What is considered american food

Last year at the inaugural Slow Food Nations conference in Denver, I attended a panel discussion dealing with an issue too complicated to broach over dinner, let alone in front of a roomful of attentive listeners. Its title: There's No Such Thing as "American" Food. Its argument: more self-evident than it is controversial.

Just as our country was founded by immigrants on someone else's land, so, too, our cuisine, which was built by immigrants on someone else's foodways. And there's no arguing that the state of American food continues to endure this way—built cultural exchange by cultural exchange—some welcomed, others reluctant and, still, others forced.

The struggle to define American cuisine isn't a new one, but as our cravings for authentic flavors from all over the world continue to evolve, it seems like a more prevalent task than ever.

There are, however, no easy answers. In a world where information and ideas spread in an instant, what's alien today is as American as apple pie tomorrow. Never mind that the word American manages to ignore two entire continents. To take a long historical view, perhaps a better starting place is the fact that the all-American apple pie isn't actually native to the United States. It came, along with the apples themselves, from England.

No wonder the only definition I can come up with is a paradox: American food is foreign food until it isn't.

"The first settlers had come upon a land of plenty. They nearly starved in it."

So wrote Waverly Root and Richard de Rochemont in Eating in America: A History, tartly summing up colonial attitudes toward the New World's early food systems. Initially ill-prepared to provide for themselves, the Pilgrims did live on the corn and beans, squashes and pumpkins, wild turkey, deer, and bison that have come to symbolize our heritage, but only by relying on the indigenous peoples who knew how to cultivate, hunt and prepare them.

Eventually, the Pilgrims "set to work to end this disagreeable necessity" and were soon transforming the landscape in Europe's image, planting Old World grain and fruit crops for food as well as booze, raising cattle and pigs, building dairies, and launching fishing fleets.

So, as early as the birth of our country, we find that American taste is not quite American at all. By the time America could be charted on a map, its cuisine had essentially been imported, grafted onto native rootstock. From the cornmeal-and-rye loaves that became Boston brown bread to the seafood chowders combining local ingredients with European technique, the food of New England developed the same way all distinctive regional cuisines that came after did—through what food historian Adrian Miller describes as "people coming into contact with other people, seeing what they do and borrowing their ideas. Synthesis is the American story."

Perhaps American cuisine is better considered by its diversity and sheer quantity of "ethnic" restaurants that reflect the various populations that have come to America. This synthesis happens traditionally in either one of two ways. The first is through the classic melting-pot analogy, by which immigrants adapt their traditions and techniques to their adopted homeland and vice versa to create a new version of an old cuisine: Think Italian American with its pepperoni pizza and spaghetti and meatballs, Chinese American with its chop suey and orange chicken, Tex-Mex with its queso and fajitas. Also think of Seattle-style teriyaki, Cuban sandwiches or Irish American corned beef and cabbage—each a homegrown specialty derived through immigrant ingenuity from a foreign staple.

The other way represents an integration more than an assimilation. I like Miller's "mixtape" metaphor, which asserts the exchange produces an entirely new cuisine. Consider the Southwest, with its interweaving of Hispanic, native and Anglo foodways, or the Creole cooking of Louisiana that combines French, Spanish, African and native elements. Or consider soul food, says Miller, author of a James Beard Award-winning book on the topic, "It's an original American cuisine because it's mixing the traditions of three different continents that weren't previously in close contact with one another—the Americas, Western Europe and West Africa."

Speaking of West Africans, their contributions to our culinary heritage, particularly in the South, simply can't be overstated. For one thing, they too transplanted crops we now associate with Americana, including yams, okra, black-eyed peas and watermelon. For another, the history and legacy of slavery tell us they were a major presence in the nation's kitchens, which Miller explains gave them wide latitude to "put their stamp on somebody else's food" and eventually make it their own—be it mac and cheese, the Coca-Cola brisket black cooks in Jewish households invented or the noodle dishes brought south by Chinese workers and reinterpreted by African Americans.

Granted, these truths are historically understated. Which brings us to the flip side of the mixtape: appropriation.

The difference between adaptation and appropriation is one of privilege—the privilege to control and inevitably whitewash the narrative surrounding a given dish. At a time when we're "questioning what it means to be American," as James Beard Foundation chief strategy officer Mitchell Davis put it in his introduction to the aforementioned panel discussion, recent examples are especially painful.

To take just one instance: Nashville-style hot chicken is a relatively new trend. But as Miller notes, the term itself "obscures the African American origin of the dish." He goes on, "I'm calling it Prince's-style hot chicken from now on," a nod to its juicy origin story of revenge gone wrong. Referencing the farm-to-table practice of menu transparency, he asks, "If you're telling me the names of the animals I'm eating and where the vegetables were raised, why can't you culturally source your dishes? I want a lot of different people to eat and cook soul food. I just want you to give a shout-out to where it's from."

Sonya Kharas agrees. As one of the Slow Food panelists, the program manager at The League of Kitchens, a cooking school in New York City (and, soon, Los Angeles) taught by immigrant instructors in their homes, observed that home cooks—to whom, I'd add, the vast majority work in the restaurant industry—"are often excluded from the conversation." In League workshops, by contrast, "the instructors are not in a service position—they're the hosts, the experts, the cultural ambassadors."

Which doesn't mean they need be constrained by their heritage. As Israeli-born fellow panelist Alon Shaya noted, he went from being "embarrassed by hummus" to cooking Israeli food in New Orleans."To me," Shaya added, "that's American." But so is "the opportunity to be flexible. Food that we see as traditional we want to capture in a certain place and time; when we talk about appropriation, we mean taking something out of context. But things are always evolving."

Besides, Mexican-born chef-panelist Dana Rodriguez pointed out, "I can give the same recipe to five people, and none of them will make it the same way. Another Mexican chef and I can make cochinita pibil, and it will taste completely different."

These answers point the way toward an American cuisine that's not merely diverse but radically pluralistic, its roots exposed rather than buried even as they sprout in new directions. There's room for Shaya to define and redefine Israeli cuisine in the U.S. by "looking in his own backyard" to incorporate Southern staples like black-eyed peas and fried green tomatoes in New Orleans, or "beautiful Colorado lamb and cherries" for the upcoming Safta in Denver. There's room for Miller to trace "all-American" barbecue styles back to their pre-Colombian roots while researching his next book. There's room for the League's Uzbek instructor, Damira Inatullaeva, to realize that, as Kharas quoted her, American food is "Italian, it's Chinese—and my hope is that one day Uzbek food will also be American food." (Kharas urges you to watch Inatullaeva tell her own story here.)

And there's still room for us all, Kharas added, to "celebrate the incredible skill and expertise that immigrants bring to our country," just as they have from the beginning, and to "have meaningful interactions" with others through food, "even in the face of what's happening on the larger political scene."

After all, without those cultural exchanges, we, too, starve in our land of plenty.

Ruth Tobias has been living, and writing about, the (mile) high life in Denver for 10 years and counting. Follow her on Instagram at @Denveater.

What is considered american food

Nathans Hot Dogs | Courtesy of Nathans

The first thing that comes to mind when you think of “American cuisine” are classics like burgers, fried chicken, hot dogs and pancakes. Like many things American, the cuisine also has influences from elsewhere – German, British, Italian, Dutch, French, and Caribbean are only some of the cultures that have contributed to the food that is now considered typically American. Here’s our roundup of popular American foods that you will find across the country.

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Although created in the 1960s, these fried chicken wings doused in a cayenne-vinegar hot sauce (buffalo sauce) are ubiquitous bar snacks. Buffalo chicken wings was first served in the Anchor Bar in Buffalo, New York, and are now one of the the most popular bar foods.

Yes, we love French Fries too but, for an American variation on the traditional spud, you have to try tater tots. These grated potato mini-balls which are cylindrical in shape and fried with a crispy exterior are found in breakfast spots, fast food joints and diners.

Nothing complements a summer cookout or a baseball game better than an all-American hot dog. Although the creation is credited to the German Charles Feltman, who used buns to serve German sausage (hence also referred to as frankfurter or frank) to save on plates, it was Polish immigrant Nathan Handwerker’s hot dog stand Nathan’s on Coney Island that turned the hot dog into a national icon. There are regional variations of it – for example, New York-style with ketchup and relish and Chicago-style served on a poppy seed bun with absolutely no ketchup.

You’ve probably heard the phrase “as American as apple pie” and it’s not without reason. Probably the most iconic of American foods, apple pie was first introduced in the States by British and Dutch immigrants. However, over the years it’s been transformed into a distinctly American food experience, typically served with a scoop of vanilla ice cream.

Barbecuing food has been one of the country’s oldest traditions and has now evolved into an art, with bbq fanatics and lovers all over the country partial to their favorite styles. But whether you like Kansas City’s hearty offering, Memphis‘ wet ribs, or North Carolina’s vinegar base, one thing we can all agree on is that barbecue in America is definitely something that brings out a lot of passion!

The classic corned beef, Swiss cheese, and sauerkraut sandwich is synonymous with American delis. There might be debate about whether this was invented in Nebraska by a grocer named Reuben Kulakofsky, or perhaps the brainchild of Arnold Reuben, the German owner of New York’s now closed Reuben’s Delicatessen, who came up with it in 1914, but either way, this sandwich is an American staple.

A Southern favorite, the original biscuit was brought to the country by the British, and the ‘sawmill’ gravy was created as a cheap and filling breakfast option in the food-strapped colonies of the South during the Revolutionary War. The biscuits are traditionally made with butter or lard and buttermilk; the country gravy with meat drippings and (usually) chunks of fresh pork sausage and black pepper. Nowadays, biscuits can be found with all sorts of ingredients – bacon and chive combination is a popular one.

Comfort food at its best, most American households will have a family recipe for their version. Typically, it involves ground meat and seasonings, made into a loaf shape either using a loaf pan or hand-shaped, roasted and then topped with sauce or just ketchup! Meatloaf will usually take Americans right back to their mother’s kitchen!

The first time you try grits, you probably wonder what the heck it is. For those who grew up eating grits (Southern US), it’s something they can’t live without! A dish made from coarsely ground corn kernels, grits can be extremely versatile. Typically found in savory versions, they can also be made sweet. A classic dish is shrimp and grits, but grits are also a popular breakfast item, in place of oatmeal. Any which way, they are extremely satisfying.

The popularity of the hamburger and cheeseburger in the USA is indisputable. Traditional, gourmet, fast food, with bacon, sliders, with green chili, Juicy Lucy style… the list of variations and toppings is infinite. If there is one food that we had to pick, burgers have to be the most American of them all.

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