Lusternia vs Food: Cheeeeeeeeese Edition
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I completely agree with your comment on American cuisine though. We tend to take things from other cultures, make changes to them / combine them in different ways, and then call them ours.
Some etymologists believe that barbecue derives from the word barabicu found in the language of the Taíno people of the Caribbean and the Timucua of Florida,[1] and it has entered multiple European languages in the form of barbacoa. Specifically, the Oxford English Dictionary traces the word back to Haiti, that translates as a "framework of sticks set upon posts".[2] Gonzalo Fernández De Oviedo y Valdés, a Spanish explorer, was the first to use the word "barbecoa" in print in Spain in 1526 in the Diccionario de la Lengua Española (2nd Edition) of the Real Academia Española.[3] After Columbus landed in the Americas in 1492, the Spaniards had seemed to have found native Haitians roasting animal meat over a grill consisting of a wooden framework resting on sticks and a fire made underneath. The flames and smoke would rise and envelop the animal meat, giving it a certain flavor.[4] Strangely enough, the same framework was used as a means of protection against animal attacks at night.
Tonight amidst the mountaintops
And endless starless night
Singing how the wind was lost
Before an earthly flight
It is literally served with a stick of melted butter.
Vive l'apostrophe!
Kraft made this? You do not mix the cheese of my people in Tex Mex!!! I declare Crusade! *sounds horn* *girds loins*
I have also heard the area surrounding Paris makes excellent applejack. I have a bottle of some French apple liquor from France but it is not from Paris and I haven't cracked it.
Ten to one says they don't have anything close to apple in them
If olive oil comes from olives, where does baby oil come from?
If vegetarians eat vegetables, what do humanitarians eat?