Jul 28

Grandma Hystad’s Recipes, Drink, Food Information

CONTENTS

RECIPES

KATE’S VEGAN PANCAKES

VEGAN MIXED BERRY MUFFINS

BORCH (SOUP)

OVEN FRIED CHICKEN

MASHED POTATOES

BAKED POTATOES

CINNAMON APPLES

LIGHTSIDE

FOOD WARNING

SALMONELLA OUTBREAK

BAR MIXES

NON-ALCOHOLIC DRINKS

ICED TEA

HOT DRINKS FOR CHILDREN

RECIPES

KATES VEGAN PANCAKES
1 I/3 cup flour (unbleached).
3 Teaspoons.
½ teaspoon salt.
3 tablespoons sugar.
1 egg (egg replacer).
1 ¼  cup milk (Soya milk).
3 tablespoons oil.
¼ teaspoon vanilla .

VEGAN MIXED BERRY MUFFINS

Flour, white, 1.75 cup
Raw sugar, 4 tsp
Baking Powder, 2 tsp
So Good ‘Trim’ Soymilk, 1.25 cup
Egg Replacer, 1 serving
Applesauce, unsweetened, 25 grams
Strawberries, frozen, unsweetened, 0.125 cup,
Blueberries, frozen (unsweetened), 0.125 cup,
Blackberries, frozen (unsweetened), 0.125 cup,
Raspberries, 0.125 cup

Preheat oven to 400 degrees. Spray a 12-cup muffin tin with non-fat cooking spray. In a large bowl, combine all dry ingredients.
In a smaller bowl- combine applesauce and soymilk.

Chop the frozen berries into a manageable size.  Add wet ingredients to the dry, and stir to combine, adding berries as you mix. Using a 1/4 cup measure, scoop into prepared muffin tin (they should be about 2/3 full), bake for 20-25 minutes (when a toothpick inserted comes out clean). Cool in tin for 5 minutes, then turn out to cooling rack.
serve warm.

Number of Servings: 12

VEGETABLE SOUP Borch
2 pounds beef, with soup bone.
2 carrots.
1 medium head of cabbage.
2 average-sized onions.
6 average-sized potatoes.
2 cups canned tomatoes.
6 whole pepper kernels.
1 bay leaf.
A few sprigs of dill.
½ cup chopped beets.
Cover meat with cool water and bring to a boil.
Let simmer until almost tender.  Add water if necessary
to keep meat covered.  One hour before serving, add chopped
vegetables and seasoning.  Potatoes may be cooked separately
before serving.  When ready to serve, remove from heat and
add sour cream.

Grandma’s Oven Fried Chicken
4 ounces……………..(125 ml)……………potato chips
½ cup ………………..(125 ml)……………butter
½ teaspoon ………….(2.5 )………………garlic powder
Melt butter.  Brush chicken with butter.  Crush potato chips with
rolling pin before opening bag.  Mix garlic, salt and pepper with
potato chips.  Shake buttered chicken in potato chip mixture.  Place
on pan skin side up.  Pour rest of mixture over chicken.  Bake at 375 F,
(190 C) for about 1 hour.
YIELD: Coating for 1 fryer
TIME:   Preparation 10 minutes, cooking time approx. 1 hour.

Beef And Potato Cakes
You can use ground meat if desired.  A treat for children.
8 oz. Beef.
8 oz. Potatoes.
1 small 2-3 inch onion chopped finely.
1 egg yolk.
Dark soy sauce.
1 teaspoon salt.
Cook the potatoes and mash.  Mix in egg yolk and salt.  Chop onion finely, brown with 1 tablespoon oil, add ground meat.  Brown for 4 minutes.  Add soy sauce and mix the batch with the potatoes.  Shape into balls the size of golf balls, flatten into cakes.  Heat the cooking pan. Grease lightly with oil, use medium heat to brown the cakes, turn to brown both sides.  If you have a electric skillet set temperature at 340.  When automatic control light blinks, turn cakes over.

MASHED POTATOES
6 boiled potatoes.
2 tablespoons butter.
4 tablespoons hot milk.
½ teaspoon salt.
Mash the cooked potatoes with a potatoe-masher until soft; add the butter, salt, pepper, and milk, and beat all until light and fluffy.  Pile lightly in a hot serving-dish.

BAKED POTATOES
Select smooth, medium-sized potatoes.  Wash well with brush. Bake in a hot oven 45 minutes, or until done.  Break the skins to let the steam escape and serve at once.  If baked potatoes stand they become soggy.

Cinnamon Apples
4 tart apples, sliced.
1 cup sugar.
½ cup water.
½ pound cinnamon candy.
Pare and slice apples into eights. Combine sugar, water and candy to make syrup.  Bring to a boil and when sugar and candy are dissolved, add sliced apples.  Cook until apples are soft.  Makes 4 servings.

LIGHTSIDE
A wife was making breakfast of fried eggs for her husband, when he burst into the kitchen.  “Careful”, he said. CAREFUL! Put in some more butter. Oh WHAT ARE YOU DOING! You are cooking too may at once. TOO MANY! TURN THEM DOWN NOW! Are you CRAZY? USE THE SALT!!! THE SALT!!THE SALT NOW!!

The wife stared at him.  “What in the world is wrong with you?  You think I don’t know how to fry a couple of eggs?”

The husband calmly replied, “I wanted to show you what it feels like when I am driving”.

FOOD WARNING BACTERIA
Bacteria may be present on products when you purchase them. Raw meat, poultry, seafood, and eggs are not sterile. Neither is fresh produce such as lettuce, tomatoes, sprouts, and melons.

Foods, including safely cooked, ready-to-eat foods, can become cross contaminated with bacteria transferred from raw products, meat juices or other contaminated products, or from food handlers with poor personal hygiene.

Botulism, a life-threatening illness caused by the bacteria Clostridium outline, were reported in the United States. Frozen, fully cooked products were suspected of causing these illnesses. The Food Safety and Inspection Service advises all consumers to handle frozen, fully-cooked products in accordance with these food safety recommendations.

Before buying frozen, fully cooked products carefully inspect the container or package. If the package is punctured, torn, partially opened, or damaged in any other way that might expose the contents to the outside environment, do NOT purchase the product.

 
Do not purchase frozen products that appear to have thawed and refrozen. Reject all swollen or gassy containers or spoiled foods.

Buy food from reputable dealers, with a known record of safe handling. Buy frozen products only if they are frozen solid and only if stored in the freezer case. Observe any use-by or sell-by dates on the package.

When you open the container, inspect the product. Do not use products that are discoloured, mouldy, or have an off odour. Do not use products that spurt liquid or foam when the container is opened. Do not taste the product to determine if it is safe.
Follow the preparation instructions on the product label.
Handling Possibly Contaminated Products Report any suspect commercial food products to your local health department.

If a suspect food is opened in your kitchen, thoroughly scrub the can opener or other utensils, containers, counters, etc., that might have contacted the food or its container. Discard any sponges or cloths used in the cleanup. Wash your hands thoroughly. Promptly launder any clothing that might have been splattered upon.

Botulism is a rare but serious paralytic illness caused by a nerve toxin. Symptoms of botulism include double vision, blurred vision, drooping eyelids, slurred speech, difficulty swallowing, dry mouth, and muscle weakness. The illness can cause paralysis, respiratory failure and death. Symptoms usually occur from 18 to 36 hours after eating contaminated food. Anyone concerned about an illness should contact a physician.

Many frozen chicken products, such as chicken Kiev and chicken cordon bleu, may appear to be precooked, but are actually only prebreaded or prebrowned.

Use a meat thermometer and make sure the internal temperature of the chicken is at least 165 degrees Fahrenheit.  . This means really cooking the chicken, in a regular oven or microwave, not merely thawing it.

Salmonella Typhimurium Outbreak

Clearly, what began as an investigation of bulk peanut butter shipped to nursing homes and institutional cafeterias is now much broader.

It includes not just peanut butter, but baked goods and other products containing peanuts that are sold directly to consumers. Health officials say as many as one-third of those who got sick did not recall eating peanut butter.

“The focus is on peanut butter and a wide array of products that might have peanut butter in them,” said Dr. Robert Tauxe, director of the foodborne illness division at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Federal health authorities told consumers on Saturday to avoid eating products that contain peanut butter until they can determine the scope of an outbreak of salmonella food poisoning that may have contributed to six deaths.

“We urge consumers to postpone eating any products that may contain peanut butter until additional information becomes available,” Dr. Stephen Sundlof of the Food and Drug Administration’s Center for Food Safety said in a teleconference with reporters.

Officials said they are focusing on peanut paste, as well as peanut butter, produced at a Blakely, Ga., facility owned by Peanut Corp. of America.  Peanut paste is significant because it can be used in dozens of products, from baked goods to cooking sauces.

Law Firm Information

Fred Pritzker is founder and president of Pritzker Law, a firm with involvement in practically every major food poisoning outbreak including the Peter Pan peanut butter Salmonella outbreak and the Taste of Chicago Salmonella outbreak in 2007, among many others. The firm has collected millions of dollars on behalf of victims of food poisoning. For more information, visit http://www.pritzkerlaw.com/

BAR MIXES

SHANGHAI COCKTAIL

¼ juice of lemon

1-teaspoon anisette

1 ½ ounce Jamaica rum

½ teaspoon grenadine

Shake with ice cubes. Strain into cocktail glass.

MARTINI (sweet)

1-ounce gin

½ ounce Italian vermouth

1dash orange bitters

Stir with ice cubes. Strain into chilled cocktail glass

NON- ALCOHOLIC DRINKS

ICED COFFEE

There are just as many ways of making coffee, as there are different brands. Here are some general rules.

For good results measure water and coffee.

2 tablespoons coffee to each 1 cup

Make coffee just before serving

Make coffee double strength and pour the hot coffee over ice in a tall glass.  As the ice melts, it will dilute the coffee. Top the glass with whipped cream or vanilla ice cream.

HOT DRINKS FOR CHILDREN

½ cup cocoa

1 cup sugar

2 cups water

1/8 teaspoon salt

¼ spoon vanilla.

Combine cocoa, sugar and salt

Add water and stir until well blended.

Cook for 5 minutes.  Cool and bottle

Makes 3 cups syrup

Add 2 tablespoons of syrup to each cup of scaled milk.

Disclaimer: The Author of this article is not responsible for accuracy or completeness nor shall he be held liable for any damage or loss arising out of or in any way related to the information or utilization of it.

You have permission to copy any of my articles providing each is complete, and Author Article Source Box is included.

Article Source: Bruce Chambers sold his printing, publishing, mail order business and retired in 1980. He came on the Internet in 2003. He researched for 1 year, and then started a free monthly Internet marketing report, plus free monthly recipes, bar mixes, tips newsletters.

At present he resells from his website. You can subscribe to either or both free newsletters by going to his web site. Please visit: http://www.cbestbuys.com

Jul 27

Give Your Taste Buds a Treat and be a Home Smoker of Gourmet Foods

Article by David Johns









Smoking meat fish and vegetables has been very popular throughout history and many generations as can be seen by the sheer variety of smokers for sale. Many have discovered the great taste that smoking infuses into all types of foods. Smoking food can be used to flavour, cook or even preserve food. Nowadays there are lots of alternatives available for us if we want to enrich the taste of our food by smoking it. In fact the choice of home smoker can be daunting.

Let’s talk about the fuel the most common choice is wood or wood products. The hobbyist/backyard home smoker can use wood, charcoal, propane or even electric to fuel their cookers. The important thing to remember is that you need a smoke source, so you are going to need some types of wood, logs, chunks or chips to provide the smoke for your cooker In North America, hickory, mesquite, oak, pecan, alder, maple, and fruit-tree woods, such as apple, cherry and plum, are commonly used for smoking

Smoke is an antimicrobial and antioxidant, but smoke alone is insufficient for preserving food in itself, unless combined with another preservation method. In the past, smoking was used in combination with other techniques, most commonly salt-curing or drying. The main problem is the smoke compounds adhere only to the outer surfaces of the food; smoke does not actually penetrate far into meat or fish. In modern times, almost all smoking is carried out for its flavor

Cold smoking can be used as a flavor enhancer for foods such as, beef, pork chops, chicken breasts, salmon, scallops, and steak. The food item can be cold smoked for just long enough to give some great flavor. Some cold smoked foods are then, grilled, baked or roasted, or even saut

Jul 26

Hot Dogs Need To Be Looked At More Closely

Article by Ethan Kalvin







If you are an American, you are very familiar with one of its favorite foods – the hot dog. There are many ways to enjoy a dog. People put all kinds of toppings on them and they especially enjoy the foot long ones. Hot dogs stand are on street corners of every major city in the United States. They are convenient when you need something on the go. However, if people really understood what ingredients are in one they might want to reconsider and pick another healthier food option.

To begin with most dogs are made out of the left over parts from chicken, pork, and beef. These byproducts are actually the parts of these animals that can’t be used to make steaks, roasts, and other cuts of meat. These parts are the least desirable and therefore are definitely not the healthiest for you and it is a generalized believe that beef hot dogs are of a higher quality and are actually a better grade of meat to select when choosing your dogs.

There have been reports that some medical professionals feel that the sub standard quality of the meat may be the cause for many children to have Leukemia. Currently, little concrete research has been done to substantiate this claim, however, it has been observed that children who consumed a lot of hot dogs have leukemia and it has been surmised that there is some type of link between the amount of them consumed and this disease that is primarily a child’s disease.

The substandard meats they are put into these dogs are not the only health risk concern. The other factor to consider is the potential for the hot dog to be a choking hazard. Frequently, hot dogs have been the cause for some children to choke as the shape and size of this meat make it easy to become lodged in a child’s throat. Because of this parents and pediatricians are joined forces to persuade the hot dog companies to redesign the shape of the hot dog so there will be less deaths attributed to choking each year.

Most are yummy and despite the controversy that they face in some forums they will remain one of the most popular food items of our time. All in all everyone loves a dog and although there may be some risks involved in eating them that won’t stops most people from reaching for these delicious treats especially when they are on the go.



About the Author

Healthy children need the right Individual health plan it is quick to go online and see all the good things that Gohealth can help with.

Jul 25

Healthy Diet Foods That Are Easy To Find

Article by ToddBlack







The quest for the ultimate healthy diet foods has been going on for years. Many have found what they perceive to be healthy diet foods, while some have come up with alternatives in the form of fad diets. However, finding that perfect combination of healthy diet foods is actually not that difficult, if you look in the right places!

The basic rule to remember while aiming to find healthy diet foods is that food closest to its natural state is the best. So of course, vegetables and fruits should rank among the top along with organic options. Bake foods are ok too, as long as they are made out of whole grains. Rather than eating an apple pie, eat an apple, it’s healthier and also tastes better. For non-vegetarians, fish is a very good selection. It contains omega-3 fatty acids which are very important for the body.

Here is a list of some of the healthy diet foods that you can indulge in.

• Beans: there are different varieties of beans that come under the healthy diet foods category. These include black beans, kidney beans, pinto beans, lima beans and navy beans. (Steer clear of refried beans)

• Seeds: seeds like flax seeds and pumpkin seeds are good snack choices. Snacking is where many people have issues.

• Dried nuts: almonds and walnuts are good for the body to reduce fat. Because they make great “filler” snacks. Meaning you don’t need to eat as many to have your hunger satisfied.

• Blueberries: they contain antioxidants, which are great for producing energy in the body and to build immunity.

• Hot peppers: jalapenos and other hot spicy foods are said to increase our metabolic rate. Contrary to popular belief that proper eating is bland and devoid of spice, hot peppers provide a tasteful and healthy way to dieting.

• Avocadoes: yes, it contains fat, but it is the right kind of fat that our bodies need to help burn the bad fat we store. Avocadoes contain about 25 important nutrients that the body requires.

• Whole grain pasta and bread: pastas come under healthy diet foods too, as long as they are made from whole grains.

• Lean meat: meats are also a good choice and they’re usually packed with protein. Eat a good amount of lean chicken or lean beef to add the meat taste into your diet.

• Seafood: seafood is probably one of the most important part of balanced nutritional plan. Fish, lobster, salmon, shrimp, sardines, all provide essential fatty acids that your body requires and often lacks.

This list of healthy diet foods is not exhaustive. There are plenty more where they came from. It is up to each individual to make the best use of foods to get the perfect regime. Also remember to get plenty of water into whichever diet you follow. If you get bored of water, try fresh fruit juices or a simple lime juice.Diet foods don’t have to necessarily be bland and boring and a healthy diet need not mean having to eat the same foods every day. With good knowledge of healthy diet foods, you can mix it up, add spice and variety, and still get the perfect body to show off.

Not sure about a certain food or how much you should actually eat?

When beginning your quest toward proper eating and nutrition many questions are bound to come up along the way.

If you need questions answered or get stumped you can read my free report to help you: Healthy Diet Foods

And always keep in mind that you can reach your goals and you are worth it. This is NOT impossible. Eating to lose the pounds is what it’s all about, click the link to see Healthy Foods To Lose Weight



About the Author

Todd is a health and fitness enthusiast and loves helping people to achieve their goals. Weight loss can be a tough journey but with the right information it can become something you can really do. I believe in YOU!!

Jul 24

Grandma Hystad’s Recipes, Food, Cleaning Tips

HOW TO REMOVE WINE FROM ARTICLES: Salt is the best ingredient to be found in the kitchen to remove or the like, from tablecloths or carpets. Pour on the discoloured spot of wine stain to thoroughly cover and imbibe all the liquor, then repeat if necessary, after brushing off all the salt first saturated. In this manner the cloth or carpet will be restored to its new condition.

To Remove Stain From Cloth.

Tartaric acid, or salt of lemons, will quickly remove stains from white muslin or linen. Put less then half a teaspoonful of salt or acid into a teaspoonful of water; wet the stain with it, and lay it in the sun for an hour; wet it once or twice with cold water during the time; if this does not quite remove it, repeat the acid water, and lay it in the sun.

STAINLESS STEEL AND CHROME:

Good for pots, sinks, and stove tops. Rub the area to be cleaned with a damp cloth and baking soda. Baking soda is an excellent general cleaner for removing many stubborn stains, including tea stains, and can be safely used on stainless steel, chrome, and ceramic.

Squeaky Clean
Germs and kitchen are like a married couple, always close by.
Germs really love the kitchen, especially sponges, dishcloths and
sinks. You can disinfect all three by soaking sponges, and
dishcloths for 5-10 minutes in the sink in a solution of ¾ cup
Clorox Regular Bleach and one gallon of water. Rinse with clean
water and let dry.

You can use the same solution to disinfect food spills,
refrigeration, door handles.

Touching surfaces that have germs on them, such as faucets, can
spread bacteria, cutting boards, tables, phones, light switches,
anything touched by humans, animals.

WINDOW WASHING

Pick a cloudy day to wash, never in hot sun.
Don’t use soap. Mix ½ cup ammonia, ½ cup of white vinegar and two tablespoons of cornstarch in a bucket of water. To make your window sparkle, mix a ½ cup of antifreeze in a quart of water. Sponge down the glass and wipe dry with newspaper.

STAIN REMOVAL

Before washing, it is essential that all stains be removed.
Sometimes Soap or hot water will set a stain and make its removal
impossible.

WARNING: DO NOT MIX BLEACH AND AMMONIA TOGETHER, THE FUMES CAN
BE DEADLY.

Commercial cleaning supplies can aggravate your allergies and
have long terms effects on your health. You can save on your house-cleaning bill with very good results using less toxic substances.

Ø Ammonia – cuts grease, cleans windows, Strip wax off floors.

Ø Baking soda – cleans, deodorizes, polishes, and removes stains.

Ø Bleach – whitens practically anything, removes mould and mildew.

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Ø Cornstarch – cleans and deodorizes carpets and rugs.

*Rug Stains: Use a solution of half water, half white vinegar.

*Shirt or blouse stain: Just a little of water and cornstarch will remove.

*Grass stains: Dampen stain with cold water, and rub with plain

bar soap. (One without moisturizers). The stain should come

right out. Then wash normally.

*Toilet bowl: Use tang, or sprinkle baking soda into the bowl.

Drizzle with vinegar. Scour with toilet brush. Cleans and

deodorizes.

*Basin, tub and tiles: rub the area to be cleaned with a half

lemon dipped in Borax. Rinse and dry with soft cloth.

*Fix plaster walls: with white glue and baking soda. Try it,

crack will disappear in minutes.

Berry Stain, place the stained part over a pot and pour boiling
Water over it from a height of about 2 feet so as to strike the stain with force.

 
Plunge the stained part up and down in the hot water until the stain is removed. If stain is persistent, use javelle water.

Peach Stains, are not easy to remove. Be careful not to wipe
hands with peach-stains on a good napkin, towel or apron. Stretch
stain over a pot of hot water and apply javelle water with a
medicine-dropper. Do not allow it remain too long in contact with
the fibres. Javelle water rots even cotton and linen. Apply
oxalic-acid solution to neutralize the alkali and rinse thoroughly in hot water.
Several applications may be necessary.

Tea And Coffee Stains.
Follow the same procedures as for berry stains above.

Blood and Meat-Juice.

Cleaning tips

Never put in hot water as that sets the stain. Soak at once in cold water. Rub with soap and wash. A paste of raw starch mixed with cold water will remove these stains on flannel, blankets, and heavy goods. Repeat until stain disappears.

Egg-Stain, wash in cold water, then warm water and soap.

Mix 50-50 water, white vinegar. Great for stubborn carpet
stains.

Wood Furniture; to remove water stains, dab white toothpaste
onto the stain. Allow the paste to dry and then gently buff
with a soft cloth.

LIGHTSIDE

In court, the prosecuting lawyer asked the farmer on the witness stand, “At the scene of the accident, did you tell the policeman you had never felt better in your life?”

 
“That’s right.” The farmer replied.

 
“Well, then, how is it that you are now claiming you were seriously injured when my client’s auto hit your wagon”.

The farmer explained. “When the policeman arrived, he went over to my horse, which had a broken leg, and shot him. Then he went over to Rover, my dog, who was banged up, and shot him.

When he asked me how I felt, I just thought under the
circumstances, it was a wise choice of words to say, I’ve never felt better in my live.”

FOOD INFORMATION, TIPS, During Storms.

 

Parts of USA and Canada have been hit with disaster, from fires in California to floods in British Columbia, snow and ice storms in eastern USA and Canada. Many will be dealing without power, flood houses.  Here is information to help you get through some of the problems.

 

NOTE: To prepare for a disaster go to my archives on my website, and read my article “Ring Of Fire”.

 

The refrigerator will keep food safely cold for about 4 hours if it is unopened. A full freezer will hold the temperature for approximately 48 hours (24 hours if it is half full) and the door remains closed.

 

Discard refrigerated perishable food such as meat, poultry, fish, soft cheeses.

 

Food may be safely refrozen if it still contains ice crystals or is at 40°F or below when checked with a food thermometer.

 

Never taste a food to determine its safety!

 

Obtain dry or block ice to keep your refrigerator and freezer as cold as possible if the power is going to be out for a prolonged period of time. Fifty pounds of dry ice should hold an 18-cubic-foot full freezer for 2 days.

 

If the power has been out for several days, check the temperature of the freezer with an appliance thermometer. If the appliance thermometer reads 40°F or below, the food is safe to refreeze.

If a thermometer has not been kept in the freezer, check each package of food to determine its safety. If the food still contains ice crystals, the food is safe.

 

Discard any food that is not in a waterproof container if there is any chance that it has come into contact with flood water. Discard wooden cutting boards, plastic utensils, baby bottle nipples and pacifiers.

 

Thoroughly wash all metal pans, ceramic dishes and utensils that came in contact with flood water with hot soapy water and sanitize by boiling them in clean water or by immersing them for 15 minutes in a solution of 1 tablespoon of unscented, liquid chlorine bleach per gallon of drinking water.

 

Disclaimer:

The Author of this article is not responsible for accuracy or completeness nor shall he be held liable for any damage or loss arising out of or in any way related to the information or utilization of it.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Article Source: Bruce Chambers sold his printing, publishing, mail order business and retired in 1980. He came on the Internet in 2003. He researched for 1 year, and then started a free monthly Internet marketing report, plus free monthly recipes, bar mixes, tips newsletters. At present he resells from his website. You can subscribe to either or both free newsletters by going to his web site. Please visit: http://www.cbestbuys.com

Jul 23

Electric Smokers – Hot Smoking With The Bradley Smoker

The Process of Hot Smoking

“Hot smoking” exposes the foods to smoke and heat in a controlled environment. Although foods that have been hot smoked are often reheated or cooked, they are typically safe to eat without further cooking.

Hams and ham hocks are fully cooked once they are properly smoked. Hot smoking occurs within the range of 165°F/74°C to 185°F/85°C. Within this temperature range, foods are fully cooked, moist, and flavorful. If the smoker is allowed to get hotter than 185°F, the foods will shrink excessively, buckle, or even split.

Smoking at high temperatures also reduces yield, as both moisture and fat are “cooked” away.

Or simply put, HOT SMOKING is a cooking process where special hardwood powder is smoldered in the base of the smoker whilst the food cooks from above!

For hot smoking, just place your wood chips on the charcoal, as you produce enough heat to simultaneously cook your food. Barbecuing – To barbeque, just light your charcoal fire underneath the food and regulate the air as you wish, either with the lid or vents. ‘Designed by cooks for the ultimate in healthy living’.

Easy to use and designed for the outdoors. Your neighbours will come flocking when you open the door and release all those wonderfull smokey aromas.

The Bradley Smoker

The Bradley Food Smoker is a unique and compact “smoke house” that is sold complete with its accompanying smoke generator in which flavour bisquettes are burned for 20 minutes each so that the temperature does not fluctuate, thus eliminating the high temperature gases, acids and resins that can distort the flavour of smoked food.

The Bradley smoker is light enough to carry and is about the size of a small fridge making it ideal for use in relatively small spaces.

The Bradley Food Smoker makes clean tasting food without any aftertaste. While other smokers need to be tended constantly, the Bradley Smoker automatically produces clean, cool smoke for up to 8 hours safely and without intervention

Additionally, using the independently controlled internal heating element the Bradley Food Smoker will also hot smoke, or may be used simply as a slow cooker or slow roasting oven.

The low temperature cooking environment is perfect for any smoking project and the infra red heater source is also particularly well- suited for drying fruits making it a versatile and much loved cooking device that has gained a loyal worldwide following from avid smoker fans.

Barbecue Party is a leading resource that provides a regularly updated BBQ news feed,  competition schedules, product reviews, helpful guides, hundreds of delicious BBQ recipes, restaurant reviews, BBQ franchise information as well as a BBQ store that stocks BBQ smokers and grills from dozens of popular manufacturers.

Jul 22

Hot Sauce For A Healthier Diet

Everybody loves good tasting meals but most of the time the food items we consume contain too much salt and oil. Too much of these are absolutely not great for you. Exactly how do you reduce on these unhealthy substances? If perhaps you are used to robust flavors, a diet low in salt and oil can be extremely hard to maintain. However, you can flavor your own foods with much healthier choices such as herbs, spices, and indeed, hot sauce! Hot sauce, in particular, tend to be excellent food enhancers. With some creativity, you could put together great mouth watering meals that are equally wholesome and also enjoyable.

Tips for a Better Diet plan

Quit frying and also start grilling! Many individuals really prefer the flavor of grilled foods. Viewing that grilling is a healthier cooking option, you must be doing it more often. Invest within a very good outdoor grill. You can additionally investigate those indoor electric models for fast grill cooking. Instead of sodium, try adding hot sauce and herbs to your own barbecue marinade instead.

Hot sauce items make a fantastic condiment. In fact, you could remove the salt shaker at home and place a variety of hot sauces instead. The African Rhino Peri-Peri Peppers Sauce is actually a great all-around flavor enhancer. From sandwiches to veggie salads, this versatile condiment is a great alternative. You can buy it at The-Best-Hot-Sauce store of difficult to find barbecue sauces and also condiments.

Similarly, hot sauce can replace unhealthy or high calorie ingredients like oil, butter and also sugar without compromising on taste. For instance, when you make a lot of pasta dishes, you can try getting rid of the butter and also olive oil and swapping it with a splash of herbs and hot sauce as an alternative. Your own family will certainly love the difference.
There are a range of hot sauce which you could select from. Make sure you choose one which has the lowest sodium content. For a lot more variety, you can opt to purchase online from one of those specialty bbq condiment online retailers.

Quick Hot Sauce Recipes in order to Fire up Your own Taste BudsHot Casserole – Adding hot sauces into your own casserole sauce is actually a great way to stimulate this staple dish. This could be marinara sauce, spaghetti sauce, or even white sauce. Make certain you mix the sauce thoroughly so you won’t have uneven hotness. Georgia Peach & Vidalia Onion Hot Sauce is actually an excellent selection for hot casseroles. It’s mild enough in order to appeal to everyone, and also the onion flavor complements virtually any type of casserole.

Fried Rice is actually extremely easy and quick to make, perfect for busy parents. Simply dice leftovers and your favorite vegetables, and sauté them in oil. It’s a filling and delicious dish, but in the event that you want to help make it really special, you should include some hot sauce for extra heat. Once again, an excellent option might be the Ass Kickin Roasted Garlic Hot Sauce obtainable of course from The-Best-Hot-Sauce. The particular garlic flavor blends nicely with the dish while the peppers include just the right amount of heat.

Fried Foods – You will enjoy fried chicken, pork chops and also steaks even much more once you’ve added several hot and spicy flavors to it. Marinate meats within hot sauce for at minimum one hour along with your favorite spices just prior to dipping them within flour.

I bet you never really knew you might put a precious few drops of hot sauce into the above meals so do try them and give ‘ordinary’ dishes that additional zing.

To find more great Hot Sauce visit www.the-best-hot-sauce.com

Jon Good has been in the computer industry for over ten years now. He now runs a Hot Sauce site to help people learn how they can add great flavors to all of their foods.

Jul 21

Features Fireplace in Winter Hot Pot of Seven Recommended

Features Fireplace in Winter Hot Pot of Seven Recommended

Young people must go to a Medog, that is the beauty of Tibet, where access to highways, and now before us is the need to eat a meal from the region of Tibet Lu Lang stone pot. Restaurant owners are super strong love travel ass, into the possession of a surprise each time brought back many times, opened the shop, that is, the combination of their love of Tibet and love. Lu Lang them from Tibet brought back handmade Tibetan stone pot, this is the most prominent feature here. Stores everywhere traces of Tibet, Tibet, on the wall map of the body when people eat far not tempted. Stone pot chicken and fish Kamameshi two most popular dishes here, eating the flesh of the stone pot, pour broth, rinse cooking articles, hot, and hot stone pot is different from the ordinary, it has enough insulation efficiency, while still allowing the unique texture fusion hot stone pot soup, unique taste.

Edit Comment: a bit hard to find places, if the road south from the central axis line, the Second Ring Road on the north side of the road west of the first turn, go after the first road into the right hand side is. Perhaps just as Medog remote location of the same at each Mix, takes a little thought and patience.

Forget the introduction of a new sit cooking pot can be considered the capital of Yunnan, the first, this pot seems from the shape of old Beijing on the same copper pots, copper production, slope soaring, and a belly used to hold carbon. At first glance, this is simply shabu twin brother, talking about their history and related to Kublai Khan can not avoid. Do not look alike, which is completely irrelevant to install things. Pay attention to the old Beijing-shabu broth into the meat, rinse a few fishing net to food, and cooking pot here is based on chicken soup base, boiled in the wild strain and vegetables to eat. Sitting in a forgotten not only from the local to build the eight cooking pot, return to original practices is so cold chicken with bacteria and Blackfoot, the original recipe, but rich people in ancient times to eat the. Bacteria from the Buddhist holy cold Dali Gyejoksan, ranked first in Gyejoksan four specialties. Chicken taste more than the beauty of fir, food worth far more than matsutake, morel, then we must first serve soup, dotted with bits and pieces of chicken fat, then you can rinse bacteria and food, natural fragrance and taste of monosodium glutamate completely modified different. La ribs hot pot is one of the characteristics of Yunnan, the best with a few friends over, or risked is still very sharp test of a pot full of food intake.

Edit Comment: cooking pot eat is plain, it is best not under the raw meat into the pot, rinse dishes to eat in Yunnan, while dip Do not enjoyably, soup mix with a small material, not afraid to point millet spicy chili circle more to the force.

Beijing, this lobster has been the theme of fresh lobster pot, but as the main, just one winter, perhaps a lobster to the Romans, pot up. Lobster is Canada, the United States commonly used ingredients, singly big meat, but also the strict standards of fishing, ND from Boston Lobster restaurant food is lobster production of high places, everybody jump. Hot, including the two most unique is the sake lobster pot, pot open when blowing strong taste of sake, the lobster chopped into pieces, put rinse, unique taste. Is a new type of pot, and taste than the original black pepper lobster, lobster baked cheese warmer, and more moisture.

Edit Comment: Now the restaurant is very affordable package, a package 300 yuan, for 2 to 3 people together, including a lobster, a wide variety of rinse dishes, cold dishes, and lobster pizza.

Hidden in a small courtyard to the hard to find, there is a distinctive hot pot restaurants, especially those based on it, there is no prominent a Sichuan hot pot, there is no traditional copper pots of old Beijing, the only way to find a pot of steaming hot pot trotters served at bouncing. The teenagers in the small courtyard, indoor and outdoor dining area is, there is a second floor balcony to look at the scenery, of course, limited to use in the summer. Hanging on the walls of the house a lot of accessories, soft lighting and intimate setting makes instant relaxation. Diners can choose to come here only the pot, trotters are rich in collagen, which will give girls radiant weapon. Like to point papaya trotter soup pot, whole papaya, cut into large pieces with a corn, melon, boiled with pig’s trotters stew, rich white soup, is the result of 2,3-hour simmer over low heat out of the results, and once the pot lack of soup, add the white water but not the soup, taste delicious as to ensure that from start to finish. The soup of the flavors seem to have enough fun, then to hot pot stimulate your nerves, alternating red and white colors exceptionally sharp, spicy trotters materials and complement each other, no more dipping sauces to eat something delicious.

Edit Comment: added a new beef shabu-goods store, is determined by the owner of several trials, with several dishes of each pot will rinse dishes, meat and vegetables, trotter has Ruannuo taste, almost stew to separate the flesh, in the cold winter to point the most nutritious enough. Note that parking is bad here, especially at noon the risk of being stickers, insurance purposes or come by bus.

Tomato into the pot is a popular way of eating in recent years. Whether male or female will be hooked through the center of this hot and sour food, pot served to incense exudes a touch of tomato. Very limited number of ordinary tomatoes, skin should be thin, the meat should be thick, juice to more surface texture in the sand, not sloppy. Then there is the hot time, anything can eat big dinner, where after re-rinse products are mostly processed and smooth the fillet, marinated pork ribs, pork and shrimp balls made are amazing dishes.

Edit Comment: Here there is a characteristic of rinse product is the “fruit fragrance.” Such as cucumber, is the most simple and natural taste, a touch of water taste was filled with unique impoverished tender astringent. Tomato fondue benefit detoxifies, to discuss his girlfriend’s favor here is insurance.

This pot is the predecessor of the invention by the Japanese farmers, and therefore called on compound such exquisite range of children eating is simple. Boss material produced in Japan for many years in Japan, of course, sits the Japanese chef. Main here is clear, that is authentic Japanese hot pot, the most traditional is the Kansai region produced sukiyaki hot pot, beef as main ingredient with Snow Dragon, the pursuit of the high-level Huanen taste. Although the ingredients into the pot with different types, but remained independent of each flavor. Raw eggs are not used to cook here, but to dip, of course, got to select eggs with ultraviolet disinfection. Cattle intestine soup pot of different coat, with basic tastes of salt flavor, soy sauce, miso taste and smell, there was the spicy cabbage, curry, tomatoes, soy milk. Intended choice of miso soup, like the thick texture of the recommended curry, turnip greens all have loved, not afraid of hard word of tune.

Edit Comment: looking for the store needs a bit of work, there is no high-profile doors down, even a small supermarket with a Japanese cover for the environment is a pure Japanese style, bamboo curtain hanging above each table, you can create a pull-down semi-enclosed space.

Fish here by air from Sichuan Yibin. So well with the appropriate materials have to eat, secret pot tomato soup mandarin duck into the original soup of ordinary restaurant, special for tomatoes in Xinjiang has rich flavor, drink a bowl of savory soup can be the first large-scale loss of appetite, let’s fish in the soup juice roll it, remember not to rinse the mouth for too long lost Q cool.

Edit Comment: In addition to duck pot there is the choice of sauerkraut, where many can be placed in a large room with two tables, if the alternative may well be one of the company dinners here.

Address: East Third Ring Road, Chaoyang District, School No. 54, 9 Building A

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Jul 20

Starting a Hot Dog Stand Business – Equipment and Supplies

For around ,000 you can buy a customized trailer in which you can operate your business.

For those on a budget it makes sense to look at purchasing used equipment. Used equipment can typically be acquired for around half the price of new equipment and sometimes much less.

Leasing is also a great option as you will be paying regular payments over time as you earn money instead of having to come up with the lump sum that is needed if you were to buy equipment. This enables you to preserve your capital for business growth. If you lease, you will also have an easy exit option if you decide that you want to discontinue your business at some point in time.

Some people choose to build their own hot dog stand and it is possible to buy plans that explain how to go about this online. This approach usually requires a significant outlay to purchase a kit set or the necessary parts. It can be done for well under a thousand dollars but may not be worth it if you are not technically minded.

Putting hot dogs and food ingredients aside for a minute, lets consider some of the equipment and supplies that a hot dog vending stand will require.

A Stand or Cart

Your first requirement is a quality stand or cart. These usually have two wheels on one end and two legs on the other for mobility and stability. Stands are usually made up of mostly stainless steel components and they should be easy to take apart and clean.

A good stand should be able to be towed around by a vehicle. It will also have a sink for washing and cleaning, a water tank and a waste water tank.

Hot dog stands are generally powered by propane or LPG tanks although in some cases they are run on diesel. If you are doing a good daily trade then you may also have to have a spare tank available. Hot dog stands are usually required to have a fire extinguisher on hand.

There are stands with umbrellas, stands with portable awnings and stands with no overhead protection at all. Unless you will be operating indoors you should probably choose a stand with some sort of protection from the weather.

Food Storage and Preparation Equipment

Your cart will need a steamer and a broiler or grill for cooking hot dogs and warming or toasting buns.

If you plan to set up in a heavily trafficked area you’ll need lots of storage space or a convenient area to keep extra buns, hot dogs and other things you might run out of.

You will need condiment dispensers that can hold large volumes of sauces and you may also need a display rack for condiments if you are encouraging customers to add their own.

You may consider buying an extra cooler if you will be selling large volumes of beverages. Most hot dog carts have coolers built in but they are often not large enough to cater to demand on a hot day.

Other food preparation equipment that you may need will include knives, a cutting board for slicing buns and spoons for adding certain toppings.

Display Cases and Racks

People are often more likely to purchase food when they see it displayed. You may consider displaying beverages, coleslaws or salads in a refrigerated display case. Other product items like chips can be hung from racks so that everyone can easily see the selection of brands that you offer.

Other Supplies and Considerations

Other supplies that you will need to purchase on a regular basis aside from food include food handling gear such as gloves, cleaning equipment, soap and napkins or foil bags for serving hot dogs to customers.

You will need a safe place to put the money that you take in each day. A cash register is only really practical for larger trailers. Most stands or carts get by with a money box. Make sure that you use a box that can be locked and for security purposes it is ideal if the box can be chained to your stand in some way.

For more hot dog stand ideas and tips and to learn more about some of the products that can guide you into your own successful hot dog business visit - Start a Hot Dog Stand

Jul 19

American Food in American Literature

 


The months between the cherries and the peaches

Are brimming cornucopias which spill


 

Fruits red and purple, somber-bloomed and black;


Then, down rich fields and frosty river beaches


We’ll trample bright persimmons, while you kill


Bronze partridge, speckled quail, and canvasback.


—Elinor Wylie1

I ate another apple pie and ice cream; that’s practically all I ate all the way across the country, I knew it was nutritious and it was delicious, of course.


—Jack Kerouac2

  In October of 1998, Jiao-Tong, the literary editor of the China Times in Taipei, Taiwan, invited me to write an essay on American food in American literature for presentation at the first International Conference on Food and Literature that was held in Taipei in May of 1999.  I thought that I would find many secondary source books on this topic.  After extensive searches of the net and communications with several professors of American literature at universities in the United States and Canada, I was quite surprised to find no book in print on the topic.  Not only was there no book about it there was also no single article that directly addressed my topic.  The absence of secondary sources explains why most of the references in this essay are to primary sources.  The limitations on time and space for this writing further explain why I have limited my survey of American literature to novels, short stories and poetry.  I have tried to make a representative selection among novelists, short story writers and poets including writers from almost two hundred years of American literature, both genders and a variety of ethnic groups.  Because there are so many versions of primary works that I cite, I have limited those citations to author’s name, title of work and internal part such as verse, chapter, or section and omitted page numbers of the particular versions that I used.  Less well-known works, collections and anthologies receive standard citation format.

To bring some order to this vast quantity of material, I have created three themes around which I can weave what I have found about American food in American literature: continuity and discontinuity; purity and impurity; and, abundance and scarcity.  These three themes allow several important truths about the American experience through time to appear as preoccupations of its writers as well.  For example, the great changes wrought on the land and the indigenous peoples were accompanied by profound and lasting attachments to European food habits.  Also, the tremendous abundance of natural resources and artificial wealth in America has long coexisted with devastated land and utter poverty.  The greatest American writers, such as Melville, Faulkner, Hemingway and Steinbeck, have repeatedly recognized and embodied these extremes in their plots and in their characters, much as they are embodied in the every day lives and personalities of Americans.


As an introductory frame for my presentation, I would like to offer some possible explanations for the lack of secondary sources.  First, I think that most of the famous and popular American foods, such as pizza, hot dogs, hamburgers and ice cream are derivative from European foods.  The pizza came from Italy.  The hot dog is a version of the German sausage.  Hamburgers are reformed meatballs joined with bread that is as old as agricultural civilization itself.  And ice cream also has its counterparts in the cuisine of European nations.  So the first reason for the lack of secondary sources is that most American foods are derivative and not original to America.

An ironic counterexample in this context is the Chinese fortune cookie.  As a food item, it has very little nutrition, but as a part of the American idea of Chinese food it has become a necessity at American Chinese restaurants.  However, I have asked several owners, waiters and waitresses in American Chinese restaurants whether Chinese fortune cookies came from China.  All of them have told me that they did not.  They were invented in America and most likely, according to this oral history, in San Francisco.  This seems to me to be a credible history.  San Francisco grew as a city on the money generated by high-risk professions such as whaling, shipping, gold mining and offshore ocean fishing.  We can easily imagine an enterprising Chinese person noting how concerned the Americans in these professions were with their future good luck or bad luck, putting this understanding together with a well-established American liking for sweet desserts, and creating a sweet dessert that looked different and contained words of wisdom about the consumer’s fate.

 Second, until the last few decades, American literature and literary criticism were dominated by males whose worldview connected food with women and put them both in the kitchen and out of sight.  Most of the male writers whom I read for this essay used food and activities around food to highlight aspects of character or plot.  They did not present food gathering and preparation, cooking, serving, eating, drinking and cleaning up as activities that substantially reinforced aspects of their main characters, most of whom are men, or as events that substantially advanced the plot, story-line or themes of their writing. 

Indeed, a related topic could be included in this kind of study that has to do with care of the body generally.  For example, it is extremely rare for any American writer to mention such bodily functions as excretion or urination.  Different kinds of breathing are certainly associated with different kinds of emotional and physical conditions, such as fear, sorrow, fatigue, exertion or contemplation.  But like food, other bodily processes are usually ignored, taken for granted or glossed.  I mention this topic only in passing, and do not have the time or space here to dwell on it, but simply to point out that focusing on food as a topic in relation to literature is an important innovation that signifies a range of human activities whose presence or silence in literature would be an interesting expansion of this focus.     

Third, as an American, I feel that most Americans take food for granted.  We tend to view it as an unavoidable burden placed on our freedom of activity by the condition of having a physical body.  We tend, especially in the last decade of the 20th century, to try to minimize as much as possible the time and energy required for all phases of life connected with physical nourishment of our bodies.    The growth, popularity and power of the fast food industry in America reflect this disdain for the necessities of physical nourishment.

After the Allied victory in World War II, the US experienced unprecedented prosperity while applications of new technology allowed older tasks to be done with increasing speed.  The complete acceptance of free market competition, in an ideological, political and economic opposition to centralized, planned economies and societies, the tremendous success of rapid, large-scale mass production in support of military forces during the war, and the increasingly tense and complicated struggle between capitalism and communism began to change the values of American society from the slower, simpler values of agricultural life and rural living to the faster, more complicated values of industrial production and urban living.  Speed began its emergence as a paramount American value.  For example, in 1955, shortly before the experiences recorded in Kerouac’s On the Road, the two fast food companies that are now the largest in America—McDonald’s and Kentucky Fried Chicken—were founded.  “By the early 1980s there were about 440 food franchising companies with a combined total of more than 70,000 retail outlets in the United States.”3  Americans from smaller, more congested living situations in Europe slowly adjusted to the scope of the American land and its resources.  Size, especially bigness, became a common value in all areas of American life.  With the advent of speed as a value, the American ideology for the remainder of the 20th century gained its primary outlines—the bigger the better, the faster the better.  From automobiles to hamburgers, this ideology began increasingly to govern how Americans thought about everything they did.  Both values play significant and signifying roles in the relationship between American food and American literature.   

Besides the social environment of European derivation, male dominance and indifference toward food, there is the traditional character of the successful American writer.  Most of America’s most famous writers were and continue to be male.  Most of these male writers, such as Hawthorne, Twain, Faulkner, Hemingway, Steinbeck, Poe, and Miller, continually placed their leading characters, most of whom were males, in positions that required the creation of a stable and meaningful life.  Like the first colonists, like the pioneers, like the immigrants, their characters are continually faced with challenges to their survival, their ability and their manhood where the latter is defined in terms of overt verbal and physical superiority rather than mutual, cooperative care or nurturing.  An ironic counter-example is Ayn Rand, a female writer who totally accepted the values of competition, personal power and rugged individualism. Her powerful male characters, such as the nearly godlike architect in Atlas Shrugged, are faced with problems and situations that demand forceful, individual creation and production on large scales. 

The fact that creation and production also consumed energy, resources, time and money was not a central concern until the beginnings of the environmental movement in the late 50’s and early 60’s.  The fact that creation and production often resulted in the emotional and physical deprivation of less independent beings, such as children, animals, women, the poor, and members of minority ethnic groups was also not a central concern of American writers or critics until the late 50’s and early 60’s.  The earlier writers felt driven to produce and reproduce the feelings, drives, imagery and characters of male-oriented, individualistic creation and production in their writings.  As a consequence, many of the facts of life, such as eating, drinking, digesting, excreting and nurturing were consistently absent, implied, glossed or ignored.




These are at least four reasons why there is such a scarcity of secondary sources on the topic of American food in American literature.  It is, in effect, a book waiting to be written.

Fortunately, however, there are many instances of food in American literature and they do show some interesting patterns and features.  I have created three themes to focus these patterns and features: continuity and discontinuity; purity and impurity; and, abundance and scarcity.  First I am going to briefly described the substance and justification of each theme and then proceed with the literary material that especially illustrates and is illuminated by each theme.

A.            Continuity and Discontinuity.  The first European colonists on the East Coast of America experienced several discontinuities and began creating others.  From crowded European cities and farmlands they came to vast, sparsely inhabited forests, mountains and valleys.  From the rigidly intolerant societies of many 16th and 17th century European countries they came to a land whose societies, those of the indigenous peoples, were completely strange and closed to them.  From lives of poverty and scarcity they came to a land that gradually disclosed resources and riches beyond their wildest dreams.  From old, settled areas in Europe that had long ago been tamed by the sword, the plow, the cross and the crown they came to wilderness that seemed indifferent to the grandeur and traditions of European civilization.

Within these discontinuities they also created discontinuities in the lives of the indigenous peoples, by war, trade and intermarriage.  In the natural life cycles of the new land, they also began creating discontinuities by the invasive activities of logging, farming, mining, urbanization, hunting and fishing.  The cultivation of extremes that have


become fixtures of American life began at this time.  There were Americans who loved the wilderness and the indigenous ways and shed as many of their European ways as possible.  There were Americans who loathed the wilderness and the native ways and strove either to change them or destroy them.  These latter among the early colonists insisted on the continuation of European religions and languages, official protocols, social forms and manners and whatever foods they could make in the new world, such as bread, or have shipped from Europe without spoilage, such as tea.

The indigenous people fell before the larger and larger waves of Europeans most of whom firmly believed that the best Indian was a dead Indian.  For example, it is estimated that in 1600 there were approximately 10,000,000 indigenous people living in many different groups, or tribes, across the American continent.  By 1900, under an official US government policy of extermination, that total had fallen to approximately 500,000.  The impact of the new inhabitants on the land has been no less powerful.  In 1600, most of the land east of the Mississippi River and west of the Rocky Mountains was covered with mixed hardwood and deciduous forests.  By 1990, less than 3% of the original trees remained standing.

Besides the clash of Europeans and indigenous peoples, the growing population of Americans cultivating land for crops, especially cotton and tobacco, sold to a growing population of consumers in Europe provided a market for human labor—slaves.  The slave trade, initiated by the Dutch and pursued by almost every Western European country with seafaring expertise, created extreme discontinuities in many aspects of African life that are beyond the scope of this essay.  But the importation of Africans as slaves created an entirely new stream of Americans, subjected for two hundred years to plantation conditions of near starvation, who invented and innovated with the meager edible material accessible to them.  Their creativity has contributed many different kinds of distinctively American foods, such as chitlins, greens, and an entire range of foods centered in the bayou area of Louisiana known as Cajun food.  Along with original contributions made by the indigenous peoples to the first colonists’ and pioneers’ diets such as corn, some of these food items that have lasted longer than the institution of slavery itself have also found places in American literature.

B.             Purity and Impurity.  The early colonists on the American East Coast brought with them a deep fear of hell and a deep desire to purify their lives of any elements that prevented the practice of true Christianity.  True Christianity meant for them a literal reading of the bible and a literal construction of human social life around the teachings and tenets of the bible.  Red, for them, was the color of the devil, the color of evil and the color of the indigenous people.  Pure black and pure white were their colors of choice.

Those Americans who loved the wilderness, however, quickly adopted the use of multi-colored animal skins for clothing and natural dyes for coloring cloth or their skin.  It was therefore no mere historical accident that the American cultural revolution of the 60’s adopted wildly colored clothing, vehicles, hair and language as an obvious and dramatic signifier against the dark suits, white shirts, dark ties and dark shoes of establishment figures.  It was no historical accident that the beatniks and hippies both reached out for foods that differed greatly in flavor, color, smell, taste and texture from white bread, roast beef, boiled potatoes, oatmeal, milk and tea.  It was also no historical accident that some of the most influential writers of this era, such as Allen Ginsberg and Gary Snyder, found deep and lasting inspiration from the literature and the food of lands and peoples far beyond the American shores.

C.            Abundance and Scarcity.  From 1895 to 1915, approximately 23,000,000 immigrants moved from Europe to the United States.  These people came from all parts of Europe.  They left living conditions characterized by poverty, political turmoil and oppression and lack of any kind of opportunity for improvement.  America was a land that promised to make their dreams of prosperity, wealth, abundance and freedom come true.  Many of those immigrants made their fortunes in America then returned with them to their families in Europe.  But many others stayed in America, had their families there and began contributing tastes, colors and flavors to an increasingly heterogeneous American scene.  This period of intense migration saw the beginnings of neighborhoods in major cities, such as New York, Boston, Philadelphia and Chicago. These were ethnic enclaves for Italians, Poles, Germans, Jews, as well as Blacks trying to find an alternative to the militarily defeated but still powerful racism of their former southern masters, or others whose strong sense of group identity always brought with it special foods that were amplified by the increasingly large scales of American life.

At the same time, the rapid growth of large-scale manufacturing, in factories employing tens of thousands of immigrants who were poorly paid and allowed only a minimal education beyond the background of their European origins, turned some of these neighborhoods into the first American slums and ghettos.  Extremely low wages, non-existent social services, waves of unemployment and the increasing pressure of large families and new arrivals frequently put many of these new Americans on the edges of malnutrition, hunger and even starvation. Abundance and scarcity began to appear as poles of a socioeconomic oscillation driven not by such obvious institutions as slavery but by beliefs, prejudices and attitudes about the superiority and inferiority of different kinds of peoples coupled with firmly established patterns of access and lack of access to resources.  The negative shock of World War I was followed by the positive euphoria of the roaring 20’s.  That decade of unprecedented prosperity and national expansion was followed by the great depression of the 30’s.  America was clearly moving into the vanguard of a world order whose extremes ranged from genocide to population explosion, from starvation to rotting surpluses and from worn feet in foul mud to toenail polish in satin slippers on polished marble. 


A first glimpse of the theme of continuity and discontinuity can be seen by comparing the two citations at the beginning of this essay. Elinor Wylie lived from 1885 to 1928.  Jack Kerouac lived from 1922 to 1969.  Ripe fruit appears as an edible food from the tree in Wylie’s poem and as an ingredient of pie in Kerouac’s novel.  Wylie’s cherries and peaches are closer to unprocessed nature than Kerouac’s baked apple pie.  Wylie’s poem signifies the rootedness of the early European colonists in a land that provided ample foodstuffs.  Kerouac’s novel signifies the restlessness of urban Americans for whom food had become an uninteresting necessity. 

Wylie’s poem signifies abundance and therefore the value of bigness without the addition of speed that played such an important role in the life of Kerouac’s main character, Dean Moriarty.

In fact, Dean Moriarty was based on the real man, Neal Cassady.  In 1964, I was living in Palo Alto, California, having dropped out of Stanford University to try my hand at writing fiction and poetry.     I met a lovely young woman who was a first year student at Stanford and invited her to a party.  The party was in a house in the east side of Palo Alto that was increasingly known as a suitable place for non-conformists and beatniks.  The party featured many people whom neither my friend nor I knew along with much wine.  It also featured some very unusual people.  At one point during the party we were drinking wine in the small, brightly-lit kitchen.  In a commotion of laughing, talking people, a young man with a brilliant smile and ringing laughter, whose feet seemed barely able to stay on the floor, floated and flew through the room while the man who had invited me to the party introduced him to me as Neal Cassady.  He acknowledged me and disappeared out another door.  I never saw him again but retain to this day the vivid impression of light and speed that he also seems to have given to Kerouac.

The continuity between Wylie’s poem and Kerouac’s novel is indicated by the American saying, “It’s as American as apple pie!”  Another kind of continuity appears, moreover, when the verse after the one quoted above from Wylie’s poem is considered:

Down to the Puritan marrow of my bones


There’s something in this richness that I hate.


I love the look, austere, immaculate,


Of landscapes drawn in pearly monotones.


There’s something in my very blood that owns


Bare hills, cold silver on a sky of slate,


A thread of water, churned to milky spate


Streaming through slanted pastures fenced with stones.4

Taken together, this verse and the one quoted at the beginning of this essay dramatically display all three themes.  There is continuity and discontinuity between the doctrines of a European religious heritage, Puritanism, that emphasized great worldly achievements but as little worldly display as possible.  One of Max Weber’s most important contributions to our understanding of the modern Protestant viewpoint is his clear delineation of the conflict in early Protestantism between acquiring great wealth to signify being in god’s favor and displaying only humility to the rest of the world without the material ostentation that the Pietists, the Puritans, the Luddites and many other Protestant groups found so distasteful in Catholicism.

Weber argues, convincingly, I think, that the “Puritan, like every rational type of asceticism, tried to enable a man [sic] to maintain and act upon his constant motives, especially those which it taught himself itself, against the emotions.”5   The goal of this action was to lead a certain kind of life “freed from all the temptations of the world and in all its details dictated by God’s will, and thus to be made certain of their own rebirth [in heaven after the last judgment] by external signs manifested in their daily conduct.”6 From the Bible as well as from all other religious literature, success in difficult tasks is a clear sign of God’s favor.  For Protestants, such signs do not guarantee salvation but they are the closest to a guarantee that a Protestant can get.  Indeed, that “God Himself blessed his chosen ones through the success of their labours was…undeniable…to the Puritans.”7  This doctrine that combined asceticism with success in worldly endeavors positioned Protestantism to be the driving religious force behind capitalism and the great creations and accumulations of material wealth that have occurred in modernity.  But it is no less true that this combination can be a rhythm, an oscillation, a confusion or conflict.  This combination clearly provides much of the historical substance for our themes of abundance and scarcity and purity and impurity.

A condensed example of the oscillation between abundance and the austerity of American Puritanism can be seen in a brief passage from the short story, The System of Dr. Tarr and Prof. Fether, by Edgar Allen Poe (1809-49).  This passage also underlines the way in which food and the activities surrounding food have been treated by many of America’s greatest male writers—as unavoidable but uninteresting necessities, even in a fictional setting:  “The table was superbly set out.  It was loaded with plate, and more than loaded with delicacies.  The profusion was absolutely barbaric.  There were enough meats to have feasted the Anakim.  Never, in all my life, had I witnessed so lavish, so wasteful an expenditure of the good things of life.”8

The tension between the narrator and his hosts in Poe’s tale is echoed by the tension between the narrator and the main character in On the Road.  The quote from Jack Kerouac is part of the first-person narration of the novel by Sal Paradise, the supporting, secondary character that is based on Kerouac himself.  For the duration of his cross-country hitchhiking trip, he lives on apple pie and ice cream.  This diet reflects not only Sal’s poverty, but also clearly situates the novel in a continuous American tradition that de-emphasizes the bodily, physical or material world.  A discontinuity, however, occurs between the naturalness of the fruits in Wylie’s poem and the impersonal, processed food that Sal Paradise ate.  A further discontinuity appears in the fact that Sal is taking his food on the road, on the run, at high speed, while Wylie is painting a picture of humans relating to trees that by their nature cannot move from where they are.

Wylie’s poetic picture is drawn from her life in New England.  Many of the first colonists stayed on or close to the coast because it allowed them to continue the seafaring lives and occupations they had practiced in Europe and because it provided an abundance of food.  However, their Puritan ideology often resulted in lives that were lived as far from that abundance as Wylie’s “cold silver on a sky of slate.”  Another American poetess, Elizabeth Bishop (1911-1979), was born in Massachusetts and raised by her grandparents in Nova Scotia, the eastern, seafaring Province of Canada. Her life partly overlapped Wylie’s and she also paints the spirit of that area specifically in terms of food but with an emphasis on the austerity of their diet:

From narrow provinces


of fish and bread and tea,


home of the long tides


where the bay leaves the sea


twice a day and takes


the herrings long rides,9

Moreover, the abundance that Wylie hates is also rejected by Kerouac in an off-hand, casual way as though the less time a man spent on something as mundane as food the better or higher quality a person he was.  However, the oscillation between abundance and scarcity appears in Kerouac’s novel in the contrast between Sal Paradise and the main character of On the Road, Dean Moriarty.

“…but Dean just raced in society, eager for bread and love; he didn’t care one way or the other, ‘so long’s I can get that lil ole gal with that lil sumpin down there tween her legs, boy,’ and ‘so long’s we can eat, son, y’ear me?  I’m hungry, I’m starving, let’s eat right now!”—and off we’d rush to eat, whereof, as saith Ecclesiastes, ‘It is your portion in the sun.’” (Ch. 1 (italics in original))

It is also certainly worth noticing in passing that in both writers, differentiated by gender, by background, and by time, there is a strong connection between religion and food.  This commonality and this continuity clearly occur in the traditional American feast days of Thanksgiving, Christmas and Easter.  All three feature unusually large and lengthy meals as well as strong connections with the Christian, Protestant backgrounds of the early American colonists, settlers and pioneers.  As with the bodily functions mentioned before, bringing the topic of food and literature into the foreground also illuminates the strong presence of Judeo-Christianity in American life and literature.  Again, this innovative topic proves to be a powerful lens for viewing a wide range of signifiers that occur repeatedly and pervasively in American literature.

Indeed, the theological basis of Wylie’s hatred of “this richness” is the Puritan soul struggling for release from all of its attachments, involvements, entanglements and preoccupations to, with and in the material world.  Metaphysical battles are fought on empirical battlefields.  In this case, the metaphysical battle between the ontological powers of good and evil is fought on the empirical battlefield of the relationship between a poetess and edible, natural fruit.  The apple signifies the fall of man at the hand of woman.  The hatred of  “this richness” is therefore a self-hatred that drives the woman farther from impure nature and closer to the immaterial purity of the austere, unadorned Protestant soul.  The continuity of the human body with nature is displaced by the discontinuity of the immaterial soul with the body.  The abundance of human bodies and souls is displaced by the scarcity of the elect, those in Protestant doctrine chosen by God from the foundations of the world to survive the last judgment and live eternally in heaven.

Serious reflection on the relationship between food and literature brings us to a range of signifiers that underpins all literature, namely, religion.  Why?  Because writing originally served the purpose of passing on what is most valuable in the viewpoint and experience of the group.  The most valuable possession of all is that which most certainly promotes the survival of the group. All human groups discovered long ago that humans are dependent on greater powers for survival.  All humans need air, water, food, warmth and sleep.  The fear of, respect for, worship of and sacrifice to the powers that govern life, both visible and invisible, is the ancient substance of all religions.  The ancient truth and pervasive message of all religions is the dependency of humans on those powers, including the power of reproduction that is represented in ancestor worship.  Religion embodies, ritualizes and carries forward that fundamental truth of human dependency.  The denial of that dependency can lead to greatly innovative creativity and profoundly transformative spirituality as well as to self-destruction and madness.  Humans can imagine absolute freedom but to try to live it, as Nietzsche showed, leads only to self-destruction and madness.

Sylvia Plath (1932-1963) struggled with madness all her life and eventually ended her life by committing suicide.  The following poem opens with the kind of paean to natural abundance that we saw in Wylie’s poem and closes with a similar feeling of empty space and cold silver.  The contrast between the terms “nothing” and “blackberries” in the first line signifies the tension between abundance and emptiness.  This signifier in turn connects with the tension between purity and impurity through the signifier of nothingness as a desirable and advanced spiritual state and as the material condition of spiritual devotees on earth.  In this poem, these themes are again carried by concrete, local wild food and abstract, created imagery that moves the reader away from an abundant present to an absent but implied purity above or beyond the physical earth:


Blackberrying

Nobody in the lane, and nothing, nothing but blackberries


Blackberries on either side, though on the right mainly,


A blackberry alley, going down in hooks, and a sea


Somewhere at the end of it, heaving.  Blackberries


Big as the ball of my thumb, and dumb as eyes


Ebon in the hedges, fat


With blue-red juices.  These they squander on my fingers.


I had not asked for such a blood sisterhood; they must love me.


They accommodate themselves to my milkbottle, flattening their sides.

Overhead go the choughs in black, cacophonous flocks—


Bits of burnt paper wheeling in a blown sky.


Theirs is the only voice, protesting, protesting.


I do not think the sea will appear at all.


The high, green meadows are glowing, as if lit from within.


I come to one bush of berries so ripe it is a bush of flies,


Hanging their bluegreen bellies and their wing panes in a Chinese screen.


The honey-feast of the berries has stunned them; they believe in heaven.


One more hook, and the berries and bushes end.

The only thing to come now is the sea.


From between two hills a sudden wind funnels at me,


Slapping its phantom laundry in my face.


These hills are too green and sweet to have tasted salt.


I follow the sheep path between them.  A last hook brings me


To the hills’ northern face, and the face is orange rock


That looks out on nothing, nothing but a great space


Of white and pewter lights, and a din like silversmiths


Beating and beating at an intractable metal.10

It is no accident, in this perspective, that Neal Cassady, the living person behind Kerouac’s character Dean Moriarty, died of a drug overdose on the hot, shining steel rails of a railroad track in central Mexico.  The use of drugs in all groups has traditionally been associated with personal and group alignment to the greater powers for the purpose of amplifying the ability of the group to survive.  Cut from their traditional moorings in religion, drugs have become a way to experiment with the physical, psychic and spiritual dimensions of absolute freedom.  The fact that many drugs, such as LSD, cocaine, methamphetamine and opium, make the user feel that they need no food or other natural supports for their existence, shows precisely how they fit into the attempt to deny dependency and achieve absolute freedom.  The discontinuity of the American experience in relation to older traditions, the abundance of material wealth and the usually unacknowledged background ideal of a pure, immaterial soul have worked together to produce in its literature characters like Dean Moriarty who make a life—and a death—of treading the edge between innovation and self-destruction.

Or, to condense our themes in the pithy and quintessentially American poetic language of William Carlos Williams:  “the pure products of America go mad” (from “On The Road To The Mental Hospital”)  

Apple pie and ice cream, moreover, also provide Kerouac with an opportunity to make a statement of value that clearly displays abundance as bigness:  “I ate apple pie and ice cream—it was getting better as I got deeper into Iowa, the pie bigger, the ice cream richer.” (Ch. 3)  “Better,” “deeper,” “bigger,” and “richer,” work together to define a system of values that was both American—bigger is better—and Romantic—depth and richness.11

The theme of abundance can be found in all periods of American literature.  In Nathaniel Hawthorne’s, Scarlet Letter, for example, a character who is the “father of the Custom House—the patriarch, not only of his little squad of officials, but, I am bold to say, of the respectable body of tide-waiters all over the United States—was a certain permanent Inspector.”12  The Custom-House was the official federal government office responsible for inspecting all cargo coming into the country by ship and determining what if any duties had to be paid.  In the novel, this particular Custom-House is located on a wharf in the harbor of Salem, Massachusetts.  In this particular character, Hawthorne signifies one of the most important aspects of the American diet that also repeatedly appears in its literature—the consumption of large quantities of meat.  The Inspector had the unusual ability to remember in great detail


“the good dinners which it had made no small portion of the happiness of his life to eat….to hear him talk of roast meat was as appetizing as a pickle or an oyster….it always satisfied me to hear him expatiate on fish, poultry, and butcher’s meat, and the most eligible methods of preparing them for the table.  His reminiscences of good cheer, however ancient the date of the actual banquet, seemed to bring the savor of pig or turkey under one’s very nostrils….A tenderloin of beef, a hindquarter of veal, a sparerib of pork, a particular chicken, or a remarkably praiseworthy turkey, which had perhaps adorned his board…would be remembered….”13 

The dominance of meat in the American diet can be seen in several ways.  One is the following chart of specialty foods in the individual franchises of the top thirty fast-food companies in the US:

Type of Food Number of Franchises

Chicken 8,683


Hamburger/Hot Dog/Roast Beef           29,600


Pizza [usually served with a


meat topping]            11,593


Tacos [usually served with a


meat filler] 3,620


Seafood 2,630


Pancakes/Waffles [usually eaten


        with bacon,


        sausage or ham] 1,63014

Another view of this American food habit comes from considering the quantities of meat consumption and production in the United States.  For example,


“Americans spend about 25 percent of their food budget on red meat.  The per capita consumption of beef in the United States has increased steadily, while that of pork has declined….Only in Australia, New Zealand, and Argentina is per capita consumption higher than in the United States.  The United States normally produces about 27 percent of the world’s meat.” (Ibid., (13) 190)

From the United States Chamber of Commerce, the source of these statistics in Compton’s Encyclopedia and from the 19th century work of Hawthorne, we can move to the late 20th century.  In the late 1980’s, Fried Green Tomatoes at the Whistle Stop Café, by a California writer, Fannie Flagg, was published.  In the first section of the novel, a reproduction of an article from the weekly newspaper in her fictional southern US town of Weems, Flagg describes the basic menu of the newly opened Whistle Stop Cafe:


…the breakfast hours are from 5:30 to 7:30, and you can get eggs, grits, biscuits, bacon, sausage, ham and red-eye gravy, and coffee….


For lunch and supper you can have:  fried chicken; pork chops and gravy; catfish, chicken and dumplings; or a barbecue plate; and your choice of three vegetables, biscuits or cornbread, and your drink and dessert….


…the vegetables are:  creamed corn; fried green tomatoes; fried okra; collard or turnip greens; black-eyed peas; candied yams; butter beans or lima beans.15

Later in the novel, the items in a particular meal served to a customer are described as “fried chicken, black-eyed peas, turnip greens, fried green tomatoes, cornbread, and iced tea.”16

The fatness, abundance and purity of meat in the American diet have also been used by some writers as a counterfoil to other kinds of scarcity and impurity.  Sylvia Plath uses the tradition of a large meat meal on Sunday, as a once a week special gathering for American families, that often features a large, oven-roasted turkey, to give stark contrast to another kind of oven:


Mary’s Song

The Sunday lamb cracks in its fat.


The fat


Sacrifices its opacity…

A window, holy gold.


The fire makes it precious,


The same fire

Melting the tallow heretics,


Ousting the Jews.


Their thick palls float

Over the cicatrix of Poland, burnt-out


Germany,


They do not die.

Grey birds obsess my heart,


Mouth ash, ash of eye.


They settle.  On the high

Precipice


That emptied one man into space


The ovens glowed like heavens, incandescent.

It is a heart,


This holocaust I walk in,


O golden child the world will kill and eat.17

One of America’s most gifted and enigmatic of contemporary poets, the Pulitzer Prize winner John Ashbery (1927-), turns America’s abundance into a counterfoil not of impurity but of scarcity as a lack of certainty:


Hardly anything grows here,


Yet the granaries are bursting with meal,


The sacks of meal piled to the rafters.


The streams run with sweetness, fattening fish;


Birds darken the sky.  Is it enough


That the dish of milk is set out at night,


That we think of him sometimes,


Sometimes and always, with mixed feelings?18

Besides the prominence and priority of meat, the Plath poem and the lists from Fried Green Tomatoes at the Whistle Stop Café foreground an important continuity and discontinuity in American food.  The important continuity stems from the fact that the early colonists and pioneers, trying to live in a strange land before it had been developed for agriculture, made their bread primarily from locally available grains, especially corn.  Wheat and other related grains were too hard to grind by hand and required a heavy, complicated mill that the early settlers could not carry with them.  Corn became a staple food as important to the early European colonizers as it already was to the indigenous people:


Young, ripe corn was eaten as roasting ears.  In winter the husks of the kernels were soaked off with lye to make hominy.  For breakfast and supper there was boiled corn-meal mush.  Sometimes the mush was fried and served with butter or pork drippings.  The most common dish, however, was hot corn bread.  Baked on a hoe blade before the fire, this was called hoecake.  Mixed with water into a stiff batter and covered with hot ashes, it was ash cake.  From the Dutch oven it emerged as corn pone or corn loaf.  Small cakes of corn pone were called corn dodgers.19

In the passage from Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter both fish and turkey are mentioned along with pork and chicken.  The fish and turkey were most likely caught and shot in their natural habitats.  The pork and chicken were most likely raised and butchered in a domestic animal keep.  This combination of wild and domestic meat began with the first colonists and continues to the present day.  Indeed, the pioneers who traveled by foot, wagon and horse from the east westward on the American continent found a great abundance of wild game for meat.  Still they tried to carry enough familiar, nutritious foodstuffs to last them for the journey to their new homestead and to carry them through periods when wild game was unavailable.  A typical load for one adult traveling by oxen-drawn wagon westward was:


“…200 pounds of flour, 30 pounds of pilot bread, 75 pounds of bacon, 10 pounds of rice, 5 pounds of coffee, 2 pounds of tea, 25 pounds of sugar, half bushel of dried beans, one bushel dried fruit, 2 pounds of baking soda, 10 pounds salt, half a bushel of cornmeal.  And it is well to have a half bushel of corn, parched and ground.  A small keg of vinegar should also be taken.”20

In many rural or sparsely inhabited parts of America the mixing of wild and domestic meats continues to this day.  In Alaska, for example, where I have lived for many years and which is one-third the area of the entire contiguous forty-eight states of the US, many people still rely on hunting for a large portion of their meat supply.  John Haines, past Poet Laureate of the State of Alaska and Alaska’s best known poet, began homesteading near Fairbanks, Alaska in the 1950’s.  I have known him personally for many years and read poetry with him on the stage of the Loussac Library in Anchorage in 1986.  His poetry clearly reflects how the dependence on wild meat can crystallize the themes of abundance and purity in an identification with the predator:


If the Owl Calls Again

at dusk


from the island in the river,


and it’s not too cold,

I’ll wait for the moon


to rise,


then take wing and glide


to meet him

We will not speak,


but hooded against the frost


soar above


the alder flats, searching.


with tawny eyes

And then we’ll sit


in the shadowy spruce and


pick the bones


of careless mice,

while the long moon drifts


toward Asia


and the river mutters


in its icy bed.

And when morning climbs


the limbs


we’ll part without a sound,

fulfilled, floating


homeward as


the cold world awakens.21

Long before Haines or any other European settled in Alaska, however, the indigenous  people had long lived on whatever meat animals they could kill and prepare.  In fact, when the first French explorers met and spent time with the indigenous people in the north of what is now Canada, they were so impressed by the predominance of uncooked meat in their diets that they called them “Esquimeaux,” which is French for “eaters of raw meat.”  Further down the coasts of Canada and Alaska, however, salmon run by the millions up the great rivers and are caught and used by the local people.  These Americans now eat their salmon after it has been smoked or cooked, as told in the following poem, “Subsistence #2” by Andrew Hope, III (1949-), of Sitka, Alaska:


Dog salmon colors


Glistening


Evening sun


Incoming tide


Washing the beach


Dog salmon shine


Silver purple flash


Reaching


Lifting a big one


By the tail


Incoming tide


Washing the beach


Time to eat


Fried dog salmon


For dinner22

There are five kinds of salmon that migrate into Alaskan fresh waters and are used there for food.  Each kind has its own name and some kinds have different names in different areas of Alaska.  Thus, discontinuities through time in preparation—from raw to cooked—have occurred along with discontinuities in time among practices of naming the same foodstuff.  Dog salmon are so-called because they were once used by the thousands to feed the many dogs upon which the indigenous Alaskan people relied for transportation during the long winters.  This kind of salmon, however, is perfectly fit for human consumption and now that many indigenous people in Alaska travel only by motorized vehicles in all seasons, dog salmon have become a staple of human nutrition.  

These discontinuities connect with the discontinuity signified by the meal ingredients in the first and second quotes from Fried Green Tomatoes at the Whistle Stop Café which is variation in regional foods.  Grits, for example, is a kind of cereal or mush made from corn or wheat that is coarsely ground.  Grits is considered by most Americans to be a food characteristic of the American South.  Its public presence in northern cities is usually the result of southerners moving north and opening restaurants that feature American Southern cuisine.  Other typical regional American foods are codfish associated with the northeastern seafood cuisine, key lime pie associated with the cuisine of the Florida Keys, tortillas and red beans associated with the southwest cuisine derived from America’s Hispanic heritage, and salmon associated with the northwest and Alaskan cuisines.

One of Alaska’s Native American poets, Charlie Blatchford, a Yupik Eskimo whom I knew personally and who is now deceased, stated the case for meat very simply in one of his few published poems:


Forgotten Words

Our language, of what I know,


has been prepared


with wisdom and grace.


The fine skin has been fleshed


and lies to one side.


The innards have carefully


been exposed.


Their sweet flesh


ready for feast.


Meat, the staple of life,


is consumed with satisfaction…


Sedating our need


for new words.23

In the hands of more contemporary poets who are not Native American, as Charlie Blatchford was, meat continues to signify substantial food and is often joined by a kind of substance that could serve as a separate topic alongside food—intoxicants such as alcohol and drugs.  In Whitman, Kerouac, Burroughs, Ginsberg and many other writers, wine, beer and other kinds of mind-altering substances often accompany food and especially meat.  This range of consumable signifiers has a history in all literatures that is as ancient, as interesting and as important as that of meat and other foods.  Indeed, putting the light of interest on food has again brought into focus an important stream in the lives of all peoples that could well serve as a topic for extensive further research, discussion and writing.  In many poets, the connection between meat and wine is briefly made, as in the fourth verse of “Asylum” by Herman Fong (1963-):


At meals they barely feed her,


give her the smallest cuts of meat,


mostly fat, and a few red drops of wine.24

A concentration on the details of ordinary life characterizes the style of many American writers, both older and younger.  John Steinbeck, a Nobel laureate and one of the pre-eminent American literary voices of the 20th century, frequently drew for his characters and settings from the everyday lives of people in California.  Some of his best and most popular writings, novels such as Cannery Row, Grapes of Wrath, and Of Mice and Men, and the short story collection, The Long Valley, feature characters and settings in coastal, southern and central California.  Tortilla Flats features the lives of “paisanos” who lived near the central California coastal town of Monterey.  According to Steinbeck, a paisano was a “mixture of Spanish, Indian, Mexican and assorted Caucasian bloods” (Ch. 1).  The main character, Danny, and his friends hear about a ship that has been wrecked on the nearby coast.  They go to the beach and salvage flotsam from the wreck then sell it.  The sale puts five dollars into Danny’s possession, an unusually large amount of money:


The five dollars from the salvage had lain like fire in Danny’s pocket, but now he knew what to do with it.  He and Pilon went to the market and bought seven pounds of hamburger and a bag of onions and bread and a big paper of candy.  Pablo and Jesus Maria went to Torrelli’s for two gallons of wine, and not a drop did they drink on the way home, either. (Ch. 5)

Part of Steinbeck’s genius as a writer and one of the aspects of his stories that set them apart from other American writings is the deliberate use of food items and activities for characterization and plot development.    Tortilla Flats provides an example of his style as well as continuing to demonstrate the importance of meat in the American diet across all geographic regions and ethnic groups:


Danny’s business was fairly direct.  He went to the back door of a restaurant.  “Got any old bread I can give my dog?”  he asked the cook.  And while that gullible man was wrapping up the food, Danny stole two slices of ham, four eggs, a lamb chop and a fly swatter.


“I will pay you sometime,” he said.


“No need to pay for scraps.  I throw them away if you don’t take them.”


Danny felt better about the theft then.  If that was the way they felt, on the surface he was guiltless.  He went back to Torelli’s [the wine merchant], traded the four eggs, the lamb chop and the fly swatter for a water glass of grappa and retired toward the woods to cook his supper. (Ch.1)

The particular food item of onions appears in the first passage from Tortilla Flats as a small detail that signifies a range of regional foods in an American southwest first colonized by European settlers from Spain not from England.  Between hamburger and onions are both the continuity of easily prepared and consumed meat and the discontinuity of regional American cuisines.  Another great American literary voice, that of William Carlos Williams, also picked out this range of southwestern signifiers on his one and only trip to that part of America.  Besides a fine ear for the peculiarities that distinguish American English from all other kinds of English, Williams also had a keen eye for the small details of place that brought the reader in close to the object of Williams’ writing.  The following passage is from “The Desert Music” which was based on Williams’ trip to the American southwest and his sojourning in towns that, at that time, were far more Hispanic than Caucasian:


–paper flowers (para los santos)


baked red-clay utensils, daubed


with blue, silverware,


dried peppers, onions, print goods, children’s


clothing     .      the place deserted all but


for a few Indians squatted in the


booths, unnoticing (don’t you think it)


as though they slept there      .25

The use of activities around food to develop plot and character is also part of the style of another American novelist who received a Nobel Prize for literature, William Faulkner (1897-1962).  From the deserts and sparse valleys of the southwest to the lush forests, swamps and meadows of the deep south, American literature, like the perduring literature of every language, has consistently insisted that the physical place and its features are part of the story.  In the following passage from Light in August, Faulkner uses Mrs. McEachern’s attempt to nourish Joe as a reflector for both characters:


He was lying so, on his back, his hands crossed on his breast like a tomb effigy, when he heard again feet on the cramped stairs….


Without turning his head the boy heard Mrs. McEachern toil slowly up the stairs.  He heard her approach across the floor.  He did not look, though after a time her shadow came and fell upon the wall where he could see it, and he saw that she was carrying something.  It was a tray of food.  She set the tray on the bed.  He had not once looked at her.  He had not moved.  “Joe,” she said. He didn’t move.  “Joe,” she said.  She could see that his eyes were open.  She did not touch him.


“I aint hungry,” he said.


She didn’t move.  She stood, her hands folded into her apron.  She didn’t seem to be looking at him, either.  She seemed to be speaking to the wall beyond the bed. “I know what you think.  It aint that.  He never told me to bring it to you.  It was me that thought to do it.  He dont know.  It aint any food he sent you.”  He didn’t move.  His was calm as a graven face, looking up at the steep pitch of the plank ceiling.  “You haven’t eaten today.  Sit up and eat.  It wasn’t him that told me to bring it to you.  He dont know it.  I waited until he was gone and then I fixed it myself.”


He sat up then.  While she watched him he rose from the bed and took the tray and carried it to the corner and turned it upside down, dumping the dishes and the food and all onto the floor.  Then he returned to the bed, carrying the empty tray as though it were a monstrance and he the bearer, his surplice the cut down undergarment which had been bought for a man to wear.  She was watching him now, though she had not moved.  Her hands were still rolled into her apron.  He got back into bed and lay again on his back, his eyes wide and still upon the ceiling.  He could see her motionless shadow, shapeless, a little hunched.  Then it went away.  He did not look, but he could hear her kneel in the corner, gathering the broken dishes back into the tray.  Then she left the room. It was quite still then.26

Faulkner lived and wrote in the Bible Belt.  The Bible Belt signified the fact that most people in the south were fundamentalist Christian Protestants who girded themselves with the spirit of austerity and yearning for an otherworldly paradise of simplicity and peace articulated so strongly by New England writers such as Wylie and Bishop.  Although food occurs frequently in Faulkner’s work, it is rarely ample, elaborate or wasted.  Usually it serves to highlight the physical scarcity and tenuous moral condition of people who live on the edge of a society whose abundance seldom appears in his work:


And Judith.  She lived alone now.  Perhaps she had lived alone ever since that Christmas day last year and then year before last and then three years and then four years ago, since though Sutpen was gone now…she lived in anything but solitude, what with Ellen in bed in the shuttered room, requiring the unremitting attention of a child while she waited with that amazed and passive uncomprehension to die; and she (Judith) and Clytie making and keeping a kitchen garden of sorts to keep them alive; and Wash Jones, living in the abandoned and rotting fishing camp in the river bottom which Sutpen had built after the first woman—Ellen—entered his house and the last deer and bear hunter went out of it, where he now permitted Wash and his daughter and infant granddaughter to live, performing the heavy garden work and supplying Ellen and Judith and then Judith with fish and game now and then, even entering the house now, who until Sutpen went away, had never approached nearer than the scuppernong arbor behind the kitchen where on Sunday afternoons he and Sutpen would drink from the demi-john and the bucket of spring water which Wash fetched from almost a mile away….”27

Another indication of Faulkner’s genius is his ability to see in an event as ordinary as a young man ordering pie and coffee from a waitress with whom he secretly wants some kind of relationship the potential for fine, deep drama.  Faulkner’s preference for scant food and small food items continues to display the themes of scarcity and purity that were inescapable in his social and historical environment.  In the following passage, Faulkner describes Joe, the boy in the passage just presented, who has come to a restaurant to be served by the waitress, in terms that transparently bring into play the signifiers of purity as immaterial dimension and food as binding, burdensome material necessity:


He believed that the men at the back…were laughing at him.  So he sat quite still on the stool, looking down, the dime clutched in his palm.  He did not see the waitress until the two overlarge hands appeared upon the counter opposite him and into sight.  He could see the figured pattern of her dress and the bib of an apron and the two bigknuckled hands lying on the edge of the counter as completely immobile as if they were something she had fetched in from the kitchen.  “Coffee and pie,” he said.


Her voice sounded downcast, quite empty.  “Lemon coconut chocolate.”


In proportion to the height from which her voice came, the hands could not be her hands at all.  “Yes,” Joe said.


The hands did not move.  The voice did not move.  “Lemon coconut chocolate.  Which kind.”  To the others they must have looked quite strange.  Facing one another across the dark, stained, greasecrusted and frictionsmooth counter, they must have looked a little like they were praying:  the youth countryfaced, in clean Spartan clothing, with an awkwardness which invested him with a quality unworldly and innocent; and the woman opposite him, downcast, still, waiting, who because of her smallness partook likewise of that quality of his, of something beyond flesh.  Her face was highboned, gaunt.  The flesh was taut across her