St.Valentine ….a bit of history .

LIFE FOOD
From St. Valentine to the Valentines Day massacre
Thursday, February 13, 2014 2:21:58 MST PM

February has long been celebrated as the month of romance, and that St. Valentineā€™s Day, or Feast of Saint Valentine as we know it today, contains leftovers of both Christian and ancient Roman tradition infused with modern day spending habits.

The history of St. Valentineā€™s Day and its patron saint are shrouded in mystery.

The Catholic Church recognizes at least three different patron saints named Valentine or Valentinus.

From these three we have adopted the story of Father Valentine who was martyred on February 14, 269 who in his final hours started the tradition of exchanging Valentine messages with our loved ones.

For a few years before St. Valentines death the Roman Emperor Claudius was recruiting soldiers for his armies.

Enlistment was down, and Claudius; a warring ruler blamed the declining recruitment on the men wanting to stay at home with their wives and families instead of going to war.

Claudiusā€™s solution to his dilemma was to ban weddings, hoping that this would cause boredom within in the male population and inspire men to want to go to war thus causing enlistment to go up.

Father Valentine may have almost neurotically enjoyed performing marriage ceremonies. When Claudius banned marriages Father Valentine continued to conduct them in secrecy, which instigated Claudius to classify weddings as ā€œpagan ritualsā€ and when he heard that Father Valentine was illegally performing wedding ceremonies Claudius imprisoned Father Valentine until he denounce his Catholic faith, which would leave him defrocked and without his churchly powers.

While imprisoned Father Valentine befriended Claudiusā€™s daughter and would spend long hours talking to her from his cell.

Roman Emperor Claudius also known as Claudius the Cruel had had enough and ordered Father Valentine to be beaten and beheaded.

One of Valentineā€™s final actions was to write a note to his jailerā€™s daughter. The note was signed ā€œfrom your Valentineā€.

Shortly thereafter on February 14, 269 AD Father Valentine was executed.

It wasnā€™t until 496 AD that Pope Gelasius marked February 14 the day to remember St. Valentine the patron saint of lovers and over time the day was marked with sending simple gifts, poems or messages.

During the height of prohibition, it is believed that on February 14, 1929 Chicago gangster Al Capone chose to send a Valentineā€™s message to George ā€œBugsā€ Moran.

Capone had given orders for his men to take down the rival gangster by starting at the bottom and working their way up through the ranks until they got to Bugs himself.

It is believed that these orders from Capone led to the ā€œValentineā€™s Day Massacreā€.

After the Valentineā€™s Day Massacre, Capone went into hiding for a while but when he returned home to Chicago; Capone was welcomed by his family and friends with a celebratory feast. One of the dishes served at this feast was Chilled Pasta in Walnut Sauce, Caponeā€™s favorite dish, as revenge is a dish best served cold.

The following Scarface Capone Pasta recipe is easy to make and can be enjoyed any day of the year, served hot or cold and made with locally sourced ingredients.

SCARFACE CAPONE PASTA

Ingredients:

1/2 lb. walnut pieces, toasted

2 garlic cloves, crushed

2 tbsp. butter, softened

1/4 cup finely grated parmesan cheese

2/3 cup flat-leaf parsley leaves

2/3 cup olive oil

1/3 cup heavy cream

1 lb. pappardelle or fettuccini pasta

Method: In a food processor place the walnuts garlic, butter, parmesan and 1/3 cup of the parsley. Process the ingredients until they form a coarse paste. With the motor running, slowly pour the oil into the paste and continue to process until relatively smooth. Transfer the paste into a bowl and stir in the cream, and season to taste with salt and pepper. Let the sauce rest for a couple of hours in the refrigerator. Cook your pasta, top with sauce and chill. chef Brian Henry: www.chefbrianhenry.com.

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Responses

  1. WOW! What a history; from Valentinus to Al Capone and Walnut Salad. This is an interesting twist and i guess there are plenty of thoughts of a massacre today also, but lets hope they can “get over it”. I have. Never had time to look back and still don’t, though betrayed in some vile ways.
    I love your Pasta Recipe, very different. I think I will make it soon.