Category: Cooking

May 15

Capsicum Peppers Origin

Capsicum is a genus of plants from the Solanaceae family, cultivated for thousands of years by the people of the tropical Americas. The term chilli or chile is widely used and it refers exclusively to the smaller, hot types of capsicum fruits. Its orthography is common in Spanish although the name varies depending on the location. For example, in South America it is better known as aj, locoto or rocoto, meanwhile in USA it is called bell pepper and in Canada and the United Kingdon only like pepper. The spelling of this word is very important to make the difference between the capsicum fruit ?chili? and the country Chile which is named after the Quechua chin (“cold”), tchili (“snow”), or chilli (“where the land ends”). There is also some disagreement about whether it is proper to use the word “pepper” when Knife Sharpener discussing chili peppers because “pepper” originally referred to the genus Piper, not capsicum. Despite this dispute, a sense of pepper referring to capsicum is supported by English dictionaries. Even though chilis are considered as a vegetable, they are transformed in hot sauces or chili pepper powder to be used in culinary dishes as spice. Since at least 7500 years BC, chili peppers were domesticated by prehistoric people starting in the south with Peru to Mexico in the north of the Americas. Some of these countries used capsicum fruits with medical purposes. In most European countries and in the continental United States of America, only Jalapeo pepper is produced but habanero chiles do not grow well because of the climate. Only in San Diego or Florida, they survive from one growing season to the next.

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Apr 07

Can You Make a Career Out of Food History?

Everyone knows the stereotype of historians … they’re dusty old fellows with patches on their jacket elbows who smell faintly of book mold and are forever squinting at something tiny scribbled in the margin of an old book. Let’s face it; historian is not one of the sexiest career choices in the world. Whatever kind of history you pick, be it military history, government history or that popular catchall “world history,” there’s just not a lot of glamour. Food history, however, is a different kettle of (poached) fish entirely. The most common title given to a practitioner of food history is that of culinary anthropologist. This is a fascinating field, in which world cuisines are researched and related across a broad spectrum. One of the most famous faces in this field is Deb Duchon, whose face will be familiar to viewers of the hit Food Network series “Good Eats” featuring Alton Brown. D Wusthof Knife Sharpener eb is the go-to woman for anything involving food history for the show, and is seen on-camera frequently. Culinary anthropology will take you around the world, as well. Consider the humble flatbread, a food item found in almost every world culture. In South America, it’s the tortilla. In Europe, it’s the crepe, and in America it most often takes the form of a pancake, although our culture is so homogenized that all the others take equal prominence. Basically, it’s a simple, unleavened or lightly leavened bread that can be used either as a food on its own or to wrap around other foods to make them portable. In the process of researching the history of this food, a culinary anthropologist from a Texas university traveled all over the world, appearing on cooking shows and local-interest programming from Bangkok to Dublin. Food history is more than just culinary anthropology, though.

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