Service à la russe
Service à la russe is a style of serving food in which dishes are brought to the table sequentially and served separately to each guest. Service à la russe was developed in France in the 19th century by adapting traditional Russian table service to existing French gastronomic principles. The new service slowly displaced the older service à la française, in which a variety of dishes are placed on the table in an impressive display of tureens, platters, and other serving dishes.
In service à la russe, each dish is arranged in the kitchen and immediately brought to the table, where guests choose what they want from each platter as it is presented to them. In service à la française, many platters are placed together on the table, where the dishes often grow cold and lose their freshness before the guests can eat them; and in practice, guests can choose from only a few of the dishes on the table. Service à la russe, which includes only flowers and cold dishes on the table, is less magnificent than service à la française, with its elaborate display of many dishes. Service à la russe also reduces the time spent at the table.
Early descriptions of Russian table service
In 1553, Richard Chancellor, the first Englishman to visit Moscow, recorded his impressions of an elaborate banquet at the court of Tsar Ivan the Terrible. Chancellor described the Russian practice of serving the dishes of the meal in succession, with individual plates prepared and presented to each guest.Later writers in the 17th century, including Adam Olearius and Grigory Kotoshikhin, describe serving the bowls or platters in succession, but they describe them as being set on the table for guests to help themselves to the food. The early-18th-century Honorable Mirror for Youth implies a similar arrangement.
Also in the 18th century, Johann-Georg Korb describes a variety of dishes with no mention of table service. Just Juel and Friedrich Christian Weber describe a variety of dishes presented in several courses, also with no discussion of table service—a first course of cold, salted and pickled food set out in abundance on the table ; a second course of hot soups, roasts, and other hot dishes; and a third course of sweets. That arrangement derives from the reforms of Peter the Great and differs from the practices described in older accounts.
In the late 18th and early 19th centuries, Denis Fonvizin and Marie-Antoine Carême, both writing in France, compare Russian and French table service. Fonvizin prefers the Russian style of presenting the food sequentially, but Carême prefers the French style of arranging a variety of dishes on the table.
Development of ''service à la russe'' in France and England
Alternatives to a strict observance of service à la française were already evident in France in the early 19th century without direct reliance on Russian table practices.As early as 1804, Grimod de La Reynière roundly criticizes the display of many dishes on the table, encouraging instead serving dishes in succession.
Later authors, including Carême, Élisabeth-Félicie Bayle-Mouillard, Bernardi, Urbain Dubois and Émile Bernard, and Isabella Beeton, recommend presenting certain dishes as assiettes volantes for foods that must be served "straight from the oven", like soufflés, fritters, beignets, and various pastries. Celnart also writes that at large dinners, the soup tureen and large joints are not set on the table, but instead are placed on a sideboard where the servants portion the soup and carve the joints and serve them individually to the guests. That sort of presentation was unknown in the 18th century and earlier.
In 1810, the first dinners à la russe were served in France by Russian Ambassador Alexander Kurakin at his residence in Clichy. All of Paris was abuzz with the novelty. Others claim that service à la russe was introduced to France and England at the Peace of 1814, as a compliment to the Tsar of Russia. By 1829, “the style termed à la Russe” was already popular among some noblemen. Even so, the transition from service à la française to service à la russe took place over decades, and the differences between the two services were not always clear.
By the 1850s and '60s, culinary writers, including Dubois and Bernard, Charles Pierce, Isabella Beeton, and Jules Gouffé, began to describe the distinctions between the two services in detail, and they wrote that both were commonly used and that each had supporters and detractors. The principal difference between the styles is the presentation of the food, not the sequence of dishes, which in both styles is the "Classical Order" used in service à la française since the early 17th century.
Courses in a dinner served ''à la russe''
The details of the courses in a dinner à la russe are variously described by prominent culinary writers from the late 19th and 20th centuries, including Dubois and Bernard, Charles Pierce, Baron Brisse, S. O. Johnson, Sarah Tyson Rorer, C. Herman Senn, Mrs. Van Koert Schuyler, Charles Ranhofer, Oscar Tschirky Lida Seely, Emily Post, Prosper Montagné, and Amy Vanderbilt.The number of courses has changed over time, but an underlying sequence of dishes—potage, entrée, roast, entremets, and dessert—persisted from the 19th century to World War II and continued for formal meals in a much-reduced form into the 21st century. The sequence of dishes descends directly from the much older service à la française. The growing popularity of service à la russe, though, led to some changes in the sequence of dishes.
In some styles of service, oysters or cold hors d’œuvres were served before the potages. Hot hors d’œuvres might also be served after the potages, but they were increasingly omitted from dinner menus in the 20th century.
Beginning in the early 19th-century, fish was a common relevé in service à la française. In the later 19th century service à la russe, fish was often the only relevé, served as a distinct “fish course”.
The coup du milieu, a glass of frozen punch taken at the midpoint of the meal, was introduced in the early 19th century and remained popular in service à la russe.
By the late 19th century, vegetable entremets had largely ceased to be a separate course. They often appeared on menus as if they were, but they were served as accompaniments to the various meat or fish courses. Only certain vegetables continued to be served separately after the roast, such as salads, asparagus, sweet corn, cauliflower, artichokes, and fresh tomatoes.
By the mid-20th century, the dessert course, which formerly included only foods from the storeroom, came to include dishes that were formerly served as sweet entremets. In the United States, dessert came to include only ices, ice cream, and other chilled or frozen sweets, and fruit came to be served in a distinct course of its own.
In French-style meals, cheese may be served before the sweet entremets or fruit. In English-style meals, cheese or a “savoury” may be served before or, more commonly, after the fruit. Escoffier considered the savoury to be a gastronomic absurdity.
Menus of the 19th and early 20th centuries typically include at least potage, fish or other relevé, entrée, roast, vegetable entremets, and sweet entremets, as in the six-course menus of the prominent mid-19th-century culinary writer Baron Brisse. Brisse and some other writers do not include dessert on their menus, but dessert is always assumed to be the last course.
Other 19th-century writers typically recommend more courses, including oysters or a cold hors d’œuvres before the potage, a hot hors d’œuvres after the potage, punch at the mid-point of the meal, a separate game course, and cheese or savouries before or after the dessert.
By offering multiple entrées, relevés, and roasts, menus could grow to a dozen courses or more. Charles Ranhofer outlines in detail the dishes necessary for restaurant dinners ranging from five to fourteen courses. His five-course dinner includes soup, fish, a choice of two entrées, one roast with a salad, and dessert. Longer dinners are created by adding to the menu ever more hors d’œuvres, relevés, entrées, frozen punch, cold dishes, and hot and cold sweet entremets. Ranhofer also gives extensive instructions for serving wines.
Emily Post, arguably the most influential 20th-century writer on American social customs, recommends in her early books menus of seven courses—cold hors-d’œuvres, soup, fish, entrée, roast, salad, and dessert, followed by after-dinner coffee. “The menu for an informal dinner would leave out the entrée, and possibly either the hors-d’oeuvre or the soup.”
Post writes disparagingly of the lengthy dinners of the previous century.
After the 1920s, dinners were further curtailed. As Post writes in the 1945 edition of her book, the shorter "informal" meal of five courses and after-dinner coffee in the first edition of her book had become the norm for formal dinners at private homes—soup or oysters or melon or clams; fish or entrée; roast; salad; and dessert; followed by after-dinner coffee in the library or drawing room. Wine service could include a separate wine for each course, or champagne could be the only wine after the sherry served with the soup.
In the 1960s, Jackie Kennedy reduced the menus at White House dinners from the seven courses typical of mid-century formal occasions to a mere four courses—fish, meat, salad, and dessert or, on lean days, soup, fish, salad, and dessert. Dinners of only four courses were not new, but Kennedy’s influence set the style for White House state dinners and other formal dinners through the end of the 20th century.
Presentation and table setting
The details of presentation and table setting in service à la russe are variously described by culinary writers from the late 19th to the early 20th centuries, including Dubois and Bernard, Pierce, Johnson, Schuyler, Seely, Post, and Vanderbilt.The table is set with candles, flowers, and cold foods. In the late 19th century, sweet entremets, cakes, pastries, fruit, nuts, and bonbons were typical. In the 20th century, nuts, olives, celery, and radishes, or only nuts, were more common.
The cover for each guest is laid with a service plate, napkin, flatware, and stemware. The cover may also include a roll or other piece of bread, a place card, and a menu. Salt cellars and pepper pots are placed between guests.
Forks are laid to the left of the service plate and knives to the right, placed in the order they will be used, going from the outermost fork and knife to the innermost. A tablespoon for the soup is laid to the right of the knives, and a small fork for oysters or other cold hors d’œuvres is laid to the right of the spoon. No more than three forks and three knives are laid with the cover, enough to accommodate the first three courses after the soup. If there are more courses, additional flatware is brought to the table at the time the course is served.
If the first course is oysters or a cold hors d’œuvres, it is typically prepared on separate plates that are placed on the service plates. Johnson and Schuyler suggest placing the first course on the table before the guests enter the dining room; Post considers the practice old-fashioned. After the hors d’œuvres are consumed, the servants remove the soiled plates and any glasses associated with the course, leaving the service plates on the table.
The soup is apportioned by the servants at a side table or in the pantry or kitchen. The servants set the plates of soup on the service plates. After the soup is consumed, the soup plate and service plate are removed together with the sherry glass.
A clean plate is laid for the next and each subsequent course. For each course, the servants present platters to the guests, who serve themselves from the dish. Foods that are easily portioned or divided, like entrées and entremets, are presented as they come from the kitchen. Large joints, like relevés and roasts, are carved at the sideboard or in the kitchen and arranged on the platters before the servants present them to the guests. Servants may also present vegetables, sauces, and condiments to accompany the course being served. Servants remove the soiled plates, flatware, and glasses after each course and lay a clean plate for the next course.
The table is cleared before the dessert course, leaving only the water and wine glasses needed for dessert. The servants place a dessert plate in front of each guest with the dessert fork and spoon on the plate, and the guests move their own flatware to the sides of the dessert plate.
If a fruit course follows, the servants remove the dessert plates and flatware and place a fruit plate in front of each guest, arranged with a fruit fork and knife on the plate, as in the dessert course.
If finger bowls are used, they are typically placed on the dessert plate with the flatware on either side of the bowl. The bowls are sometimes set on a cloth doily or an underplate. The guests move the finger bowl with the doily or underplate to the upper left of the dessert plate and move the flatware to the sides of the plate in the usual way. After dessert, guests lightly dip their fingertips into the water, one hand at a time, and then wipe them on the napkin in their laps.
The guests usually leave the table after dessert or fruit and take coffee and liqueurs in another room, but they are sometimes served at the table. The English and American custom is for women to go to another room and leave the men at the table or in a separate room to enjoy whisky and cigars.