Too Old to Cut the Mustard
Yesterday I was feeling "too old to cut the mustard any more." That's part of a hillbilly song that I knew when I was a kid. I had vague ideas that it meant something about being too weak to cut mustard, which, if one could cut it, shouldn't take strength to do. It made me start to wonder what exactly the phrase meant. This morning I looked it up and this is what I found:
(Phrase Origins)
This expression meaning "to achieve the required standard" is first recorded in an O. Henry story of 1902: "So I looked around and found a proposition [a woman] that exactly cut the mustard."
It may come from a cowboy expression, "the proper mustard", meaning "the genuine thing", and a resulting use of "mustard" to denote the best of anything. O. Henry in _Cabbages and Kings_ (1894) called mustard "the main attraction": "I'm not headlined in the bills, but I'm the mustard in the salad dressing, just the same." Figurative use of "mustard" as a positive superlative dates from 1659 in the phrase "keen as mustard", and use of "cut" to
denote rank (as in "a cut above") dates from the 18th century.
Other theories are that it is a corruption of the military phrase "to pass muster" ("muster", from Latin _monstrare_="to show", means "to assemble (troops), as for inspection"); that it refers to the practice of adding vinegar to ground-up mustard seed to "cut" the bitter taste; that it literally means "cut mustard" as an example of a difficult task, mustard being a relatively tough crop that grows close to the ground; and that it literally means "cut mustard" as an example of an easy task (via the negative expression "can't even cut the mustard"), mustard being easier to cut at the table than butter.
The more-or-less synonymous expression "cut it" (as in "'Sorry' doesn't cut it") seems to be more recent and may derive from "cut the mustard".
Source: [Mark Israel, 'Phrase Origins: "cut the mustard"'
Thanks, Mark. I was wondering. Today I'm more up to "muster."











