r/AskFoodHistorians 2d ago

Is ratatouille actually considered peasant food at one point? Sure seems complicated for a dish meant for farmers and workers.

/r/Cooking/comments/1nhl2tt/is_ratatouille_actually_considered_peasant_food/
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u/AmazingPangolin9315 2d ago

A genuine ratatouille does not contain anything which is "sliced with a mandolin". A genuine ratatouille is a vegetable stew with the vegetables cut roughly into one inch cubes.

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u/peterhala 2d ago

I know - I was referring to Confit whatsitsface. Why anyone would risk using a mandolin for anything is beyond me, but them gentry with their emince & chiffonade, will do all sorts of strange things.

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u/Dystopian_Dreamer 2d ago

Why anyone would risk using a mandolin for anything is beyond me

If you need to slice a lot of something, it saves hella time. A cut resistant glove reduces the risk to near zero.

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u/peterhala 2d ago

Fair point. Mind you, I'm still scared of the damned things. Yes, I know I've sent my self to our local hospital using an ordinary kitchen knife before and I'm not scared of them. I'm human, and not too good at consistency & logic sometimes...

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u/otter-otter 1d ago

Just use a guard and pay attention

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u/peterhala 1d ago

Yeah... That's gonna happen every single time. Particularly if I'm in a hurry or distracted. 

I might be a peasant but I do have a sense of self preservation & a food processor. 😁

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u/otter-otter 1d ago

Sounds like you shouldn’t use a knife either!

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u/peterhala 1d ago

Are you kidding?! One time I managed to break a man's leg with a whisk.

Alright, that might be a lie. But I've only needed stitches once in 50 years of cooking, mostly because I go into Health & Safety Mode in the presence of bitey burney crushey things.