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Experience the Life : Trades : Foodways


Members of the Historic Foodways department prepare food in the kitchen of the Governor's Palace.

Members of the Historic Foodways department prepare food in the kitchen of the Governor's Palace.


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Foodways

Dining experience important in colonial times

Food played a very important part in the social lives of 18th-century Virginians. Aside from providing basic sustenance, dining was also one of the most important ways that colonial Virginians exchanged information. The dining process might last for two hours in some upper-class households. It wasn't unusual for a conversation that began at a dinner table to continue well into the night. The taverns of Williamsburg also provided the food, drink, and atmosphere the helped propel the American Revolution. On numerous occasions, the Burgesses retired to one of Williamsburg’s many taverns to continue their political discussions with food and drink.

Governor's Palace served finest foods

The foods and preparation techniques used by colonial Virginians varied depending upon the wealth and social standing of the citizenry. Meals at the Governor’s Palace served those at the pinnacle of social standing. The last two Royal governors employed professionally trained European cooks. Known as "principal cooks," these men were the highest paid servants on the property. They served an apprenticeship in Europe and had a level of training and skill unmatched in Virginia. The Governor was able to provide these cooks with the best-equipped kitchen in the colony. The governor’s cuisine reflected the French influence popular among upper class English society.

The household inventory for Governor Botetourt listed numerous copper pots, a spit jack, and an eight-day clock. Based upon the inventory, Colonial Williamsburg added a charcoal-burning stew stove to the Palace kitchen in 1994.

Gentry served food in English fashion

The Virginia gentry were next in wealth and status. They demonstrated their social standing by providing a wide variety of meats and sweets at each meal prepared in a more traditional English fashion. The Virginia gentry employed slave cooks who were less formally trained than the governor's cooks, but they were extremely skilled nonetheless. Highly skilled cooks were expensive and prized possessions. One slave cook who was known for her skill was Lydia Broadnax, who developed her reputation cooking for the Wythe family for many years and was eventually granted her freedom.

Middling class provided less variety

Next in social standing in the18th century were the middling class, who were less able to provide the variety and choices that the gentry could. They probably emulated the gentry when entertaining but ate more basic foods on a daily basis. The upper middling classes may have employed slave cooks, while the less well-off relied on the cooking talents of the mistress of the house.

Lower class prepared one-pot meals

Most colonial Virginians fell into the bottom rung of the social ladder. The poor were very limited in cooking equipment, often having only one cast iron pot. The wife of the house prepared basic soups and grain porridges. The most common type was hominy, made from corn, often flavored with salt-cured pork and vegetables. This basic diet was supplemented with whatever meats and vegetables they could obtain.



For further reading:
Listen to a Behind the Scenes Interview: Brewing and baking and much, much more. Frank Clark and his Foodways staff interpret 18th-century food trades in Colonial Williamsburg's Historic Area.

Audio file (MP3, 2.7Mb)  ||  View transcript

Listen to a Behind the Scenes Interview: From ceviche to syllabub. Journeyman foodways tradesman Barbara Scherer discusses the elaborate serving and savoring of meals in 18th-century Williamsburg.
Audio file (MP3, 2.9Mb)  ||  View transcript

These interviews are part of an ongoing series of podcasts available on the Colonial Williamsburg site. Learn more.