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How to find links to Food Information on Countries . . . and Cuisines . . . Anthropology of Food University of Minnesota Duluth Tim Roufs © 2010

Anthropology of Food University of Minnesota Duluth Tim Roufs © 2010

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Page 1: Anthropology of Food University of Minnesota Duluth Tim Roufs © 2010

How to find links to

Food Informationon

Countries . . .and Cuisines . . .

Anthropology of FoodUniversity of Minnesota Duluth

Tim Roufs © 2010

Page 2: Anthropology of Food University of Minnesota Duluth Tim Roufs © 2010

there are many links to

food information on “countries, cultures, regions, areas and territories . . .” and

cuisines on the course WebPages

Page 3: Anthropology of Food University of Minnesota Duluth Tim Roufs © 2010

and one or more of thesemight prove interesting,

and useful with your class project

Page 4: Anthropology of Food University of Minnesota Duluth Tim Roufs © 2010

there is a WebPage listing all of the countries, cultures and areas available, or . . .

Page 5: Anthropology of Food University of Minnesota Duluth Tim Roufs © 2010

you can just click on the A-Z index in your Moodle

home for the country or culture you’re interested

in . . .

Page 6: Anthropology of Food University of Minnesota Duluth Tim Roufs © 2010
Page 7: Anthropology of Food University of Minnesota Duluth Tim Roufs © 2010

or click on the “Food of Countries / Cultures”

link in the “Additional Learner Support

Resources” section of your Moodle home . . .

Page 8: Anthropology of Food University of Minnesota Duluth Tim Roufs © 2010
Page 9: Anthropology of Food University of Minnesota Duluth Tim Roufs © 2010

the countries . . . page looks like this

Page 10: Anthropology of Food University of Minnesota Duluth Tim Roufs © 2010

scroll down for the individual countries . . .

Page 11: Anthropology of Food University of Minnesota Duluth Tim Roufs © 2010

Where to go?

Page 12: Anthropology of Food University of Minnesota Duluth Tim Roufs © 2010

The first horse meat that I

(knowingly) ate was in Belgium

The best restaurant meal that I have ever eaten was in Bruges,

Belgium.

[these two events are unrelated]

Page 13: Anthropology of Food University of Minnesota Duluth Tim Roufs © 2010

The first horse meat that I

(knowingly) ate was in Belgium

The best restaurant meal that I have ever eaten was in Bruges,

Belgium

[these two events are unrelated]

Page 14: Anthropology of Food University of Minnesota Duluth Tim Roufs © 2010

so let’s go to Belgium . . .

Page 15: Anthropology of Food University of Minnesota Duluth Tim Roufs © 2010
Page 16: Anthropology of Food University of Minnesota Duluth Tim Roufs © 2010

Belgium is divided (some say “split”) into two major cultural groups . . .

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WaloonsFlemish

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Waloonia(French Speaking)

(Catholic)

Page 19: Anthropology of Food University of Minnesota Duluth Tim Roufs © 2010

Flanders(Flemish Speaking)

(Catholic)

Page 20: Anthropology of Food University of Minnesota Duluth Tim Roufs © 2010

Brussels tends to operate as a

separate “region”(Multilingual)

(Catholic)

Page 21: Anthropology of Food University of Minnesota Duluth Tim Roufs © 2010

click on “Belgium” to start your trip

Page 22: Anthropology of Food University of Minnesota Duluth Tim Roufs © 2010
Page 23: Anthropology of Food University of Minnesota Duluth Tim Roufs © 2010

note the three divisions:

Belgium (the country)

Flanders

Wallonia

Page 24: Anthropology of Food University of Minnesota Duluth Tim Roufs © 2010

Food Trivia 1:

In Belgium there is no such thing as a “Belgian waffle”

Page 25: Anthropology of Food University of Minnesota Duluth Tim Roufs © 2010

Food Trivia 2:

But there is a “Brussels sprout”

Page 26: Anthropology of Food University of Minnesota Duluth Tim Roufs © 2010

“Brussels sprouts as we now know them were grown

possibly as early as the 1200s in what is now Belgium”.

Wikipedia

Page 27: Anthropology of Food University of Minnesota Duluth Tim Roufs © 2010

“Brussels sprouts as we now know them were grown

possibly as early as the 1200s in what is now Belgium”.

Wikipedia

Format Factoid: This is the way most Europeans punctuate a “full

stop” at the end of a sentence with a quotation mark.

In the U.S.A. it is conventionally just the reverse.

Page 28: Anthropology of Food University of Minnesota Duluth Tim Roufs © 2010

Food Trivia 3:

“French Fries”are

French-speakingBelgium fare, not French . . .

Page 29: Anthropology of Food University of Minnesota Duluth Tim Roufs © 2010

(. . . a fact most American national

politicians apparently weren’t aware of

that when they voted to serve only

“Freedom fries” in Washington

when France wouldn’t support the

second war in Iraq . . .)

Page 30: Anthropology of Food University of Minnesota Duluth Tim Roufs © 2010

. . . but more to the point, speaking of “French” fries, what’s in a name anyway?

Some folks love “escargot”, aka “snails”,

but wouldn’t think of eating “slugs”, even if they were

“freedom slugs” . . .

Page 31: Anthropology of Food University of Minnesota Duluth Tim Roufs © 2010

. . . but more to the point, speaking of “French” fries, what’s in a name anyway?

Some folks love “escargot”, aka “snails”,

but wouldn’t think of eating “slugs”, even if they were

“freedom slugs” . . .

Page 32: Anthropology of Food University of Minnesota Duluth Tim Roufs © 2010

. . . but more to the point, speaking of “French” fries, what’s in a name anyway?

Some folks love “escargot”, aka “snails”,

but wouldn’t think of eating “slugs”, even if they were

“freedom slugs” . . .

Page 33: Anthropology of Food University of Minnesota Duluth Tim Roufs © 2010

. . . back to the food of Belgium . . .

Page 34: Anthropology of Food University of Minnesota Duluth Tim Roufs © 2010

The food information is toward the middle of the page.

If you click on “food” from the index page that will take you

directly there.

Page 35: Anthropology of Food University of Minnesota Duluth Tim Roufs © 2010

Have a look at some of the other items on the page as you’re looking for the food section. They tell you a

lot about the country.

For e.g., note that Belgium has three national anthems as well as

three flags.

Page 36: Anthropology of Food University of Minnesota Duluth Tim Roufs © 2010
Page 37: Anthropology of Food University of Minnesota Duluth Tim Roufs © 2010
Page 38: Anthropology of Food University of Minnesota Duluth Tim Roufs © 2010

Here at the food section you can find a lot of information on Belgium cuisine . . .

and you might even note that they have some of the best chocolate in the world . . .

(more on this Week 14)

and that they DO love waffles (but each region has their own style and name – what we call the

“Belgium Waffle” is a “Brussels Waffle”)

Page 39: Anthropology of Food University of Minnesota Duluth Tim Roufs © 2010

What we call the “Belgium Waffle” is what they call the “Brussels Waffle” and it’s the style eaten in the Brussels

area.

Other areas of Belgium have their own styles.

Page 40: Anthropology of Food University of Minnesota Duluth Tim Roufs © 2010

The term “Belgium Waffle” was invented as a marketing ploy to sell

waffles to Americans at the Worlds Fair.

Page 41: Anthropology of Food University of Minnesota Duluth Tim Roufs © 2010

The term “Belgium Waffle” was invented as a marketing ploy to sell waffles to Americans at the 1964 New York City World's Fair

http://foodtimeline.org/restaurants.html#fair

Page 42: Anthropology of Food University of Minnesota Duluth Tim Roufs © 2010

You probably will not find too much on-line about it, but the horsemeat sausages are really wonderful.

Really . . .

wonderful.

Page 43: Anthropology of Food University of Minnesota Duluth Tim Roufs © 2010

You probably will not find too much on-line about it, but the horsemeat sausages are really wonderful.

Really . . .

wonderful.

Page 44: Anthropology of Food University of Minnesota Duluth Tim Roufs © 2010

You probably will not find too much on-line about it, but the horsemeat sausages are really wonderful.

Really . . .

wonderful.

Page 45: Anthropology of Food University of Minnesota Duluth Tim Roufs © 2010

REM: To go directly to a country’s . . . food section just click on “food” from the index page or

from you’re A-Z index on your Moodle page.

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. . . and that will get you here directly

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Bon Appétit!

Page 48: Anthropology of Food University of Minnesota Duluth Tim Roufs © 2010

Bon Appétit!

The Wallonians like to hear you talk like that