Thanksgiving in America continues to be one of the most traditional
holidays. It still features the original four hundred year old
activities of overeating, football, and complaining about Black Friday.
In
the Hunter household, as in all of Indiana and much of the world that’s
not outside this country, we battle the overeating. How? By serving
food that the rest of the year we hate. Stuffing stuff. Cranberry
things. Pumpkin anything. It was good enough for the Pilgrims and the
Wampanoag Indians, who the Pilgrims politely invited to share a meal in
the new home they’d just stolen from the Wampanoag. The Indians brought a
housewarming gift of deer, mostly because they didn’t want to eat
cranberries or pumpkin.
But what was actually served at that
original celebration? And did they really all sit down at long tables
outside, in New England, in November? That’s a recipe for a nice heaping
helping of frostbite.
The first Thanksgiving was a three day
event, leaving one day each for the meal, football, and shopping. The Pilgrims were naturally dismayed to discover no mall or
Wal-Mart in sight. Rumor had it there was a Target down the road, but
both the trip and the name were a bit more dangerous at the time. They
compensated by throwing another feast that third day, during which they
discussed the football.
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Roadside food was different, back then.
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Governor William Bradford sent four men
on a fowling mission beforehand. We don’t know for sure what they
brought back, but it might have been turkey. It also might have been
ducks, geese, or swans, which explains the song they invented about the
meal and the entertainment. If it hadn’t taken so much time to memorize
it, the song would have been “The Twelve Days of Thanksgiving”. That
would have turned our holiday world upside down.
Why are game birds called “fowl”? Because they had no refrigeration. It was a warning: “Eat it fast, before it’s fowl!”
On
a related note, this has carried over into football, which during the
first Thanksgiving was so primitive it was watched on a black and
white TV, with no remote control, or blimp. Whenever a player gets
caught doing something that stinks, it’s called a foul. The spelling was
changed during the Great Depression, when a letter shortage caused
double U’s to be singled.
There was indeed an
abundance of cranberries at the First Thanksgiving, mostly because the
Natives used them as dye. (Good dye, although it tended to run in the
washing machine.) By then the Pilgrims had run out of sugar, so there
was no cranberry sauce or relish or anything cranberry. That’s one of
the things they were thankful for.
Potatoes were … absent. The
Spanish had discovered them in South America, but they weren’t popular
with the English yet. Instead they probably had seafood—lobster, clams,
oysters, all that stuff you find on the Thanksgiving menu today.
Actually, these days the closest we get to that is either oyster
dressing, or “see? Food!”
Pumpkin? Absolutely: in their pie,
their coffee, donuts, milkshakes … kidding—Starbucks didn’t deliver. They did have pumpkins, but no butter or flour for any kind of
crust. They may have hollowed out the pumpkins, filled the shell with
milk, honey, and spices, and roasted them in hot ashes.
I’m not making this up. I get paid to do this research.
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I'm celebrating as fast as I can!
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I’m
sure you’re all wondering what kind of beer they washed all this down
with. I mean, Sam Adams, right? That’s the state beverage of
Massachusetts. But no, it turns out they hadn’t had time to make beer,
and didn’t yet have apples for cider, so they drank water. This helps
explain all those Pilgrim paintings with dour expressions.
Add
this to native foods like plums, grapes, leeks, and squash, and you get …
*gasp* … a meal that’s good for you! It turns out health food nuts
aren’t a new thing; it’s just that back then it was involuntary.
Interestingly,
I found no reference from historical records about stuffing being
served at the first Thanksgiving. I suspect the Pilgrims planned it,
until the Wampanoag heard about the idea:
“So, once we get the
birds ready, we’ll mix old bread crumbs and tasteless vegetables
together, throw a bunch of spices on them, and stuff them up the fowl
butt. Instant side dish!”
“Um … we’ll just take our smallpox blankets and go.”
Imagine how they reacted to fruitcake.
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I would be personally grateful if you made my black Friday green.
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