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Jamaican cuisine

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Jamaican cuisinejerk chicken and pork served with hard dough bread, jerk sauce, festival, fried pressed plantain and coleslaw, in Jamaica.
The Taínos jerked, smoked and roasted foods on a range of wooden grills.
Taíno (Arawak) women preparing bammy in the 1500s.

Jamaican cuisine includes a mixture of cooking techniques, flavours and spices influenced by Amerindian, West African, Irish, English, French, Portuguese, Spanish, Indian, Chinese and Middle Eastern people who have inhabited the island. It is also influenced by indigenous crops, as well as, crops introduced to the island from Mesoamerica, Europe, tropical West Africa and Southeast Asia— which are now grown locally. A wide variety of seafood, tropical fruits and meats are available.

Some Jamaican dishes are variations of cuisines brought to the island from elsewhere, which are often modified to incorporate local produce and spices. Many others are novel or Creole dishes, created from a fusion of dishes, techniques and ingredients from different cultures— which have developed locally over time. Popular Jamaican dishes include curry goat, fried dumplings, brown stew oxtail, ackee and saltfish and jerk. Jamaican patties along with various pastries, breads and beverages are also popular.

Jamaican cuisine has spread with migration, between the mid-17th and 20th centuries. Contingents of Jamaican merchants and labourers, who settled in coastal Latin America, to establish businesses, and work in agriculture and the construction of railroads, ports and the Panama Canal, contributed Jamaican dishes to the region. Also, Jamaicans who have sought economic opportunities in other parts of the world, have spread their culture and culinary practices.

History

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Women selling desserts in Kingston, Jamaica, c. 1899

Development of the cuisine

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Taíno / Arawak influence

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The original inhabitants of Jamaica, the Taínos, developed dishes such as jerk meats, roasted fish, bammy, cassava bread and pepperpot (made with callaloo and scotch bonnet pepper). Taíno influence can also be found in dishes like turned cornmeal, duckunoo, Jamaican hominy corn porridge and Saturday beef soup. They are believed to have kept a stock pot in which meat, fish and vegetables were collected for soup.

Many native crops and local staples, like peppers (scotch bonnet, cayenne and other cultivars) and beans (like kidney beans) were taken to Jamaica in canoes from Mesoamerica— along with corn, sweet potato, cacao and cassava. They also cultivated squash, pumpkin, yam, peanut, guava, potato, pineapple, starapple, papaya, and other local ingredients. According to historian, James Delbourgo, the brewing of cocoa beans, which led to the creation of chocolate milk and traditional Jamaican chocolate tea, came from the Taínos.

Cooking techniques like jerking, grilling, roasting and barbecuing, as well as, the use of earth ovens, charcoal, pimento wood, plantain or banana leaves and corn husks to cook, can be traced back to them.

African influence

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African cuisine developed on the island as a result of waves of slavery and indentureship, such as callaloo from the Angolan dish calulu, okra and taro. Along with the Europeans, Africans contributed to the cultivation of rice, cow peas and pigeon peas (known as gungo locally) in the Americas, which are key ingredients in some local dishes. Their knowledge of cultivating and using crops that were introduced by the Europeans, from Africa and other regions, helped to shape cuisines in the Americas including Jamaica's. African influences can be seen in one-pot dishes like seasoned rice, callaloo rice, ackee and saltfish and turned cornmeal. Dishes prepared with offals like tripe and bean, cow foot stew, cow skin or cow cod soup and mannish water (goat head soup), were also influenced by them. They also adopted and added the use of certain spices and ground provisions to variations of dishes from other cultures, as well as, Creole dishes that were created on the island during the colonial era. Jamaican sweets such as Bustamante backbone or stagga back and asham can be traced back to the Africans, along with the names of foods like "duckunoo" and "gungo".

Spanish and Portugese influence

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The Spanish, the first European arrivals to the island, contributed dishes such as the vinegary escovitch fish (Spanish escabeche), stewed dishes like brown stew meats and stew peas with cured meats, as well as, the soaking of fruits in wine for desserts. Spanish and Portuguese Jews[1][2] who had escaped the inquisition in the 1500s also introduced coconut macaroons, gizzada, and salted codfish which is used in the national dish ackee and saltfish. It has become a staple from the time it was eaten by enslaved Africans as a long-lasting source of affordable protein. The Jamaican patty, a pasty or empanada-styled turnover filled with spiced meat may have been influenced by the Cornish and the Spanish. Baked goods like puddings, fruit cakes and spiced bun were influenced by the British, who ruled the island until its independence. After the abolition of slavery, indentured labourers from India, China,[3] Scotland, Ireland,[4] Germany[5] and the Azores in Portugal[6] replaced slaves. As such, East Indian influences can be found in Jamaican cuisine like roti, dhal, ginger and curried dishes, while Chinese influences can be found in dishes with pak choy and mustard, the use of soy sauce and escallion on meats, chow mein and sweet and sour meats. Irish moss and porridges were influenced by the Irish and Scottish. The French, possibly those who fled from Haiti[7] or French Jews[8][9] who went to Jamaica during the inquisition, along with the Spanish, may have influenced dishes like Jamaican fricassee chicken and other cooking techniques.

Jamaican cuisine and the Rastafari

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Jamaican cuisine includes Rastafari influences. Rastafari have a holistic vegan approach to preparing food, cooking, and eating, and have introduced a host of unique vegetarian dishes to Jamaican cuisine. Rastafari do not eat any living creature, saying that nothing with a face is suitable for human consumption. The diet of adherents of Rastafari beliefs is referred to as Ital, from the English word vital. This diet is believed by adherents to maintain and honor the Temple of the Body, wherein the spirit of divinity dwells. Food which is grown nearby, picked fresh, and cooked immediately possesses the most "Itality". Popular Ital dishes include ackee stew, pepper pot, pumpkin rice, and callaloo. Modern Rastafari are blending global vegan trends with Ital roots, creating new dishes such as jerk hummus.

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Ackee and saltfish
A Jamaican patty wrapped in coco bread

A Jamaican breakfast includes ackee and saltfish, seasoned callaloo, boiled green bananas, and fried dumplings.[10]

Main courses

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Soups

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Side dishes

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Breads and pastries

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Bammy flatbread

Beverages

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Desserts and sweets

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Grapenut and rum and raisin ice cream are two popular desserts. Jamaican ice cream comes in many flavours like, coffee, pistachio, jackfruit, coconut, mango, pineapple, guava, soursop and Dragon Stout.

Other popular desserts include batata pudding, cornmeal pudding, cassava pone, gizzada, grater cake, toto, banana fritters, coconut drops, plantain tarts, guava cheese, banana bread, rum cake, carrot cake, pineapple cake, fruit cake and coconut macaroons.

Tie-a-leaf or blue drawers is a dish made by combining a starch (usually cornmeal, cassava or sweet potato) with coconut milk, spices like cinnamon and nutmeg, sugar and vanilla, then wrapped and tied in banana leaf before boiling.

Asham is parched corn that is ground and combined with brown sugar.

Tamarind balls are candy made with the sticky flesh of the fruit rolled with brown sugar into round sweet and sour balls. You can also make a spicy version that contains hot pepper in the mix.

Bustamante Backbone, also called Busta, stagga back or buss mi jaw, is a toffee-like candy named after Jamaica's first Prime Minister Alexander Bustamante. It is made with brown sugar, coconut, ginger and molasses, and can also include coffee, vanilla and lime juice.

Jamaican food abroad

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Jamaican coco bread from a Los Angeles bakery

Jamaican cuisine is available throughout North America, the United Kingdom, and other places with a sizeable Jamaican population. In the United States, a large number of restaurants are located throughout New York's boroughs, Atlanta, West Palm Beach, Fort Lauderdale, Washington DC, Philadelphia, and other metropolitan areas. In Canada, Jamaican restaurants can be found in the Toronto metropolitan area, as well as Vancouver, Montreal, and Ottawa.

Golden Krust Caribbean Bakery & Grill is a chain of about 120 franchised restaurants found throughout the U.S. These restaurants sell Jamaican patties, buns, breads, and other popular Jamaican dishes. They also supply food to several institutions in New York.[citation needed]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Portuguese Jews of Jamaica". jewishmuseum.org.uk. 2020-10-13. Retrieved 2024-11-15.
  2. ^ "Pieces of the Past- Out Of Many Cultures: The People Who Came - The Jews In Jamaica". old.jamaica-gleaner.com. 2003-08-03. Retrieved 2024-11-15.
  3. ^ "Pieces to the Past: The Arrival of the Chinese". Retrieved 2024-11-15.
  4. ^ "Pieces to the Past: The Arrival of the Irish". Retrieved 2024-11-15.
  5. ^ "Pieces to the Past: The Arrival of the Germans". Retrieved 2024-11-15.
  6. ^ "Atlantic Islands, Migrants from by Roberta M. Delson". Retrieved 2024-11-15.
  7. ^ "Confusing Labels: French "Emigrants" and "Prisoners of War" in Jamaica during the Haitian Revolution". 2023-07-22. Retrieved 2024-11-15.
  8. ^ "Portuguese Jews of Jamaica". 2020-10-13. Retrieved 2024-11-15.
  9. ^ "The Jewish Community of Jamaica". Retrieved 2024-11-15.
  10. ^ Deborah S. Hartz Authentic Jamaican breakfast Aug 1, 1991 Ocala Star-Banner page 44
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