Oysters
are a dish fit for a king. Or a prime minister, or
an emperor. They are even fit for a president of the
United States.
Grilled oysters were one of the favorite appetizers of Britain’s King Edward
VII (1901-1910), who also considered the dish an ideal midnight snack. Louis
St. Laurent, prime minister of Canada from 1948 to 1957, had his own recipe for
oyster stew, which he dubbed Oyster St. Laurent. Vitellius, emperor of Rome during
part of 69 AD, is said to have eaten 1,000 oysters in a day.
And there have been U.S. presidents, from George Washington to George W. Bush,
who have enjoyed those tasty mollusks.
Last Dec. 25, columnist George Will told of the resolve of General Washington
in 1783 to return home to Virginia by Christmas. He wrote:
“Washington’s journey to Mount Vernon, which he reached after dark,
December 24, was a moveable feast of florid rhetoric and baked oysters.”
Thomas Jefferson, dining at a hotel in Amsterdam, downed 50 oysters and half
a bottle of wine, enjoying that same meal the following night, according to a
1995 book, “Passions: The Wines and Travels of Thomas Jefferson.”
Oysters were so commonplace on the East Coast in the 1700s that Jefferson is
said to have apologized to his guests on one occasion for serving the dish.
Oysters are definitely “OK.” That term comes not from the “OK
Corral,” but is derived from a common reference of the time to Martin Van
Buren, the eighth president of the United States. Reared in Kinderhook, N.Y.,
he came to be known as “Old Kinderhook,” shortened to “OK.” A
favorite food of his was oysters.
Among Abraham Lincoln’s favorite dishes was scalloped oysters. As an Illinois
politico, he used roasted oysters to lure crowds to his rallies. At parties at
their Springfield abode, the Lincolns would serve oysters — and nothing
else. Of course in the Midwest, oysters were a delicacy; they were hardly to
be found in Lake Michigan. They had to be shipped in by train, on ice.
On election night, Nov. 8, 1864, Lincoln, unsure that he would be returned to
office as president, was in the library at the War Department where telegraphic
dispatches, with the returns, were read aloud as they came in. His assistant
secretary, John Hay (later secretary of state under President William McKinley),
was to recount:
“Towards midnight we had supper … . The President went awkwardly
and hospitably to work shovelling out the fried oysters.”
Prior to becoming the 19th president, Rutherford B. Hayes, as an Ohio lawyer,
attended “Saturday night meetings of the Cincinnati Literary Club with
its mix of intellectually stimulating discussions and oysters washed down with ‘liberal
amounts of the local Catawba wine,’” according to the Web site of
the University of Virginia.
The Tides Inn in Portland, Maine boasts that Teddy Roosevelt stayed there in
his pre-presidential days, and ordered oysters Rockefeller.
There were news photos of President Herbert Hoover downing oysters when September
came around, ushering in the “R” season (months with the letter “r,” when
oysters were at their best).
In a speech delivered in 2001, Army Brig. Gen. William E. Carlson recounted a
dinner which Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower hosted Dec. 16, 1944, the day the Battle
of the Bulge began. He told his audience at a World War II veterans’ reunion:
“Eisenhower had something special he was looking forward to that day. His
old Army buddy, General Omar Bradley, was coming back from his Army Group Headquarters
to spend the night at Eisenhower’s Headquarters. Eisenhower had prepared
a special treat for his old friend, Brad. Taking advantage of a plane flying
in from Washington, Eisenhower had ordered a bushel of oysters. Eisenhower loved
oysters and he planned a special dinner for his old friend. Dinner would begin
with oysters on the half shell, then oyster stew followed by fried oysters as
the main course.”
There was a hitch. Bradley was allergic to oysters, and wound up eating reconstituted
powdered eggs.
The man who was to become Eisenhower’s successor as president, John F.
Kennedy, dined frequently at the Union Oyster House in Boston as a young lawyer.
A plaque marks the booth at which he regularly sat.
Antoine’s Restaurant in New Orleans is where oysters Rockefeller was created
in 1899. President Franklin Roosevelt partook of the dish at that eatery in 1936,
dining with the mayor of New Orleans.
President George W. Bush — a Texan well familiar with Gulf oysters — followed
FDR’s example in 2002, accompanied by Louisiana Gov. Mike Foster.
Richard and Pat Nixon also ate oysters Rockefeller there, but long before they
moved into the White House. It was on June 21, 1941 — their first wedding
anniversary.
By the way, minced greens are used at Antoine’s in preparing oysters Rockefeller — but
not spinach, commonly used in recipes elsewhere.
The "55-Plus" column
is written especially for those over the age of 55, by a veteran California
journalist who is himself eligible for the club. Roger M. Grace has written
and edited newspapers for more than four decades, and has been a lawyer for
more than three.