Medieval Arabs Ate Sandwiches Too!?
We all bought into the theory that the inventor of the sandwich was John Montagu, the fourth Earl of Sandwich of England (1718 – 1792). The story goes that he was the one who started the trend when he asked for his meal to be served between two layers of bread. John Montagu was an avid gambler, or a workaholic, according to another account, who chose to forgo the traditional proper table-dinners that would have interrupted whatever it was he was doing and, more importantly, to keep a hand free.
Fourth Earl of Sandwich |
The speculation is that soon enough people around him started to imitate him, to have that same 'thing' that Sandwich had, and that was how food consumed this way acquired the name ‘sandwich,’ with the first documented English sandwich recipe appearing in the 1773 English cookbook The Lady’s Assistant for Regulating and Supplying her Table by Charlotte Mason:
Mason, Lady's Assistant, p. 427 |
Well, as far as naming goes, this is all plausible, but the fourth Earl of Sandwich was definitely not the first one to have his meal this way. Food must have conveniently been eaten this way from ancient times in the Near East, where bread was baked in a variety of ways: flat ones and risen and spongy ones. They were variously made leavened and unleavened, large and small, and many more. Depending on how they were made, there was the clay oven tannūr for the leavened flat bread, the larger communal brick oven for baking puffed and spongy bread, and the metal plates (saj) for the large and thin bread varieties.
Baking Khubz in the tannūr |
Excavated remains of a brick oven furn in ancient Mesopotamia Tell Brak |
A baking thin sheet of flat bread, called marquq, shrak, lawash/lavash, etc. |
An ancient Egyptian baking scene |
A medieval cook kneading bread dough |
Thus it follows that in a region so impressively rich and varied in making bread, it should come as no surprise to learn that the documented history of the sandwich and its culture in the Near East began much earlier than the eighteenth century in Europe. While the first English sandwich recipe appeared in the1773 Lady's Assistant, in the surviving medieval Arabic cookbooks many sandwich recipes were included as early as the tenth century. In fact, based on the references and descriptions of sandwiches in medieval Arabic literature, their origin can be pushed even further back to the eighth or ninth century, which was the beginning of the golden age of the Baghdadi cuisine. For instance, in al-Masʿūdī’s tenth-century Murūj al-Dhahab, a poem by the famous Abbasid poet of Baghdad Ibn al-Rūmī (d. 896) describes how to construct a sandwich, which he calls wasṭ (وسط), in which the stuffing is put between two layers of bread. Here is how he describes it:
AS for recipes, the earliest ones occur in Ibn Sayyār al-Warrāq’s 10th-century cookbook, Kitāb al-Ṭabīkh, chapter 23 (my English translation, Annals of the Caliphs' Kitchens). In this chapter, five recipes are given with a bonus food poem. In these five recipes, sandwiches are made in three different ways:
1. A thin flat bread similar to today's marquq (lavash) is spread with layers of finely chopped ingredients (meat, vegetables, herbs, etc.), and then seasoned and tightly rolled. The sandwich is served sliced into pinwheels, called bazmaward, a name of Persian origin. It was also called muyassar wa muhanni ميسر ومهني (i.e. delightful and easy to eat).
2. Another type of sandwich is called wast (pl. aswat اوساط); it is similar to the one described in Ibn al-Rimi's verses.
3. The third type is called wast mashtour (وسط مشطور), which is an open-faced sandwich. This one, al-Warraq tells us, was made by no less than the Abbasid gourmet Prince Ibrahim b. al-Mahdi himself (d. 839), who was half-brother of Hārūn al-Rashīd. The recipe describes how the crusty edges and top of a brick-oven bread are first sliced off, and the face is spread with a fermented condiment, called binn, and then slathered with walnut oil. It is toasted on a grill set on a brazier, and after smearing it with yolk of soft-cooked eggs, and grated cheese if wished, it is good to eat. Here is the recipe as it occurs in al-Warraq's Arabic edition:
What is even more exciting is the fact that Ibn al-Mahdī supplemented his recipe with a short poem describing it, which in effect is an artistic representation of the dish itself -- second best to today's camera images. Here is his poem:
What a delicious sandwich on the brazier I made,
slathered with binn and walnut oil!
Fragrant and shining, as if the binn I used
with ambergris and musk was embalmed.
Of nigella seeds I put what it needed,
as for fennel, I did sprinkle some.
Olive oil I made sure to add,
for it gives a luscious coating and a saffron-glow.
Smeared with egg yolks, with cheese sprinkled,
looking like speckled embroidered silk.
As colorful as striped silk it looks,
exuding musk and camphor.
The taste, luscious as pure honey,
for the best of aromatic spices I did use.
Here is a recipe for you to try:
Use cold [cooked] meat of two legs and
shoulders of a kid or lamb. Finely shred the meat into thread-like pieces.
Choose whatever you like of leaf vegetables, excluding watercress (jirjīr)
and endives (hindibāʾ). Finely chop them until they resemble sesame
seeds and mix [part of] them with the shredded meat. Set the mixture aside.
Now
choose good quality sharp cheese, scrape it with a knife, and collect the
scraped cheese. Coarsely grind walnuts and add them [with the cheese] to the
[set-aside meatless] chopped vegetables. Also add some chopped herbs and rue. A
portion of the chopped vegetables should have been set aside unmixed with the meat.
Next, peel and chop some olives and add them to the [meatless] chopped
vegetable mixture.
Spread a
soft and large ruqāqa [similar to lavash/markook bread], cover it with some of
the meatless vegetable mixture and sprinkle it with seasoned salt. Next, spread
the meat and vegetable mixture [to which you should have added] some spices.
Then arrange a layer of eggs sliced lengthwise. Next, spread another layer of
the meat and vegetable mixture followed by a layer of the meatless vegetable
mixture. Sprinkle them with fine-tasting salt and drizzle them with sweet
vinegar and rose water.
Tightly
roll the bread with the filling and slice it crosswise into discs. Arrange the
[pinwheels] on a platter and pass them around, God willing.
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I am not giving exact amounts of ingredients here, but a good rule of thumb is to decide how much to use of the main ingredient, which is the cooked meat here, and build around it. The layering is kind of elaborate; the following steps will help you keep track of the layers.
On a lavash bread spread the ingredients in this order:
1. vegetable mix
2. vegetable + meat mix
3. sliced eggs
4. vegetable + meat mix
5. vegetable mix
Roll it up and slice it into pinwheels.
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