Emily Dickinson: A Poet in the Kitchen
by Tori Avey on Oct 4, 2012
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On her website ToriAvey.com, Tori Avey explores the story behind the food why we eat what we eat, how the recipes of different cultures have evolved, and how yesterdays recipes can inspire us in the kitchen today. Learn more about Tori and The History Kitchen.
Hope is the thing with feathers
That perches in the soul
And sings the tune without the words
And never stops at all
- Emily Dickinson, 1861
Emily Dickinson (December 10, 1830-May 15, 1886) is best known as one of the greatest poets in American history. But did you know that she was also an accomplished cook? Emily seems to have been most at home in the kitchen, as evidenced by letters and documents from her family estate. She took great pride in making delicate cakes, cookies, and candies, both for her family and as gifts for friends.
Emily found the kitchen to be a creatively nourishing place, where inspiration would strike at a moments notice. Often she would draft poems on wrappers and other kitchen papers. Her poem, The Things that can never come back, are several, was first composed on the back of a friends recipe for Coconut Cake:
The Things that never can come back, are several
Childhoodsome forms of Hopethe Dead
Though Joyslike Menmay sometimes make a Journey
And still abide
Emily especially loved to bake, and was quite accomplished in the art of making bread and desserts. Her Rye and Indian round bread won second prize at the 1856 Amherst Cattle Show (to be fair, her younger sister Lavinia was one of the judges). When the Dickinson familys housekeeper quit, Emily took it upon herself to bake the familys daily bread. She kept up the responsibility, even after a replacement was hired, because her father preferred the flavor of her bread to all others.
Emily talked about baking in many of her letters to family and friends, and described her food with warm, loving words. This is an Emily far different from the one we imagine from her darker poetry she is often painted as a somewhat morose, sad figure, but her letters and frequent baked gifts for friends tell a different story. Here are some excerpts from her letters:
I have got a nice cake of Sugar, to send you by Mr. Green, and shall put some big, sound Apples, if there is any room
Thank you, dear, for the quickness which is the blossom of request, and for the definiteness for a new rule (recipe) is a chance. The bread resulted charmingly, and such pretty little proportions, quaint as a druggists formula
With it, I enclose Loves remainder biscuit, somewhat scorched perhaps in baking, but Loves oven is warm
I send you a taste Jennie, of E. Kelloggs wedding cake you remember her, dont you? Eat it tearfully, Jennie, for it came all the way from me!
You thank me for the Rice cake you tell me Susie, you have just been tasting it and how happy I am to send you anything you love
- Letters excerpted from The Letters of Emily Dickinson, Harvard University Press
Though Emily was reclusive and rarely left her home, she often sent food gifts to friends and acquaintances. In Emilys obituary, her brothers wife and lifelong friend Susan Dickinson describes her sisters fondness for sending out care packages:
Very few in the village knew Miss Emily personally, except among the older in habitants, although the fact of her seclusion and intellectual brilliancy was one of the familiar (Amherst) traditions. There are many homes among the classes into which her dainty treasures of fruit and flowers and almost ambrosial dishes for the sick and well were constantly sent, that will forever miss those dainty traces of her unselfish devotion
Emily was also known for standing at her window and lowering baskets of treats to the neighborhood children, like cakes and gingerbread. In fact, in her lifetime she may have been better known for her baked goods than her poetry Emilys poetic talent was not fully recognized till after her death.
Some of Emilys original family recipes still survive. You can find more information, as well as a recipe for Coconut Cake from Emilys kitchen, on The History Kitchen website.
Research Sources
Johnson, Thomas and Ward, Theodora V., editors (1958). The Letters of Emily Dickinson. Belknap Press of the Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA.
Mudge, Jean et al (1976). Emily Dickinson: Profile of the Poet as Cook, with Selected Recipes. Self Published, Amherst, MA.
The Emily Dickinson Museum Website: http://www.emilydickinsonmuseum.org/cooking
You can uncover more fascinating food history on Tori's website: The History Kitchen.
Meet the Author
Tori Avey is a food writer, recipe developer, and the creator of ToriAvey.com. She explores the story behind the food why we eat what we eat, how the foods of different cultures have evolved, and how yesterdays food can inspire us in the kitchen today. Toris food writing and photography have appeared on the websites of CNN, Bon Appetit, Zabars, Williams-Sonoma, Yahoo Shine, LA Weekly and The Huffington Post. Follow Tori on Facebook: Tori Avey, Twitter: @toriavey, or Google+.