Appalachian cuisine is a style of cuisine located in the central and southern sections of the Appalachian Mountains of the Eastern United States. It is an amalgam of the diverse foodways, specifically among the British, German and Italian immigrant populations, Native Americans including the Cherokee people, and African-Americans, as well as their descendants in the Appalachia region.
The cuisine of Appalachia focuses on seasonal local ingredients and practices like pickling, foraging, canning and food preserving. Appalachian cuisine is a subset of Southern cuisine, and is specifically different because of the cold winters and the mountainous landscape.

History

British immigrants to Appalachia brought buttermilk, biscuits, dumplings, and moonshine. Chefs from the region have noted other European-originated foods like Italian sausage, and borscht. The Cherokee in Appalachia have contributed to the cuisine with dishes and ingredients such as boiled chestnut bread, fried creasy greens, ramps, pokeweed, corn, and fiddlehead greens. African-Americans in Appalachia have contributed to the regional food history with ingredients such as kale, collard greens, peanut beans, foods infused with bourbon, spoonbread, and the use of molasses and sorghum as a meat glaze.
Staples of Appalachian cuisine that are common in other regional cuisines of the south and in soul food include peanut brittle, sweet potato pie, pork chops, biscuits and gravy, fried chicken, chicken and dumplings, collard greens, cracklings, and ham hocks. Appalachia has a wide variety of wild game, with venison, rabbit, raccoon, and squirrel particularly common, thus helping to compensate for distance from major cities and transportation networks (this was particularly true in the 19th century). Many aspects of the diet came from economic necessity. Subsistence farming was the backbone of the Appalachian economy throughout much of the 19th century, and is still a practice in the present-day in some areas through farming revitalization efforts.
Traditionally most Appalachia homes used a fireplace and a dutch oven for cooking, which cooks hotter than a wood-burning stove. However some households preferred using a wood-burning stove. Sunday dinners are a tradition for many in the region.

Characteristic foods

Breads
Beans
Pickles
  • chow-chow
  • cucumber relish
  • green tomato pickle
  • iceberg green tomato pickle
  • icebox green strawberry pickles
  • pear relish
  • icicle pickles
  • pickled beans
  • pickled corn
  • pickled beets
  • mustard pickle
  • red tomato pickle
  • sour kraut
Meat dishes
Other dishes
Desserts
Cakes
Candy
Other desserts
Beverages
Common ingredients
Fruits
  • apples - Golden Delicious apples are the state fruit of West Virginia
  • blackberries
  • peaches
  • pawpaw (Asimina triloba)
  • plums
  • raspberries
Vegetables
Other common ingredients

Categories: American cuisine
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