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Posted: Thu Jun 08, 2006 7:47 pm
Regional Access This thread is to discuss your personal tastes and how your ethnic background and current region you live in have affected that... alot of people have already posted some of their specialties in their introduction page this page's purpose is to discuss that even further and in greater detail This Thread used to be a strictly Polish food thread which did well in the early days Ive moved all my Polish recipes to the cookbook so they arent gone I decided to open up the thread to discuss all regions and ethnicities!
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Posted: Tue Aug 22, 2006 4:32 pm
For Example Im Margaret my family is of Polish, German and Prussian heritage I grew up near Gilroy California though Ive been travelling alot with Circuses and Faires since about 13 years old and Ive been a vegan for over a year! being a vegan has the biggest influence on my food choices because obviously I cant eat meat, dairy or eggs my specialty has now become Vegan foods (and lord help you if you ask me to cook chicken for you...) I like to make thick hearty soups and I also like baking... and use alot of Garlic in my recipes I prefer tangy or spicy foods to sweet
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Posted: Wed Aug 23, 2006 5:33 pm
I was born in West Virginia, though we moved to Virginia soon after. We moved quite a bit, but both my parents were born in West Virginia, so we ate farm type food. My mother baked from scratch, rolls, biscuits mostly. And pie crust OH my! She was of the old school, using lard for the shortning and keeping everything icy cold, not working it too much. Lard produces the flakiest crust in the world, and also made fluffy, flakey biscuits.
We ate "soup beans" which are pinto beans with some onion and bacon in them, served on a plate with the cooking liquid. This is always served with cornbread. Mom's cornbread was not sweet, and had no corn in it, just flour and corn meal (yellow) with the rest of the ingredients.
We ate a lot of green beans, spinach and corn cut from the cob with dinner. Also, we always had some kind of salad, usually green salad or cole slaw. And potatoes... usually mashed. We had meals by the day of the week... Friday was fish day (we're not Catholic, but why not), meatloaf day, Swiss steak day, chicken day, spaghetti day.... Sunday breakfast was pancakes or waffles, yummy. We used real maple syrup, cheaper in those days.
My father always had a vegetable garden, and my goodness, corn on the cob has never been fresher or sweeter. Right off the stalk and into the pot. We always had fruit, grape vine, apple tree, pear tree, sour cherries.... Mom made jams and jellies from the fruit. And applesace with pears, grape juice....
Farm tradition feeds people well... farm work is hard, and in season, there are farm hands to feed. The meals my grandmother served were incredible, and her daughters all helped. They laid a true groaning board! LOL A farm meal included at least two kinds of meat (always chicken, often beef, sometimes pork), potatoes, two or three vegetable side dishes, one salad, fresh baked bread or biscuits, and at least two kinds of dessert, a fruit pie and perhaps a cake or gingerbread. Those guys worked hard, and the mid day meal was usually the biggest meal of the day for them. Fresh lemonade and coffee were served, and milk or buttermilk as well.
The tradition was for the women to get all the food on the table, then retire to the big kitchen and its big table, where they ate. Separation of the sexes, but each had its own duties, and the "women talk" was great... at about age 8 or 9, I was found hiding under the kitchen table (it had a long table cloth), listening to the women talk about sex, having babies, and all the things I knew nothing about. blaugh
There was a short discussion, and the decision was I could stay, to learn a bit. However, I noticed the conversation was a bit dull after that.
Ah, memories.
whee
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Posted: Wed Aug 23, 2006 5:56 pm
wow sounds like a great time and even better food! My family is Catholic too though we never really designated our food like that we arent good Catholics -_- (ok this is really weird concept for a thread so like this would be the part where I had any questions on technique or debates on methods to make cornbread for example I would do so... but I dont! so yay thanks for the lovely story MustangDragon!)
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Posted: Wed Aug 23, 2006 10:35 pm
Ballerina Galoshes wow sounds like a great time and even better food! My family is Catholic too though we never really designated our food like that we arent good Catholics -_- (ok this is really weird concept for a thread so like this would be the part where I had any questions on technique or debates on methods to make cornbread for example I would do so... but I dont! so yay thanks for the lovely story MustangDragon!) You're welcome, and thanks! Now tell us about the kinds of food (recipe not needed just a general description) your family ate, and what you eat now.
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Posted: Thu Aug 24, 2006 3:52 pm
my Grandparents had to deal with alot of children ...ALOT of children srsly so there were always plenty of sweets around... but I never liked sweets but I loved to bake so every few weeks or so when we were running low my Grandma and I would bake a cake or cookies or some sort of sweets like that My Grandma has this one recipe for cookies which is so good it's my sister's favorite it's like a flakey pastry cookie with nuts and cinnamon My grandma tried to cook whatever was "cool" like pizza and tacos and things which is really sad that she felt she had to Americanize herself like that but Holidays were sacred My Family is mostly Catholic and Celebrates holidays like Easter and Christmas but my grandma wouldnt have that she made sure on Christmas and our birthdays we had plenty of Ladkas ^^ we always had lamb on easter ALWAYS! it never changed we went to mass at 5am then we went home for coffee and then got started on the lamb my grandpa was a huge Catholic born and raised hardcore so he never let anyone fudge on Easter... never our Birthdays sure Christmas maybe but never Easter I spent pretty much my whole childhood with my Grandparents and Im very proud of it My father was in the mental hospital for a long time and my mom couldnt take care of me... the only time I wasnt with them I was on the road doing horse shows or Faires or Circuses... I ate alot of carney food and lots of Candy!!!!! I like this one candy they had with was like a braided marshmallow it was pink and blue and yellow they were so good! now I mostly stick to Renaissance Faires but I occassionally go other places Renaissance food is nuts good but you'll have a heart attack Turkey legs Shepard's pie fried Raviolli Gyros all the good faire stuff! now that Im a vegan though a whole new world of food has been opened up to me Hawaiian, Thai, I even changed some of my favorite foods so they're vegan! sure there are some restrictions and I know there are some things I will never be able to eat again but Im ok with that... because I have so much more now but I have so much respect and admiration for my Gramma now how she grew up in persecution lived in a new country, survived cancer, celebrated new holidays and religious practices, raised her children neices nephews and grandchildren, and could still could cook a kickass meal! wow thats long nobody quote this ninja
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Posted: Fri Feb 02, 2007 5:41 pm
HI I WAS RAISED IN WISCONSIN THE DAIRY STATE AND YES THO I DIDNT LIVE ON A FARM -WAS RAISED ON FARM FOOD , SINCE I HAVE MANY AUNTS N UNCLES WHO OWN FARMS. I LIVED IN A TINY TOWN WHERE PEOPLE DID MOST OF THERE OWN GARDENING AND PRESERVING FOODS AS MUCH AS THEY COULD. IN THAT AREA MOST PEOPLE COOKED LIKE THE PENNSLVANIA DUTCH RECIPES -WHICH ARE CLOSE TO AMISH STYLE. VERY WHOLESOME AND HEARTY FOOD. I DONT CARE FOR PROCESSED FOODS TOO MUCH THO IT IS NICE NOW AND THEN FOR THERE CONENVIENCE. WE PRESERVED MANY FOODS LIKE MOST HOMEGROWN VEGETABLES AND SO IN THE WINTER IT WAS MANY HEARTY SOUPS AND APPLE PIES ANYTIME. WITH HOMEGROWN VEGGIES, FARMED RAISED MEATS AND THE WHOLESOME CHEESES -WOW CANT GET ANY BETTER THAN THAT. LOTS OF BEEF STEW AND BISCUITS AND HOME-MADE BREADS WHERE A REGULAR ALONG WITH DIFFERENT SAUSAGES AND CHICKEN IN THOSE DAYS WERE ALOT BIGGER AND TASTIER THAN TODAY PUNY BIRDS. MY MOM TAUGHT MANY THINGS WHICH I STILL KEEP UP THE TRADITION AND NOW HAVE PASSED ON DOWN TO MY CHILDREN, EVEN MAKING HOME-MADE SOAP. YES IM A BIT OLDER THAN MOST HERE IN GAIA BUT I DO SO ENJOY THE PEOPLE HERE IN THE GUILD AND THE RECIPES . THERE ARE MANY TALENTED PEOPLE HERE AND I WOULD SURELY LIKE TO SEE THIS GUILD BLOSSOM A WHOLE LOT MORE. I ALSO AM A CATHOLIC BUT THAT HAS NOTHING TO DO WITH THE AREA FOODS THAT WE ARE ACCUSTOMED TOO.
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Posted: Sun Apr 15, 2007 8:23 pm
I love reading about what other people eat in other areas.
I was born and raised in Chicago of polish/german descent. I grew up watching my mom and grandma cook what I now call "poor cooking" I remember my grandma making chicken feet soup, pigs feet, tripe, tongue and gizzards among other things. Grandma's favorite saying was she cooked anything except the squeal (of the pig)
My mom was more the 50's /60's cook. Lots of casseroles, Meatloaf, home made pizzas, Hearty soups and chilis and pasta. Stuff she could make a lot of to feed a family of 5.
One thing I remember was my grandpa never ate things twice. Heaven forbid he was served "leftovers". He would come home at lunchtime and eat what grandma was preparing for dinner, then when dinner came around he would want a totally different meal. She was always cooking. We would go visit grandma and be invited to lunch. she would say " I don't have much just a few things in the fridge." Open the door and start pulling out pots, plates, foil wrapped packages and covered bowls. Yep all the leftovers gramps wouldn't eat a second time. And they were truely awesome. For such a small refridgerator, it sure held A LOT! For years i was sure there was another fridge on the other side of the wall with the amount of food she would pull out. I don't think gramps ever got the idea that many things taste better the second day.
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