They say that you can tell a lot about a person by the clothes they wear, the company they keep and, these days, from their Instagram accounts. But it might also be said that you can tell a lot about someone based on how they eat, and what.
We look to great historical figures for advice on how to live well. We might be inspired to follow James Joyce’s reading list, to see Samuel Beckett’s favorite plays, to watch Martin Scorsese’s favorite films. But we don’t often discuss drawing inspiration from, and also analyzing, the favorite foods of historical figures.
Does it tell us anything to learn that Lord Byron shunned fancy food at dinners, and preferred the staples of the navy—hard biscuits and soda water—and, when this was unavailable in the kitchen of the restaurant to which he had been invited, he opted instead for mashed potatoes, which he further mashed into a thin puree, doused in vinegar? A psychoanalytic investigation would surely bear fruit. But instead, I prefer to find motivation in the favorite foods of famous folk.
For if we feel we can learn something by emulating them, and this is certainly the case in the category of cultural consumption, then surely we can learn something as well from their culinary delights? So what did Darwin eat and Balzac drink? A few are famous, like Marcel Proust’s madeleines dipped in tea, but some may be surprising…and hopefully inspiring.