagne frappe in the U.S. was simply iced Champagne which was almost like a slush. Nothing was generally added to the Champagne. The Evening Star (D.C.), May 26, 1854, noted that Champagne frappe was selling for $3 per bottle. And in the Boston Saturday Evening Gazette, October 30, 1858, it was said, “.., gave me some champagne which was very thick; it was like soft ice. It was champagne frappe,’ said the merchant.” In addition, the Boston Semi-Weekly Advertiser, October 5, 1861, mentioned, “…left our only bottle of champagne to become ‘frappe’ in the snow,..”

Anyone could make champagne frappe, simply by chilling it until it became slushy. It's all important to realize that champagne frappe was known all across the country, so the term "frappe" was not unfamiliar.   

The next mention of a different type of frappe was in 1873, where the “absinthe frappe” made its first appearance. No description was initially given. Then, The Tennessean (TN), June 1, 1885 mentioned, “…absinthe frappe, which is simply frozen absinthe, tipped with brandy.” So, it was similar to a Champagne Frappe, a slushy drink, except they added a second ingredient, a bit of brandy.

This article was reprinted in numerous all across the country, including in California, Florida, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Massachusetts, Michigan, Missouri, Montana, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, North Dakota, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin. It’s safe to say many people all across the U.S. heard of the term “frappe.” Yet at this time, it basically referred to only iced drinks.

The Chicago Tribune (IL), December 25, 1887, also mentioned the absinthe frappe, stating, “It is very popular at Christmas. Everything depends upon the manner of mixing it. In this house we make it of white absinthe and imported soda.” So, we see a slightly different recipe here, using soda instead of brandy. And in the Salt Lake Herald (UT), June 3, 1888, it was mentioned that, "Absinthe frappe is getting to be almost as popular as cocktails."

The next mention of a different type of frappe was in the Chicago Tribune (IL), July 19, 1878, which briefly mentioned a “tea frappe,” without providing a description. Later newspaper references though would go into more detail, and ice cream was not included in its creation. The Chicago Tribune, July 27, 1884, provided another brief mention of a tea frappe in an article on food and drinks to take on a picnic. It stated, "Caterers now have tea frappe, iced coffee, and cold milk, which is especially designed for private picnics..." This article was reprinted in numerous newspapers across the country, once again showing that the term "frappe" was known all over.

We then see the appearance of a coffee frappe, also known as a “café frappe,” in 1883. 

Most of the first mentions also don’t provide much description of coffee frappes, but there was a recipe in the Iron County Register (MO), December 11, 1890, which didn’t include any ice cream. The ingredients included coffee, sugar and an egg white, which are frozen to a slush. The article also stated that tea frappe could be made in the same way, but with a mixture of black and green tea. This article was reprinted in a number of other newspapers around the country.

More frappe varieties began to appear. The Fall River Daily Evening News, July 30, 1890, noted that, “Iced cocoa is a new beverage for the summer lunch table. It is made for breakfast, sweetened and frozen, frappe—that is, iced, but not frozen as firm as ice cream.” Fruit-flavored frappes eventually started to appear as well, such as the orange frappe in the Hartford Courant (CT), November 20, 1891

One of the most unusual frappes, a Clam Frappe, was detailed in 1894. Would you drink a Clam Frappe? The New England Farmer, March 3, 1894, in an article on fare for the convalescent, recommended, “The clam frappe or frozen clam juice is the only rule suitable for a very sick person, and requires 20 clams. Wash them thoroughly and put them into a stew pan with one-half cup of cold water, cover closely and steam until the shells open, strain the liquor, cool and freeze to a mush. Serve in glasses.” This article also mentioned a Lemon Frappe, as well as noting that, “The latest fashion in frappe glasses is a glass with standard and a handle..” 

Clam Frappe, or Clam Broth Frappes, would continue to make newspaper appearances also across the country, sometimes referred to as a “delicacy,” and obviously not just for the convalescent. References would continue into the 1950s, including additional recipes, mentions on restaurant menus, and more. However, none of those recipes ever called for ice cream, though there were a few that used whipped cream as a topping.

The Boston Globe, July 8, 1894, noted “Iced foods and frapped drinks may not be the best things for digestion, but on a hot summer day,…are most refreshing.” The article mentioned Champagne, coffee, sherbet & chocolate frappes, stating, “To frappe champagne it must be packed deep and tight in chipped ice for at least 12 hours.”

As for other flavors, the Boston Globe, December 19, 1894, mentioned “peppermint frappe” while the Worcester Daily Spy, May 23, 1895, noted “strawberry frappe.” 

The Springfield Republican, July 19, 1895, referred to a “raspberry frappe.” A recipe for “peach frappe” was provided in the Boston Globe, August 9, 1895. “Line a mold with vanilla ice cream, fill the center with sliced fresh peaches. Spread over them ice cream, cover closely and set in a freezer for half an hour with salt and ice packed well around it. The fruit must be chilled, but not frozen.” However, it should be noted that this was not actually a type of drink like prior frappes. 

A recipe for a “pineapple frappe” and a “café frappe” was published in the Boston Globe, March 14, 1897. The Transcript-Telegram, November 8, 1897, had a recipe for a “fig frappe.” 

The Springfield Daily Republican, April 23, 1898, mentioned a French Strawberry Fruit frappe

And the Boston Globe, August 28, 1898, briefly mentioned a “consommé frappe,” likely a savory version.

The Boston Evening Transcript, January 25, 1899, published an advertisement for Ruinart Champagne, which stated, “The idea prevails, in American, that Champagne cannot be too much iced. Some, even, drink it ‘frappe’—a custom open to criticism in treating the very best wine, but used because it makes a sweet wine palatable.” At this point in time, dry Champagne was becoming more of the norm, and champagne frappe was starting to become less common.

An advertisement in the Springfield Daily Republican, May 9, 1899, referenced a “Crème de Menthe frappe” and a “Mint Julep frappe.”

A fuller description of the “frappe” was provided in the Springfield Daily Republican, June 18, 1899. “A frappe is almost a water ice, save that it is a little heavier, and should resemble, if properly made, moist or wet snow. Frappe is usually served with the meat course, or as a drink for evening affairs or at afternoon teas, and not as a dessert.” No ice cream was used in its creation. It's also interesting that it was often paired with a meat course. 

More description was given in the Boston Sunday Herald, July 22, 1900. The article stated, “Frappe is a term given to water ices which have been only partly frozen; that is, to the consistency of mush, rather than hard enough to mould. It is really an iced drink, therefore the name should not be given to a thick custard cream. These ices are served in glasses, and usually are more or less liquid, as the mixture melts very quickly. They made be of any fruit juice diluted with water and sweetened, or with a mixture of juices, or with tea, coffee or clam juice. They are served at afternoon teas, evening entertainments, or before the game course at dinner. In freezing frappe we use equal parts of ice and salt, and freeze quickly as we wish to have a granular texture, and we turn the crank only until the mixture is partly frozen; or it may be left in the can without stirring and when partly frozen, by scraping the icy portions from the side of the can and a slight mixing, the desired consistency may be obtained.”

So, a frappe is basically a slushy drink. Again, there’s no mention of the addition of ice cream, and the frappe is not seen as a dessert. We also once again see the use of clam juice in some frappes.

And now, let’s take a slight detour and look at the origins of the milk shake.

************ 

It seems that the milk shake was invented in the mid-1880s, thus later than the invention of the frappe, and it's possible that it was first created in Atlanta, Georgia, around 1885. The first newspaper mention I found was in The Sunday News (SC), July 26, 1885, which states, "...the 'Milk Shake' has taken the starch out of all of them. It is the latest invention in the soda waterline and it seems to have caught on immediately. It is composed of a little vanilla syrup, enough Catawba to flavor it and a tumblerful of milk shaken up with ice."

The Richmond Daily Palladium (IN), September 19, 1885, noted that at their current Exposition, one of the refreshment's was the milk shake. The News & Courier (SC), October 8, 1885, had an ad for the Clover Daily Milk Saloon, claiming to have "The Best Milk Shake in the City." The Junction City Sentinel (KS), April 13, 1886, mentioned, “The milk shake is becoming quite a popular drink, but sometimes it is so strong of pure cream that it makes the drinker shake a wee bit next morning.” 

The Savannah Morning News (GA). April 16, 1886, had a drug store ad, noting “Milk Shakes with shaved ice.” And The Union Times (SC), May 14, 1886, stated that at a soda fountain, they had “the most delightful drink” which was “something new, delicate in flavor and delightfully refreshing; and he called it a Milk Shake.” 

As for its invention, the Boston Herald, May 13, 1886, reprinting an article from an Atlanta newspaper, mentioned that, “The newest Atlanta drink is ‘milk shake.’ You get it at the soda fountains. The mixer of cooling beverages pours out a glass of sweet milk, puts in a big spoonful of crushed ice, puts in a mixture of unknown ingredients, draws a bit of any desired syrup, shakes the milk in a tin can like a barkeeper mixes lemonade, sprinkles a little nutmeg on the foaming milk until it looks something like a Tom and Jerry, sets it out for you and you pay five cents. ‘Milk shake’ is an Atlanta drink. Atlanta is nothing if not original.”

At this time, no one seemed to dispute the claim that the milk shake was an Atlanta invention. And the reprinted article showed up in newspapers all across the country, helping the spread the idea of the milk shake. I’ll also note that at this time, the milk shake, like the frappe, had no ice cream in it.

More information on the milk shake was provided in the Fall River Daily Herald, September 28, 1887, reprinting the information from a Cincinnati newspaper. “It is a big glass full of flavored milk—vanilla suits most people better than any other flavor—iced and ‘shaken before taken,’ until there is an inch of froth or foam at the top.” The article continued, “But perhaps the chief charm of a milk shake is it novelty and the watching its manufacture. You can get it at most of the drug stores and at several of the corner stands.”

As for its preparation, “The maker asks what syrup you prefer, draws it in the glass, shaves in some ice, or puts in some powdered ice, fills it nearly full of milk—they generally have a good quality—claps it on the cup shaped top of a little machine behind the counter, which is only an upright rod made to oscillate up and down with lightning like rapidity by means of a crank.” Customers apparently loved the milk shake. “Ninety-nine out of a hundred pay their nickel well satisfied and call again,..”

The milk shake apparently arrived in Massachusetts around 1888. The Pharmaceutical Record: A Semi-Monthly Journal (May 1, 1888), mentioned, “The demand for this summer drink is making its way Eastward…” It continued, “The necessaries are perfectly fresh, rich milk; this is an absolute requisite—especially laying the emphasis on the word FRESH; clean ice, an ice crusher or shaver, pure juice syrups and a good ‘shaker.’” The Pittsfield Sun, May 17, 1888, noted, “With some sparkling pounded ice, some syrup from the fountain and a glass of rich milk agitated together by a whirling crank machine, Druggist Manning makes the new southern drink called ‘Milk Shake.’ It is a delightful beverage, wholesome, satisfying and strictly temperance.”

Then, the Fitchburg Sentinel, May 11, 1889, mentioned, “The ‘milk-shake,’ a Western drink, was introduced last year, and this year, ‘milk punchine’ promises to be a favorite summer drink...” The Boston Globe, August 11, 1889, stated, “Milk Shake. This is composed of milk flavored with syrups to taste.”

The Steward’s Handbook by Jessup Whitehead (Chicago, 1889), described a, “Milk Shake—A good trade is done in this in summer time. A milk shake is ½ pt. milk in a large lemonade-glass, a spoonful sugar, shaved ice, flavor if requested; covered and shaked to froth.”

The Complete Practical Confectioner (Chicago, 1890) discussed Milk Shake Formulas. “Take not quite as much of the syrup as is generally used for soda water; be careful not to get too sweet; shave ice to about half fill the glass; pour in enough milk to fill the glass within about an inch of the top and then shake. One secret in making Milk Shake is, to thoroughly shake the milk."

A Port Wine Milk Shake? The Pharmaceutical Journal Supplement, July 6, 1895, noted, “Milk Shake (New Formula). Fill the tumbler half full of shaved ice, add 1 ½ fluid ounce of milk-shake syrup (equal parts of vanilla and pineapple syrup), fill the glass almost full of milk, and shake well. A pint of port wine added to a gallon of the milk-shake syrup improves the drink.”

However, it appears the milk shake might have lost some of its popularity in Massachusetts in less than ten years. The Recorder (MA), September 18, 1897, stated, “For the milk-shake, which was the fad a few years ago, there is now hardly ever a call, and the shake-machine has disappeared.” Shake-machines used to sell for $35, but the price had dropped drastically to only $5. Why did this happen?

The article alleged, “The tuberculosis scare is doubtless largely accountable for the disappearance of the milk shake. When it first came into vogue it was supposed to be the most healthful of drinks. A glass of good fresh milk with a savoring of some syrup, an egg perhaps, cracked ice and a sprinkling of nutmeg was put into the machine and given a veritable Y.M.C.A. shake.” The article continued, “But some doctors cried against the drinking of ice cold milk when it was heated, and others showed that the milk was not always healthy—sometimes coming from tuberculosis animals, and it was not always pure—sometimes being made of chalk—and the public stopped drinking it.”

There were numerous articles at this time about the potential dangers of milk, including the risk of tuberculosis from contaminated cows. This might have led to a decrease in milk shake consumption across the country. 

Ice cream made an appearance! In MacMahon’s Latest Recipes and American Soda Water Dispensers’ Guide by Albert C. MacMahon (Chicago 1893), there was a recipe for an “Ice Cream Shake. Mixing glass one-third full Shaved Ice. Don’t Care Syrup 1 ½ oz. Sweet Cream 2 oz. Fill with milk. Shake well and strain into fancy glass. Then add heaping teaspoonful of ice cream. Top off with nutmeg and serve with spoon.” 

This was basically the first and only milk shake recipe in the 19th century that called for ice cream. It was more an outlier and the ice cream was basically an accompaniment rather than integrated into the shake. You couldn't drink the ice cream, but rather needed a spoon to eat it.

Now, back to the frappe.

*********** 

With the start of the 20th century in Massachusetts, frappes continued to be mentioned, in a variety of flavors, and ice cream was still not an ingredient. The New England Farmer, January 5, 1901, had a recipe for a Pomona Frappe, made with sugar, water, sweet cider, orange juice, and lemon juice. And the New England Farmer, July 13, 1901, noted that, “A frappe is simply a half-frozen ice. Its distinguishing characteristic is mushiness. If liquor is added to a frappe, it becomes punch.

The Fall River Globe, January 27, 1902, provided a recipe for a cider frappe while the Boston Globe, March 7, 1902, mentioned Lemon, Orange and Claret Frappes. This was expanded upon in the Boston Globe, March 9, 1902, which gave recipes. “To make lemon, I simply make a good strong lemonade and add quite a little lemon flavoring. Orange is made by using half oranges and half lemons.” In addition, “Claret—A strong lemonade to which is added more or less claret according to taste.” The Boston Globe, June 15, 1902, referred to a variety of frappe flavors, including pineapple, coffee, mint, ginger, peach & orange, apple, and rhubarb.

A Clam & Chicken Frappe??? The New England Farmer, May 3, 1902, provided a recipe for a Clam & Chicken Frappe, first noting, “This is really an iced soup and of course is to be served on a warm day.” The recipe called for you to steam two quarts of clams and then strain the liquor through a cheese cloth. Then, you added highly seasoned chicken stock to the liquor. Finally, “Cool and freeze to a mush; serve garnished with whipped cream.” Quite a unique frappe!

The Boston Globe, June 17, 1902, provided a definition for a frappe. “A frappe is but a ‘water ice’ partially frozen. It is stirred in freezer till soft and mushy instead of firm and hard. It is really an iced drink, and is served in handled glasses. Frappes are made of any fruit juice diluted with water and sweetened, or with several fruit juices combined, or with tea, coffee, and even clam juice.”

More recipes. The Fall River Daily Herald, August 8, 1902, published a recipe for a Tea Frappe while the Fall River Globe, September 6, 1902, gave one for a Cantaloupe Frappe. The Worcester Daily Spy, January 3, 1904, printed a recipe for a Cranberry Frappe. The Boston Herald, July 7, 1904, had an advertisement for Sanford’s Ginger, with a recipe for a Ginger Frappe, while the Boston Journal, August 11, 1904, gave a recipe for a Black Raspberry Frappe. None of these recipes included ice cream as an ingredient.

When was ice cream first used in creating a frappe? There was a mention in The Boston Journal, April 29, 1904, although the dish sounded more like a sundae than a frappe. It wasn’t really a drink, but more of a dessert. The article stated, “Almost every woman nowadays has her own special frappe combination with which she delights to mystify her guests. One that scored immediate success the other night was made in this way: Into the bottom of the frappe glass went a generous spoonful of preserved strawberries; on top of the berries came the ice cream—vanilla in this case—then a spoonful of whipped cream, and on top of the cream a grating of English walnuts.

However, frappes with ice cream, as a drink, appeared around 1909. The Dispenser Soda Water Guide compiled by The Soda Fountain (2nd edition, NY, 1909), noted, “Frappe is simply another name for a well-shaken ice cream soda. A dispenser in a small drug store can serve a frappe as easily as an ice cream soda. Mix as for an ice cream soda and convert into a frappe by putting a common shaker over the glass and shaking it well. Serve with a straw.” The book had recipes for numerous frappes, most without ice cream, including: Ping Pong, Honey Dew, Maple, Flinch, Orange, American, Pineapple, Coffee, Tea, Admiral, Blood Orange, Buffalo, Café, Chocolate, Crème de Menthe, Funston, Honeycomb, Maple Crusta, Martian, Navy, Opera, Orange, Mint Cordial, Mint, Fruit, Ambrosia, Ginger, and Delmonico.

However, several of those frappe recipes actually included the use of ice cream, including Honey Dew, Maple, Flinch, American, Coffee, Buffalo, Chocolate, and Fruit. The ice cream was integrated into the drink, and wasn't merely an add-on. There were also a couple of recipes for Milk Shakes, Peach and Coffee, but they didn't include ice cream.

The 1915 edition of this book included more Milk shake recipes and information. It stated, “The shakes fall naturally into three general classes, dependent upon their principal basic material. The milk shakes are essentially sweet milk and a flavoring to which can be added an egg (egg milk shake), malted milk (Malted milk shake), or both (egg malted milk shake). The cream shakes are enriched by the use of sweet cream, and the ice cream shakes by the use of ice cream.” The Milk Shake recipes included Coffee, Peach, Findlay’s Fruit Milk Shake, Japanese Milk Shake, Sportsman Shake, and Clam Milk Shake. The Clam Milk Shake was made with 1 ½ oz. clam juice, 2 oz. milk, 5 oz. soda water, and a pinch of salt and a little white pepper. None of the recipes included ice cream.

However, frappes continued to be frequently mentioned without the addition of ice cream. The Berkshire Eagle, November 7, 1910, stated, “A frappe is simply a water ice frozen to the consistency of mush, equal parts of ice and salt being used to make it granular in the process of freezing.” There were also mentions of many more frappe flavors during these ten years, including grapefruit, maple, banana, lime & lemon, muskmelon, lemon & grape juice, cider, marshmallow, loganberry, pistachio, vanilla, double egg, tomato juice, chocolate mint, raspberry nut, nut chocolate, pistachio nut, cocoanut, and raisin & cranberry.

Another book though mentioned frappes made with ice cream. Wm M Bell’s “Pilot”: An Authoritative Book on the Manufacture of Candies and Ice Creams compiled by Wm M. Bell (Chicago 1911), wrote that, “One of the best drinks Tom served with this syrup was a coffee frappe…He placed in the shaking glass one ounce of the coffee syrup and then about two or three dishers full of ice cream (if the cream was hard, he used it in small pieces); he then placed the shaker over the glass and shook it extra hard in order to dissolve the ice cream without using ice in the glass, which would make the frappe too thin. After this operation the shaker, containing the mixture, was run full of carbonated water and poured into a serving glass. The glass was allowed to set for a few seconds and then some more of the liquid was poured into it, which forced the heavy foam on the top of the frappe to come up over the top of the glass and form a sort of cap. A small dab of whipped cream was placed on the top, two straws placed in the drink and a spoon served on the side.”

The book continued, “Tom served all kinds of frappes, among the best being maple, chocolate and coffee, although his coffee was the most popular. The other frappes were made in the same manner as the coffee.” It also said, “To make frappe, use 2 oz. any flavor and about 4 oz. soft ice cream; shake well and finish with fine and coarse stream.

It’s important to note that this book was printed in Chicago, indicating that frappes made with ice cream were available in that city. They were not restricted to New England. Plus, the reach of this book could easily have spread across the country, introducing lots of people to the idea of frappes made with ice cream.

Clam frappes continued to be mentioned. The Boston Sunday Herald, July 5, 1914, provided a recipe for Clam Frappe, noting, “This frappe is delicious as a punch at dinner.” And the Springfield Republican, June 19, 1915, published a restaurant ad for a special Sunday dinner menu that included a “Clam cocktail frappe.”

Handy Household Hints and Recipes compiled by Mattie Lee Wehrley (1916, Louisville, KY), noted, “If originality palls at times, put the frappe glasses to the use they were intended to fill. There is nothing quite so sure to win to the heart of every guest as a frapped itself—which commonly means vanilla ice cream with some sort of sauce. The variety of simple sauces is endless, but chocolate is the general favorite.” This mentions ice cream and frappe but again seems more like a sundae than a drink.

The Boston Herald, August 20, 1916, stated, “A frappe, properly speaking, is a sweetened mixture filled with shaved ice and set in salt and ice a few minutes before being sent to table.” The general definition of a frappe still didn't include the use of ice cream.

And the Boston Globe, December 25, 1917, printed a similar article to a prior Globe article from June 1902. It added, “General Rule for Frappes—One quart water with 2 cups sugar, boiled together from 5 to 20 minutes. Add 2 or 3 pints mashed and sifted juice and pulp of fruit, like strawberries, raspberries, peaches, plums, apricots, cherries, etc. Add more sugar is needed. Some fruits need a little lemon juice.” Still no mention of ice cream. 

What would it take to make ice cream a usual ingredient for frappes? 

Maybe the first store advertisement which offered a frappe made with ice cream! The Star-Gazette (NY), July 9, 1925, published an ad for a drug store, part of the Rexall group, which offered a “Java Frappe. A delicious and nourishing coffee-flavored drink of rich milk and ice cream, topped with spiced whipped cream.” It cost 20 cents.

Five years later, the Boston Globe, June 13, 1930, published a large drug store ad for Liggett’s, “America’s Greatest Drug Stores,” and part of the Rexall group. The ad mentioned, “Frappes. A generous portion of rich Ice Cream is beaten to a soft consistency—any flavor syrup. The Dixie Cup is filled with rich, pure dairy milk, and you have a palate teasing combination, rich in food value.” They cost 15 cents. There was also a mention of, “Milk Shakes. Cool, rich, dairy milk flavored to your taste with coffee, chocolate, vanilla or any other pure fruit syrup. A cool nourishing drink that is incomparable.” They only cost 10 cents.

During the rest of the 1930s, newspapers provided plenty of frappe recipes which still didn’t include ice cream. There were some soda fountain/drug store ads which mentions flavored frappes, but didn’t specify whether they were made with ice cream or not. There were a few mentions though of frappes with ice cream, but most of them mentions were in ads for Liggett’s.

The Evening Gazette, June 17, 1931, had an ad for the Brockelman Bros., a market in Worcester with a soda fountain. The ad mentioned, “Egg Frappe with Ice Cream” costing 10 cents a glass and you had your choice of flavors. The Springfield Republican, April 19, 1936, mentioned that, “In season, almost any fresh fruit is combined with the desired flavor in ice cream, to form a fancy-named sundae, frappe or parfait.”

In 1939, several Boston newspapers had ads for Liggett’s, advertising items such as “Delicious Bostonia Ginger Ale Frappe with ice cream,” and Chocolate and Coffee Frappes with “pure ice cream.”

In 1903, Louis Kroh Liggett, who founded the L.K. Liggett Drug Company, established a retailer’s cooperative, United Drug Stores, which sold items under the Rexall brand. After World War I, the cooperative created a franchise program, where the franchisees sold Rexall products. During the 1930s, the company was based in Boston. For many years, they were the largest player in retail drug stores, and each store likely had a soda fountain.

When we consider how frappes, made with ice cream, became so prominent in New England, a primary reason may have been Liggett's. We see that they were producing frappes with ice cream since at least 1925, and they were the first newspaper ad I found for a soda fountain offering such a frappe. In addition, as there were so many Liggett's stores, the largest number of any retail drug store, then they were able to make frappes familiar to many people in New England. At this time, if a lone soda fountain had offered a frappe with ice cream, it would have been very difficult for them to spread the ida of such a frappe all across New England. For a large chain like Liggett's, it was very easy to spread the concept.

Even though Brigham's Ice Cream was also around during this time period, having been established in 1914, I couldn't find any evidence that they sold frappes during this period. The few ads they placed in the local newspapers noted that they made ice cream and candies, sundaes and sodas. However, none of those ads mentioned frappes, even though we know they eventually started selling them much later in time.

1939 seemed to be a watershed year for frappes made with ice cream as a number of other soda fountains started offering them. Remember that this is 14 years after the first Liggett's ad for ice cream frappes. 

The Boston Globe, July 17, 1939, noted a regional difference concerning frappes. It stated, “If you order a milk shake in Los Angeles you’re served a frappe, and when you ask for a frappe the clerk looks at you as though there are bats in your belfry.” However, it seems very likely that such a California clerk would have at least heard of a frappe before, although he probably would have seen it as a type of water ice, and not something with ice cream.


The Boston Herald, August 18, 1939, mentioned a Moxie Frappe, made with a scoop of coffee ice cream and Moxie, which was “thoroughly blended in the electric mixer.” In the North Adams Transcript, September 5, 1939, there was an ad for McCann Dairy Store, which sold “Ice Cream Frappes” for 10 cents each. The Fitchburg Sentinel, September 20, 1939, printed a grocery ad which sold “Ice Cream Frappe” for 10 cents while the Fitchburg Sentinel, November 7, 1939, noted that the same grocery advertised, “Frappes. All Flavor with 2 Scoops of Ice Cream.”

During the 1940s, plenty of frappe recipes still didn’t include ice cream. For example, the Boston Herald, July 6, 1941, had a recipe for Café Frappe, without any ice cream. Additional recipes were printed, such as cranberry frappe, tomato frappe, and grape juice frappe, none with ice cream. However, there were some advertisements during this period which mentioned frappes, but didn't specify whether they had ice cream or not.

Another regional issue. The Boston Herald, February 26, 1947, published an article on “sectional dialects.” The article stated, “I learned that a good many words are unknown in other parts of the country. Such commonplace words, for example, as ‘frappe,’ ‘cobbler,’ ‘cruller,’ and ‘cranberry.” However, as I've previously shown, the term frappe was actually known across the country, although it probably didn't include ice cream.

As the 1940s ended, and into the 1950s, ice cream frappes became even more common. The Boston Herald, October 29, 1949, advertised a 24 ounce Frappe, made with ice cream, that sold for 25 cents. The Boston Traveler, June 13, 1951, published an ad for Whitings Milk Co., noting that a chocolate frappe could be made with a scoop of ice cream and Whiting’s chocolate beverage.


The Quincy Patriot Ledger, June 19, 1951, had a large ad for the nationally known, locally owned, “Genuine Dairy Queen.” They offered “Thick & Cooling Frappes” for 30 cents each. 

Another Dairy Queen ad. The Quincy Patriot Ledger, May 2, 1952, had an ad that stated, “Step right up and order your favorite flavor extra-thick frappe made with Dairy Queen. Sm-o-o-th, delicious Dairy Queen is a freshly frozen dairy food.” The Journal Tribune, (ME) June 19, 1952, also had a Dairy Queen ad, which stated, “Call it what you want—milk shake, frappe, or velvet—It’s all the same here—A BIG, thick, cooling drink, mixed to your taste—"

The Boston Evening American, July 20, 1954, described frappes. “Our favorite dessert is a frappe;” It continued, “These are not frozen frappes, a kind of ice, but de luxe ice cream and milk drinks, popular in New England, and pronounced ‘frap.’ These are most easily made in an electric blender or liquefier. Combine the ingredients and run about 2 minutes or until smooth and fluffy.” In addition, the article noted, “Almost any kind of fresh ripe or half-thawed frozen fruit can be used for frappes in combination with whole milk and ice cream. If frozen fruit is used, add less sugar.” A few frappe examples included banana, strawberry and peach.

Regional differences once again. An article in the Boston Traveler, December 21, 1954, noted the differences of Boston and Kentucky, including that “...a milk shake in Kentucky is a frappe here.” In Boston, there’s no ice cream in the milk shakes."

************

We know that the term "frappe" predated the appearance of "milk shake," but initially, both drinks didn't includes any ice cream. Both terms were also known all around the country. Ice cream wouldn't become an ingredient for some of these drinks, both frappes and milk shakes, until the early 20th century, and even then, it didn't become the norm until years later. In addition, the earliest soda fountain recipe books that mentioned the use of ice cream in frappes and milk shakes were published in New York and Illinois, so it doesn't seem that ice cream frappes actually originated in New England. 

What may have spurred on the idea of frappes with ice cream in the New England could be the Liggett's drug stores, which were the dominant drug store at the time, and which their side fountains sold frappes made with ice cream. This ubiquitousness may have then led to more independent soda fountains to start creating frappes with ice cream as well, eventually leading to the idea that such frappes were only a New England thing. Other regions of the U.S. would generally embrace milk shakes with ice cream, instead of frappes, forgetting that New England didn't originate the idea of frappes and ice cream.

Wednesday, April 29, 2020

All About Boston's Chinatown, Chinese Restaurants & Cuisine

What was the first Chinese restaurant in Boston's Chinatown?

That question intrigued me and I wasn't satisfied with the answer I found through some quick Googling. So, I engaged in my own intensive research seeking an answer, poring through thousands of old newspapers and books. As I delved into that rabbit hole, I uncovered so much fascinating information about the history of Chinatown and its restaurants. Eventually, I decided to write a five-part series of articles about what I found, as well as providing some answers to my original question. These articles contained an abundance of references, especially to many old newspapers.

Even after completing this initial series of articles, I continued my research as I kept finding new and interesting information. Eventually, I began expanding and revising my original articles as well as writing additional historical articles, on a variety of related topics, from the first Chinese restaurants outside Boston to a history of Dim Sum in the U.S. Many of these articles were completed and/or expanded/revised during the first third of 2020, and consist of over 100,000 words, the size of a book, so there's plenty to read if you're so inclined.

To help bring more visibility to all of these posts, and to make it easier to find these articles, I've compiled all of the links into this single post. It will be a repository for all of these articles, and I'll update it when I write a new article. This should be helpful to my readers who want to delve deeper into the fascinating stories of the history of Boston's Chinatown, its restaurants, and related matters.

In some respects, these articles can be considered works in progress, as I try to update them whenever I engage in new research. I've written some of the most extensive articles you'll find about the history of Chinatown and its restaurants, and I'm always trying to improve and expand them. Plus, I'm working on other historical topics for future articles. I hope you enjoy and would love to hear feedback.

The First Restaurants In Boston's Chinatown
Check out Part 1, covering the 18th & 19th centuries
Check out Part 2, covering the years 1901-1920
Check out Part 3, covering the 1920s.
Check out Part 4, covering 1930-1959
Check out Part 5, covering the 1960s
Check out Part 6, the tale of Ruby Foo.
Check out Part 7, the tale of Anita Chue
Check out Part 8, the tale of Mary Yick
Check out Part 9, a Deeper Look into Two Restaurants
Blob Joints: A History of Dim Sum in the U.S.

Sampan Articles
#1: In Search of the First Chinese Restaurant
#2: Malden's First Chinese Restaurants
#3: Quincy's First Chinese Restaurants
#4: Ruby Foo, Chinatown's First Woman Restaurateur (Part 1)
#5: Ruby Foo, Chinatown's First Woman Restaurateur (Part 2)

Monday, April 6, 2020

Origins of Manhattan Clam Chowder

The beginning of a poem about Clam Chowder.
--New-England Galaxy & Masonic Magazine, September 1, 1820

Ladies and gentlemen, I present for you a Battle Royale: New England Clam Chowder vs Manhattan Clam Chowder. In the end, who shall prevail?

People often have strong opinions on which chowder version they prefer, generally dependent upon where they live, although there are exceptions. For example, though born in Oregon, famed cook James Beard moved to New York City when he was around 24 years old. You might think he embraced Manhattan clam chowder but in his book American Cookery (1972), he wrote briefly about “. . . that rather horrendous soup called Manhattan clam chowder,” and noted that it "...resembles a vegetable soup that accidentally had some clams dumped into it.”

What's your opinion?

Although tomato-based clam chowders have existed in New York since at least the second half of the 19th century, most sources claim that the first use of the term "Manhattan" Clam Chowder was in 1934. in the Soups and Sauces cookbook by Virginia Elliott and Robert Jones. In Savoring Gotham: A Food Lover's Companion to New York City (2015), edited by Andrew F. Smith, it stated, “The first located recipe titled "Manhattan Clam Chowder" was published by Virginia Elliott and Robert Jones in Soups and Sauces (1934). This recipe substituted tomatoes for milk. The name "Manhattan Clam Chowder" caught on, but it had no real association with New York City.”

Other sources would quote or use this information in their own articles. Many sources also stated that tomato-based chowders were previously known in New York by other names, including Fulton Market Clam Chowder, Coney Island Clam Chowder, and New York Clam Chowder. These sources also commonly allege that "Manhattan" Clam Chowder received its name by New Englanders who were derisive of tomato-based chowders.

In the Daily Oklahoman (OK), February 1, 2012, there was a chowder article which discussed some of the findings in The Book of Chowder (1978) by Richard Hooker. Hooker alleged that tomato-based clam chowder was "an abomination to the simple country folk of New England who derisively referred to the nouvelle chowder as 'Manhattan-style' since nothing of quality came from New York." He also claimed "By the beginning of the Great Depression, the name had stuck,.."

However, is that the true origin of Manhattan Clam Chowder? It didn't take much research to cast significant doubt upon the most commonly accepted origin tale. For example, I found a reference to Manhattan Clam Chowder predating the 1934 cookbook reference by almost 50 years. And the deeper I delved, the more fascinating I found the entire matter. There was so much more involved to the history of Manhattan clam chowder, and I became convinced of the validity of a different theory as to the true origin of its name.

Chowder was very popular in New York during the early 19th century, and as you could also find in New England, there were "chowder parties" held in various parts of New York, including Brooklyn and Long Island. These parties likely included both fish and clam chowders. The first reference I found to a chowder party in New York was in the Long-Island Star, June 26, 1834. Some chowder lovers even organized, such as the Brooklyn Chowder Association. The Brooklyn Evening Star, July 19, 1842, noted that the motto of this organization was “For the promotion of Health, Sociability and Enjoyment.” They held semi-monthly excursions, on the first and third Tuesdays, weather permitting.

Coney Island, located on a New York peninsula, had become a popular seaside resort by the mid-19th century. Seafood, including chowder, was ubiquitous at Coney Island restaurants though the first direct reference to "clam chowder" on Coney Island was in the New York Daily Herald, July 19, 1845. Prior to that time, the term "chowder' was used, but you couldn't differentiate whether it referred to fish or clam chowder, or both.

As a brief aside, in 1847, there was an "eating match" between two men in New York, a competition to see who could eat the most chowder. The Brooklyn Evening Star, August 11, 1847, noted that such eating matches, for public entertainment, were new. Two members of a chowder party, both known as “extraordinary feeders,” faced off against each other on Bergen's Island. The loser of the contest ate only 37 bowls of chowder, while the winner ate more, though the article didn't specify how much more.

The 1850s saw the formation of a number of "chowder clubs," which basically seemed to be groups who went on excursions to eat chowder together and drink. There were groups such as the Union Chowder Club, American Chowder Club, and the Ninth Ward Chowder Club. The 1850s would also see the first specific reference to “Coney Island clam chowder.” The New York Daily Herald, March 20, 1857, had a brief mention of “Coney Island clam chowder.” Unfortunately, there wasn't a description of this chowder, though it is suspected it might have included tomatoes.

Coney Island was acquiring a stellar reputation as a place for clams and chowder. The Times Union, August 4, 1862, noted that if “would you enjoy a glorious plunge in the saline-aqueous, with clam-chowder and eke the roasted bivalves afterwards? We commend to Coney Island.” The New York Times, August 20, 1863, had the first specific reference to a “clam-chowder party,” and not just a ore generic "chowder party." The Buffalo Sunday Morning News, May 6, 1877, mentioned that “Clam chowder parties are fashionable…” while their June 17, 1877 issue was the first to mention a specific “clam chowder club.”

There's mention of another specific chowder in New York. The Indianapolis News (IN), March 29, 1875, mentioned that "Fulton Market Clam Chowder" was available at a local market, without providing any description of its contents. Was it tomato-based or not? The Schenectady Evening Star (NY), October 16, 1875, mentioned that Coney Island Clam Chowder was available at the David House.

To the east of Coney Island, there was Manhattan Beach, which during the 1870s saw significant investment to turn it into a high-class tourist destination, catering to the wealthy. In July 1877, the luxurious Manhattan Beach Hotel opened and then in August 1880, the equally luxurious Oriental Hotel opened on the shore. Manhattan Beach became the most high-end resort area on the peninsula, and its creation likely plays a large role in the naming of Manhattan Clam Chowder, a topic I'll address later in this article.

An article published a year after the opening of the Manhattan Beach Hotel noted the higher food prices on Coney Island and the two other resort areas. The New York Daily Herald, July 22, 1878, reported that many people were concerns about the high food prices and hotel costs. The prices were often higher than what was found in New York City restaurants, though restaurant owners claimed that they also had higher costs as they had to bring in ingredients from a greater distance and they also had higher waste. Some comparison prices were given, for Manhattan Beach, Brighton Beach and an Uptown Restaurant. For example, stewed clams were 40 cents at Manhattan Beach, 30 cents at Brighton, and 20 cents Uptown. For fried clams, they were 40 cents at Manhattan Beach, 35 cents at Brighton, and 35 cents Uptown.

The Lancaster Times (NY), July 10, 1879, noted that at the Coney Island pier, you could have “genuine Coney Island chowder.” There would be plenty of other ads during the next couple years for this chowder.

A more detailed article was provided in The New York Times, July 14, 1879, which sang the praises of Coney Island chowder. "As the great national chowder-pot, Coney Island comes boldly to the front." But, not all of the chowders on Coney Island were the same. "And Coney Island chowder is a mystery that no man has ever yet fathomed." One man claimed to have eaten chowder at 11 different places, each one different. That person ate at Norton & Murray's, noting, "I think it was genuine chowder, for it had clams in it, and potatoes, and tomatoes." How, he didn't like that they added vinegar to the chowder. He also noted that, "At the Brighton and Manhattan beaches, where it comes on in silver pans, which cost more,.."

The article seems to indicate that Coney Island clam chowder must have tomatoes, though each restaurant still made their own version, with the addition of various different ingredients in addition to tomatoes. It's also interesting how the clam chowder was presented on Manhattan Beach, served in silver pans, presenting it as a high quality dish, elevated above the more common clam chowders on Coney Island. This is another important element in the role of the naming of Manhattan Clam Chowder.

The New York Tribune, July 21, 1879, was the first to provide a price for clam chowder, noting that Fulton Market Clam Chowder sold for 20 cents.

The first recipe I found for Coney Island Clam Chowder was in the New Family Cookbook (1885) by Juliet Corson. Corson was born in Boston though moved to New York, where she established the famed New York School of Cookery in 1886. Her cook contained a recipe for Coney Island Clam Chowder, with directions including, “Peel and slice a pint of fresh or canned tomatoes.” We see here that Coney Island Clam Chowder was tomato-based. The recipe also contained a couple different spices, including grated nutmeg and curry powder.

Interestingly, the cookbook also contained a recipe for “Clam Chowder,” which was actually very similar to that for the Coney Island version, including the fact that it used tomatoes. This was definitely not a New England version of Clam Chowder. It didn't include the nutmeg or curry as in the Coney Island version, and used celery seed, which wasn't in the Coney Island recipe. Though Corson was originally from Boston, it's obvious her love was for New York style chowder.

In 1886, another cookbook provided a recipe for Coney Island Clam Chowder. Cooking for Profit: A New American Cook Book Adapted for the Use of All who Serve Meals for a Price (Chicago, 1886), by Jessup Whitehead, was originally published in the San Francisco Daily Hotel Gazette. This indicates how far the fame of Coney Island Clam Chowder had already spread, all the way to California. The book contained a recipe for Clam Chowder: Coney Island Style, and stated, "The clam chowder so popular in the restaurants as a lunch as a lunch dish is more of a stew than soup, being thick with clams and potatoes." It also mentioned, "The Coney Island chowder contains tomatoes and herb seasonings." There was also a recipe for Clam Chowder: Boston Style, and it was noted, "This is what is called the old-fashioned sort, having no tomatoes in it."

One more cookbook. In A Few Hints about Cooking, with Remarks on Many Other Subjects (Boston, 1887), by Sarah Grier, there is a recipe for Clam Chowder, which we would call a New England style, which is made without tomatoes. However, and despite the fact Sarah lived in the Boston area, she preferred tomato-based chowder. As she wrote, "There is another recipe, which, in my opinion, is infinitely superior to the above; but it is an acquired taste, and I should not like to risk the serving of it to guests who were eating it for the first time. It is the Coney Island manner of making chowder." She noted that the main difference between the two chowder recipes, was that the Coney Island version added a half can of tomatoes, powdered thyme, Worcestershire sauce, and a sliced lemon.

Manhattan Clam Chowder appeared! The first reference I found for "Manhattan" Clam Chowder was in 1887, 47 years before what most sources claim was the first reference in a 1934 cookbook. The Buffalo Times (NY), June 25, 1887, published an ad which read, “The original boss Manhattan clam chowder at Geo. J. Bucheit’s, cor. of Ellicott and Carroll Streets, every Saturday night from 5 to 10." There's no indication "Manhattan" was used as a term of derision, and obviously use of the term occurred much earlier than the Depression. And this is but the first of many other references to "Manhattan" clam chowder which I found prior to 1934.

Back to Coney Island Clam Chowder. The Steward's Handbook and Guide to Party Catering by Jessup Whitehead (January 1, 1889) mentioned that Coney Island Clam Chowder was a “thick soup or thin stew containing tomatoes, clams, onions, potatoes, bay leaf, herbs, etc., started by frying the main ingredients together until half-cooked, then adding broth and little wine.” The book also noted another type of chowder, Tunnison Clam Chowder, which was a “seaside hotel-keeper’s specialty” that contained tomatoes and herbs, in addition to the regular ingredients.

I wasn't able to find much else about Tunnison Clam Chowder, except for a recipe first provided in the Courier-Journal (KY), April 9, 1901, which was reprinted in several other newspapers, in Indiana, D.C., New Jersey, and New York. The recipe included tomatoes, as well as a layer of milk soaked sea biscuits or Boston crackers.

During the later half of the 19th century, Delmonico's, located in New York City, was considered one of the best fine-dining restaurants in the country. Two former chefs at Delmonico wrote their own cookbooks, and both contained clam chowder recipes that included the use of tomatoes. Interestingly, both chefs referred to these recipes simply as "Clam Chowder," and didn't call it Coney Island or Manhattan chowder.

First, there was The Table: How to Buy Food, How to Cook It, and How to Serve It (1889) by Alessandro Filippini. His recipe mentioned, “Lightly scald four medium-sized tomatoes, peel and cut them into small pieces and add them to the preparation.” Second, there was  The Epicurean: A Complete Treatise of Analytical & Practical Studies (1894) by Charles Ranhofer. His recipe called for “one quart of tomatoes peeled, pressed and cut in half inch squares.”

Despite claims that New Englanders were vehemently opposed to the use of tomatoes in clam chowder, The Boston Globe, January 29, 1895, published four recipes for Coney Island Clam Chowder. A reader sought such a recipe and several people came forward, offering their own version of that recipe. Above, is the first recipe that was submitted.

The second submitted recipe.

The third submitted recipe.

The fourth submitted recipe.

The Boston Globe, February 13, 1895, also presented another recipe for Coney Island Clam Chowder. Obviously there were a number of people in the Boston area who were curious enough to make their own tomato-based chowders at home.

New York Clam Chowder! The Boston Daily Globe, June 2, 1896, briefly mentioned that New York Clam Chowder was available for Ladies' Lunch at Cook’s.

And as I start addressing chowder references from the early 20th century, I want to note that the term Coney Island Clam Chowder continued to be used throughout the entire 20th century, in a myriad of restaurant ads, all across the country, including as far west as California. It was essentially a synonym for Manhattan Clam Chowder, yet its usage didn't vanish as the use of "Manhattan" rose.

Another cookbook, Vachon's Book of Economical Soups and Entrees (1903), by Joseph Vachon, provided a recipe for Boston Clam Chowder, which didn't contain tomatoes. It also provided a recipe for Coney Island Clam Chowder which called for a “thin layer of canned tomatoes” and recommended to flavor it "with a little tomato catsup and Worcestershire.”

The Fort Wayne Daily News (IN), June 19, 1903, noted that Manhattan Clam Chowder was available at O’Reilley’s Oyster Bay. We thus see that this type of chowder was now available outside of New York, in this instance in Indiana.

The Democrat and Chronicle (NY), April 6, 1904, provided more details about Manhattan Clam Chowder, and the information seemed to indicate it had existed for some time. The article noted, “There was a time when Manhattan clam chowder was a mixture of merit, occupying a position of honor in the culinary world. Nobody ever thought of letting a Friday go by without indulging in a dish of the delicious concoction, and as much oftener is the week as the appetite called for it.” There's no indication that anyone ever saw the term "Manhattan" as a term of derision from non-New Yorkers.

The article continued, noting that many current restaurants weren't providing the quality chowder as once was available. “Metropolitan clam chowder has, however, descended to the quick lunch menu, and is no longer the succulent dish that old New Yorkers used to go wild over. Clam chowder as served in the majority of restaurants today is suspiciously like vegetable soup, with just enough of the clam flavoring to give it a name. There are still a few places in town, however, where real clam chowder may be had.

And how is that real Manhattan Clam Chowder prepared? “Here is the way they make it: They put into iron kettles layers of nice fat pork cut into small squares, let it simmer and brown for a while, then put in a layer of claims (little necks preferred) cut into pieces, but not as small as the pork squares. Then some layers of sliced onions, potatoes, tomatoes, carrots, turnips, and on top a layer of biscuit. All this is allowed to cook slowly until thoroughly done, and never under any circumstance is it stirred until ready to serve.” The addition of a layer of biscuit is interesting, and rarely seen in other recipes at this time.

More placings serving Manhattan Clam Chowder. The Evening World, February 2, 1905, had an ad for Rothenberg & Co., "New York’s Fastest Growing Store, " that noted their restaurant offered a 5-course “Table d’Hote Lunch” for 25 cents, which included Manhattan Clam Chowder. The Gazette (Montreal, Quebec), August 11, 1905, published an ad for La Corona Hotel Café, with a Friday special including Manhattan Clam Chowder. The chowder had spread to Canada! And in The Honolulu Advertiser, July 13, 1906, they printed an ad for The Grotto Restaurant, and its lunch menu included Manhattan Clam Chowder. The chowder had spread as far west in the U.S. as it could, to Hawaii.

Manhattan tomato-based chowder had spread wide and far, all by 1906.

Again, despite claims that New Englanders didn't like tomatoes in their clam chowder, the Boston Globe, March 4, 1908, provided a recipe for Fulton Market Clam Chowder.

The San Francisco Call Bulletin (CA), April 25, 1909, offered a recipe for Coney Island Clam Chowder.

From Manhattan to Utah. The Salt Lake Tribune, July 24, 1909, published an ad for the Saltair Restaurant, which had their menu including Manhattan Clam Chowder for 15 cents.

One of the oldest, and quite vehement, attacks against the use of tomatoes in clam chowder was presented in the Salt Lake City Deseret Evening News, August 13, 1909, reprinting a column from the Washington, D.C. Times. Interestingly, the source of the derision wasn't from someone from New England. And these attacks were very rare in the newspapers during this time period.

The article stated, “What passes for clam chowder in New York is not chowder. It is soup, and poor soup. It is soup without pride of race or strength. Usually it is watery, as if prepared originally as a swimming pool for living clams. Tomatoes you will always find therein. You cannot tell a New York clam chowder by the clams, but you can always identify it by the tomatoes. If you order clam chowder and get something that resembles a cross between tomato soup and chicken gumbo, say nothing that you will be sorry for. Eat what you get, or not, as your hunger demands and your fastidiousness permits. You are face to face with that evil, misnamed concoction, a New York clam chowder. If you find a clam therein, or a section of a clam, let it alone. It is not the kind of clam which enters into the real clam chowder of these shores. It is large, tough and aged, chopped with a hatchet into little bits, and used sparingly, but not sparingly enough. The best way to eat a New York clam chowder is to throw it out of a window or send it back.” Quite harsh words.

There was a bit more positivity in an article from the Morning Union (CA), August 25, 1909. The article started, “This is a very hearty dish, generally liked." It then provided a recipe for Manhattan Clam Chowder, noting, “Get five pounds of little neck clams, this being enough for six persons. Wash and put on to boil in a saucepan with a glass of water. Cover. Steep five minutes. Strain the broth and remove the clams from the shells, cutting them in half, or if they are large, in quarters. Now brown a minced onion, a minced green pepper and a quarter pound of dried salt pork, cooking until the onion is tender. Then add four potatoes diced very small; four peeled, quartered tomatoes and six Bent’s crackers rolled into small bits. Then add the broth, two glasses of water, seasoning, a teaspoonful of Worcestershire, a wineglassful of tomato catsup, some thyme leaf juice and simmer slowly until the potatoes are done but not broken into bits. Just before serving add your clams, a pinch of sugar and minced parsley. Serve oyster crackers on the side.”

More places offered Manhattan Clam Chowder. The Indianapolis Star (IN), September 18, 1909, printed an ad for White’s, which offered Manhattan Clam Chowder for 10 cents. The Pittsburgh Daily Post (PA), March 6, 1910, had an ad for Kaufman’s, offering a Lenten Lunch with Manhattan Clam Chowder. The Oregon Daily Journal, September 5, 1912, posted an ad for The Holtz Store, with a lunch menu including Manhattan Clam Chowder. The Indianapolis Star (IN), September 27, 1912, published an ad for the Budweiser Bar and Café with Manhattan Clam Chowder for 10 cents. And the Hartford Courant (CT), April 18, 1913, had an ad for the Boston Branch Grocery, with Manhattan Clam Chowder as a Buffet Special.

Back to Canada. The Star-Phoenix (Saskatchewan, Canada), December 15, 1913, had an ad for a Café at Cairns serving Manhattan Clam Chowder for 10 cents. The San Francisco Call & Post, December 18, 1913, printed an ad for Hale’s “Pompeian Court” Restaurant which served Manhattan Clam Chowder. The Ridgewood Herald (NJ), October 8, 1914, published an advertisement for the O.K. Market, which offered a Friday special of “Home-Made Manhattan Beach Clam Chowder” for 20 cents per quart. The Buffalo Times (NY), November 13, 1914, had an ad for J.N. Adam & Co., which in their Tea Room served Manhattan Clam Chowder.

I want to highlight the use of the term, "Manhattan Beach Clam Chowder" which was mentioned in the New Jersey newspaper. This actually hints at the possible origin of the term "Manhattan" clam chowder, which might have derived from a specific location, the Manhattan Beach. By itself, this certainly wouldn't be sufficient evidence, but later in this article, the more evidence and analysis will be proffered.

Canada again. The Vancouver Sun (British Columbia), February 23, 1915, printed an ad for Ritz Café, offering a 30 cent luncheon with Manhattan Clam Chowder as one of the dishes. The St. Louis Post-Dispatch, September 30, 1915, had an ad for Stix, Baer & Fuller, mentoring their Seafood Luncheon, which cost 50 cents, and included Manhattan Clam Chowder. The Star Tribune (MN), October 22, 1915, printed an ad for The Pheasant Room West Hotel Club Luncheon with their Manhattan Clam Chowder. In Hotel Monthly, Volume 24, 1916, it was noted that Manhattan Clam Chowder served at The Cadillac in Detroit. And the Evening News (PA), March 9, 1917, had an ad for The Hampton, which had a special of Manhattan Clam Chowder for 10 cents.

Again, we see that Manhattan Clam Chowder was popular all across the country, as well as in Canada.

Canned Manhattan Clam Chowder? Despite claims that the term "Manhattan" clam chowder wasn't coined until 1934, it ended up on can labels as early as 1920. The Canner/Packer, Vol.50, 1920, mentioned that “The Gorton-Pew Fisheries Co….at its Plymouth cannery, where they also pack “Down East” and “Manhattam” clam chowder,…” So, a famed Massachusetts fishery, with a canning facility in Plymouth, produced Manhattan clam chowder in a can. They didn't seem to have a problem with tomatoes in clam chowder. And that tomato-based chowder was obviously popular enough that the fishery expected the product to be profitable.

The York Dispatch (PA), March 2, 1921, posted an ad for Manhattan Clam Chowder in a can, for 15 cents.

Another recipe for Manhattan Clam Chowder. The Times Union (NY), February 26, 1929, presented winning recipes from the Brooklyn Daily Time Recipe Contest for the Lenten season. Mrs. Catherine Gottfried won $1 for her Manhattan Clam Chowder recipe, with a list of ingredients including 5 slices of bacon, diced, 1 large can of tomatoes, 1 large onion, 4 potatoes, 5 carrots, 1 stalk celery, 1 green pepper, 1 cup diced strong beans, 6 cups water, and 1 dozen large clams.

The Morning Post (NJ), July 10, 1931, printed an intriguing recipe for Clam Chowder Souffle, which required a can of Manhattan clam chowder. This would be easy for any home cook to prepare.

The Atlanta Constitution (GA), July 18, 1933, had a recipe for Manhattan Clam Chowder, which required 2 dozen fresh clams, 4 potatoes, 3 medium onions, 1/3 cup celery, 2 slices salt pork, teaspoon salt, ¼ teaspoon pepper, and 2 cups of canned tomatoes.

Differences between Manhattan and New England chowders. The Wilkes-Barre Time Leader (PA), May 31, 1935, mentioned that "New England clam chowder is made from clams, onions, potatoes and milk with salt pork as seasoning; Manhattan style clam chowder is more like a vegetable soup with clams since it contains clams, onions, potatoes, carrots, celery, tomatoes with salt pork, thyme and other seasonings." The article then provided a recipe for Manhattan Clam Chowder.

The Boston Herald, January 13, 1936, provided an article comparing New England and Manhattan clam chowders. It begins, "The original American chowders were made with shell fish, green turtle, corn, and okra. Gradually their ingredients were extended to include all manners of seafood, meat and vegetables--even the feathered clan has found its way into the chowder kettle with chicken chowder high in favor." It then mentions the difference of the two chowders. "New England clam chowder--a creamy blend of clams, milk and potatoes--is anathema to the New Yorker. By the same token, people from 'Down East' wince at the mere mention of Manhattan clam chowder, in which the clams frolic in a highly seasoned tomato broth."

The author of the article enjoyed both versions. "Both chowders are equally delicious (there now, we've probably started something!) but with entirely different flavors." Recipes for both versions were then provided.

A law to ban tomatoes in Clam Chowder? The Austin American-Statesman (TX), January 25, 1939, published a from a story from Augusta, Maine. It stated that, “Cooks who add tomatoes to Maine clam chowder Wednesday were threatened with the impossible penalty of digging a barrel of clams at high tide. The penalty was proposed in a bill introduced in the Maine legislature by Rep. Cleveland Sleeper Jr., who explained he was alarmed by the ‘infiltration of foreign ideas of cookery,’ which he feared would ‘throw Maine clam chowder from its culinary pinnacle.” The preamble to the bill noted that “Tomatoes and clams have no affinity either of mind or body,’ and ‘Their union in a chowder is an unholy one and leads only to the moral degradation of the principals.”

The Boston Globe, January 27, 1939, explained that Cleveland Sleeper, Jr., the Maine State Representative from Rockland, had recently presented a bill to the State Legislature to “make it illegal for housewives or others to add tomatoes to Maine claim chowder, making the so-called clam chowder, New York style." Of course lovers of tomato-based chowders weren't pleased with this idea. The Brooklyn Daily Eagle (NY), January 29, 1939 mentioned that “Tomato-loving friends of so-called ‘Manhattan clam chowder’ (named for old Manhattan Beach of the day of the steam cars) were indignant.”

That article is intriguing for its explanation for the naming of "Manhattan" clam chowder. The 1880s and 1890s were a major time for the production of steam cars, and that fits within the first documented reference I found, in 1887, of the use of the term "Manhattan." It is also supported by the reference, in a New Jersey newspaper of 1914, which referenced “Home-Made Manhattan Beach Clam Chowder.” This may be a more logical origin tale than that "Manhattan" began as a term of derision.

As mentioned previously, clam chowder was very popular on Coney Island and the resorts of Manhattan Beach and Brighton Beach. Manhattan Beach tried to differentiate itself as the resort for the wealthy, and served their clam chowder in silver pans. Why wouldn't they also try to name this chowder after themselves, differentiating it from "Coney Island" chowder, making it seem a higher-quality product? So, instead of being derived from terms of derision, "Manhattan" clam chowder was more likely a designation of alleged superiority.

The Hartford Courant (CT), January 30, 1939, noted that the New York Herald Tribune has “risen to the defense of that New York favorite, the Manhattan clam chowder with tomatoes." The article also referred to a New Jersey concoction called “bully Clam Chowder,” that was made of large juicy clams, ground ripe tomatoes, green peppers, onions, parsley, spices, salt and pepper. I haven't been able to find anything else about this type of New Jersey chowder.

The Boston Herald, February 26, 1939, reported that, in five days, there would be a Clam Chowder contest, pitting Maine chowder against Manhattan chowder. The contest would occur, at 4pm, at the Hotel Lafayette in Portland, Maine, pitting a chef from Maine against a chef from Philadelphia. The event was to be the main event of the mid-Winter frolic of the Maine Hotel Association. Rep. Sleeper would represent the tomato-free chowder, and Harry Tully, an owner of a restaurant in Philadelphia and the President of the International Stewards and Caterers’ Association, would present tomato-based chowder.

A radio debate over chowder. The Boston Globe, February 27, 1939, noted that WBZ radio hosted a debate on “Should There be Tomato in Clam Chowder." The three speakers included Rep. Cleveland Sleeper, Chef Mathias Gotwalt, and Joe DiMaggio, of the New York Yankees (who was there to defend the use of the tomato in chowder). No results of the debate were provided.

The Boston Globe, February 28, 1939, and The Town Talk (LA), March 3, 1939, gave more details about the chowder showdown. Rep. Sleeper's tomato-free chowder would be prepared by George Miller, the official cook for the Maine’s Hotel Men’s association. Harry Tully's, chowder would be prepared by Chef Julius Savinese. It was now even more clear that Sleeper's bill to prohibit tomatoes in chowder was a publicity stunt.

The results of the chowder battle were detailed in the Boston Globe, March 4, 1939 and Boston Herald, March 4, 1839. About 200 people attended the event and before the chowder contest, there were a series of Maine cookery demonstrations by Maine cooks. A top prize went to Miss Prudence Stickney, age 78, from Shaker Village at Sabbath Day Lake in Poland, for her Shaker Fish and Egg Casserole.

Eleven judges presided over the chowder battle, including Paul Mack-Hale, the President of the Massachusetts Restaurant Association; Joseph Martz, president of the Epicurean Club of Boston; Arthur Greenleaf, Maine fisheries commissioner; Ruth Wakefield, inventor of Toll House cookies; and Arthur Race, manager of the Copley-Plaza hotel in Boston. None of the judges were from New York or Philadelphia, just Maine and Massachusetts, which certainly seems a bit slanted in favor of Rep. Sleeper.

And the result? “11 of New England’s leading authorities on what’s fit to eat, agreed unanimously that clam chowder is one thing, and that ‘clam chowder, Manhattan style’ is another—an inferior article.” Chef Julius Savinese lost and the judges noted that his tomato-based chowder was “Not a bad vegetable stew.” The judges even refused to refer to it as a "chowder," calling it either a "stew" or "vegetable soup." Plus, it was mentioned that Savinese had been brought to "drown good Maine clams in a little pond of tomato sauce."

In addition, it was stated that the judges “..knew what they learned at their mothers’ knees, that a true clam chowder contains salt port, milk, Maine clams, Maine potatoes and little else. They knew that to put tomatoes into a clam chowder is to commit a crime against nature.” It was also mentioned that “Behind Representative Sleeper and his measure rallied the entire state of Maine, which loves publicity as a wolf loves meat.”

An Ohio write penned an article noting the differences of the two chowders. The Plain Dealer (OH), May 4, 1941, began with "If you want to get into a spirited argument with a New Englander all you have to say is 'Tomatoes belong in a clam chowder and not milk.'" The author also believes that Manhattan clam chowder is the most popular version, though the article includes recipes for both versions.

We now can see that the term "Manhattan" clam chowder appeared much earlier, nearly fifty years, than most sources claim. Plus, this type of chowder was available all across the country, as far west as Hawaii, and even in Canada. It was even available by the can, produced by a Massachusetts fishery, prior to 1934, when most other sources claimed the term "Manhattan" clam chowder was first used.

The early appearance, as far back as 1887, as well as other evidence and analysis, seems to indicate the term wasn't created by acts of derision by New Englanders who hated tomato-based chowder. There is some evidence, which seems reasonable, that it may actually have been named after Manhattan Beach, used as a term of superiority to differentiate it from the more "plebeian" Coney Island clam chowder.

We can also see that Boston newspapers in the later 19th century were providing tomato-based chowder recipes for its readers, so not all New Englanders opposed such a thing, at least during that time period. The chowder battles between New England and New York may be a later invention, especially as they seem far more common during the 1930s.

What are your thoughts about Manhattan Clam Chowder?