Note: this post is Part One of several on American Cuisine. Stay tuned for further adventures…
In my so-called real life I work in IT and have worked with a number of firms that had large international employee bases, in both cases this means I’ve had the opportunity to have a lots of discussion with people from all over about my favorite subject, food. Recently, at one of these organizations, a number of us were going to eat lunch and were trying to decide what we wanted to eat and where we could go for it. The group was a veritable United Nations of hungry geeks from all over the world. We were tossing around the various options, Indian, Chinese, Thai, Peruvian etc. when one of the group who is not American said “Let’s have American food, I have X food everyday”. Another member of the group, who isn’t American either, then remarked that “Americans don’t really care about food and don’t really seem to have a cuisine” Naturally, the Americans in the group responded indignantly that there was so an American Cuisine. This led to a discussion that went something like this:
“Ok, so name me some American Cuisine”
We are all silent while we think about this.
“Uh, Pizza!”
“That’s Italian.”
“Oh yeah, Ok, Tacos!”
“Mexican.”
Stumped again.
“I know! Hotdogs!”
“Nope, German.”
Someone blurts out “Spaghetti!”
“SPAGHETTI?” We all reply as if we haven’t already thought of or offered up something equally foodtardic.
“Oh, yeah, Italian, I was thinking of the things my Mom cooked”
“Your Mom cooked Spaghetti?”
“Well, yeah, she thought we should be American”
“Ok, yeah, my Mom did too…”
“She did put cumin and cinnamon in it though”
Finally, someone offers up hamburgers.
“I’ve got it! HAMBURGERS! Hamburgers are quintessential American food!”
“Actually, I think Hamburgers are German too. You guys just added tomato castup and secret sauce”;
This leads to a discussion of why it’s called “tomato castup” when there is no other castup and how come it’s spelled “catsup” when it’s really spelled “ketchup”. Evidently the castup/ketchup debate sparked someones imagination because someone says, excitedly,
“French Fries!
“Uh, FRENCH fries? Dude, those are like, French.”
Curses, foiled again.
I’ve been giving this some serious thought, I am sure we have a cuisine, but they kind of have a point, is this what people think American food is, fast food, junk food? I mean, even the Americans in the group, who are all much younger than I, don’t really seem to really know or at least can’t articulate it anyway. Finally I say “Corn”.
They all look at me like I just sprouted an ear on the end of my nose.
“Corn?”
“Yeah, corn, corn is American, well North American, er, native to the New World; so are potatoes and tomatoes and we do have a [American] cuisine.”
Everyone looks at me a bit skeptically, even the Americans in the group. I start spouting out all the American food I can think of .
“Corn on the cob, popcorn, cornbread, johnny cakes, hoecakes, grits, flapjacks, maple syrup, potato chips, baked potatoes, barbeque, crabcakes, spiced shrimp, blue crab, hush-puppies, greens with ham hocks, hopping john, chili, fried chicken, mac and cheese, apple pie and cheese, beaten biscuits, wild rice, jerky, gumbo, southern Maryland stuffed ham, Boston baked beans, salmon, pemmican, shad and shad roe, abalone, oysters, ice cream cones, chicken fried steak, lobster rolls, pumpkin pie, roasted turkey, clam chowder, sweet potato casserole, ambrosia, potato salad, egg foo young and chop suey, Lady Baltimore cake, pecan pie…”
I manage to get these all out before I run out of breath. They all just kind of stare at me and then start responding with things like “Those are all American food?”, “We invented potato chips?” and “What’s pemmican?” but I am still pondering this whole American Cuisine thing and then I say, almost to myself, “ American cuisine is like we are, a melting pot, literally.
It’s kind of weird that we, all of us, had to stop and think about what American Cuisine was when we actually have a rich and varied cuisine, which in itself isn’t weird, what’s weird is that we don’t even really seem to know about it, or do we just not think of it as a “cuisine” like we do French, Chinese, Indian etc.
By the time we had hashed all this out, our lunch break was pretty much over and we didn’t have time to go out so we all ended up with whatever we could come up with fast – guess what? hotdogs, cheeseburgers, pizza, maybe that explains a lot…
Stay tuned for Part Two..
This winter we had a couple of theme dinner parties that were great fun & great meals (potluck), but all “foreign” food. We had a Mexican night, a Thai night, an Italian night, and just last week a vegetarian Indian birthday event. But one night that we kept talking about but which never got off the ground was a regional “State Dinner.” One friend really wanted to cook Baked Alaska for dessert, but in order to do that, all the other dishes in the meal had to be the name of a state. Like…Maryland crab cakes! Virginia ham! Florida oranges! The menu seemed sort of lame, but it is a pretty creative group of people so I figured half the fun would be seeing what people showed up with. I also think a City Dinner could be good (starting with Manhattans), as well as a Regional Meal.
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What marvelous fun! Lame menu? I don’t see how! Just think Maine Lobster, Georgia Peaches, Virginia Ham, Idaho Potatoes, Carolina BBQ, Maryland Fried Chicken, Kentucky Fried Chicken :). We have a party every summer (Antipodes) in addition to the Pre-Thanksgiving bash;. this year Antipodes is going to be all local and American Cuisine, probably fairly regional, like Down Home Southern fish Fry. Last year it was the Donner Party, donnor being Turkish kebabs, so we had a middle eastern flair. I can tell you that cranking out pita bread in a 500+ degree oven, on a 90 degree day in an un-airconditioned kitchen is an experience not to be repeated! Anyway, It’s usually the end of June so there is a lot of produce ready,. I am looking forward to it. One day you will be able to make it to one of my parties I hope.
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Looking forward to another post. Don’t forget Eastern Shore Stewed Tomatoes, Maryland Steamed Crabs and Crab Cakes,Baltimore Barbecue Chicken, Baked Stuffed Rockfish, Maryland Shore Oyster Dressing and Chesapeake Bay Oyster Stew. Check out The Heritage of Southern Cooking – Camille Glenn, and Dishing up Maryland – Lucie Snodgrass.
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