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  • Many hotels offer guests a free breakfast consisting of muffin, coffee, cereal and milk,

  • toast, juice, bagel, and, at some, even scrambled eggs and make-your-own waffles.

  • Born in the Gilded Age, today's continental breakfasts reflect the West's transition

  • from a mostly agrarian culture to an industrial (and today, service) society.

  • Luckily, however, some of us have not forgotten our culinary past.

  • Breakfast in the Early 1800s In the first part of the 19th century, as

  • many rural American families had greater wealth and access to a larger variety of foods, a

  • typical family breakfast would include a meat, eggs, fish, a bread, a cereal, fruit and any

  • of a variety of condiments, including butter, jam and maple syrup.

  • Common meats throughout the states included bacon, sausage and ham.

  • Cereal grains such as grits and oats were also popular, as were many different types

  • of breads, including pancakes and biscuits.

  • A hefty intake of calories, these hearty breakfasts were a necessity for the hard-working American

  • farm family of the first half of the 19th century.

  • Birth of the Continental Breakfast Over the latter part of the 19th, and early

  • quarter of the 20th, centuries, the West (and in particular) America increasingly became

  • urbanized.

  • From 1870 to 1920, the population of American cities grew from 10 million to 54 million,

  • and many of these people were a part of the growing middle class.

  • While these shopkeepers, dentists, accountants and merchants may have put in long hours,

  • they certainly weren't exerting the same physical energy as their agrarian forebears.

  • Needing fewer calories, the traditional American heavy breakfast eventually fell out of fashion.

  • Also at this time, continental Europeans were traveling the world and bringing their taste

  • preferences with them.

  • This brings us to the British and the traditional British fry up.

  • Alternately known also as thefry,” “full English,” and even theFull Monty,”

  • a traditional English breakfast has both sausage and bacon, eggs, fried bread (literally, a

  • slice of bread fried in either lard, butter or bacon fat), sliced fresh tomato and baked

  • beans (yes, like Heinz' baked beans).

  • In addition, many purveyors of this Matterhorn of breakfasts also offer optionalpudding

  • (not JELLO, but rather a sausage made from oats and pork fat, with or without pig's

  • blood), kidneys (beef or lamb), kippers (smoked herring), sautéed mushrooms, and, of course,

  • fried potatoes.

  • Appalled by the heavy British breakfast, the Europeans (think the French and their petit

  • jeuner) helped the British create a modest first meal, frequently consisting merely of

  • coffee or tea, pastry and fruit.

  • By 1855, this was being referred to as the continental breakfast.

  • Europeans were also touring America and staying in her hotels.

  • Frequently the primary (if not only) source of meals for a tourist, American hotels soon

  • began adjusting their fare to meet the tastes and expectations of their European customers.

  • The American middle class (some of whom also toured Europe and were exposed to the practice

  • over there, as well) soon also preferred the smaller meal, and, thus, the continental breakfast

  • became an American staple.

  • It's Not Just the Food The termcontinentalreferred to more

  • than just the dishes served, it also described its pricing.

  • Traditional American hotels were more like boarding houses where meals were included

  • in the price of a room.

  • On the other hand, European hotels offered rooms and meals à la carte.

  • As Europeans toured America, (and Americans toured Europe), soon hotel patrons in the

  • U.S. were opting out of most hotel meals, although breakfast was still desired.

  • To accommodate these changing tastes, the 'continental' model of room pricing, where

  • breakfast was included with the cost of the room, came about.

  • Lamenting a Loss Not every member of the Gilded Age was pleased

  • with the new fad.

  • As one sad and hungry person noted in Harper's Weekly in 1896:

  • In old days a hungry man could get more things to eat . . . . Hungry men have declined in

  • numbers and influence . . . . No one but theAutocratever talked much at [the old-style

  • breakfast] for the viands were too temptinggreat beef steaks, hot rolls, buckwheat

  • cakes, omelettes, potatoes, coffee, and

  • even . . . pie.

Many hotels offer guests a free breakfast consisting of muffin, coffee, cereal and milk,

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コンチネンタルブレックファストはなぜそう呼ばれるのか? (Why are Continental Breakfasts Called That?)

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    rita58177 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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