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- 3 de Feb, 2013
The Seckel pear is the only widely available pear cultivar native to America. Cranberries grow throughout the Northern Hemisphere, but they're typically associated with the northern United States.
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I do sort of wish that American cuisine drew more from the continent's native species and recipes rather than importing British cuisine wholesale, and that an elite British-native hybrid cuisine had further developed before the influx of mass European migration in the 19th century. As of now, native cuisine is a footnote, mostly supplanted by those of the successor cultures. Even high-end 'modern' native cuisine is really that same European cuisine with a rug (a Bison hide?) thrown over it.I tried to figure out American cuisine before and I came to the conclusion that at it's core, US food is a mix of British and German dishes. (Most of the stuff I like is, anyway.)
Bob Evans restaurant is the most basic American food place I can think of right now. https://www.bobevans.com/menu
I wanted to make a separate post for this:I do sort of wish that American cuisine drew more from the continent's native species and recipes rather than importing British cuisine wholesale, and that an elite British-native hybrid cuisine had further developed before the influx of mass European migration in the 19th century. As of now, native cuisine is a footnote, mostly supplanted by those of the successor cultures. Even high-end 'modern' native cuisine is really that same European cuisine with a rug (a Bison hide?) thrown over it.
That being said, American cuisine is very regional, especially in borderland regions and places that had culturally matured before mass travel- i.e. the Southwest, Louisiana and the general American South. The most unique it'll ever get is in those regions, especially in New Orleans, and maybe in the 20th century working class recipes like the garbage plates.
As of now, I don't believe that there is a fashionable 'American' cuisine at the forefront, as the Euro-centric nature of it has become a sort of faux-pas to liberal senses. It has ultimately dissolved, and though many people would still enjoy a hamburger or a roast turkey, the newer generations do their own thing now, especially as further waves of immigration have essentially brought the world's cuisines into America.
I wanted to make a separate post for this:
I think the Julia Child's phenomenon kind of ruined American cruisine. This guy https://youtube.com/watch?v=9i3zKU8Q6ZI hits on some interesting points about how the celebrity chefs are spoiled brats that have a lot more than the (for example) Waffle House cook. I think the celebrity chefs who have spent their life "training in Europe" to be a chef have brought nothing to American cuisine. The food is either too expensive in time or money, or it's with ingredients that aren't in the common home cook's pantry cause it came from the "healthy food store".
America's a huge place! Where IS the "New England" recipes with ingredients from stuff local to NE, or where IS the rhubard inspired plates. Like it's nothing amazing in America and I don't know why we have so many recipes we love and pass down, but have nothing to offer the rest of the world.
Eggy toast!Can I piggyback in on this please? I love me a good breakfast. I tend to to my grocery shopping early, like first thing when the store opens, and I fancy doing an American style breakfast. Any suggestions would be awesome please. I love eggs, can make US (Ie, real, none of that crepe faggotry) pancakes, and will eat anything at least once. If anyone fancies throwing some suggestions my way I'd appreciate it!
Do americans visit the coffee shop every morning? Is it that weird ass perculated coffee or real coffee?
We've basically always had coffee. It's so ubiquitous I really would put it in the category of "American food" not in the sense that we created or improved upon it, but because it's just so important to us that sometimes we don't even notice it. Like asking a fish to see water.If I had to guess, they were probably more popular from the 50s through the 80s or so.
Yeah, whoever's quoting Wikipedia is a retard. Bruschetta isn't anything like garlic bread, garlic isn't even a necessary ingredient.You can even see it in the comments. Joe is correct. Garlic bread as we know it comes from America.
Southern foodways are primarily American Indian. Some African and European crops were added as well as the African and European livestocks, but most of the core vegetables and cooking techniques are the same ones that the Five Civilized Tribes based their agriculture around (extremely heavy use of beans and corn) and barbecuing was imported from the Caribbean where it originated from those tribes.I do sort of wish that American cuisine drew more from the continent's native species and recipes rather than importing British cuisine wholesale, and that an elite British-native hybrid cuisine had further developed before the influx of mass European migration in the 19th century. As of now, native cuisine is a footnote, mostly supplanted by those of the successor cultures. Even high-end 'modern' native cuisine is really that same European cuisine with a rug (a Bison hide?) thrown over it.
That being said, American cuisine is very regional, especially in borderland regions and places that had culturally matured before mass travel- i.e. the Southwest, Louisiana and the general American South. The most unique it'll ever get is in those regions, especially in New Orleans (with its own elite cuisine utilizing local ingredients developed for the creoles), and maybe in the 20th century working class recipes like the garbage plates.
As of now, I don't believe that there is a fashionable 'American' cuisine at the forefront, as the Euro-centric nature of it has become a sort of faux-pas to liberal senses. The notion of a national cuisine has ultimately dissolved, and though many people would still enjoy a hamburger or a roast turkey, the newer generations do their own thing now, especially as further waves of immigration have essentially brought the world's cuisines into America.
Italians use tomatoes and Chinese + Indian people use peppers from the new world.I do sort of wish that American cuisine drew more from the continent's native species and recipes rather than importing British cuisine wholesale, and that an elite British-native hybrid cuisine had further developed before the influx of mass European migration in the 19th century. As of now, native cuisine is a footnote, mostly supplanted by those of the successor cultures. Even high-end 'modern' native cuisine is really that same European cuisine with a rug (a Bison hide?) thrown over it.
That being said, American cuisine is very regional, especially in borderland regions and places that had culturally matured before mass travel- i.e. the Southwest, Louisiana and the general American South. The most unique it'll ever get is in those regions, especially in New Orleans (with its own elite cuisine utilizing local ingredients developed for the creoles), and maybe in the 20th century working class recipes like the garbage plates.
As of now, I don't believe that there is a fashionable 'American' cuisine at the forefront, as the Euro-centric nature of it has become a sort of faux-pas to liberal senses. The notion of a national cuisine has ultimately dissolved, and though many people would still enjoy a hamburger or a roast turkey, the newer generations do their own thing now, especially as further waves of immigration have essentially brought the world's cuisines into America.