Page 59 - 2023-11-13;Bulletin, Vol.82 No.2, October 2023
P. 59

KAPPEL SOUP – THE SOUP THAT HELPED TO

                                               BROKER PEACE


                                                 By Evelina RIOUKHINA and Marithé HORVAT


               Have  you  heard  the  legend  of  Swiss  Kappel  Soup?  It  happened  in  1529,  and
               increasingly  food  historians  and  researchers  agree  that  Kappel  milk  soup  was  an
               ancestor of the fondue. The Kappel milk soup is today considered an icon of diplomacy,
               as well as an important symbol of neutrality and accord.

               The events took place in Kappal am Albis and no one today knows for sure how the
               soup came to be, or the ingredients used, but it was first made in the field near Kappel
               Abbey.  It  was  during  the  Swiss  Reformation  at  the  start  of  the  16th  century,  on  the
               turbulent frontier between opposing Protestant and Catholic leaning territories. To the
               north  was  the  Protestant-favouring  canton  of  Zürich,  led  by  Ulrich  Zwingli,  a  parish
               overseer  who  was  spreading  reform.  To  the  south  were  Zug  and  the  allied  Catholic
               cantons of the Old Swiss Confederacy, who felt their rural union should remain aligned
               with Rome. Schism and distrust were rife, and by summer 1529 diplomacy between the
               two  cantons  had  failed.  Zürich’s  soldiers,  kitted  out  with  armour  and  pikes,  marched
               south to war.

               Fortunately  bloodshed  was  prevented…  by  soup.  The  legend  is  that  the  broth  was
               created by accident in June 1529 when two hungry armies met on what is now known
               as  the  Milchsuppestein,  or  ‘milk  soup  pasture’.  While  the  generals  continued
               negotiating,  the  infantry  brokered  their  own  truce  over  a  cooking  pot  while  on  the
               battlefield. They were hungry after the long march, and Zürich had plenty of bread and
               salt, while Zug had a surplus of milk from its farms. The story goes that they put aside
               their arms and were eating together from the same bowl, each putting their own piece of
               bread in it. Although they were separated by the frontier and taking from opposite sides
               of  the  casserole,  they  were  sharing  the  same  soup  while  their  arms  were  at  rest,
               thereby preventing bloodshed.

               The legend was so impressive and important, that it was brought to life by the great
               Swiss painter Anker in his work ‘Die Kappeler Milchsuppe’ (1869). Since then, food has
               played  a  strong  role  in  Swiss  history  and  is  now  used  internationally  as  a  symbol  of
               diplomacy and reconciliation. There is even a memorial to honour the soup that helped
               broker peace, stop the hostilities, prevent bloodshed, and show the way to compromise
               using what unites rather than divides us.

               If only soup could resolve all conflict! However, even at Kappel the tension remained,
               leading to the Second War of Kappel two years later when the opposing cantons once
               again  took  to  the  battlefield.  However,  the  mythology  of  the  soup  has  proven  to  be
               a catalyst for Swiss diplomacy ever since.

               Nowadays, when Swiss politicians or councillors have disputes this soup is still served.
               The  soup  has  also  been  used  as  a  symbol  of  Switzerland  for  its  diplomacy  and
               neutrality and the ability to find compromise. It is believed that the mixture was made of


               AAFI-AFICS BULLETIN, Vol. 82 No.2, 2023-10                                                57

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