Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Dining with Silent Cal

Nicknamed Silent Cal, Calvin Coolidge’s quiet ways became legendary. His wife Grace often told a story about how a woman seated near the president at a dinner party claimed to have made a bet that she could get at least three words out of him. Without looking at her, Coolidge flatly replied, “You lose.”

Despite his reputation for prolonged silences and inhospitality, Coolidge and his wife welcomed more guests to the White House then any of their recent predecessors, and they regularly entertained many famous Americans, including John D. Rockefeller III, Will Rogers, Douglas Fairbanks, Mary Pickford, John Barrymore, Helen Keller, and Charles Lindbergh.

Plagued by asthma and lifelong digestive problems, Coolidge’s culinary habits were as quirky as his personality. At his regular White House breakfasts for congressmen and senators, Coolidge was as stoic as usual and carefully avoided the flavorful sausages, griddlecakes, bacon, and eggs in favor of a plain cereal made of “two parts whole wheat and one part rye.”

The Coolidges were also great animal lovers and allowed dozens of pets to roam freely around White House grounds. In addition to at least ten dogs, three cats, and dozens of exotic birds and wildlife, including thirteen Peking ducks, two African lion cubs (named Tax Reduction and Budget Deficit), a donkey, a goose, canaries, a wombat, and an Australian wallaby, the Collidges also had a rambunctious pet raccoon named Rebecca.

Rebecca was sent to the Coolidges to be part of their Thanksgiving dinner but the president was reportedly so delighted with her that he had a little house built for her on the White House lawn and could often be seen playing with her after his afternoon paperwork was done. Treated like a family member, Rebecca was occasionally allowed to dine upstairs in the private family quarters at the White House, where she was reportedly served such sumptuous dishes as baked chicken, persimmons, scrambled eggs and green shrimp. Not bad for a raccoon!

FOOD FACT: Published in 1931, the first edition of Irma Rombauer's The Joy of Cooking included sections on canning, pickling, and instructions on how to use meats such as squirrel, opossum and raccoon. Ew!