Definitely counts. If it can be farmed and it’s living protein that consumes something and run away, it’s a meat.Grasshoppers and crickets?
...I don't think they count
Actually, when you really look at it, all American cuisine has its roots in Europe and Asia. *^^* there's nothing "pure American" about any of our food.I agree, american cuisine is the weirdest thing ever.
We need to breed an ugly, spiteful rabbit. Maybe with some sort of horn.Rabbits are an alternative meat that could become a global food source. Unfortunately, rabbit meat isn't popular due to its cuteness. Well, while I've eaten rabbits and even keep them now, slaughtering them for food is indeed difficult or rather, I don't have the heart to slaughter them.
Asian.rice dishes, rice pudding
Not a dish, just a fruit.watermelon
Pie was invented in Egypt; the Europeans and Asians learned it from the Middle Eastern people, and then the colonizers started making pie with pumpkin. Pumpkin pie would not exist without Europe.pumpkin pie
Just a fruit, not a dish.corn
Just an animal, not a dish.turkey
I was about to assume you got this one right, but then I looked it up. African.Okra
African.black eyed peas
The earliest evidence of rice cultivation comes from the Yangtze River basin in China at around 8,000-13,500 years ago (while African rice is only about 3,000 years old per your own source); cultivation, migration, and trade spread rice around the world—first to much of East Asia, and then further abroad, and eventually to the Americas as part of the Columbian exchange. China did it first; other civilizations eventually started doing it too. That being said, even if it was African rather than Asian, the recipes/dishes still did not originate in the US, so my point still stands.>>> rice dishes, rice pudding
>> Asian
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Oryza glaberrima - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
> In the late fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, the Portuguese sailed to the Southern Rivers area in West Africa and wrote that the land was rich in rice. "[T]hey said they found the country covered by vast crops, with many cotton trees and large fields planted in rice ... the country looked to them as having the aspect of a pond (i.e., a marais)". The Portuguese accounts speak of the Falupo Jola, Landuma, Biafada, and Bainik growing rice. André Álvares de Almada wrote about the dike systems used for rice cultivation,[2] from which modern West African rice dike systems are descended.
> African rice was brought to the Americas with the transatlantic slave trade, arriving in Brazil probably by the 1550s[11] and in the U.S. in 1784.[14][dubious – discuss] The seed was carried as provisions on slave ships,[11] and the technology and skills needed to grow it were brought by enslaved rice farmers. Newly imported African slaves were marketed for their rice-growing skills, as the high price of rice made it a major cash crop.[12] Not all Africans came to the Americas with knowledge in rice growing, due to the vast variabilities in cultures and ethnicities, but the practice of cultivation was shared throughout the Carolina plantations, which allowed the enslaved people to develop a new sense of culture and made African rice the primary source of nutrition.[15] The tolerance of African rice for brackish water meant it could be grown on coastal deltas,[13][16] as it was in West Africa.
> There are numerous stories about how the rice came to North America,[17] including a slave smuggling grains in her hair[11] and a ship driven in to trade by a storm.[13][18] African rice is a rare crop in Brazil, Guyana, El Salvador and Panama, but it is still occasionally grown there.[1] There are also native South American rices, which makes it hard to recognize the arrival of African rice in histories.[11]
> Asian rice came to West Africa in the late 1800s, and by the late twentieth century had substantially supplanted native African rice. However, African rice was still used in specific, often marginal habitats, and preferred for its taste.[2][1] Farmers may grow African rice to eat and Asian rice to sell, as African rice is not exported.
How did that happen? aren't they like inedible, this is the first time I've heard a starfish could be eaten...Starfish
Saponin is water soluble so you can just boil the toxins away.How did that happen? aren't they like inedible, this is the first time I've heard a starfish could be eaten...
Oh, so then which parts did you eat?Saponin is water soluble so you can just boil the toxins away.
The weird abomination looking insides. Tastes like the head part of a crab if you let it outside for a bit too much but not enough for it to go bad.Oh, so then which parts did you eat?