The History of American Food

The History of American Food

byMargaret Hardin

ArtsFoodHistorySocietyCulture

Starting with the first English settlements in the 17th Century, this podcasts traces how we went from barrels of salted meat & peas to Korean bbq tacos and the largest grocery store selections ever seen anywhere in the world. We'll go everywhere - and it is full of surprises.Show Notes: https://thehistoryofamericanfood.blogspot.com/Email: TheHistoryofAmericanFood@gmail.comInternets: @THoAFood

Episodes(40 episodes)

152 Early 19th Century Tea - Still Extremely Fashionable
Last show on the substandard mic - but the paper towel as popfilter helped some.Let's talk tea - what tea were people drinking in the early 19th century?  The answer was almost uniformly, "bad tea".  Ignorance lead to people needing sugar in their tea b/c they were drinking the bad stuff.  In fact a whole grade of "export quality" tea was invented to fulfill the growing global/European/American demand.  Just in this case - "expot quality" mostly meant the dregs.  Or the dust anyway.Understanding that most tea Americans were drinking in this a...
Published: Aug 20, 2025Duration: 30m 45s
151 The First Chinese Food in America
First of all - sorry about the diferent mic.  But this way we get the episode.  I'll see what I can do to make things better for next ep - and all will be back to normal by the one after that.Anyway - 19th Century Chinese Food?What can I tell you?  It would have looked much the same as lots of the food you will find right now around the Pearl RIver Delta, the old district of Canton - now known as Guangzhou.But this episode is not just about the food - i...
Published: Aug 6, 2025Duration: 38m 34s
150 Lobster - From Poor Man's Chicken to Fancy Canned Good
Think you're fancy with your lobster roll... or did you get it from a Massachusetts McDonalds?All are possible... and much more - including death by lobster poisoning.To get more of the story - tune in to early 19th century lobsterMusic Credit: Fingerlympics by Doctor TurtleShow Notes: https://thehistoryofamericanfood.blogspot.com/Email: TheHistoryofAmericanFood at gmail dot comThreads: @THoAFoodInstagram: @THoAFood& some other socials... @THoAFoodMusic Credit: Fingerlympics by Doctor TurtleShow Notes: https://thehistoryofamericanfood.blogspot.com/Email: TheHistoryofAmericanFood at gmail dot co...
Published: Jul 23, 2025Duration: 23m 31s
149 Trains & Buying Stuff in the Early 19th Century - The Birth of American Consumer Culture
Have you ever thought how we got here - that farm land is all AWAY and houses are all in close?That products come to you... and packaging is often more important than the thing inside?That didn't happen over night.  The fact that farms are there, house are here, and manufacturing stuff is a third place altogether is not an accident.  Instead it's something that has been developing in America for about 200 year.To see WHY you don't have neighborhood farms - as well as why things like setting up local recycling cen...
Published: Jul 9, 2025Duration: 27m 0s
148 Making Beef for Dinner - Increases in Early 19th Century Cattle
What happens when you grow more cows to make more milk to make more cheese and butter?You end up with more oxen that can't make milk - but are useful as a source of beef.And this works out well when you are living in a society that craves more meat, and are in a place with apparently wide open spaces that are just fine for feeding said cattle.A bonus when you have lots of growing industries that are willing to buy beef from you to feed their growing ambitions - whaling, t...
Published: Jun 25, 2025Duration: 32m 45s
147 How to Survive Drinking Milk in the Early 19th Century
So you are a typical early 19th Century American type... Is there a dairy scene?  Yes.But are you drinking milk?  Maybe... and probobly only for breakfast.Ok... but is it Raw Milk?  Most likely not.In the early 19th century, most milk products were at least heated (cheese) or outright cooked - almost everything else - or downright boiled - your breakfast milk.Funny thing is, Americans have retained their passion for boiled milk at breakfast.  We just flavor it with coffee and tea now.For more on this and h...
Published: Jun 11, 2025Duration: 33m 38s
146 What Was Early 19th Century America's Problem with Mushrooms?
Check out the NCPTT... while it's still there, and maybe find an unexpectedly cool place to live.  Or maybe a cool woodworking job.https://www.nps.gov/subjects/ncptt/index.htmHey - so were early Americans eating mushrooms?Yeah.  But not all that much.  Just enough for a mushroom industry to spring up in the end of the century - but only in one place, and only for one kind.But in the meantime - mushroom powder is DELICIOUS... and not that hard to make.Recipe for 1 quart/4 cups/1 litre of...
Published: May 28, 2025Duration: 28m 14s
145 Mushroom History - Food Edition & What Eactly is a Mushroom Anyway?
While last episode was drowning in information - this week when hunting down mushroom info... it's a bit of a desert.  But no worries, there's still fun stuff to be learned - mainly just what is a mushroom?  And how have humans crossed paths with it - in ways besides tripping out?Also - how is the lack of information and the limited presence of mushrooms in AMerican food related?Some answers are here.Also - The Fantasia clip of Tchaikovsky's "Chinese Dance" will let you see (among other things) open and closed mushrooms...
Published: May 14, 2025Duration: 28m 55s
144 Early 19th Century Apples - the Fruit of Progress & Propaganda
This week - it’s time to look at the connection between westward American Expansion and the apple. How is the apple all tangled up with our creation of the  19th century tall tales we started to tell on and about ourselves? So get ready for a visit from some of the features/specters of that myth making that inhabited a huge part of the 20th century. Links:Johnny Appleseed Cartoon (1948) Paul Bunyan Cartoon (1958)  John Henry Cartoon 1 (1973 – narrated by Roberta Flack)John Henry Cartoon 2 (2000 - Disney)Pecos Bill Cartoon (1948) Davy Crockett Disney TV...
Published: Apr 30, 2025Duration: 32m 59s
143 Oats & Hay - Grass Powers the Early 19th Century World
As odd as it sounds, there was a time in American Food before oatmeal.And while that's wild on it's own, even more impossible to imagine is how much of agriculture used to be dedicated simply to growing food to feed the animals that allowed you to run the farm.  Having solar panels and biodigesters to create power on the farm now is pretty wild... but it wasn't that long ago, all things considered when all the energy used on a farm was grown... on the farm!But it does help put into perspective how much e...
Published: Apr 16, 2025Duration: 32m 21s
142 Are Chickens Alternate Reality Pigs?
Finally - Recipes for early 19th Century Fried Chicken - sorta.IT's time to learn some chicken history and face the reality about what chickens were really for in the early 19th century - eggs!If you wanted bird meat there were lots of better birds out there to eat above and beyond the scrawny backyard chcicken. But that was about to change as the worlds chickens began to come to America.To learn about all that and more - listen in.And the old Temple in Turkiye / AnatoliaGöbekli Te...
Published: Apr 2, 2025Duration: 40m 51s
141 The Forking of America - When We Start to Stop Eating with our Hands
Ever notice that fabulous dinner parties depicted on screen rarely take place earlier than the 1800's - and in America pretty much always after the Civil War?Well!  That's because in just about every one of those situations the eating etiquette would look so different it would be unrecognizable - in fact it's likely people would be eating with their fingers!Americans have only been eating with forks - on a regualr basis for about 150 years!The earliest Americans ate with their hands - becasue so did almost everyone else.Oh - and I a...
Published: Mar 19, 2025Duration: 35m 43s
140 Tasty Preseerved Pork - Early 19th Century Ham & Sausage plus Scrapple
Yes yes... tasty pigs.But as you might have gathered I'm not entirely OK right now.  Will there be a National Park Service -NPS.gov by next episode?Will I have access to the library of congress or is it going to get "Alexandira'd"?I don't know, but at least I do know that I can hook you up with both old school and modern methods of preserving pork when the power grid goes down.I the mean time take care, love your local food producers and be kind.  Even and possibly especially to th...
Published: Mar 5, 2025Duration: 33m 18s
139 How to Eat Pork in the Early 19th Century
Turns out all I was able to squeeze in to this episode was the fresh pork - more or less.How to keep pork will be around next time.But the big lesson is - boy do we need our hands held when it comes to recipes.Is 50 words not enough for you to prepare boiled poik and pease porridge?  It certainly isn't enough for me.  I'd be absolutely sunk.Though it does explain why enslaved cooks could learn the recipes that were read to them out loud.  The recipes weren't that long...
Published: Feb 19, 2025Duration: 30m 55s
138 19th Century Pigs - Greasng the Way to the Future
To Market to market to buy a fat pigHome again home again jiggety jig...But how did those pigs get to market in the first place?On their own 4 feet!  That's right, there's more than one way to concentrate corn down for better transport and not all of it is Bourbon / Corn Whiskey.Also learn about how early mechanical America only kept moving due to the presence of pigs.Big contributions to the script from Mark Essig's _Lesser Beasts_ Be sure to look up the Canadian Super Pigs... an...
Published: Feb 5, 2025Duration: 26m 29s
137 American Crackers – Biscuit by Another Name or Another Thing?
This week I've gone crackers.  I've wondered for awhile why it's biscuits everywhere else - but sometimes ... it's crackers.  I mean, the most British of British claymation - Wallace and Grommit, when they go to the moon to get cheese, even they bring crackers.... not biscuits.That, and a few other things had me wondering if crackers and biscuts DIDN'T come from the same source?  Rather did the two just meet in America.  Turns out - that's what it was.It was Douglas Mack of The Snack Shack that got me stared with this post on bi...
Published: Jan 22, 2025Duration: 29m 53s
136 America is Made of Bread & Steel
Sure - people say America is built on A LOT of things, but the rise of Industrial America depends on two things - Bread and Steel.  Steel to make the Great American Dessert into the Great American Bread Basket - and all that wheat would make the steel of the railroad make lots of sense very quickly.If you are curious just what steel is - and how all that early American iron is related, this is your episode.  Sure - I'm a food podcast, but this time it's all about Geology, Steel and some bread.Th...
Published: Jan 8, 2025Duration: 35m 0s
Crossover… PART 16 - Is This too Many Locations? Zorro S1E6 on Amazon Prime
For those of you listenting along at home - a little reminder, these are just filler episodes from the other podcast project I was playing around with.  If you want that feed and not this one - hop over there.But for those of you who need something to tide you over - listen along to the Hot Nonsense (and a little Cristo Fernandez appreciation).Again - this is not the safe for everyone part of the feed.  And some of the bonus contect will be just fine.  But this is to simply avoid a blank spa...
Published: Dec 27, 2024Duration: 1h 4m 2s
135 Some of the Reasons America is so Weird About Liquor - Lack of Cash, Lack of Refrigeration & Lack of Expertise
Welcome to the messy alcoholic beverage scene in the early 19th century.  Migration, mechanization and new profit centers are all going to shift how alcoholic beverages are made and regarded in early America.  They are less part of community exchange, and instead become part of the flow of economic life.  Any sense of aged or carefully constructed liquors will never develop.  Instead alcohol will have more of an identity as a cog in the economic wheel.And becaseu booze is about to become big business, lots of people are going to have lots to say about it....
Published: Dec 18, 2024Duration: 34m 28s
Crossover... Part 15: SLAP! Achievement Unlocked Zorro S1E5 on Amazon Prime
*THIS* is the don't listen at work part of the feed. I'll include this for all the naughty episodes.  And Zorro - he's a Bad Boy?  Bad Girl? Oh heck... it's just how bad people can be when it all becomes about money, power and entertaining TV.So have you been following along?Now that we have our major players set up - and the relationships are established we can really get the plates spinning:Secret Societies - checkLove Triangle - checkTwin Brothers - checkMysterious/Nefarious Death - chec...
Published: Dec 13, 2024Duration: 1h 14m 1s