Indigenous cuisine of the Americas

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Cuisines of the Americas
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Indigenous cuisine of the Americas

The many indigenous tribes and nations of the Americas (see Indigenous cultures of North America, Indigenous cultures of Mesoamerica and Indigenous cultures of South America) each had somewhat different foods, and many of their dishes are available today.

In most cases there has been considerable influence in both directions between indigenous cultures and colonial cultures. This article therefore overlaps considerably with articles on the other cuisines of the region.

Understand

The Neolithic revolution where agriculture began and people who had previously been hunter-gatherers settled near their crops and soon developed irrigation and cities seems to have occurred independently in at least half a dozen places around the world, including two in the Americas.

One was among the Indigenous cultures of Mesoamerica who developed agriculture based on the "three sisters" corn (maize), beans and squash starting before 7000 BCE. Later their crops and techniques spread to other indigenous groups across North America. Mesoamerica also made other important contributions to world cuisine, notably chocolate and chili peppers.

The other was among the Incas, with a different mix of crops. Their great contributions to world cuisine were the potato and sweet potato.

Foods

While some native groups have been farming for a thousand years or more, and many others have settled on reservations or in towns in recent centuries, hunting and fishing are still common and much native cooking involves game meats or foods foraged in the wild.

Bison mother and calf

Beware that these animals can be quite dangerous; an elk, moose or buffalo can total a small car by charging it, and in North America more humans are killed by moose than by bears and wolves combined.

  • Category:Eat listing with no coordinatesSalmonCategory:Has map markers. These fish are taken on both the Atlantic and Pacific coasts of both Canada and the US, as well as in several other countries. Only two cultures in human history have developed advanced forms of art before irrigation or cities. They were the Ainu in Japan and the Indians of the Pacific Northwest in Canada and the US; both relied heavily on salmon. Salmon is readily available fresh, frozen, smoked, or canned in markets anywhere in North America, and is often offered in restaurants; it is almost always more expensive than most fish.
    Some claim the world's best salmon is found in the Pacific Northwest, smoked using traditional native methods, though like almost any "world's best " claim this is disputed. One good source is Haida Gwaii, also known as the Queen Charlotte Islands.
    Salmon on Wikipedia salmon (Q2796766) on Wikidata
  • Category:Eat listing with no coordinatesArctic charCategory:Has map markers (Salvelinus alpinus). A fish species related to salmon and trout that needs cold water to live. They are found in parts of Northern Europe, but are most abundant in Northern Canada, especially Nunavut. They are fished commercially, are popular with sport fishermen, and make excellent eating. Arctic char on Wikipedia Arctic char (Q421047) on Wikidata
  • Category:Eat listing with no coordinatesCountry foodCategory:Has map markers. This phrase is used mainly by Canada's urban Inuit (Eskimo), referring to foods that are common up north but not found in supermarkets in the south. It is mainly used for hunted sea mammals such as seal, walrus and whale, but can also refer to other game such as caribou, ptarmigan, char or beaver. Inuit cuisine on Wikipedia

Sports hunters and fishermen also take some of these types of game, and some natives run resorts for them or work as guides.

Other traditional native foods include:

Inuit bannock

Drugs

A number of common drugs originated in the Americas, though their use in indigenous societies was often rather different from how they came to be used elsewhere.

  • Tobacco use goes back many thousands of years, and was mainly ceremonial among native groups.
  • Coca taken as tea or by chewing the leaves is a stimulant used by many Andean tribes, not entirely safe but not remarkably dangerous either, and legal in several countries. Cocaine, the concentrated white powder which can be extracted from coca, is quite dangerous and is illegal in most countries.
  • Two psychedelics (effects similar to LSD) have been used in indigenous societies, mainly by shamans and mainly in Mexico and the US Southwest. The peyote cactus (mescaline) has been made illegal in many countries, but US law has an exemption for the Native American Church. The psilocybin mushroom is also illegal in many places, but "shrooms" are available in most North American cities and in parts of Mexico for the tourist trade.
  • Another psychedelic ritual drink, Ayahuasca, is common in the Amazon Basin, prepared by the prolonged decoction of the stems of the Banisteriopsis caapi vine and the leaves of the Psychotria viridis shrub. It is offered in many tourist places today. It is not recommended if not performed by an experienced and trusted shaman, and you even may get something totally different than Ayahuasca.

Destinations

Some of these foods are available in restaurants or stores on reserves or in other native communities; see Indigenous cultures of North America, Indigenous cultures of Mesoamerica and Indigenous cultures of South America for information on some of the communities. There are also native-run restaurants or stores in various cities.

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