1 / 15

IV. National Foods/Ethnic Foods

IV. National Foods/Ethnic Foods. Introduction Regional Cuisines in pre-Industrial North America French Gastronomy: the First National Cuisine Ethnic Foods and National Cuisines in North America. 1. II. Regional Cuisines in Pre-Industrial North America.

joye
Download Presentation

IV. National Foods/Ethnic Foods

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. IV. National Foods/Ethnic Foods Introduction Regional Cuisines in pre-Industrial North America French Gastronomy: the First National Cuisine Ethnic Foods and National Cuisines in North America 1

  2. II. Regional Cuisines in Pre-Industrial North America How did the national foods of the US grow out of earlier regional cuisines? • Diets of the colonial era • English & French • Spanish • African • Regional Cuisines in the United States from around American Revolution (1765-83)

  3. The United States in North America, 1800

  4. II. Regional Cuisines in Pre-Industrial North America • Southwestern US • Navajo herder: 2,000 sheep, 100 Mexican goats, 50 cattle, and 200 horses • Zunis, Pimas, Papagos • Meso-American foods made with wheat and corn, mixed with European and Mexican fruits and vegetables • Northeastern US • New England: corn, pumpkins, maple syrup, seafood, light breads • Pennsylvania: sausages, coleslaw

  5. II. Regional Cuisines in Pre-Industrial North America • Southeastern US • African influence: Hoppin’ John, yams, watermelon • Upcountry • Cherokee nation • Canada • blueberry cake, maple syrup, seafood, tourtierre • Elizabeth Simcoe • Creolization

  6. III. French Gastronomy: the First National Cuisine How did the French pioneer the idea of a national cuisine? • French Revolution, 1789 • American Revolution, 1765-83 • Germany, Italy, and Japan as nation states, 1870s • Pilcher: national cuisines “must be imagined from diverse local foods” • Chef Anton Careme • Brillat-Savarin, Physiology of Taste (1826) • Science in the Kitchen and The Art of Cooking Well (1891) • Franciso Bulnes 8

  7. Ratatouille by Brad Bird and Jan Pinkava, 2007

  8. III. French Gastronomy: the First National Cuisine • Mexican Independence, 1821 • Francisco Bulnes – wheat as the “progressive grain,” 1899 • Mexican nationalist’s claim enchiladas, tamales and tortillas, 1910s

  9. IV. Ethnic Foods and National Cuisines in North America How did ethnic foods and a national cuisine develop in the United States? • New Imperialism (“Scramble for Africa,” late 19th century • 50 million people migrate, 1850s-1914 • Immigration to Canada • Scottish, Irish, and English, 1820s • 4.5 million immigrants, many from eastern and southern Europe,1880-1920

  10. IV. Ethnic Foods and National Cuisines in North America

  11. US and Canadian Westward Expansion, 1803-1912

  12. IV. Ethnic Foods and National Cuisines in North America • Chinese and Gold Rushs • California, 1848 • British Columbia, 1858 • 15,000 Chinese migrants for work on CPR, 1880s • Italian immigration to the US, from 1870s • Italian immigration to Canada, from c. 1900

More Related