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44

MY

ROUSES

EVERYDAY

maY | JUNE 2016

D

espite our current obsession with

chefs, the real basis for a cuisine

is the food people cook and serve

at home. Even in cities that have many

restaurants serving local cuisine, it is still

not the restaurants that nurture the flavors,

the dishes and the cultural foodways of the

city. It is the home cooks, who prepare food

to share with their families and friends, who

are the guardians of our food traditions and

who are the transmitters of those traditions

into the future.

Before the coming of the Europeans to

settle in the South, the native peoples

prepared meals that reflected the great

natural bounty of the area. They cultivated

and tended to oyster beds, gathered fish,

crabs and shrimp, caught crawfish, hunted

duck and turkey and deer, tended corn,

pecans, tomatoes, onions, sweet potatoes,

peppers, peanuts, pumpkin and beans.

Despite its variety this list does not reflect

all that was available and exploited by native

people. Through trade they had access to

such things as chocolate and potatoes. This

diverse natural pantry formed the basis of

plentiful, generous, and complex foodways.

The Europeans established themselves in

the region in the late 17

th

and early 18

th

century. In the earliest days the Europeans,

whether English, French, German or

Spanish,were hard pressed to duplicate their

traditional dishes and cultural practices. But

there was an abundance of local product

and there were also ships bringing supplies.

The food that developed was home cooking

and street food. With the addition of

enslaved Africans who worked as cooks

as well as agricultural workers, the region’s

home kitchens became the crucible for the

development of what has come to be known

as Southern cuisine.

So many cultural traditions include food

as a central component that food and

kitchen have become the standard bearers

of our culture. Parents cook with their

children as a way to pass down tradition.

Families eat together as a way to share their

love. Cooking is a respected skill. Good

home cooks are honored and recognized,

competing with each other to make the

best gumbo or the best red beans and rice at

festival competitions.

K itchen Traditions

by

Liz Williams, Director of the Southern Food & Beverage Museum

the

Pork

issue