✯ ✯ ✯

The menu for Abraham Lincoln’s ill-fated second inaugural ball, at the Patent Office Building, March 6, 1865

George Washington

The general’s camp chest

The president’s dentures

Food and entertaining shape presidents and reflect their administrations

Thomas Jefferson’s sketch of a “maccaroni” machine, with pasta-making instructions, c. 1787

The “King Mob” at Andrew Jackson’s inauguration party on March 4, 1829, grew so rowdy that the White House staff used a potent punch to lure his admirers outside before they crushed him. (For a version of this punch, see Recipes, p. 383.)

The White House Kitchen Through the Ages

Circa 1891, with President Benjamin Harrison’s cook, Dolly Johnson

Circa 1909, Theodore Roosevelt’s kitchen

1948, the Harry S. Truman kitchen

2009, Michelle Obama with chef Cristeta Comerford and pastry chef Bill Yosses

The Roosevelt cousins were master gastropoliticians

Teddy Roosevelt’s “shocking” dinner with Booker T. Washington, October 16, 1901

Franklin D. Roosevelt served hot dogs and beer to the Windsors at “the picnic that won the war,” June 11, 1939

Posters encouraged food aid and food rationing in wartime

A poster from World War I

A poster from World War II

The kitchen staff set the tone in the White House

Mrs. Henrietta Nesbitt, c. 1940

Chef René Verdon (third from left), with Julius Spessot (to his right), and assistant cooks, c. 1962

Pastry chef Roland Mesnier, Nancy Reagan, and chef Henry Haller, July 30, 1982

Walter Scheib with Hillary Rodham Clinton, 1994

The Kennedy Style

John F. Kennedy stays cool aboard his yacht, the Honey Fitz, September 7, 1963

The Kennedys’ “Brains Dinner” for Nobel laureates, with novelist Pearl Buck and poet Robert Frost, April 29, 1962

From Opulence to Basics at the Executive Mansion

Luci B. Johnson and Patrick Nugent cut their wedding cake, August 6, 1966

Richard M. Nixon’s last presidential lunch: cottage cheese on a pineapple ring, with a glass of milk, August 8, 1974

The Reagan Years

Ron and Nancy enjoy a TV dinner, November 6, 1981

A magical night: Mrs. Reagan arranged for Princess Diana to dance with the sinuous Saturday Night Fever star John Travolta at a White House gala, November 9, 1985

The Easter Egg Roll has been one of the most popular White House events since Lucy Hayes inaugurated the tradition in 1878

Easter 1958

Easter 2018

First Ladies have always influenced their husbands’ administrations

Dolley Madison helped to invent the role of “Mrs. Presidentress.”

Laura Bush introduces the annual gingerbread White House, December 3, 2001

President Obama Breaking Bread

A bipartisan congressional lunch in the President’s Dining Room, May 16, 2012

The president ate bun cha noodles with the TV star Anthony Bourdain in Hanoi, Vietnam, May 23, 2016

White House China

James K. Polk pattern, c. 1849

A Rutherford B. Hayes oyster plate, 1877

On April 14, 1865, Abraham Lincoln sipped his last cup of coffee from this cup.

The Reagans’ elegant, controversial service, 1982

Dining at the White House is always a special occasion

A menu for a George W. Bush holiday dinner was signed by guests, December 16, 2005

Waiters at a state dinner for Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, March 10, 2016

The Reagans hosted a banquet for Prince Charles and Lady Diana in the State Dining Room, November 9, 1985

✯ ✯ ✯