First thanksgiving likely a British meal.

PositionYOUR LIFE - Brief article

Thanksgiving is considered the quintessential American holiday, but the food prepared by the pilgrims in 1621 likely was more British than New World, according to a visiting professor of English literature at Duke University, Durham, N.C.

Despite the inclusion of uniquely American ingredients such as corn and cranberries, the food prepared for the three-day harvest celebration at Plymouth Colony, in what we now consider the first Thanksgiving, likely was derived more from British middle-class cookery than American influences, maintains Kelly A. Amienne. "That first meal is so interesting, so shrouded in mythology. A big part of it was the new ingredients," she says. "In some ways, it's very American but, in some ways, it's very British"

She notes that it is likely the pilgrims used familiar techniques when cooking food in their new home, especially if they had managed to bring ingredients such as spices and sugar...

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