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Food Around the World

Food Around the World. The United States. Your Description Goes Here. Where in the World?. Historical Overview. Food traditions began with Native Americans Excellent farmers Grew many fruits and veggies Gathered fruits, nuts and hunted wild game to supplement diet

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Food Around the World

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  1. Food Around the World The United States

  2. Your Description Goes Here Where in the World?

  3. Historical Overview • Food traditions began with Native Americans • Excellent farmers • Grew many fruits and veggies • Gathered fruits, nuts and hunted wild game to supplement diet • British and Spanish colonists followed Natives • Followed by French and Dutch • Each group had to adjust to the climate and geography of the area in which they settled • Natives taught first colonists how to hunt, fish and plant crops • Learned to eat new animals, fish, vegetables and fruit from relationships with Natives • Your Description Goes Here

  4. Historical Overview • As knowledge grew colonists added new dishes to their diets, such as: • Used local lobster, crab and other fish in seafood chowders • Salted pork and preserved beef for a variety of meat dishes throughout the winter • Used pumpkin and wild berries to make pies, puddings and cakes • Your Description Goes Here

  5. Where Did That Come From? • Immigrants brought their food customs to New World and adapted the recipes to the foods that were available in their region • Italians: pasta sauces from tomatoes, basil and onions sold by street vendors in New York • Chinese: used chicken, bamboo shoots and water chestnuts to make chow mein • Poles: stuffed cabbage leaves with ground beef and tomato sauce to make traditional cabbage rolls • Your Description Goes Here

  6. Holidays in the United States

  7. Mardi Gras • Celebrated in some parts of the South where French settlers introduced it • Mardi Gras: French for fat Tuesday • Celebrated on day before Lent • Mardi Gras began as a last celebration before entering into the solemn time of fasting and prayer known as Lent • Festivities include parades with marching bands and floats, gala balls and parties • Special foods • Cajun favorites: shrimp mold appetizer, crab bisque and crawfish stew • Classic dessert – king cake • Your Description Goes Here

  8. Cinco de Mayo • Celebrated by Mexican Americans • Spanish for Fifth of May, which is the day of celebration • Marks the victory of severely outnumbered Mexican troops over French troops at the Battle of Puebla in 1862 • Festivities include parades, music, dancing and carnivals • Traditional foods: • Sweet breads and coffee • Hot chocolate flavored with cinnamon • Your Description Goes Here

  9. Kwanzaa • Family-centered observance of cultural unity among people of African heritage • Kwanzaa = “first fruits” in Swahili • Weeklong celebration between Christmas and New Year’s Day • People use this time to think about their ancestry, family and community • Kwanzaa was developed in the United States but is becoming popular among people of African descent all over the world • Karamu • Last night of Kwanzaa • Ritual feast held by families • Your Description Goes Here

  10. Regions of the United States

  11. New England • Maine • New Hampshire • Vermont • Massachusetts • Rhode Island • Connecticut • Your Description Goes Here

  12. New England • Settled first by the British • Rocky, mountainous or forested land – hard to farm • People worked hard to survive • Learned how to dry and salt foods to preserve them in order to survive long, cold winters • Cooked in large fireplace in home – used Dutch ovens and beehive ovens to bake foods over coals • Popular foods • Water: lobsters, crabs, clams and other shellfish • Forests: wild turkeys, geese, ducks, pheasants • Baked Goods: Indian bread, Sally Lunn, johnnycakes • Corn: corn sticks, Indian pudding, cornmeal mush, succotash • Dried foods: beans, corn, apples • One-dish meals: New England boiled dinner, red-flannel hash • Maple syrup used to flavor vegetables and desserts • Your Description Goes Here

  13. New England Menu New England Clam Chowder Boiled Dinner Boston Baked Beans Brown Bread Blueberry Muffins Pumpkin Pie Tea • Your Description Goes Here

  14. Mid-Atlantic • New York • Pennsylvania • New Jersey • Delaware • Maryland • Your Description Goes Here

  15. Mid-Atlantic • Climate is milder than New England • Region is rich and fertile = profitable farming • New Jersey • Major center of fresh fruit and vegetables • Ships apples, peaches, beans, cranberries, tomatoes, onions, asparagus, cucumbers, peas and melons to many parts of US • Settled by Dutch, German, Swedish and British immigrants • Dutch • Excellent farmers – well-stocked gardens and orchards • Excellent bakers – introduced cookies, doughnuts, molasses cake, gingerbread, waffles, coleslaw, cottage cheese and griddle cakes to US • Your Description Goes Here

  16. Pennsylvania Dutch in the Mid-Atlantic • Settled in southeast section of Pennsylvania • Extremely successful at adapting their farming techniques to the soil in PA • Developed a hearty, rural, inventive style of cooking different from others in Mid-Atlantic region • Learned to can, pickle and dry produce, meat and poultry raised on farm • Based style on Old World techniques – thrifty; no waste • New dishes to eliminate waste: pickled pigs’ feet, blood pudding, scrapple, smoked beef tongue, sausages, bologna • Soup: made from whatever was available; very popular • Chicken corn soup still a traditional favorite • German foods common in PA-Dutch diets • Sauerbraten, sauerkraut, liverwurst, pork • Accompanied by noodles, dumplings, potato pancakes and other filling foods • Your Description Goes Here

  17. Pennsylvania Dutch in the Mid-Atlantic • Each meal included 7 sweets and 7 sours • EX: pickled fruits and vegetables, relishes, jams, preserves, salads and apple butter • These foods were stored in cellars for use throughout the year • PA-Dutch baked specialties: coffee cakes, sticky buns, funnel cakes, crumb cakes, shoofly pie • Some religious groups (Amish, Mennonites) shared German heritage with PA-Dutch but chose to live in isolated groups • Their isolation helped to preserve their hearty home-style cooking and native crafts • Your Description Goes Here

  18. Mid-Atlantic Menu Stewed Chicken and Dumplings Buttered Green Beans Coleslaw Rye Bread Shoofly Pie Coffee • Your Description Goes Here

  19. The South • Virginia • West Virginia • Kentucky • North Carolina • Tennessee • South Carolina • Georgia • Alabama • Mississippi • Louisiana • Arkansas • Florida • Your Description Goes Here

  20. The South • Settled by immigrants from France, England, Ireland, Scotland and Spain • Once immigrants were established they brought over slaves from Africa to help work on huge plantations and serve in large mansions • Mild climate = year-round production of many crops • Most economically important crops • Sugarcane • Rice • Peanuts • Other important sources of food in the South • Gardens and orchards for fruits and veggies • Waters: catfish, bass, trout, turtle, crabs, crayfish, oysters, shrimp • Forests: squirrel, goose, turkey • Your Description Goes Here

  21. Staples of The South • Corn • Breakfast: hominy, hominy grits • Hot Breads: corn bread, spoon bread • Livestock – Pigs and Chickens • Pigs: spareribs, cured ham, fat back, chitterlings, pigs’ feet • Chicken: fried chicken • Rice (grew in Carolinas) • Used in many dishes • Combined with beans, meat or seafood to make economical and nutritious dishes • Other Southern specialties • Hot breads: buttermilk biscuits and shortnin’ bread • Black-eyed peas, yams and nuts – pecan pie and Hoppin’ John • Beans, sweet potatoes and a variety of green • Your Description Goes Here

  22. Distinct Cuisines Developed in The South

  23. Soul Food • Combines the customs of African slaves with the food customs of Native Americans and European sharecroppers • Developed around those few foods readily available to all three groups of people • Used foods from small gardens, small allotments of cornmeal, hunted wild game and used animal parts discarded by slave owners • Popular Soul Foods • Hot breads and puddings: batter bread, hush puppies, corn bread, hoe cake and cracklin’ corn bread • Hog and cow parts: chitterlings, used hogs’ feet, tails, snouts, ears • Vegetables: corn, squash, black-eyed peas, okra, green, yams • Fried okra, sweet potato pie, collard greens • Your Description Goes Here

  24. Creole Cuisine • New Orleans is the home of Creole cuisine • Combines the cooking techniques of the French with the ingredients of the Africans, Caribbeans, Spanish and Native Americans • Gumbo • Soup that reflects various cultures of Southern Louisiana • Recipes vary in their combination of meats, poultry, seafood, okra and other vegetables • Family recipes are often handed down through generations • Jambalaya • Traditional Creole rice dish • Rice, seasonings, shellfish, poultry and/or sausage • Other Creole specialties • Beignets: deep-fried squares of bread dough with powdered sugar • Café au lait and café brulot: coffee mixtures • Pralines: sweet, rich candy made with sugar, pecans and sometimes milk or buttermilk • Your Description Goes Here

  25. Cajun Cuisine • Hearty fare of rural Southern Louisiana • Reflects the foods and cooking methods of the Acadians (French-speaking immigrants from Nova Scotia, Canada), French, Native Americans, Africans and Spanish • Characterized by gumbos and jambalayas • Frequent ingredients in Cajun cooking • Crawfish, okra, rice, pecans, beans, andouille (smoked pork sausage) • Many dishes center around game and seafood locally available • Traditional Cajun dishes • Chaudin: braised pig stomach stuffed with ground pork, onions, bell peppers, ,garlic and diced yams • Rice dressing: rice cooked with bits of chicken liver, chicken gizzard and/or ground pork and seasoned with parsley and onion • Tartesdouces: pieces made with soft, sweet crust and fillings like custard, blackberry, coconut or sweet potato • Your Description Goes Here

  26. Southern Menu Southern Fried Chicken Squash Pudding Greens with Vinegar and Oil Dressing Buttermilk Biscuits Pecan Pie Chicory Coffee • Your Description Goes Here

  27. Mid-West • North Dakota • South Dakota • Nebraska • Kansas • Oklahoma • Minnesota • Wisconsin • Iowa • Missouri • Illinois • Indiana • Michigan • Ohio • Your Description Goes Here Oklahoma

  28. Mid-West • Called the “bread-basket” of the nation • One of the world’s most agriculturally productive regions due to rich soil, good climate and advanced farming techniques • Lots of corn, wheat, soybeans, beef, pork, lamb, poultry, fish, dairy products, and fruits and vegetables • Food plays a large part at most Mid-West gatherings • Fairs, festivals and picnics • Festivals in cities (Apple Festival) • Potlucks and buffet dinners • Your Description Goes Here

  29. Mid-West • Cuisine • Staples: broiled steak, roast beef, baked and hash brown potatoes, corn on the cob • Foods from Mid-West: coleslaw, fresh tomatoes from garden, home baked rolls, apple pie, brownies • Mid-West breakfast: fruit, hot cereal or cornmeal mush, pancakes, bacon, eggs, toast, coffee • Foods from Mid-West immigrants: Swedish meatballs, Greek moussaka, German bratwurst, Polish sausage, Italian lasagna • Your Description Goes Here

  30. Mid-West Menu Broiled Steak Baked Potatoes Sauteed Zucchini Sliced Tomatoes Warm Whole Wheat Bread Deep Dish Apple Pie Milk Coffee • Your Description Goes Here

  31. West and Southwest • Montana • Wyoming • Idaho • Colorado • Utah • Arizona • New Mexico • Nevada • Texas • Your Description Goes Here

  32. West and Southwest • Land of contrasts – abandoned mining towns, desolate deserts, sprawling ranches, mountains, plateaus and oil fields • Westerners tend to eat simply • Enjoy meat and game, homemade breads and biscuits, locally grown fruits and veggies • Beef plays an important part in diet • Lamb is sometimes eaten – roasted or stewed • Antelope, rabbit, deer and pheasant popular wild game • Southwest associated with cowboys and chuck wagons • Also influenced by Native Americans, Spaniards and Mexicans • Native Americans: corn, squash, beans • Spanish: cattle, sheep, saffron, olive oil, anise • Aztecs of Mexico: red and green peppers • Your Description Goes Here

  33. West and Southwest • Beef • Staple food of Southwest • Used by trail cooks to make stews and chili • First chili made with beef cubes, peppers and seasonings (no beans) • Adopted spicy foods from Mexico • Beans, corn, tortillas, tostadas, tacos • Tamales: mixture of cornmeal and peppered ground meat wrapped in corn husks and steamed • Sopapillas: sweet fried pastries • Barbeques important in region • Many fruits and veggies grow year-round • Texas: grapefruit, oranges, strawberries • Rio Grande valley: melons, lettuce and others • Your Description Goes Here

  34. Southwestern Menu Nachos Barbequed Beef Short Ribs Three Bean Salad Tossed Greens with Ranch Dressing Mexican Cornbread Sopapillas Coffee • Your Description Goes Here

  35. Pacific Coast • Alaska • Washington • Oregon • California • Your Description Goes Here

  36. Pacific Coast • Areas of Pacific Coast vary widely in geography, climate, culture and food customs • Most parts of California have rich, fertile soil; warm, sunny climate; adequate rainfall • Fruits and veggies of all kinds produced in California • Avocados, papayas, pomegranates, dates, Chinese cabbage, oranges, grapefruit, lettuce, tomatoes • Oceans and inland lakes provide fish and shellfish • Shad, tuna, salmon, abalone, lobsters, crabs, shrimp, oysters • Many foods from CA available in Oregon and Washington • Also available in Oregon and Washington • Peaches, apples, strawberries, apricots, raspberries, blackberries, blueberries, boysenberries • Steak, chops and other US fare make up remainder of Pacific Northwest diet • Your Description Goes Here

  37. Pacific Coast • Cooking techniques are simple • Take advantage of natural flavors and colors • Bake or broil fresh fish and shellfish • Serve veggies and fruits fresh • Immigrants who settled in region also influenced food • Chinese, Japanese, Koreans, Polynesians contributed native foods and dishes – chop suey • Mexicans – tamales and enchiladas • Prospectors – sourdough bread • Your Description Goes Here

  38. Alaska • In south Alaska, climate is more mild and vegetable, grain and dairy farms dot the countryside • Alaskan meat specialties: caribou sausage and reindeer steaks • Other Alaskan specialties: • Fiddlehead ferns: young leaves of certain ferns eaten as greens • Raw rose hips: the ripened false fruit of the rosebush • Cranberry catsup • Other favorites: rabbit, bear, Alaskan king crab, salmon, trout, blueberries, huckleberries, cranberries • Your Description Goes Here

  39. Pacific Coast Menu Salmon Steaks with Dill Sauce New Potatoes and Peas Avocado Salad Sourdough Bread Blackberry Buckle Iced Tea • Your Description Goes Here

  40. Hawaiian Islands • Your Description Goes Here

  41. Hawaiian Islands • Polynesians were first to settle • Christian missionaries and Europeans came to Hawaii in 1800s – some began large sugar plantations • US annexed Hawaii in 1898; became state in 1959 • During last century, Hawaii has grown rapidly – three largest industries are pineapple, sugarcane and tourism • Traditional Hawaiian diet consisted mainly of: • Poi: smooth paste made from starchy root of taro plant • Limu: seaweed (often eaten as a relish) • Fish • Men traditionally prepare meals; couldn’t eat at same table as women or cook food in same ovens • Your Description Goes Here

  42. Hawaiian Islands • Current Hawaiian diet consists of three meals • Breakfast consists of foods from the mainland • Lunch and dinner may incorporate more traditional Hawaiian foods • Various groups of immigrants have contributed different foods to Hawaiian culture • Polynesians: coconuts and breadfruit • European traders: chicken and pork • Missionaries: stews, chowders, corn dishes • Indians: curries • Chinese laborers (brought over to work in sugar fields): rice, bean sprouts, Chinese cabbage, snow peas, soybeans, bamboo shoots, stir-fry techniques • Japanese: variety of rice and fish dishes, pickled foods • Has led to creation of Hawaiian markets with an amazing variety of foods available • Your Description Goes Here

  43. Hawaiian Islands • Luaus • Elaborate outdoor feasts still popular today • Kaluapuaa – whole, young pig dressed, stuffed and cooked in a pit • Bananas, sweet potatoes, meat or seafood dishes may be wrapped in leaves and roasted with pig to be served at luau • Poi dishes also served • Musical entertainment, singing and dancing usually accompany a luau • Your Description Goes Here

  44. Hawaiian Menu Shrimp Curry Rice Spinach with Evaporated Milk Banana Biscuits Tropical Fruit Medley Coffee • Your Description Goes Here

  45. The Foods of Mexico Life Planning 2nd Block

  46. Where is Mexico???

  47. Geography and Climate • Deserts, mountains, grasslands, woodlands, tropical rain forests – all found in Mexico • Climate differs from region to region • Much of Mexico is mountainous with valleys separating the different ranges • Some regions are wet and humid • Nearly half of Mexico is arid or semiarid • Both geography and climate affect food customs • Near water: diet includes lots of fish • Area near US: too dry for large scale crop production but suitable for raising cattle – beef is staple food • Southern Gulf Coast: variety of tropical fruits and veggies • Central Plateau: adequate moisture and cool temperatures – profitable production of corn and beans

  48. Mexican Culture • Original inhabitants of Mexico = Aztecs • Very advanced civilization for their time • 1520 – Hernando Cortes and conquistadores explored and plundered Mexico • Spanish controlled Mexico except for a few years in middle of the 1800s • Greatly affected development of Mexican culture • Architecture, language and food customs

  49. Mexican Lifestyle • Living Quarters • Most are simple • Hand-carved beds, tables and chairs • Handmade dishes and utensils • Families • Close-knit • Children learn to help parents at early age • Rural children: work in fields, do housework and take care of younger siblings • City children: get jobs to supplement family income

  50. Mexican Holidays • Most holidays center around religious celebrations as most Mexicans are Roman Catholic • Feast of Epiphany • January 6 • Falls at the end of a 22-day celebration of Christmas • Celebrates the coming of three kings to see the infant Jesus • People gather to share a special supper, which includes a ring-shaped cake with a tiny plastic baby baked inside. The person who gets the piece of cake with the baby hosts a tamales party for all who are present. The party is held on February 2 which is Candlemas Day. • Candlesmas Day – day Jesus’ parents took him to the temple in Jerusalem

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