Caribbean Food – A Little History



The Arawak, Carib, and Taino Indians were the first inhabitants of the Caribbean islands. These first inhabitants occupied the present day islands of British Virgin Islands, Cuba, Dominica, Grenada, Haiti, Trinidad, and Jamaica. Their daily diet consisted of vegetables and fruits such as papaw, yams, guavas, and cassava. The Taino started the process of cooking meat and fish in large clay pots.

The Arawaks are the first people known to make a grate of thin green wood strips on which they slowly cooked meat, allowing it to be enhanced by the flavor of the wood. This grate was called a barbacoa, and the word we know today as barbeque is taken from this early Indian cooking method.

The Carib Indians added more spice to their food with hot pepper sauces, and also added lemon and lime juice to their meat and fish recipes. The Caribs are said to have made the first pepper pot stew. No recipes exist since every time the Indians made the dish, they would always add new ingredients. The Carib had a big impact on early Caribbean history, and the Caribbean sea was named after this tribe.

Then the Caribbean became a crossroads for the world . . .

Once the Europeans brought Africans slaves into the region, the slaves diet consisted mostly of food the slave owners did not want to eat. So the slaves had to be inventive, and they blended their traditional African foods with staples found on the islands. The Africans introduced okra, callaloo, fish cakes, saltfish, ackee, pudding and souse, mangos, and the list goes on.

Most present day Caribbean island locals eat a present diet that is reflective of the main ingredients of original early African dishes, and includes cassava, sweet potatoes, yams, plantains, bananas and corn meal.

African men were hunters in their homeland, and often away from home for long periods of time. They would cook spicy pork over hot coals, and this tradition was refined by the early slaves in Jamaica. The technique is known today as “jerk” cooking , and the secret involves a slow meat cooking process. Jamaica is famous for jerk chicken and pork, and you’ll find jerk all over the island.

After slavery was abolished, the Europeans went to India and China for labor, and more cooking styles were introduced. Much of the Indian cooking culture remains alive and well in the Caribbean of today with the introduction of curried meats and curry powder. Indians call it kari podi, and we have come to know this pungent flavor as curry.

The Chinese introduced rice, which is always a staple in home cooked island meals. The Chinese also introduced mustard, and the early Portuguese sailors introduced the popular codfish.

Most visitors to the Caribbean have no idea that the fruit trees and fruits so familiar to the islands were introduced by the early Spanish explorers. The fruit trees and fruits brought from Spain include orange, lime, ginger, plantains, figs, date palms, sugar cane, grapes, tamarinds and coconuts.

Even the Polynesian islands play an important role in Caribbean cooking. Most of us remember the movie “Mutiny on the Bounty”, but do not know that particular ship carried breadfruit, which was loaded on board from the islands of Tahiti and Timor. In the movie the crew took over the ship, forced the captain into a small boat to fend on his own, and they threw the breadfruit, which they considered “strange fruit” overboard. Another ship was more successful in bringing breadfruit from Polynesia to Jamaica and the St Vincent and the Grenadines. Breadfruit is a staple diet in the current day Caribbean

America is responsible for introducing beans, corn, squash, potatoes, tomatoes, and chili pepper to the Caribbean. In fact these particular foods had never been seen in Asia, Europe or Africa, so America actually introduced these foods the rest of the world via the Caribbean.

So it’s no wonder Caribbean cooking is so rich and creative with the flavors of Africa, India, and China, along with Spanish, Danish, Portuguese, French and British influences. Food served in the Caribbean islands have been influenced by the cultures of the world, but each island adds its own special flavor and cooking technique.

By: Linda Thompkins

About the Author:
Linda Thompkins is a Caribbean travel consultant and owner of Travel 2 the Caribbean online agency. Linda and her husband reside in Indianapolis, Indiana and have traveled extensively throughout the Caribbean.

Travel 2 the Caribbean has been in business for seven years and offers secure online booking, and travel agent booking.

[http://www.travel2thecaribbean.com]



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Shrimp Scampi Recipes



Many people have different ideas on how to prepare great shrimp scampi recipes as you will see below. Some of the ingredients are the same and usually it is served with pasta. The type of pasta that you serve with your dish is up to your own taste.

Here are two shrimp scampi recipes that do vary in style. For the first one you will need:

2 pounds of shrimp,

Dark, White and Milk Chocolate – Just What is the Difference?



What creates the difference between dark, white and milk chocolates? Is it the color, or perhaps the flavor? Or is it just the history and the background behind each? Nutritional values, maybe? Or how about the ingredients of each? The making process? How about all of the above?

We all know that there are three different types of chocolates. What we don’t really understand are the differences between these, which cause each to be taken as an individual substance! For example, did you know that white chocolate isn’t really considered to be chocolate? Many true chocolate aficionados might put white chocolate in a separate class -

The first and most characteristic that differentiates dark from white from milk chocolate is the distinct color of each! While dark chocolate is a deep, rich brown due to the high amounts of cocoa in its composition, milk chocolate is a lighter shade of brown, showing the presence of milk. White chocolate on the other hand, is completely white since it has no part of the cocoa liquor that’s present in the other two. This is also the reason as to why white chocolate doesn’t conform to the standards of chocolate

Another major difference between dark, white and milk chocolates is the history behind each. Chocolate was drunk as a spicy beverage about 2000 years ago, when no one had heard of mixing it with milk! When the cocoa press was first invented in 1828, solid eating chocolate was created. Thus dark chocolate was born. Later, in the year 1875, Daniel Peters created the first milk chocolate White chocolate came much later, after World War I, when it was introduced by the Swiss! Dark chocolate becomes more bitter as the amount of cocoa liquor in it increases.

In terms of taste, dark chocolate is the bitterest, followed by milk chocolate which is usually semi-sweet in response to the lower quantity of cocoa liquor used, as well as the added sweetness of milk and sugar. White chocolate is completely sweet, since it has no cocoa liquor. Cocoa contains theobromine, a healthy substance that is extremely bitter in nature. This explains why dark chocolate is more of an acquired taste than a first love!

The other difference between these three types of chocolate is in the ingredients each contains. Dark chocolate is very simple, containing cocoa liquor, cocoa butter and sugar, whereas milk chocolate has a smaller portion of cocoa liquor, cocoa butter, milk and sugar. White chocolate on the other hand, is more of a flavored candy containing cocoa butter, lecithin, sugar, milk solids and other flavorings.

As has been recently discovered, cocoa powder has many nutritional benefits, due to the flavonoids and polyphenols it contains, which are said to be antioxidants and relieve heart disease, high blood pressure, diabetes type II, and prevent a score of other diseases. Cocoa also contains epitachin, a flavonoid which widens the heart and blood vessels, leading to reduced heart risks. Since dark chocolate has the highest amount of cocoa present, it follows that dark chocolate has greater nutritional benefits compared to milk and white chocolate Milk chocolate also contains cocoa, but the goodness of it is generally wiped out by the other saturated fats contained within! White chocolate having no cocoa content, has no nutritional benefits at all.

Another scenario where the differences between these three types of chocolate are stark is the consumption and popularity of each! Dark chocolate is normally a favorite with diabetic chocoholics, because of the low sugar content it contains. Milk chocolate on the other hand, is very popular with the masses. If you’re creating a gift basket without knowing your recipients taste, you’re in the right if you include a majority of milk chocolate goodies! White chocolates, on the other hand, tend to be a love at first taste choice. You either like them or you don’t!

There are obviously major differences between the three types of chocolate However, each of them is a sumptuous decadent delight in its own way! When you’re thinking of chocolate you’re obviously not going through the differences between them. What you are thinking of is that moment when they melt in your mouth, and everything is all right with the world! So today go ahead and enjoy that delicious piece of chocolate after all you now know a little bit more about what you are eating!

By: Colleen Maguire

About the Author:
Colleen Maguire -
Writer, Traveler and Chocolate Lover

For More Delicious Chocolate Ideas and Tastes: Delicious Chocolate Ideas and Tastes: Explore Gourmet Milk and Dark Chocolates.



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Food Hygiene



There are few things more important in everyday food preparation then proper hygiene. Without the seemingly simple washing of hands and tools disease would spread rampantly throughout society. This was not always known though and in some places is still not taken as seriously as it should be. For this reason the government has made mandatory health codes and random health checks the norm.

To be a professional food handler you must know,understand, and implement proper food hygiene techniques. Knowing them alone is not enough though, for many areas you will need to take classes and be properly certified in order to prepare food professionally. This may mean that each employee needs to be certified or it may mean that the restaurant needs proper certification, it really depends on the given area.

To make sure that you have all of the proper courses and certifications you will most likely need to call your local health board. Do not be afraid to “wake a sleeping giant” of sorts, they get these calls every day and will not be influenced into inspecting your establishment because of it. More likely, they will be on much better terms with you over the long run,knowing that you are trying to do the correct thing.

To get your food hygiene certification,one must take a series of classes or at the least a course. This can usually be done at a local college,night school,or online. When choosing these classes, be sure that the proper topics will be covered and that they will meet all of your needs. The rules can vary from county to county in some cases and everyone should understand what needs to be taught.

By: Dave Hungary

About the Author:
For more information on Food Hygiene Certification or Training visit my site today.



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