![]() |
[ Home Page | News | Archive | Books | Buy Stuff | FAQs, etc. ]
From Cecil's Mailbag by the Straight Dope Science Advisory Board
Dear Straight Dope:
What is the origin of the chef's hat? --Rwatson628
SDSTAFF Veg replies:
Elementary, my dear Rwatson. The chef's hat originated when a
royal cook in the emply of King Henry VIII started going bald.
Henry found a hair in his soup, had the cook beheaded, and ordered
the next chef to start wearing a hat (the cook was only too happy
to comply).
Actually, there are couple of different theories about the origin
of the chef's hat, or toque, and there is probably some truth in
both.
Some say the toque can be traced back to the seventh century A.D.,
when chefs were considered learned men (remember that "epicurean"
derives from the name of a Greek philosopher, Epicurus). Learned
men didn't always get the respect they deserved, though, and were
often persecuted; at such times, they often took refuge in the
local church, where they donned the same costumes that the local
clergy were wearing, hats and all, as a disguise.
Eventually, not wanting to incur the wrath of God any more than the
wrath of the local savages, they started wearing white hats instead
of the black hats worn by Greek Orthodox priests, and the toque was
born.
The other most prominent story about the history of the toque is
that it comes to us from the ancient Assyrians. Since one of the
more common ways to do in His Royal Highness back then was to
poison his food (not to mention the fact that spoiled food was more
common in the days before Whirlpool), chefs were chosen carefully,
and treated very well, often even holding rank in the king's court.
Legend has it that the chef's high position entitled him
to wear a "crown" of sorts, in the same shape as the king's, though
made out of cloth and without all of those bothersome jewels. The
crown-shaped ribs of the royal headdress became the pleats of the
toque, originally sewn, and later stiffened with starch.
Speaking of pleats, the most widely circulated legend about the
toque appears to be one concerning the number of pleats. From "A
Pageant of Hats, Ancient and Modern," by Ruch Edwards Kilgour,
copyright 1958: "It was regarded as natural that any chef, worthy
of the name, could cook an egg at least one hundred ways. The
most-renowned chefs often boasted that they could serve their royal
masters a different egg dish every day in the year, some of
them so cleverly prepared, that aside from being highly palatable
they had flavors as widely different as completely diverse kinds of
foods. Today, noted chefs are seldom called upon to prove their
prowess in this manner. Nevertheless, they still wear one hundred
pleats on their hat, the old-time symbol of their skill in the egg
department." Maybe they did back in 1958, but several internet
sites advertising toques for sale, both paper and vinyl,
described their hats as having 48 pleats. I guess the advent of
cholesterol screening had a bigger impact than most of us
thought.
The toque has changed many times over the years, but most stories
about its origins are variations on one of the two above. Since
the most dramatic changes in style and shape are attributable to
the French, I'd be remiss if I didn't include something from a
snotty Frenchman regarding the decline of toquish excellence.
Roger Fessaguet, a previous co-owner of La Caravelle (which, I
believe, is in New York), laments, "American chefs don't wear a
toque. Could you think of a policeman without a hat? That is part
of the full uniform. I still have 12 uniforms. In the old days,
I used to send my toques back to France aboard French Line ships,
to Havre, where they were washed, ironed and starched by women who
knew exactly what to do." Yeah, and I'll bet he walked five miles
in the snow to his restaurant every day, and ten miles back
home.
--SDSTAFF Veg
Straight Dope Science Advisory Board
Cecil's Mailbag is researched and written by members of the Straight Dope Science Advisory Board, Cecil's online auxiliary. Although the SDSAB does its best, these articles are edited by Ed Zotti, not Cecil, so accuracywise you'd better keep your fingers crossed.
[ Return to the Mailbag Archive ]
The Straight
Dope / Questions or
comments for Cecil Adams to: cecil@chicagoreader.com
Comments regarding this website to: webmaster@straightdope.c
om
Copyright © 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999 Chicago Reader, Inc. All rights
reserved.
No material contained in this site may be republished or reposted
without express written
permission.
The Straight Dope is a registered trademark of Chicago Reader, Inc.