Granted, I don't have the knowledge to judge how similar these recipes are to ones that might be considered "authentic," but I am impressed that these veggies showed up in a mainstream cookbook from 1976 at all.
There are a couple of recipes for akee (more commonly spelled "ackee"), including this one that's supposed to be a beloved Jamaican dish.
As someone with boring European ancestry who lives 50 years after this book's initial print run, I still only knew about a[c]kee from watching Food Network shows.
There's a recipe for calabaza.
I only knew about calabaza from watching Food Network shows.
There's a recipe for dasheen.
I only knew about dasheen from watching Food Network shows.
And there is also a recipe for winter melon.
I only knew about winter melon from watching Food Network shows.
There's a recipe for callalou (more commonly spelled "callaloo"-- which are the leaves of the dasheen root, if I understood the book correctly).
I only knew about callaloo from... say it with me...
Nope! I tricked you. I don't remember seeing this on a Food Network show. I'm a lazy academic who only knew Callaloo as the title of an African-American literary magazine. So I didn't even realize it was food-related!
In short, while white Americans have learned a lot more about recipes from non-European cultures than we did 50 years ago, this book also shows that a lot of common-elsewhere veggies are still not well-known here. (Or maybe that I'm just hopelessly behind the times? Probably a little of both...)





I don't watch the food network, so I hadn't heard of any of these vegetables. I may have heard of winter melon, but I don't know what it looks like. I come from the land of endless summer zucchinis and sweet corn where white eggplant is exotic.
ReplyDeleteThey put stuff like this on "Chopped" a lot. I think they want to see what cooks will do with things they're unlikely to be familiar with.
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