Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - Why are French Fries called French Fries? (Encore)
Episode Date: February 17, 2021Everyone loves french fries. It is one of the few things which most people can agree on in the world today. The average American consumes over 16 pounds of them every year, and they have become a stap...le part of the cuisine in countries all over the world. Yet, why do American’s call them “french” fries? What do the French have to do with it? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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This is an encore presentation of everything everywhere daily.
One of the hazards of doing a daily show is that if you miss a day, it's easy to fall behind.
I've been under the weather the last few days, so to compensate, I'm reposting some of my favorite episodes.
New episodes will be back again on Friday.
Everyone loves French fries.
It's one of the few things which most people can agree on in the world today.
The average American consumes over 16 pounds of them every year, and they've become a stable part of the cuisine in countries all over the world.
Yet, why do Americans call them French fries?
What do the French have to do with it?
Learn more about the history of this ubiquitous food
and learn what the French did or did not have to do with it
on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
What if your perceptions about the past were wrong?
ThruLine is a podcast that takes you back in time
to uncover the parts of the story that may have gone unnoticed.
It effectively turned day into night.
and how it shaped the world now.
Time travel with us every week on the ThruLine podcast from NPR.
This episode is brought to you by audible.com.
If you're interested in the history of what we eat and how it came to be that way,
the book I'd recommend is Consider the Fork,
a history of how we cook and eat by B. Wilson.
In it, she goes into detail of how the techniques in the kitchen have shaped how and what we eat,
everything from the 20,000-year-old mortar and pestle to the might-year-old.
microwave oven. You can get a free one-month trial to Audible and two free audiobooks by going to
audibletrial.com slash everything everywhere or by clicking on the link in the show notes.
Before we can talk about the French fry, we first have to back up and talk about the origins of the potato.
The potato originated in South America, where the people there have been cultivating it for thousands
of years. It was first brought to Europe by the Spanish in the late 1500s where they found it
to grow quite well. And fun fact, the monastery garden in Guadalupe, Spain, was the first place
outside of the Americas where the potato was grown. Potatoes were probably brought there because it was
where Queen Isabella was staying. And I was told this, because I took a tour of the monastery two years ago.
I'm not going to go into too much depth because, believe it or not, the story of the potato is
actually really important, and it was responsible for much of the growth of Europe in the 18th and 19th century.
and I may dedicate an entire episode to it in the future.
The potato wasn't accepted at first.
Many people thought it caused diseases like leprosy,
and it was mainly used to feed pigs.
The popularity of the potato was largely due to one man.
Antoine Augustus Parmentier.
During the seven years' war, he was captured by the Prussians
and spent time in a Prussian jail where he was given potatoes to eat.
He found them to be extremely edible
and realized that the beliefs held about potatoes back in France were false.
Upon his release, he began heavily promoting potatoes.
He did publicity stunts like holding potato-themed banquets for the nobility and the king,
and growing a potato patch and putting heavily armed guards around it to make the crop seem more valuable.
He then told the guards to accept any bribes from people who wanted to steal the potatoes
and to turn a blind eye to anyone who snuck in in the middle of the night to take them.
By the French Revolution, potatoes were really taken off in France.
There were streetcarts serving fried potatoes, which became known as freets,
which is what they're known as today in French.
We can pin down a date thanks to Thomas Jefferson,
who in 1802 had his chef, a Frenchman named Honorie Julianne,
prepare a menu for a White House state dinner with potatoes served in the French manner.
They were described as potatoes deep fried while raw in small cuttings.
That's pretty close to describing French fries as we know them today.
However, while we can confidently pin down this 1802 date as a first instance of
the word French and fried being used for potatoes. That doesn't mean the idea originated in the late
18th century France. One popular version of the French fry origin story holds that in the late
17th century, and what is today the Muse Valley in Belgium, people regularly would fry small
fish as one of their staple foods. When there was no fish, they would cut up potatoes into thin
strips to mimic the shape of a small fish, and then they would fry those. This technique,
according to this version of the story, then spread to France when potatoes finally became a popular
and acceptable food 100 years later. This seems to be the best evidence of where the ideas of
fried potatoes originated from. Somewhere in what is today France or Belgium, people began
frying potatoes around the end of the 17th to late 18th century. But why do Americans call them
French fries? There is no universally agreed upon explanation, but there are several
competing theories. The first is what I mentioned above. Thomas Jefferson and others began cooking
potatoes in the French way. This implies an early adoption of what was called the French technique,
which was deep frying. The second explanation comes from Ireland. In Old Irish, to French something
means to cut into small pieces. When the great Irish migration to the U.S. occurred starting in
1845 due to the Irish potato family, they brought with them to the United States the dish of
French potatoes, which were fried. They then became French fries. The country of France really doesn't
have anything to do with it. The third explanation, and the one which is championed by the Belgians,
is that in World War I, American soldiers were served the dish in Belgium where they were called
Friots. Because the Belgian spoke French, the Americans called it French Freetz, which quickly
got Americanized into French fries. The World War I story, as endearing as it might be, is almost
certainly not true.
The first written occurrence was in 1856 in the book, Cookery for Maids of All Work, by British author Eliza Warren.
There are also several other mentioned of French fried potatoes in the United States in the 1850s as well.
Americans also have a bunch of other words for fried potatoes.
Thicker-cut ones are called steak fries, which are closer to the British chips.
American fries are just fried chunks of potato.
And of course, there is also the self-described waffle and curly fries.
So if Americans call them French fries, why do the British call them chips?
This is actually a much more straightforward story.
A cut piece of fruit or vegetable was called a chip.
Fried fish and fried chipped potatoes were separate dishes,
but eventually combined to make the staple known as fish and chips.
The first known fish and chip shops were in London in the 1860s.
Fish and chips is undoubtedly the national dish of the United Kingdom.
Oddly enough, fried potatoes have that distinction in several other countries as well.
In the United States, a hamburger with French fries is pretty much as classic American cuisine as you're going to find.
In Canada, the national dish is Putin, which is really a dish that originated in Quebec, which is French fries, covered in gravy, and cheese curds.
Finally, Belgium has never given up the tradition.
Plain old fritz and a paper cone with mayonnaise is probably the most well-known food in the country.
Belgium, to this day, has the highest per capita consumption of fried potatoes in the world.
While I'm on the subject, I should give a shout-out to the potato chip, or what the British call
crisps.
The American legend is that an African-American restaurant owner, George Crumb from Saratoga Springs,
New York, invented them in 1853.
According to the story, one of his customers was served fried potatoes and sent them back
because they were too thick.
Crumb, angry at having to prepare another dish, this time cut them so thin that they
couldn't be eaten with a fork.
Surprisingly, they were a massive hit and were soon called Cerell.
Tarotoga Chips. In some versions of the story, that customer was Cornelius Vanderbilt.
Sadly, the story, too, is probably apocryphal, as there are mentions in cookbooks as early as 1822,
which mention potatoes fried in slices or shavings. Whether you call them French fries, chips,
or pomfriets, the fried potato has become one of the few staple dishes you can find in almost
every country in the world today. Executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is James
Macalah. Today's review comes from Emma Fern, who left a review over at Apple Podcasts.
They write, The Greatest Podcasts since Slice Bread. Gary has created the greatest podcast since
sliced bread. As a matter of fact, he has an episode on the greatest thing since sliced bread.
Well, thank you very much, Em Fern, and indeed I do have an episode on that. That is episode
eight, so if you haven't listened to it, please go back. And a big thanks to all of you who've left
review, and to all of you who have supported the show over on patreon.com.
Thank you.
