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Indigenous cuisine of the Americas

Indigenous cuisine of the Americas includes all cuisines and food practices of the Indigenous peoples of the Americas. Contemporary Native peoples retain a varied culture of traditional foods, along with the addition of some post-contact foods that have become customary and even iconic of present-day Indigenous American social gatherings (for example, frybread). Foods like cornbread, turkey, cranberry, blueberry, hominy, and mush have been adopted into the cuisine of the broader United States population from Native American cultures.

In other cases, documents from the early periods of Indigenous American contact with European, African, and Asian peoples have allowed the recovery and revitalization of Indigenous food practices that had formerly passed out of popularity.


The most important Indigenous American crops have generally included Indian corn (or maize, from the Taíno name for the plant), beans, squash, pumpkins, sunflowers, wild rice, sweet potatoes, tomatoes, peppers, peanuts, avocados, papayas, potatoes and chocolate.[1]


Indigenous cuisine of the Americas uses domesticated and wild native ingredients.[2] As the Americas cover a large range of biomes, and there are more than 574 currently federally recognized Native American tribes in the US alone, Indigenous cuisine can vary significantly by region and culture.[3][4] For example, North American Native cuisine differs from Southwestern and Mexican cuisine in its simplicity and directness of flavor.

Cornbread

coarsely ground corn used to make grits

Hominy

small, savory, deep-fried round ball made from cornmeal-based batter

Hush puppy

Indian fritter

soup made from ground hickory nuts

Kanuchi

pig liver, parts of pig heads, cornmeal and spices

Livermush

Sofkee, corn soup or drink, sour

[24]

, same as pepperpot, a soup believed to have originated in Cuba before Columbus' arrival. The soup mixes a variety of meats, tubers, and peppers.

Ajiaco

, the origin of the English word barbecue, a method of slow-grilling meat over a fire pit.

Barbacoa

a style of cooking meat that originated with the Taíno of Jamaica. Meat was applied with a dry rub of allspice, Scotch bonnet pepper, and perhaps additional spices, before being smoked over fire or wood charcoal.

Jerk

, a crispy, thin flatbread made from cassava root widespread in the Pre-Columbian Caribbean and Amazonia.

Casabe

a Jamaican bread made from cassava and water, today this bread is fried and made with coconut milk.

Bammy

, a Puerto Rican food similar to the tamale; made with cornmeal or cornmeal and mashed cassave together.

Guanime

, a dish that may have also been called hallaca and originated from Puerto Rico. Pasteles were once made with cassava and taro mashed into a masa onto a taro leaf. They are then stuffed with meat and wrapped.

Pasteles

or fungi, a cornmeal mush.

Funche

, a sauce, condiment, or thickening agent made by boiling down the extracted juices of bitter cassava root.

Cassareep

a tea made in Hispaniola (Dominican Republic and Haiti).

Mama Juana

a spicy stew of Taíno origin based on meat, vegetables, chili peppers, and boiled-down cassava juice, with a legacy stretching from Cuba, Colombia coast and to Guyana.

Pepperpot

popular as herbal remedies in the Virgin Islands and other parts of the Caribbean, often derived from indigenous sources, such as ginger thomas, soursop, inflammation bush, kenip, wormgrass, worry wine, and many other leaves, barks, and herbs.

Bush teas

Ouicou, a fermented, cassava-based beer brewed by the Caribs of the .

Lesser Antilles

or taumalin, a Carib sauce made from the green liver meat of lobsters, chile pepper, and lime juice.

Taumali

This region comprises the cultures of the Arawaks, the Caribs, and the Ciboney. The Taíno of the Greater Antilles were the first New World people to encounter Columbus. Prior to European contact, these groups foraged, hunted, and fished. The Taíno cultivated cassava, sweet potato, maize, beans, squash, pineapple, peanut, and peppers. Today these cultural groups have mostly assimilated into the surrounding population, but their culinary legacy lives on.

a native to most of the Andes region, this small rodent has been cultivated for at least 4000 years.

Grilled guinea pig

a nightshade relative native to Peru.

Fried green tomatoes

a corn liquor.

Saraiaka

, a generic name for any number of Indigenous beers found in South America. Though chichas made from various types of corn are the most common in the Andes, chicha in the Amazon Basin frequently use manioc. Variations found throughout the continent can be based on amaranth, quinoa, peanut, potato, coca, and many other ingredients.

Chicha

, a Peruvian, sweet, unfermented drink made from purple corn, fruits, and spices.

Chicha morada

, a thickened, spiced fruit drink based on the Andean blackberry, traditional to the Day of the Dead ceremonies held in Ecuador, it is typically served with guagua de pan, a bread shaped like a swaddled infant (formerly made from cornmeal in Pre-Columbian times), though other shapes can be found in various regions.

Colada morada

porridge.

Quinoa

a type of dried meat.

Ch'arki

similar to modern-day tamales, a thick mixture of corn, herbs and onion, cooked in a corn-leaf wrapping. The name is modern, meaning bow-tie, because of the shape in which it's wrapped.

Humitas

(from the Quechua ruqru) is a hearty thick stew popular along the Andes mountain range. It is one of the national dishes of Argentina and Bolivia.

Locro

Mazamorra morada, a thick, sweet pudding made from ground purple corn and fruit. Sold in mix form in Peru.

[56]

, a Peruvian tea made from steeped coca leaves. It is commonly sipped by Indigenous people living at high altitudes in the Andes to prevent elevation illnesses.

Mate de coca

, stew cooked in a hautía oven.

Pachamanca

Peruvian potatoes covered in a spicy, peanut-based sauce called Huancaína (Wan-ka-EE-na) sauce.

Papa a la Huancaína

Patasca, spicy stew made from boiled maize, potatoes, and dried meat.

[57]

, raw fish marinated in lime juice. One of Peru's national dishes.

Ceviche

or tostada, fried golden hominy.

Cancha

, salsa of Bolivia.

Llajwa

mashed-potato cakes from Ecuador.

Llapingachos

(togosh), a traditional Quechua food prepared from fermented potato pulp.

Tocosh

an Andean grinding slab used in conjunction with a small stone uña

Batan

Burén, a clay griddle used by the .

Taíno

a griddle used since pre-Columbian times in Mexico and Central America for a variety of purposes, especially to cook tortillas.

Comal

Cuia, a gourd used for drinking mate in South America.

, a stone grinding slab used with a stone mano or metlapil to process meal in Mesoamerica and one of the most notable Pre-Columbian artifacts in Costa Rica.

Metate

a device used by Mesoamerican royalty for frothing cacao drinks.

Molinillo

, a basalt stone bowl, used with a tejolote to grind ingredients as a Mesoamerican form of mortar and pestle.

Molcajete

, an Andean earthenware bowl.

Paila

Cooking baskets were woven from a variety of local fibers and sometimes coated with clay to improve durability. The notable thing about basket cooking and some native clay pot cooking is that the heat source, i.e. hot stones or charcoal, is used inside the utensil rather than outside. (Also see .)

Cookware and bakeware

The earliest utensils, including bowls, knives, spoons, grinders, and griddles, were made from all kinds of materials, such as rock and animal bone. Gourds were also initially cultivated, hollowed, and dried to be used as bowls, spoons, ladles, and storage containers.


Many Indigenous cultures also developed elaborate ceramics for making bowls and cooking pots, and basketry for making containers. Nobility in the Andean and Mesoamerican civilizations were even known to have utensils and vessels smelted from gold, silver, copper, or other minerals.

black trumpet

chicken of the woods

chanterelles

hen of the woods

(certain species)

Lichen

morels

oyster mushrooms

puffball

Lois Ellen Frank

Sean Sherman

a member of the Muwekma Ohlone[58][59][60]

Vincent Medina

(1994). America's First Cuisines. Austin, Texas: University of Texas Press. ISBN 978-0-292-71159-4.

Coe, Sophie D.

Hetzler, Richard (2010). The Mitsitam Cafe cookbook : recipes from the Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian. Washington, D.C.: . ISBN 978-1-55591-747-0.

Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian

Niethammer, Carolyn (1974). American Indian Food and Lore. New York: A Simon & Schuster Macmillan Company.  0-02-010000-0.

ISBN

Archived August 16, 2011, at the Wayback Machine

Traditional Chiricahua recipes

American Indian Health and Diet Project