food and drink of peoples Indigenous to the Americas
Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Indigenous_cuisine_of_the_Americas
Indigenous cuisine of the Americas - Wikipedia
November 20, 2025 - Southeastern Native Americans traditionally supplement their diets with meat from hunting native game. Venison is a vital staple meat, due to the abundance of white-tailed deer in the region. Rabbits, squirrels, opossums, and raccoons are also common. Although it may have been secondary to game hunting, fishing is also an important food source; many peoples lived near rivers and other consistent sources of fish.
Amazon
amazon.com › Foods-Americas-Native-Recipes-Traditions › dp › 1580081193
Foods of the Americas: Native Recipes and Traditions [A Cookbook]: Smithsonian American Indian, Divina, Fernando, Divina, Marlene: 9781580081191: Amazon.com: Books
Some of the specialties are: Fry Bread Turkey with Oaxacan Black Mole Wild Rice and Corn Fritters Venison with Juniper and Wild Huckleberry Sauce Chilean-Style Avocado and Shrimp Salad To complement the recipes, Foods of the Americas also features nine illustrated short essays by American Indian writers who offer personal insights into a variety of indigenous food traditions.
What did Europeans eat before discovery of Americas?
Strawberries are actually native to Europe. The modern variaties are based on hybrids from South America. The native European species were edible though and were eaten. Many fruits were present in Europe. The Romans spread grapes and likely apples and pears. Brambles and raspberries, currants and many more are naturally found in European woods. Quinces, medlars etc. also grew. Many of these can be stored or dried quite well. Cabbage, onions, peas and broadbeans, beets, many radish like plants, other greens, carrots and relatives of them are also all native and were eaten in some capacity. Many common garden weeds are native to Europe and edible. Dandelions, stinging nettles etc. More on reddit.com
Food in North America pre-colonization?
Which parts of North America? There are hundreds of communities that would each have their own specific food traditions. More on reddit.com
What are some foods that you can only find in America and no where else in the world?
What's the corndog scene like overseas? More on reddit.com
Cuisine of the Americas
what are some examples of Mississippian cuisine? and how do we know what they were? More on reddit.com
Videos
34:11
7 Outstanding American Dishes! - YouTube
13:26
American Food, Mapped - YouTube
28:46
The 4 foods that define America - YouTube
17:50
Shocking Origins of old American Foods You Didn’t Know About ...
07:47
Most Popular Foods in the Usa | Top 10 American Food You Must Try ...
The 4 foods that define America
Britannica
britannica.com › technology › agriculture & agricultural technology
18 Food Crops Developed in the Americas | Britannica
1 month ago - The exact origin of cacao (the source of chocolate) is debated, but it may have been domesticated in South America and then introduced to the Maya some 1,500 years ago. Also known as manioc or yuca, cassava was likely domesticated 8,000–10,000 years ago in southern Brazil by ancient Amazonian peoples. Chia was widely cultivated in pre-Columbian Mesoamerica and was an important food to Aztecs.
Tasting Table
tastingtable.com › 1297689 › native-american-foods-should-try-once
26 Native American Foods You Should Try At Least Once - Tasting Table
February 19, 2025 - Jerkies, salt-cured meats, and similar products are so universal for many reasons, such as the seasonal availability of animals, long winters without plant-based foods, and the abundance of perishable meat needed to be preserved once an animal has been killed. In Native American communities, wild animals like venison, bison, salmon, and turkey have been dried and preserved in such a manner.
Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian
americanindian.si.edu › nk360 › informational › native-life-food
Native Life and Food: Food Is More Than Just What We Eat | Helpful Handout Educator Resource
Along with potatoes, many other foods—including corn, beans, squash, pumpkins, peppers, tomatoes, yams, peanuts, wild rice, chocolate, pineapples, avocados, papayas, pecans, strawberries, cranberries, and blueberries, to name a few, are indigenous to the Americas.
Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Cuisine_of_the_Americas
Cuisine of the Americas - Wikipedia
July 10, 2024 - The cuisine of the Americas is made up of a variety of food preparation styles. North American cuisine consists of foods native to or popular in countries of North America, such as Canadian cuisine, American cuisine, Mexican cuisine, and Central American cuisine.
Cook Unity
cookunity.com › blog › american-food
What is American food? Origins, influences, and iconic meals
Explore the history, cultural influences, and iconic regional American foods that define American cuisine—from Native dishes to modern fusion favorites.
Reddit
reddit.com › r/askeurope › what did europeans eat before discovery of americas?
r/AskEurope on Reddit: What did Europeans eat before discovery of Americas?
January 19, 2022 -
I have been thinking ... potatoes, tomatoes, corn, pepers, vanilla, pumpkins, beans, sunflower, strowberries, pineapple, avocado, sweet potatos ... all of it originates from Americas.
I am wondering what Europeans ate prior to discovering Americas. Do we know anything about European cusines before that times.
I imagine our ancestors ate a lot of cereals and dumplings. Do you know any dishes/recipies?
Top answer 1 of 42
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Strawberries are actually native to Europe. The modern variaties are based on hybrids from South America. The native European species were edible though and were eaten. Many fruits were present in Europe. The Romans spread grapes and likely apples and pears. Brambles and raspberries, currants and many more are naturally found in European woods. Quinces, medlars etc. also grew. Many of these can be stored or dried quite well. Cabbage, onions, peas and broadbeans, beets, many radish like plants, other greens, carrots and relatives of them are also all native and were eaten in some capacity. Many common garden weeds are native to Europe and edible. Dandelions, stinging nettles etc.
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Hello, trained historian here, who worked extensively with the medieval era. So, what did old-timey people eat? In Denmark, we're mainly talking about a diet without much meat. Only the richest nobles could afford to eat meat dishes every day, and for the vast majority of the population, meat-focused dishes was a luxury, largely reserved the major holidays, such as Christmas and Easter. Ofc. meat was eaten, but not in the same style and context as today. It was mainly dried, smoked, or preserved in other ways. It wasn't a fresh roast or piece of steak. Contrary to nowadays, beef and mutton was, for a long time, the main eating animal in Denmark, before pork took over, pork being regarded as a luxury in medieval times. Poultry wasn't really viable, not even for the richest, outside of special occasions. The only widely available meat, was fish. Particularly herring, which the Danish belts floweth over with, so much so that the main income for the Danish state for a long time, was taxing the Scanian herring-markets. It was crazy how much herring was pulled from the debts. When the small silver suckers stupidly migrated through Øresund, you could practically pick them out of the water with your bare hands. So, if meat was off the table, bar at holidays, what else did people eat? Ofc. fish, but also porridge from barley, or oats if you were fancy. The first price however, was cabbage. Cabbage was so important in medieval Danish cuisine, that the oldest Danish word for garden is kålgård, meaning "cabbage plot." Peas were also extremely important to Danish cuisine, in multiple forms, but not the modern green ones, most people think of... Mainly the hard yellow and grey ones, that were dried and needed to be boiled or stewed for a long time to be edible. Ofc. there was also things like bread and such. Onion and garlic were known to be used as sources of flavour, since spices weren't a thing most people had access to. Various fruits, apples and plums and such, were also popular, particularly the apple, with many of even the poorest farms having an apple tree.
Reddit
reddit.com › r/askfoodhistorians › food in north america pre-colonization?
r/AskFoodHistorians on Reddit: Food in North America pre-colonization?
August 23, 2021 -
What did food in North America look like before European colonization? Are there any preserved recipes or cooking techniques?
Top answer 1 of 13
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Which parts of North America? There are hundreds of communities that would each have their own specific food traditions.
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Check out America's First Cuisines by Sophie D. Coe. It's mainly about Prehispanic Mesoamerica and Peruvian cuisine. Basically, lots of corn. In Mesoamerica, most people mostly ate corn gruel (atole) flavored with chili, salt, beans, tomatoes, etc for the majority of their calories (just about everyone in the world ate gruel and simple carbs for most of their meals at the time). You won't find any recipes, but there are descriptions of feasts, and certain things like tamales, atole, and tortillas are made the same way (though there were a wider variety of all of these things). Something like a taco with guacamole and turkey meat (or any combination of sauces/meats made of Prehispanic ingredients) could easily have been found in a market in Tenochtitlan. Here's a list of popular street foods from Sahagun, a priest who wrote an ethnology of the Nahua shortly after the Conquest: "He sells meat tamales; turkey meat packets; plain tamales; tamales cooked in an earth oven; those cooked in an olla...grains of maize with chile, tamales with chile...fish tamales, fish with grains of maize, frog tamales, frog with grains of maize, axolotl with grains of maize, axolotl tamales, tamales with grains of maize, mushrooms with grains of maize, tuna cactus with grains of maize, rabbit tamales, rabbit with grains of maize, pocket gopher tamales: tasty--tasty, very tasty...Where [it is] tasty, [it has] chile, salt, tomates, squash seeds: shredded, crumbled, juiced. He sells tamales of maize softened in wood ashes, the water of tamales, tamales of maize softened in lime--narrow tamales, fruit tamales, cooked bean tamales,; cooked beans with grains of maize, cracked beans with grains of maize; broke, cracked grains of maize. [He sells] salted wide tamales, tamales bound up on top, [with] grains of maize thrown in; crumbled, pounded tamales; spotted tamales, pointed tamales, white fruit tamales, red fruit tamales, turkey egg tamales, turkey eggs with grains of maize; tamales of tender maize, tamales of green maize, brick-shaped tamales, braised ones; plain tamales, honey tamales, bee tamales, tamales with grains of maize, squash tamales, crumbled tamales, maize flower tamales. The bad food seller [is] he who sells filthy tamales, discolored tamales--broken, tasteless, quite tasteless, inedible, frightening, deceiving; tamales made of chaff, swollen tamales, spoiled tamales, foul tamales--sticky, gummy; old tamales, cold tamales-- dirty and sour, very sour, exceedingly sour, stinking. The food seller sells tortillas which [are] thick, thickish, thick overall, extremely thick; he sells thin [ones]--thin tortillas, stretch-out tortillas,; disclike, straight...with shelled beans, cooked shelled beans, uncooked shelled beans; with shelled beans mashed; chile with maize, tortillas with meat and grains of maize, folded...with chile--chile wrapped, gathered in the hand; ashen tortillas, washed tortillas. He sells folded tortillas, thick tortillas, coarse tortillas. He sells tortillas with turkey eggs, tortillas made with honey, pressed ones, glove-shaped tortillas, plain tortillas, assorted ones, braised ones, sweet tortillas, amaranth seed tortillas, squash tortillas, green maize tortillas, brick-shaped tortillas, tuna cactus tortillas; broken, crumbled, old tortillas; cold tortillas, toasted ones, dried tortillas, stinking tortillas. He sells foods sauces, hot sauces; fried [food], olla-cooked [food], juices, sauces of juices, shredded [food] with chile, with squash seeds, with tomatoes, with smoked chile, with hot chile, with yellow chile, with mild red chile sauce, yellow chile sauce, hot chile sauce, with "bird excrement" sauce, sauce of smoked chile, heated [sauces], bean sauce; [he sells] toasted beans, cooked beans, mushroom sauce, sauce of small squash, sauce of large tomatoes, sauce of ordinary tomatoes, sauce of various kinds of sour herbs, avocado sauce."
Food Timeline
foodtimeline.org › usa.html
The Food Timeline--USA food history sources
Nearly all of today's popular U.S.A foods (apple pie, hot dogs, hamburgers, pizza, tacos, chocolate, jelly beans, ice cream, steak, potato salad, watermelons) originated in other countries. Their ingredients and recipes were introduced to our shores by colonists, settlers, and immigrants.
Insight Vacations
insightvacations.com › home › travel › latin america › traditional south american food: top 20 dishes you need to try
Traditional South American food: top 20 dishes you need to try
August 21, 2025 - Palm oil, peanuts, and okra became staples that shaped much of South America’s coastal cuisine. Made from cornmeal, these versatile rounds can be grilled, fried, or baked. Stuff them with cheese, shredded chicken, or beans for a snack or meal that’s equal parts comfort and popular street food.
Britannica Education
britannicaeducation.com › blog › 18-food-crops-developed-in-the-americas
18 Food Crops Developed in the Americas - Britannica Education Blog
November 2, 2022 - The origin of cacao (the source of chocolate) is debated, but it may have been domesticated in South America and then introduced to the Maya 1,500 years ago. Also known as manioc or yuca, cassava was likely domesticated 8,000–10,000 years ago in southern Brazil by ancient Amazonian peoples. Chia was widely cultivated in pre-Columbian Mesoamerica and was an essential food for Aztecs.
Food Tank
foodtank.com › home › agriculture › 20 native north american foods with stories to tell
20 Native North American Foods with Stories to Tell – Food Tank
July 8, 2020 - Home » Agriculture » 20 Native North American Foods with Stories to Tell ... Indigenous and traditional crops are an important source of food and fiber for people around the globe. Often these crops are resilient to pests and disease or can tolerate high temperatures, drought, or flooding.
Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org › wiki › List_of_food_plants_native_to_the_Americas
List of food plants native to the Americas - Wikipedia
1 week ago - Indian Potato – roots of two native species- Apios americana and Apios priceana · Jerusalem artichoke – specific species of sunflower with large, edible root. ... Oca – specific species of Oxalis, or Wood Sorrel with large edible root. Tobacco Root – (species of Valerian, not actual tobacco) ... Yampah – several plants in the Perideridia family.
Reddit
reddit.com › r/askanamerican › what are some foods that you can only find in america and no where else in the world?
r/AskAnAmerican on Reddit: What are some foods that you can only find in America and no where else in the world?
December 26, 2024 - Piki (a traditional food of the Hopi) is the first thing that comes to mind. Sort of like a tortilla chip had a baby with a crepe. ... …Indian tacos, fry bread (bannock), scrambled eggs with green onions, Pshofee, grape dumplings, bison burgers, 3 sisters (succotash), poke salad, wild rice ,maple syrup, walleye fish ... The bannock comes from Scotland, although I think the fry bread version is North American.
Reddit
reddit.com › r/dankprecolumbianmemes › cuisine of the americas
r/DankPrecolumbianMemes on Reddit: Cuisine of the Americas
November 2, 2024 - Suntubers (jerusalem artechoke) and groundnut (apios americana) are perennials that show improvement and were likely a decent chunk of diets. Loads of others trees and shrubs and herbs were used as food and medicine, highbush cranberry (crampbark) seemed to have been spread everywhere people were in the eastern/northern part of the continent.
Indiancountrybooks
indiancountrybooks.com › shop › foods-of-the-americasnative-recipes-and-traditions
Foods of the Americas:Native Recipes and Traditions
Indian Country Books by Native Media Network has the largest store selection of books, music, videos, news media and live TV about Native America and other Indigenous bands around the world.