Transcript Slide 1

By: Ranielle Nulman 7A4 ID2
 The Pilgrims came to Plymouth, Massachusetts in 1620
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on the Mayflower.
The Pilgrims brought seeds and other farming materials
with them.
Unfortunately, the seeds did not grow so well because of
the soil.
Then came the Wampanoag Indians, who wanted to
help the Pilgrims farm and take care of themselves.
So the Indians taught the Pilgrims to farm, fish, hunt
and many more things.
Colonial Times
 Food was very scarce and
hard to make.
 Took a lot of patience
and effort.
 No refrigerators, running
water, and stoves.
 All tools to cook were
handmade.
America (Today)
 Plentiful food and
resources.
 Cooking took less time
and effort.
 All tools are electronic.
 Electronic and efficient.
 It was most of the time the mother who cooked and
took care of everything around the house.
 Women cooked before dawn and the meals would take
hours to prepare because there was no technology.
 The women had to go milk the cows, make the fire,
bring water, grab eggs, hang meat to dry and pick
vegetables.
 You can see what a hard job the women had back in
the day. They had to take care of their kids, do
housework, and cook!
The quern was
used to grind
corn into
cornmeal.
 The New England ate many dishes such as Indian corn,
succotash, pumpkins, green corn, whale, and shark.
 They also had and ate lots and lots of corn. Corn was
the main thing that people would eat. They had
cornbread, corn on the cob, corn pudding, and much
more.
 The New England colony only drank water, milk, beer
and ale.
 The Middle Colonies ate peanut soup, Welsh rabbit,
Veal chop with celery, apple dumplings, mushrooms,
thyme and port, Carolina fish muddle, shepherd’s pie,
Gazpacho, blueberry flummery, gingerbread and
Holiday Wassail, cookies, and pudding.
 The middle colonies drank whine, milk, tea, water,
ale, and beer.
 The Southern Colonies had summer harvest every year
which would bring fruits to their dedicated tobacco.
 They ate cornbread, corn, snicker doodles, vegetables.,
gravy, cheese, and foal.
 The Southerners drank bear, milk, ale, tea, and water.
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Cook time: 45 min
1 cup of white or yellow corn flower
1 teaspoon of salt
2 cups of milk
4 eggs
1/3 cup butter
Directions: Preheat the oven to 350. Mix the salt and the
cornmeal together in a large bowl. Heat the milk just until little
bubbles form at the edges and remove it from the stove. Do not
boil. Stir until butter melts. Add the milk to the corn meal,
stirring until smooth. Beat the eggs with a fork until they are
light yellow. Stir them into the cornmeal. Pour into a greased 8inch square baking pan. Bake 45 minutes. Serve the bread hot
with sweet butter.
 WEB RESOURCES
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http://www.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/schools/forestoakms/site%20pa
ges/academics/social%20studies/colonisl%20times/baker.ht\ml
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http://www.google.com/imgres?q=sugar+cutter&hl=en&biw=1344&bih=
750&gbv=2&tbm=isch&tbnid=IKnY49A4PU4UPM:&imgrefurl=http://ww
w.bbc.co.uk/ahistoryoftheworld/objects/3KrYjJGHRzGsidNnCgK97g&do
cid=AK-08vOQOBJ3M&imgurl=http://static.bbc.co.uk/ahistoryoftheworldic/imageasset/iclarge/historyworldwebapp/user/somersetrurallife/object/3KrYjJGHRzGsidNnCgK97g/asset
/1&w=620&h=346&ei=_cXVTvX_CKj40gHJweCeAg&zoom=1&iact=hc&vp
x=170&vpy=205&dur=580&hovh=168&hovw=301&tx=216&ty=73&sig=11411
5918577935672073&page=1&tbnh=114&tbnw=204&start=0&ndsp=15&ved=
1t:429,r:0,s:0
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http://www.beaverbuckets.com/coloni_butterch_lg_6x2.jpg
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http://www.probertencyclopaedia.com/j/Quern.jpg
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http://www.ssdsbergen.org/Colonial/food.htm
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http://www.baes.nvusd.k12.ca.us/sutter/subjects/history/colony/aky25fo
od.htm
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http://www.foodhistory.com/foodnotes/road/cwf1/12-image.jpg
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http://retrorenovatio.wpengine.netdna-cdn.com/wpcontent/uploads/2008/03/1955-blush-colonial-kitchen-cropped.jpg
 BOOK RESOURCES
 The Colonial Cookbook by: Lucille
Recht Penner