The Black History of Eggnog

The spiced drink parallels America’s fraught history with African Americans

Kayla Stewart
Heated

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Photo: Yulia Naumenko/Getty Images

Creamy, aromatic eggnog is a staple in American homes during the winter — we consume an estimated 135 million pounds per year, to be exact. Whether served in mugs at holiday parties or paired with whiskey, rum, or brandy, the beverage inevitably makes an appearance on drink menus around Christmastime.

But how the drink’s popularity spiked, and who increased its visibility on a national stage is, like many things, intertwined with America’s fraught history with African Americans.

Food historian Fred Opie of Babson College in Wellesley, Massachusetts, has studied eggnog for years, and he expects dozens of calls about the contentious drink right around the holidays.

“Either you love it, you hate it, but it’s always at this time of the year,” Opie said. “It’s just one of those seasonal drinks.”

While the drink has origins in white, British aristocracy — commoners wouldn’t have had access to key ingredients like fresh milk and eggs. Others like nutmeg, cinnamon, and cardamom, were quite expensive. The liquors used, such as brandy, whiskey, rum, and sherry, added to the richness of the drink. Yet even with these elitist roots, across the Atlantic in the 18th century, it became…

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Kayla Stewart
Heated
Writer for

Kayla Stewart is a freelance journalist from Houston, and is currently based in Harlem.