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Wednesday, November 23, 2005

Happy Thanksgiving!

"Pass the deer and eel please!" Are these words you would expect to hear around your Thanksgiving dinner table? When most people think of a traditional U.S. Thanksgiving dinner, they think of turkey, mashed potatoes, cranberry sauce, and maybe apple pie. The original American Thanksgiving dinner in 1621, however, was very different. In the fall of 1621, 52 Pilgrims and 90 Native Americans came together in Plymouth, Massachusetts, for meals celebrating the harvest. Although Thanksgiving did not become an official holiday until 1863, most Americans consider the Plymouth feast as the first Thanksgiving. The food that these early Americans shared was not what most people would expect.



Pilgrims and Native Americans probably ate turkey. Mashed potatoes, cranberry sauce, and apple pie, however, were not on the menu. In 1621, potatoes were not part of the Pilgrims' diet. According to Kathleen Curtin, most Pilgrims had never heard of potatoesÂpotatoess grew only in South America until the late1600ss. Curtin is a food historian atPlymouthh Plantation, a living-history museum in Massachusetts. The Pilgrims and Native Americans may have eaten cranberries, but certainly not cranberry sauce. Sugar, an important ingredient in cranberry sauce, had probably not yet traveled to the New World. According to Curtin, "It would be 50 years before an Englishman mentioned boiling this New England berry with sugar." But the Pilgrims must have eaten apple pie? Surprisingly, they did not. Apples do not naturally grow in North America. The fruit didn't come to the United States until years later. So what, then, did people eat at the first Thanksgiving? The meals and festivities lasted for three days. During that time, the early Americans ate a lot of food. They probably had deer, clams, dried berries, corn, wild turkeys, and fish such as cod, sea bass, and eels. And the meat did not come in packages from the grocery store. "Animals were often cooked with heads and feet still attached. The 'humbles' [what we would call guts] were cooked and eaten as well," Carolyn Travers, a researcher atPlymouthh Plantation, explained. This Thanksgiving, as you dig in, be thankful you're eating turkey and pie and not baked guts!
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National Geographic

This hysterical!

Electric Sheep Thanksgiving Special

Link: http://www.e-sheep.com/turkey/




What I do is kick them in the pants with a diamond buckled shoe!
~~Aileen Mehle~~

3 Broken Heels:

Roberto Iza Valdés said...
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
Dawn said...

cool blog...love the shoes!

My Shoes said...

yes. goats and guts roberto.. i bet most of us only think about what we eat todayu.. turkey and stuffing and not what those pilgrims REALLY had to eat. it was not what we eat now.

Thanks Dawn. stop by any time!