The dish is named after the Italian opera star Luisa Tetrazzini.[3] The origins of tetrazzini are widely disputed. Some accounts ascribe tetrazzini as a creation of Auguste Escoffier.[2] Other sources claim tetrazzini to be invented in the early 1900s by Ernest Arbogast, the chef at the Palace Hotel in San Francisco, California, where Luisa Tetrazzini made her American debut at the Tivoli as Gilda in Rigoletto on January 11, 1905.[4] However, other sources attribute the origin to the Knickerbocker Hotel in New York City.[5][6]
In 1950s through the 1980s, upscale New York City restaurants including Mamma Leone's and Sardi's featured tetrazzini on the menu.[7][8][9] The Sardi's tetrazzini recipe was featured in Vincent Price's cookbook A Treasury of Great Recipes, and mentioned in the Sue Kaufman novel Diary of a Mad Housewife.[10][11] Tetrazzini frozen dinners were popular in the 1960s, as noted by Joan Didion in The Saturday Evening Post article "The Big Rock Candy Figgy Pudding Pitfall".[12] Recipes for tetrazzini, both from-scratch and using convenience ingredients, were popular in the 1950s and 1960s, and the dish was featured in an episode of the period TV drama Mad Men that is mostly set in the 1960s.[13] The Unofficial Mad Men Cookbook, a collection of vintage recipes, featured dishes cited in the TV series. It included recipes drawn from various popular mid-century restaurants and cookbooks, including a tetrazzini recipe originally published in Betty Crocker's Hostess Cookbook.[14][15] In the 1960s, southern restaurants and Junior League cookbooks began featuring versions of tetrazzini (referred to as chicken spaghetti in parts of the American South).[16][17][18] In the 1960s, the famed Piccadilly Cafeteria in Baton Rouge introduced chicken tetrazzini to the menu, and it remains a customer favorite decades later.[19] Foster's Market in Durham, North Carolina, introduced chicken spaghetti to their in-house dining and catering menus in the 1980s, with their version based upon the chicken spaghetti recipe featured in the Baton Rouge Junior League cookbook River Road Recipes. In the 1990s, tetrazzini and chicken spaghetti emerged as soul food classics.[20][21]
In 21st century pop culture
Tetrazzini, specifically chicken tetrazzini, became an Internet meme after a woman on Maury accuses her friend of seducing her boyfriend by preparing his favorite meal, chicken tetrazzini.[22][23] Clips from the episode were featured on the E! channel show The Soup in 2007. In 2020, Vice magazine food editor Farideh Sadeghin prepared chicken tetrazzini for their Munchies series, referencing the Maury episode as her inspiration for the dish.[24]
^Gattey, Charles Neilson (1995). Luisa Tetrazzini: The Florentine Nightingale. United Kingdom: Scolar Press. pp. 41–44. ISBN1859280102.
^Niosi, Andrea (December 2004). "Chicken Tetrazzini". Foodreference. Archived from the original on June 16, 2021. Retrieved September 6, 2012.
^Peters, Erica J. (2013). San Francisco: A Food Biography. New York: Rowman & Littlefield. p. 177. ISBN978-0759121539. Archived from the original on February 22, 2023. Retrieved January 30, 2023. The 'restaurant on forty-second' may refer to the Knickerbocker Hotel, then located on 42nd Street and Broadway.