Augustine’s Croquettes, Miss A. C. Claytor

“We do not believe that in the length and breadth of New York there is just such a place of refined enjoyment, dietetically speaking, as that narrow red brick house, not more than twenty feet front, in Walnut street, above Eleventh. It is not Delmonico’s in splendor, for there is no splendor, but it is exquisite in its comfort. Let all who go to the Centennial carefully abstain from the cold, badly-cooked edible of the commemorative dinner-tables, make it a point to visit Mr. Peter Augustin. A Centenniel croquette, a Revolutionary ris de veaux, will repay one for a dull day in Philadelphia.”

— The Philadelphia Times, 1875

I am guilty of occasionally forgetting that the railroads that brought passengers from points north into Baltimore to enjoy “real old Maryland cooking” ran both ways.

Culinary reminders of this two-way exchange occasionally appear in recipes with names such as “Delmonico Pudding,” or “Philadelphia Pepper Pot.” Others are less obvious.

Recipes for “Augustine’s Croquettes” appear repeatedly throughout my database: in the c.1895-1905 Goldsborough Family Papers recipe manuscript, in “New Old Southern Cooking”, written in 1902 by Laura D. Pickenpaugh, and finally, in the 1937 “Recipes Old and New” from St. Anne’s Parish cookbook (this recipe was also repeated in Maryland’s Way.)

These three recipes provide a hidden reminder that Philadelphia, like Baltimore, was a city where Black caterers had a stronghold over the culinary industry. W.E.B. DuBois wrote in his study “The Philadelphia Negro” that there existed “as remarkable a trade guild as ever ruled in a medieval city. This was the guild of the caterers, and its masters include names which have been household words in the city for fifty years: Bogle, Augustin, Prosser, Dorsey, Jones, and Minton.”

Three generations of the Augustin family reigned in Philadelphia, their overlapping careers spanning nearly a century.

Augustin’s 1105 Walnut Street location in 2018

In the early 1900s, the Maryland press liked to pit Black chefs against French chefs in a culinary proxy battle from which Maryland/Southern cuisine generally emerged triumphant. This oversimplification loses some intrigue when you remember that plenty of Black chefs were trained in French techniques. The whole thing seems even more silly in light of the fact that the industry was pioneered by men like Peter aka Pierre Augustin, a Creole man from Haiti, who probably was both Black AND French.

Around 1818, Augustin purchased the Philadelphia catering business of Robert Bogle. Bogle is credited with essentially establishing catering as a Black profession, but Augustin is credited with offering services that would become standards of the trade, such as providing china, tablecloths, tables, and chairs for catered events. “Bogle’s place was eventually taken by Peter Augustin, a West Indian immigrant, who started a business in 1818 which is still carried on. It was the Augustin establishment that made Philadelphia catering famous all over the country,” wrote DuBois.

The Augustin catering empire encompassed several talented family members including Mary Frances, a confectioner, and her and Peter’s son James, who ran the business with his mother after Peter’s death in 1841. Their restaurant M.F. Augustin & Son, was known as the “Delmonico’s of Philadelphia.” Peter Jerome Augustin took over the business when his brother James died in 1877.

1866

In 1879, the Philadelphia Times wrote that Augustin & Son “in addition the nightly supper parties at their rooms on Walnut Street, for which the charge is never less than five dollars a plate,” provided catering to clients all over the United States, furnishing terrapin, turkey, salads and other “good things” to clients in New York, Boston, Pittsburgh, and Nashville. The business had patrons in “Paris and other European cities.”

Of all of the varied viands provided by the Augustin’s, one dish won them fame and publicity above all others: their chicken croquettes.

Continue reading “Augustine’s Croquettes, Miss A. C. Claytor”

John Ridgely’s Shad Roe Croquettes

Shad Roe season is over but I somehow forgot to post this one. As though you’re cooking along at home. Well if you are, you can make croquettes from basically anything, as my cookbooks frequently demonstrate. I had some leftover shad roe so I made these. 

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The recipe comes to EDBM care of “John Ridgely” of Hampton. Three generations of John Ridgely’s existed but my guess based on the time frame of “Eat, Drink and Be Merry in Maryland”, and the fact he is not named “Captain” in the book is that it was Captain John Ridgely’s son John Ridgely, Jr. (1882–1959).

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John Ridgely, Jr. with wife, Jane Rodney Ridgely, and servant in 1948. Photo by A. Aubrey Bodine

This page gives a rundown of the familiar name of Ridgely in the area – note the transition to our concept of modernity between John Ridgely Jr’s two wives.

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The main house at Hampton was completed in 1790 – at the time, the largest private home in the United States.

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1950s postcard of Hampton mansion

In the 1800s it came to be one of Maryland’s largest slaveholding estates, with more than 300 enslaved people working the house and fields.

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Hampton Slave Quarters, Discover Black Heritage

 Much of this population was freed upon the death of Maryland governor Charles Carnan Ridgely, but his son John Carnan Ridgely is shown to have purchased many more during that time period. A case study by the Maryland Archives offers a possible glimpse into the life of enslaved people living at Hampton.  

“It must have been a surreal experience for blacks moving into and out of slavery at Hampton, literally passing each other on the way to different futures.” – Ridgely Compound of Hampton Towson, Baltimore County, Maryland By Dr. David Taft Terry

The lavish and famous property became harder to maintain without slave labor after Maryland enacted Emancipation in 1864 and reduced in size and grandeur over time.

Between 1948 and 1979 the mansion changed hands, including Preservation Maryland, a few times as a historic site before coming under the care of the National Park Service. Hampton and its surrounding structures including slave quarters, dairy and dovecote are part of the historic site and tourist attraction.

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Historical marker, burgersub.org

Shad roe croquettes appear in many cookbooks, especially in the late 1890s and early 1900s.

These instructions make them from scratch and suggest boiling the roe sacs. I’d say simmer them in about ½” of water and then flip.

I served them with a tartar sauce of sorts made from some pickled beets. Very tasty. If you are frying things and dipping them into some mayonnaise-based sauce and it is not delicious then you need to get it together.

Recipe:

  • shad roe, cooked
  • Salt to taste
  • 1 Tablespoon butter
  • 3 Tablespoon flour
  • .5 Pint cream
  • 1 Teaspoon juice lemon
  • 1 Tablespoon minced parsley
  • 2 egg yolks
  • 1 egg, beaten
  • 1 Tablespoon boiling water
  • breadcrumbs
  • lard

Heat cream to boiling point in double boiler, cream butter and flour, add to cream. Add 2 eggs and stir until thickened. Remove from heat and add salt, add lemon juice, and parsley. Add drained shad roe. Chill mixture. When thorughly chilled mold into chops. Beat 1 whole egg, add 1 tablespoon of boiling water and mix thoroughly. Dip chop first into egg and and dip it into the bread crumbs, then fry in boiling lard or oil.

(tiny skillet)

recipe adapted from “Eat, Drink & Be Merry in Maryland”

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