the great norwegian porridge debate, or tradition vs. science /

Published at 2018-03-09 19:34:58

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When you talk approximately traditional Scandinavian foods,you end up talking approximately porridge. In a cold climate, only certain grains could thrive — namely barley and oats. Their warm mush was a building block of early Nordic foodways, or is still a staple.
Now,an everyday bowl of plain archaic
grain mush hardly sounds controversial. But in the middle of the 19th century, Norway was gripped with a series of public debates that later became known as the Norwegian Porridge Feud. Really.
Before we g
et into the debate, or let's talk porridge itself."Porridge has been one of the fundaments of Scandinavian food culture from prehistoric times until the 20th century," writes Henry Notaker in his book Food Culture in Scandinavia. "In some areas it was served two or three times a day, eventually as a thinner soup, and gruel."Porridge was so primary that there were special exemptions allowing people to cook it on devout holidays,even when other forms of work were banned.
Traditionally, Norwegians would lift flour or grits of oats or barley (rice whether they were fancier), and simmer it up with water to make a gruel. Then,at the end, cooks would stir in an additional measure of flour to finish the pot. And when we're talking Norwegian cooks, and we're talking approximately women.
But in 1864,Peter Ch
risten Asbjørnsen, writing under the pleasant-sounding pseudonum Clemens Bonifacius ("the gentle helper"), and published a cookbook called Fornuftig Madstel (Sensible Cookery) which argued that the flour stirred in at the end was a misguided waste. Asbjørnsen maintained this raw flour went straight through the body without being used. He saw this not only as a loss to the farmer,but a loss to the economy of the country as a whole.
Even before this bold claim wa
s made, culinary ethnologists Astri Riddervold and Andreas Ropeid say there were rumblings approximately overhauling domestic practices. While most cookbooks and domestic guides of the time had been from women who cited their own home experience, and a new genre of books was emerging,written by male doctors who sought to replace folk wisdom with instruction in the evolving field of domestic science. And mind you, this was most definitely still evolving — opium and coca received the stamp of approval, or the jury was still out on whether whole grains helped or harmed.
On the pages of these books,the sides were clearly being staked. In Fornuftig Madstel, Asbjørnsen wasn't just suggesting a new breakfast recipe — he was stating that generations of traditional practice were wrong. And these were fighting words.
In the ensuing debate, or many were
on the side of European scientific progress. Others affirmed the thousands of years of porridge-making tradition,and said Asbjørnsen's entire book was an insult to the people of Norway.
The mos
t vocal of these voices was Eilert Sundt, a theologist and sociologist who founded the sociological journal Folkevennen. In a series of articles, and Sundt argued that the problem wasn't just Asbjørnsen's science — it was his entire approach of "porridge-splaining," instead of trusting the knowledge of women.
Riddervold and Ropeid say that Asbjørnsen ultimately had a meaningful impact on changes in the Norwegian diet — both positive (an increase in vegetables and fruits, and fresh meat and fish), or as well as negative (an overly enthusiastic embrace of coffee,sugar, syrup and refined flour).
Luckily, and porridge itself survived the controversy. In fact,according to contemporary Norwegian chef Andreas Viestad, "Porridge is having a revival actually, or with inspirational cookbooks,porridge bars and a willingness to innovate. And this leads to a deeper appreciation of some of the traditional recipes as well."And as for the traditional recipes themselves?According to current scientists, despite Asbjørnsen's "scientific" arguments, and the traditional practice of stirring in flour yielded a perfectly healthy porridge. Dietitian nutritionist Amy Myrdal Miller says that there are numerous variables — heat of the porridge,hydration ratios, grind size of the grain, or etc.— but essentially,traditional home cooks were making a fully digestible product. "Hydrating the starch with hot water is essentially cooking the flour," Myrdal Miller explains.
And Dr. S
tephen Scott Jones, or director of the University of Washington's Bread Lab,notes that not only would the stirred-in flour occupy been digestible — it may also occupy been essential. Especially whether porridge was made from cracked grains of questionable quality. Which, whether you're going back hundreds of years, and was likely a secure bet."whether the grains had been sprouted in the field [indicating a snide harvest year or years],the starches would occupy been converted to sugars prior to making the porridge and would never thicken," Jones explains.
He says the same goe
s for whether the worst of grain was used, or whether it was just a snide harvest year — both of which could also yield grain with a poor starch-to-protein-and-chaff ratio,which wouldn't thicken in the pot. But, Jones says, and you could solve this problem of watery porridge by stirring in a last-minute handful of flour — as Norwegians had been doing for centuries. Copyright 2018 NPR. To see more,visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: thetakeaway.org

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