Food nd culture 3
Bevs
(difference between South and North India)
Torii Gates
- Distinctive gateway to a Shinto shrine
Wasabi
- Finely grated, delicate green horseradish; also available as a powder
Food Patterns
- Indo-Gangetic plain = productive farmland. Wheat, rice, peanuts, and fruits and vegetables. Mostly vegetarian. Use unique spices
3 Main Rivers
- Indus, Ganges, Brahmaputra
Major Rivers
- Irrawaddy in Myanmar, Chao Phyra in Thailand, and Mekong in Indochina Peninsula each allow international trade in their cities of Yangon, Bangkok, and Ho Chi Minh City
Ikebana
- Japanese art of arranging cut flowers
Dal
- Puree of lentils or other legumes, usually rather blandly seasoned
Moo Shu pork
- Slivered pieces of seasoned pork and bean paste or other ingredients wrapped in small, thin pancakes (North)
Mealie Mea
- South African name for cornmeal (mealie means corn
Tandoor
- Thick-walled, deep jar-shaped clay oven used for roasting meats and baking naan
Peking Duck
- traditional dish of northern China, which involves special roasting of a duck until the skin is very crisp; skin, a bit of duck meat, and green onion are wrapped in a thin pancake liberally splashed with hoisin sauce. Plum sauce is also served (North)
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Sosaties
Barbecued pieces of meat on a stick
Tempura
Batter-coated, deep-fried shrimp or meat and thinly sliced vegetables
Voortreker -
Boer who used oxen and covered wagons to make the Great Trek between 1835 and 1839; also called trekboers
Red cooking
Braising meat mixtures in a sauce containing some soy sauce (East)
Tef
Cereal grain grown in Ethiopia since ancient times and now also grown in Kenya and Malawi
Chutney
Chunky and flavorful sauce often served as accompaniment to curry
Dashi
Clear soup stock made with dried fillet of bonito and kelp
Stupa
Covered mound, often containing a relic of significance for Buddhists
Lotus root
Crunchy root of lotus (water lily) cut crosswise to use in stir-fries and soups, where its porous appearance due to many lengthwise cavities in the root adds visual interest
Aryans
Early people of northern India. Their priests wrote the Vedas (foundation of Hinduism)
Dravidians
Early people of southern India developed their language, Tamil
Laver
Edible seaweed popular in Korea (GIM in Korea and NORI in Japan)
Injera
Ethiopian grayish, sponge-like pancake made using tef flour and baked on a griddle on one side only
Miso
Fermented soybean paste
Kimchi -
Fermented, pickled vegetables (Particularly cabbage)
Samosa
Fried pastry enclosing a filling
Winter melon
Green, oblong melon similar in outward appearance to a watermelon, but with a white, pulpy interior and seed-filled center
Religions
Hinduism and Buddhism in India, Muslim in Pakistan
Shin Sul Ro
Korean hot pot
Afrikaans
Language spoken by Afrikaners (South African farmers of Dutch heritage); one of the official languages of South Africa
Bantus
Large group of Africans originally from west and central regions of Africa who spread east and south prior to colonial days
Daikon
Large, long white radish that has a delicate flavor and slight pungency
Sang-chi-sam
Lettuce-wrapped meal containing many tidbits from numerous dishes selected by the diner
Sri Lanka
Maintaining a fragile peace with Tamil rebels who had fought to create their own separate state on the island
Satays
Marinated, skewered, grilled meat, served with sauce
Taj Mahal
Mausoleum built by Shah Jahan in Agra, India, to honor the memory of his favorite wife, Mumtaz
Naan
Oval-shaped whole wheat bread baked by sticking it to the wall of a tandoor
Murtabak
Pancake (eggs, meat, onions)
Chow Mein
Parboiled noodles fried briefly with other ingredients; a Cantonese stir-fry with noodles (South)
5 spice powder
Popular Chinese spice made by mixing star anise, Szechwan pepper, cinnamon, cloves, and fennel
Bunraku
Puppet shows featuring large, complicated puppets very skillfully presented, often in traditional stories
Cape of Good Hope
Region at the southern tip of the African continent where the Atlantic Ocean meets the Indian Ocean
Wok
Round-bottomed, two-handled metal pan used for stir-frying or as the container for boiling water to steam food in bamboo steamer trays stacked on the wok
Banchan
Small dishes of food served along with cooked rice. Served at the center of the table and shared
Dim Sum
Small, steamed dumplings filled with any of a variety of meat or vegetable fillings and many other small servings of food ranging from appetizers to sweets (South)
Boer
South African of Dutch descent
• Kobe beef
The meat from Wagyu cattle is known worldwide for its marbling characteristics and naturally enhanced, flavor, tenderness, and juiciness; it is incredibly expensive and only found in Japan
Kabuki
Traditional, highly stylized drama performed by men in elaborate costumes and makeup, often featuring dance and some music
Changgo
Two-headed drum (old lady played it in the video in class)
Great Rift Valley
Vast depression in the earth extending from Jordan south and west to Mozambique
Bitter melon
Vegetable resembling a cucumber with a wrinkled green skin and interior with red seeds
Bok Choy
Vegetable that grows as a bunch with thick, white stalks and a top of several large, coarse green leaves
Sashimi
Very carefully cut and arranged slices of raw fish
Water Puppets
Vietnam
Sushi
Vinegared rice and small bits of other ingredients pressed into a mold or rolled tightly into a long log encased in a layer of nori and sliced crosswise
Major Rivers
Zambezi (Victoria Falls), The Congo (Deepest), The Limpopo ("the elephant's child")
Muligatawney soup
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Eating Habits
breakfast in villages consists of porridge made with a cereal and water that is boiled over a fire. Men do not eat with women are children. Eat other meal at the end of the day. Heavy in starch. Men usually eat before women and children.
Chima
commercial center (most people in Korea live here) o Han River is located there
o Shikoku Island
comparatively small island roughly paralleling the western peninsula of Honshu and just a bit south of it
Mt. Kilimanjaro
highest mountain in Africa, in Tanzania (borders Kenya), 3 cones (2 extinct/1 dormant)
o Honshu Island
largest of the islands in Japan; Tokyo is on Honshu at the southern coast
Bonito
most popular fish used in Japanese cuisine o It is readily available in Asian markets in the form of flakes or pellets which are designed to be dissolved in water or rice wine, and some types of dried bonito also come with flavorings like seaweed flakes and spicy chili power
Religions
mostly Christian (Ethiopian Orthodoxy), other religions are Islam and traditional animism (belief that animals, plants, even inanimate objects have spiritual essence)
Masalo
natural waterway in Niassa, Mozambique
o Hokkaido Island
northernmost island; Sapporo, its principal city, is familiar to many as the home of the 1972 Winter Olympics, a fact that attests to its cold and snowy winters and its mountainous terrain
Beverages
o Alcoholic • Beer - lagers • Rice and fruit wines • liquors o Non-alcoholic • Tea/cha • Persimmon punch
Clothing
o Chgori • Short Jacket
Religion in japan
o Shinto - Early religion of Japan that focused on nature and considered the Emperor to be a descendant of the sun goddess o Buddhism o Christianity
Schools of Chinese cookery
o Southern (Cantonese) school • Designation of cuisine of the southern Chinese that features stir-frying, such dishes as egg rolls, dumplings (Dim sum), and pork specialties, as well as generous use of vegetables, rice, and fruits
Religion
o Vietnam o Mahayana Buddhism, Taoism, Confucianism o Philippines • 90% Christian o Hinduism • Bali, some Malaysia and Singapore o Islam • Malaysia and Indonesia
Exports
out of their main ports: lots of rice and tropical fruits/vegetables
Mochi
rice cake made by pounding cooked sweet glutinous rice; traditional for New Year's celebration
Sake
strong rice wine, usually served warm
Mirin
sweet rice wine
Protein sources
tofu, pork, eggs, lamb/mutton, a little beef, thousand year old eggs (Duck, chicken, or quail eggs
Climate
warm and very moist = tropical fruits and vegetables, experiences monsoons, so they grow lots of rice
o Kyushu Island
west and south from the tip of Honshu and Shikoku; mild, rather subtropical climate due to its southern location; apparently was the route by which early people from the mainland entered the region that is now called Japan
Western (Szechwan) school
• Designation of cuisine developed in western China that is quite spicy and hot in character and uses considerable garlic, ginger, and oil
Eastern (Shanghai) school
• Designation of cuisine of the eastern seaboard of China, notably of Shanghai; light broths, seafood, egg rolls, and paper-wrapped foods are characteristic
Northern (Peking) school
• Designation of cuisine of the northern region of China that includes Mongolian fire pot and Peking duck, as well as moo shu pork and other recipes that use wheat and wheat flour products