<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_III" id="CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III</SPAN></h2>
<h3>BREAKFAST <span class="nb">(<i>continued</i>)</span></h3>
<div class="poetry-container">
<div class="stanza"> <span style="margin-left:1em"><b>“There’s nought in the Highlands but syboes and leeks,<br/>
</b></span><b> And lang-leggit callants gaun wanting the breeks.” </b></div>
</div>
<blockquote>
<p>Bonnie Scotland—Parritch an’ cream—Fin’an haddies—A knife
on the ocean wave—<i>À la Français</i>—In the gorgeous East—<i>Chota
hazri</i>—English as she is spoke—Dâk bungalow fare—Some
quaint dishes—Breakfast with “my tutor”—A
Don’s absence of mind.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>For a “warm welcome” commend me to Bonnie
Scotland. Though hard of head and “sae fu’ o’
learning” that they are “owre deeficult to conveence,
ye ken,” these rugged Caledonians be
tender of heart, and philanthropic to a degree.
Hech, sirs! but ’tis the braw time ye’ll hae, gin
ye trapese the Highlands, an’ the Lowlands as
well for the matter o’ that—in search o’ guid
refreshment for body an’ soul.</p>
<p>Even that surly lexicographer, Doctor Samuel
Johnson (who, by the way, claimed the same
city for his birthplace as does the writer), who
could not be induced to recognise the merits of
Scotch scenery, and preferred Fleet Street to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</SPAN></span> the Trossachs, extolled the luxury of a Scotch
breakfast above that of all other countries. And
Sir Walter Scott, who never enthused much about
meat and drink, is responsible in <i>Waverley</i> for
a passage calculated to make the mouths of most
people water:</p>
<p>“He found Miss Bradwardine presiding over
the tea and coffee, the table loaded with warm
bread, both of flour, oatmeal, and barley meal, in
the shape of loaves, cakes, biscuits, and other
varieties, together with eggs, reindeer ham,
mutton and beef ditto, smoked salmon, and
many other delicacies. A mess of oatmeal
porridge, flanked by a silver jug which held an
equal mixture of cream and buttermilk, was
placed for the Baron’s share of the repast.”</p>
<p>“And,” as Mr. Samuel Weller would have
observed, “a wery good idea of a breakfast, too.”</p>
<p>A beef-ham sounds like a “large order” for
breakfast, even when we come to consider that
the Scotch “beastie,” in Sir Walter Scott’s time,
was wanting in “beam” and stature. I have
seen and partaken of a ham cut from a Yorkshire
pig, and weighing 52 lbs.; but even a Scotch
beef-ham must have topped that weight considerably.
Fortunately the sideboards of those
times were substantial of build.</p>
<p>Missing from the above bill-of-fare is the
haddock,</p>
<h4><i>The Fin’an Haddie</i>,</h4>
<p>a bird which at that period had probably not been
invented. But the modern Scottish breakfast-table
is not properly furnished without it. The<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</SPAN></span> genuine “Fin’an” is known by its appetising
savour and by its colour—a creamy yellow, which
is totally distinct from the Vandyke browny hue
of the haddock which is creosoted in the neighbourhood
of the Blackfriars Road, London, S.E.
“Strip off the skin,” says the recipe in one cookery
book, “and broil before the fire or over a quick
clear one.” Another way—<i>my</i> way—is <i>not</i> to
strip off the skin and to <i>steam</i> your haddies.
Place them in a dish which has been previously
heated. Throw boiling water on them, and
cover closely with a plate; place on a hot stove,
and in from 10 to 15 minutes the Fin’ans will
be accomplished. Drain, and serve hot as hot,
buttered, with a sprinkling of cayenne, and, maybe,
a dash of Worcester sauce.</p>
<p>Salmon is naturally a welcome guest at the
table of the land of his birth, served fresh when
in season, and smoked or kippered at all times.</p>
<h4><i>A Salmon Steak</i></h4>
<p>with the “curd” between the flakes, placed
within a coat of virgin-white paper (oiled) and
grilled for 15 minutes or so, is an excellent
breakfast dish. A fry of small troutlets, a ditto
of the deer’s interior economy—<i>Mem.</i> When up
at the death of a hunted stag, always beg or
annex a portion of his liver—are also common
dishes at the first meal served by the “gudewife”;
and I once met a cold haggis at 9.30 <span class="smcap">A.M.</span> But
this, I rather fancy, was “a wee bit joke” at my
expense. Anyhow I shall have plenty to say
about the “great chieftain o’ the puddin’ race”
in a later chapter.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</SPAN></span></p>
<h4><i>Off to Gold-land!</i></h4>
<p>Those that go down to the sea in ships, and
can summon up sufficient presence of mind to
go down to the saloon at meal times, have far
from a bad time of it. Living was certainly
better on the ocean wave in the days when livestock
was kept on board, and slaughtered as
required; for the effect of keeping beef, pork,
and mutton in a refrigerating chamber for any
length of time is to destroy the flavour, and
to render beef indistinguishable from the flesh of
the hog, and mutton as tasteless as infantine pap.
But the ship’s galley does its little utmost; and
the saloon passenger, on his way to the other side
of the equator, may regale himself with such a
breakfast as the following, which is taken from
the steward’s book of a vessel belonging to the
Union Line:—</p>
<blockquote>
<p>Porridge, fillets of haddock with fine herbs, mutton
chops and chip potatoes, savoury omelet, bacon on
toast, minced collops, curry and rice, fruit, rolls,
toast, etc., tea and coffee.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Cannot my readers imagine a steward entering
the state-room of the voyager who has succumbed
to the wiles and eccentricities of the Bay of
Biscay, with the observation: “Won’t you get
up to breakfast, sir?—I’ve reserved a <i>beautiful</i> fat
chop, with chips, o’ purpose for you, sir.”</p>
<p>And the lot of the third-class passenger who
is conveyed from his native land to the Cape of
Good Hope, for what Mr. Montague Tigg would
have called “the ridiculous sum of” £16: 16s.,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</SPAN></span> is no such hard one, seeing that he is allotted a
“bunk” in a compact, though comfortable cabin,
and may break his fast on the following substantial
meal:—</p>
<blockquote>
<p>Porridge, Yarmouth bloaters, potatoes, American
hash, grilled mutton, bread and butter, tea or coffee.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>An American breakfast is as variegated (and I
fear I must add, as indigestible) as a Scotch one;
and included in the bill of fare are as many, or
more, varieties of bread and cake as are to be
found in the land o’ shortbread. The writer has,
in New York, started the morning meal with
oysters, run the gamut of fish, flesh, and fowl,
and wound up with buckwheat cakes, which are
brought on in relays, buttered and smoking hot,
and can be eaten with or without golden syrup.
But, as business begins early in New York and
other large cities, scant attention is paid to the
first meal by the merchant and the speculator,
who are wont to “gallop” through breakfast and
luncheon, and to put in their “best work” at
dinner.</p>
<h4><i>A Mediterranean Breakfast</i></h4>
<p>is not lacking in poetry; and the jaded denizen
of Malta can enjoy red mullet (the “woodcock
of the sea”) freshly taken from the tideless
ocean, and strawberries in perfection, at his first
meal, whilst seated, maybe, next to some dreamy-eyed <i>houri</i>, who coos soft nothings into his ear,
at intervals. The wines of Italy go best with
this sort of repast, which is generally eaten with
“spoons.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>In fair France, breakfast, or the <i>déjeûner à la
fourchette</i>, is not served until noon, or thereabouts.
Coffee or chocolate, with fancy bread and butter,
is on hand as soon as you wake; and I have
heard that for the roisterer and the <i>p’tit crevé</i> there be such liquors as <i>cognac</i>, <i>curaçoa</i>, and <i>chartreuse verte</i> provided at the first meal, so
that nerves can be strung together and headaches
alleviated before the “associated” breakfast at
midday. In the country, at the <i>château</i> of <i>Monsieur et Madame</i>, the groom-of-the-chambers,
or <i>maître d’hôtel</i>, as he is designated, knocks at
your bedroom door at about 8.30.</p>
<p>“Who’s there?”</p>
<p>“Good-morning, <i>M’sieu</i>. Will <i>M’sieu</i> partake
of the <i>chocolat</i>, or of the <i>café-au-lait</i>, or of the
tea?”</p>
<p>Upon ordinary occasions, <i>M’sieu</i> will partake of
the <i>chocolat</i>—if he be of French extraction;
whilst the English visitor will partake of the <i>café-au-lait</i>—tea-making in France being still in
its infancy. And if <i>M’sieu</i> has gazed too long on
the wine of the country, overnight, he will occasionally—reprobate
that he is—partake instead of
the <i>vieux cognac</i>, diluted from the syphon. And <i>M’sieu</i> never sees his host or hostess till the
“assembly” sounds for the midday meal.</p>
<p>I have alluded, just above, to French tea-making.
There was a time when tea, with our
lively neighbours, was as scarce a commodity as
snakes in Iceland or rum punch in Holloway
Castle. Then the thin end of the wedge was
introduced, and the English visitor was invited to
partake of a cup of what was called (by courtesy)<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</SPAN></span> <i>thé</i>, which had been concocted expressly for her
or him. And tea <i>à la Française</i> used to be
made somewhat after this fashion. The cup was
half-filled with milk, sugar <i>à discrétion</i> being
added. A little silver sieve was next placed over the
cup, and from a jug sufficient hot water, in which
had been previously left to soak some half-dozen
leaf-fragments of green tea, to fill the cup, was
poured forth. In fact the visitor was invited to
drink a very nasty compound indeed, something
like the “wish” tea with which the school-mistress
used to regale her victims—milk and
water, and “wish-you-may-get” tea! But they
have changed all that across the Channel, and
five o’clock tea is one of the most fashionable
functions of the day, with the <i>beau monde</i>; a
favourite invitation of the society <i>belle</i> of the <i>fin de
siècle</i> being: “<i>Voulex-vous fivoclocquer avec moi?</i>”</p>
<p>The <i>déjeûner</i> usually begins with a <i>consommé</i>, a
thin, clear, soup, not quite adapted to stave off
the pangs of hunger by itself, but grateful enough
by way of a commencement. Then follows an
array of dishes containing fish and fowl of sorts,
with the inevitable <i>côtelettes à la</i> somebody-or-other,
not forgetting an <i>omelette</i>—a mess which
the French cook alone knows how to concoct to
perfection. The meal is usually washed down
with some sort of claret; and a subsequent <i>café</i>,
with the accustomed <i>chasse</i>; whilst the welcome <i>cigarette</i> is not “defended,” even in the mansions
of the great.</p>
<p>There is more than one way of making coffee,
that of the lodging-house “general,” and of the
street-stall dispenser, during the small hours,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</SPAN></span> being amongst the least commendable. Without
posing as an infallible manufacturer of the refreshing
(though indigestible, to many people)
beverage, I would urge that it be made from
freshly-roasted seed, ground just before wanted.
Then heat the ground coffee in the oven, and
place upon the perforated bottom of the upper
compartment of a <i>cafetière</i>, put the strainer on
it, and pour in boiling water, gradually. “The
Duke” in <i>Geneviève de Brabant</i> used to warble
as part of a song in praise of tea—</p>
<div style="margin-left:20%">
<div class="poem">
<div class="stanza"> <span class="i0">And ’tis also most important<br/>
</span> <span class="i2">That you should not spare the tea.<br/>
</span> </div>
</div></div>
<p>So is it of equal importance that you should
not spare the coffee. There are more elaborate
ways of making coffee; but none that the writer
has tried are in front of the old <i>cafetière</i>, if the
simple directions given above be carried out in
their entirety.</p>
<p>As in France, sojourners (for their sins) in
the burning plains of Ind have their first breakfast,
or <i>chota hazri</i>, at an early hour, whilst the
breakfast proper—usually described in Lower
Bengal, Madras, and Bombay as “tiffin”—comes
later on. For</p>
<h4><i>Chota Hazri</i></h4>
<p>(literally “little breakfast”)—which is served
either at the Mess-house, the public Bath, or in
one’s own bungalow, beneath the verandah—poached
eggs on toast are <i>de rigueur</i>, whilst I have
met such additions as <i>unda ishcamble</i> (scrambled
eggs), potato cake, and (naughty, naughty!)<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</SPAN></span> anchovy toast. Tea or coffee are always drunk
with this meal. “Always,” have I written?
Alas! In my mind’s eye I can see the poor
Indian vainly trying to stop the too-free flow of
the <i>Belati pani</i> (literally “Europe water”) by
thrusting a dusky thumb into the neck of the
just-opened bottle, and in my mind’s ear can I
catch the blasphemous observation of the subaltern
as he remarks to his slave that he does not require,
in his morning’s “livener,” the additional flavour
of Mahommedan flesh, and the “hubble-bubble”
pipe, the tobacco in which may have been
stirred by the same thumb that morning.</p>
<p>“Coffee shop” is a favourite function, during
the march of a regiment in India, at least it used
to be in the olden time, before troops were
conveyed by railway. <i>Dhoolies</i> (roughly made
palanquins) laden with meat and drink were
sent on half way, overnight; and grateful indeed
was the cup of tea, or coffee, or the “peg”
which was poured forth for the weary warrior
who had been “tramping it” or in the saddle
since 2 <span class="smcap">A.M.</span> or some such unearthly hour, in
order that the column might reach the new
camping-ground before the sun was high in the
heavens. It was at “coffee-shop” that “chaff”
reigned supreme, and speculations as to what the
shooting would be like at the next place were
indulged in. And when that shooting was likely
to take the form of long men, armed with long
guns, and long knives, the viands, which consisted
for the most part of toast, biscuits, poached
eggs, and <i>unda bakum</i> (eggs and bacon), were
devoured with appetites all the keener for the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</SPAN></span> prospect in view. It is in troublous times, be
it further observed, that the Hindustan <i>khit</i> is
seen at his best. On the field of battle itself I
have known coffee and boiled eggs—or even a
grilled fowl—produced by the fearless and devoted <i>nokhur</i>, from, apparently, nowhere at all.</p>
<p>At the Indian breakfast proper, all sorts of
viands are consumed; from the curried prawns
and Europe provisions (which arrive in an hermetically
sealed condition per s.s. <i>Nomattawot</i>),
to the rooster who heralds your arrival at the <i>dak</i> bungalow, with much crowing, and who
within half an hour of your advent has been
successively chased into a corner, beheaded,
plucked, and served up for your refection in a
scorched state. I have breakfasted off such
assorted food as curried locusts, boiled leg of
mutton, fried snipe, Europe sausages, <i>Iron ishtoo</i> (Irish stew), <i>vilolif</i> (veal olives, and more correctly
a dinner dish), kidney toast—chopped sheep’s
kidneys, highly seasoned with pepper, lime-juice,
and Worcester sauce, very appetising—parrot
pie, eggs and bacon, omelette (which might also
have been used to patch ammunition boots with),
sardines, fried fish (mind the bones of the Asiatic
fish), <i>bifishtake</i> (beef steak), goat chops, curries
of all sorts, hashed venison, and roast peafowl,
ditto quail, ditto pretty nearly everything that
flies, cold buffalo hump, grilled sheep’s tail (a
bit bilious), hermetically-sealed herring, turtle
fins, Guava jelly, preserved mango, home-made
cake, and many other things which have escaped
memory. I am coming to the “curry” part of
the entertainment later on in the volume, but<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</SPAN></span> may remark that it is preferable when eaten in
the middle of the day. My own experience was
that few people touched curry when served in
its normal place at dinner—as a course of itself—just
before the sweets.</p>
<p>“Breakfast with my tutor!” What happy
memories of boyhood do not the words conjure
up, of the usually stern, unbending preceptor
pouring out the coffee, and helping the sausages
and mashed potatoes—we always had what is
now known as “saus and mash” at my tutor’s—and
the fatherly air with which he would remind
the juvenile glutton, who had seated himself just
opposite the apricot jam, and was improving the
occasion, that eleven o’clock school would be in
full swing in half an hour, and that the brain
(and, by process of reasoning, the stomach) could
not be in too good working-order for the fervid
young student of Herodotus. The ordinary
breakfast of the “lower boy” at Eton used to be
of a very uncertain pattern. Indeed, what with
“fagging,” the preparation of his lord-and-master’s
breakfast, the preparation of “pupil-room”
work, and agile and acute scouts ever on
the alert to pilfer his roll and pat of butter, that
boy was lucky if he got any breakfast at all. If
he possessed capital, or credit, he might certainly
stave off starvation at “Brown’s,” with buttered
buns and pickled salmon; or at “Webber’s,” or
“the Wall,” with three-cornered jam tarts, or
a “strawberry mess”; but Smith <i>minor</i>, and
Jones <i>minimus</i> as often as not, went breakfastless
to second school.</p>
<p>At the University, breakfast with “the Head”<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</SPAN></span> or any other “Don” was a rather solemn function.
The table well and plentifully laid, and the host
hospitality itself, but occasionally, nay, frequently,
occupied with other thoughts. A departed
friend used to tell a story of a breakfast of this
description. He was shaken warmly by the
hand by his host, who afterwards lapsed into
silence. My friend, to “force the running,”
ventured on the observation—</p>
<p>“It’s a remarkably fine morning, sir, is it
not?”</p>
<p>No reply came. In fact, the great man’s
thoughts were so preoccupied with Greek roots,
and other defunct horrors, that he spoke not a
word during breakfast. But when, an hour or
so afterwards, the time came for his guest to take
leave, the “Head” shook him by the hand
warmly once more, and remarked abstractedly—</p>
<p>“D’you know, Mr. Johnson, I don’t think
that was a particularly original remark of yours?”</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />