Pigeon pie

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Pigeon pie
Pigeon pie with beetroot.jpg
Pigeon pie with beetroot
Origin
Place of origin France
Details
Course Main
Main ingredient(s) Pigeon

Pigeon pie is a savoury game pie made of pigeon meat and various other ingredients traditional to French cuisine and present in other European cuisines.[1] It has been eaten at least as early as 1670 in French cuisine.[2]

Similar dishes to Pigeon pie exist in other cultures. In Morocco it is called Bastila.[3] Early versions of the traditional Canadian dish of Tourtière, currently made with meats such as pork or beef, were probably made of pigeon, likely the now extinct Passenger Pigeon. [4]

Contents

Historical record of Pigeon Pie

Records in the British National Archives show that Pigeon Pie was a menu item at Kew Palace during the reign of George III.[5] In 1879, the British Medical Journal reported a group of sailors aboard the Troop ship HMS Tamar (1863) were poisoned by a bad pigeon pie which spawned an Admiralty investigation.[6]

Before the late 19th century in the United States, Pigeon pie was a common dish. Archival records show that Pidgeon Pie was a traditional dish for the American holiday of Thanksgiving, though is currently uncommon at Thanksgiving meals.[7] Similarly, during the earlier part of the 19th century Pigeon pie was a common Christmas meal in Detroit, but later was replaced by other meats.[8] The reviewers in The Pacific Northwest Quarterly of the 1976 The Homestead Cookbook edited by Victoria Paul, noted that without publications of cookbooks like it, the traditional dish of pigeon pie would become culturally extinct in the United States.[9]

In Spain, pigeon eating was a common practice as early as the 14th century under the 1379 Order of the Pigeon created by King Juan I of Castile. The order ate pigeon regularly at their order banquets. In 1611, a recipe book by the royal chef at the court of Philip III of Spain included recipes for pigeon pie. Similarly, a chef at a university residence hall in Spain included recipes for pigeon pies in his 1607 collection of recipes.[10]

See also

References

Further reading


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