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Caviar
Its Allure, Provenance, and Destiny
By Keyvan Tabari

A Mixed Provenance 

It was not always like that. In fact, the origin of Russian caviar was quite humble, and its rise to prominence owed much to people who were not all Russians. The food’s initial consumers in modern times were the poor parishioners of the Russian Orthodox church near the Caspian Sea. In the late 13th Century, the church sanctioned eating sturgeon and its eggs during religious feasts when meat was forbidden. The roe was much cheaper, and extensive fasting seasons made caviar a staple food of the impoverished. (Saffron, 2002a: 52-53; Saffron, 2002b)

     At the time, the temporal rulers of this region were the Mongol descendants of Genghis Khan, and they get the credit for starting the international trade in caviar with exports to Italy. With Venice as the port of entry, by the 15th Century caviar had become a fad that spread to other Italian cities and lasted for two centuries. Galileo who lived in the early 17th Century is the first recorded celebrity who enjoyed caviar so much that he sent it as a gift to his daughter's convent in Florence. (Ramade, 1999: 10, 11, 14)

     It was not until another one hundred years, however, that caviar served as a royal gift, from Peter the Great to King Louis XV of France.  Although its taste did not please the King who became the first famous Frenchman to spit it out in public, on the carpets of the Versailles, caviar soon found its proper place among delicacies in the cuisine of the French aristocracy. (Ramade, 1999: 14)

     Meanwhile the Tsars had defeated the Mongols, settled a group of pirates and fishermen in their place and, to secure their loyalty, granted them the exclusive right to fish for sturgeon in the Caspian. While these Cossacks were encouraged to produce caviar for export, it was a Greek entrepreneur who would later become the first major international caviar dealer. Ioannis Varavarki obtained his franchise to unrestricted fishing in the Caspian from Catherine the Great, following an accidental meeting with her lover in a St. Petersburg coffeehouse. Varavarki exported so much caviar to Greece in the late 1780s that he had to employ thousands of workers. (Ramade, 1999: 18; Saffron, 2002a: 64)

    A truly large scale international transport of caviar, however, had to await the technological advances of the 19th  Century, especially ice making machines which made it possible to preserve the perishable fish eggs in long journeys, and railroads that shortened the travel time. Now a quarter of the caviar produced in Russia could be exported.  

     It still took months of careful handling before the delicate food reached European destinations. Therefore, the price of caviar remained high but costliness, ironically, became its main attraction. This was a status food that appealed to the new bourgeoisie of the industrial revolution as they developed a hunger for exotic treats. By the end of the 19th century, caviar was the rage in Europe of the Belle Époque. It evoked the life style of the wealthy Russian nobles, now frequent visitors to the capitals of Europe whose excesses became a subject of fascination. In Russia, from the time of Peter the Great in the late 17th Century, caviar had been gradually transformed to a food that only the rich could afford. The Russian upper class devised elaborate rituals for gastronomic indulgence, always including caviar in the collection of their colorful hors-d'oeuvres. (Ramade, 1999: 20)

Caviar Everywhere 

The lucrative market for caviar induced European vendors to look for local sources. The French found enough sturgeon in the Gironde area, north of Bordeaux, to establish a thriving caviar industry. Its very success, however, led to its demise. So much caviar was produced that on the eve of World War I, the delicacy was selling at a price only slightly higher than the cost of a baguette in Paris. (ezcaviar.com) The abundant supply was the result of over fishing which, in turn, caused the virtual extinction of the French sturgeon.

     In Germany , it was the sturgeon from the Elbe River near Hamburg that became the source of the local caviar. It enabled the firm of Dieckmann & Hansen (D&H) not only to satisfy the German demand, but to reach for markets in England, Sweden, France, and Austria, thus becoming the first multinational caviar dealer. As in France, however, the German sturgeon supply was soon depleted by over fishing. The problem was confounded here by the industrial pollution of nearby factories which diminished the oxygen needed both by the sturgeon and their river food. D&H began looking elsewhere for surgeon. (Dieckmann & Hansen, 2004)

     Sturgeon was not a rare fish. It could be found in many places, all in the northern hemisphere. It has long been familiar to man. Its images are carved in the ancient Egyptian temples, and many Greek classics wrote about it. ((Ramade, 1999: 8) As Cicero complained, sturgeon has always been too pricey because it is hard to catch; a jar of sturgeon meat cost as much as one hundred sheep in the second century B.C. (Walker, 2002) Sturgeon was also dear in ancient China, where its caviar was enjoyed as early as the tenth century. Even before that, it is said, the Persians living near the Kura River, north of the Caspian, became the first people to eat caviar, believing that it was a medicine for many diseases as well as a source of energy. (ezcaviar.com)

     Medieval Europe did know how to make caviar, but valued sturgeon as a delicacy. The Europeans who settled in America, however, disliked the sturgeon. It was a favorite of the natives. As the fish was cheap, it was later used to feed the slaves. The immigrants who arrived from Europe in the middle of the 19th Century were poor and became additional consumers of the inexpensive sturgeon meat. It was now called “Albany Beef”, since it was caught in the Hudson river . (What's Cooking America ) Turning the sturgeon's roe into caviar, however, required the processing expertise which German dealers, led by D&H, brought to America .

     By 1870 those dealers were shipping caviar to Hamburg from the sturgeon caught in the Delaware River . (United Press International, 2000) On that river's banks in New Jersey a new boomtown, appropriately named Caviar, emerged as the center of the caviar industry in the United States. In the 1880s, more caviar was made here than in any other country. Most of the American caviar was exported to Europe . Locally, the only notable impact was that a few New York bars offered free caviar in the hope that its salt would cause customers to order more drinks. (Nalley, 2002; Robins, 1994)

     In less than three decades, the sturgeon in the East Coast of the U.S. met the same inevitable fate as those in Germany and France; over fishing eliminated its stocks, assisted by the oil slick from Philadelphia's emerging petroleum industry. The fishermen had already begun moving to the Great Lakes and the Pacific coast. The future was bleak there too. The stocks in Lake Erie and California 's Columbia River were exhausted in a decade. When the catches in the Sacramento River also declined precipitously, California banned the commercial fishing of sturgeon in 1902. The main culprit again was unbridled fishing, while in the Great Lakes, the pollution of the runoff from the sawmills was also a factor.

     D&H did not abandon the U.S.; in 1912 it opened the first American caviar retail shop, Romanoff, in the lobby of the Waldorf-Astoria hotel. To obtain caviar, however, D&H, turned toward Russia, first to the Amur River in Siberia but soon to the Caspian Sea, now the last place where sturgeon could be caught in large numbers. There are twenty seven species of sturgeon. (Shoumatoff) The Caspian Sea has been the best habitat for the greatest number and variety, including the three species most coveted for their eggs: beluga sturgeon which produces caviar with the same name, Russian or Persian sturgeon which produces the osetra caviar, and stellate sturgeon which produces the sevruga caviar. A moderately saline water, a special algae, and a mild temperature combine to make the Caspian Sea a singular environment for caviar. (Avakian, 1992)

     On the eve of World War II, D&H was the main foreign producer of caviar in the Caspian port of Astrakhan, the center of the Russian caviar industry. Every year it exported 100 tons of Caviar to Europe. (Dieckmann & Hansen 2004) This large quantity, however, was a small fraction of the caviar made in that city. Most of the Russian caviar was consumed locally. With that robust market in mind, a certain Armenian caviar producer, Stepan Matinovic Lianozov, had succeeded in securing an exclusive concession for fishing in the portion of the Caspian Sea which was still outside Russia.  READ MORE

Copyright 2005 Keyvan Tabari. All Rights Reserved.
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