Cuisine of the United States
Encyclopedia : C : CU : CUI : Cuisine of the United States
|
| This article is part of the Cuisine series |
| Preparation techniques and cooking items |
|---|
| Techniques - Utensils Weights and measures |
| Ingredients and types of food |
| Spices and Herbs Sauces - Soups - Desserts Cheese - Pasta - Bread Other ingredients |
| Regional cuisines |
| Asia - Europe - Caribbean South Asian - Latin America Mideast - North America - Africa |
| See also: |
| Famous chefs - Kitchens - Meals |
However, many food items now enjoyed worldwide either originated in the United States or else were substantially altered by American chefs. Additionally, since a lot of what is considered American Cuisine is rustic rather than elaborate, much of American food culture isn't immediately recognised as being "cuisine". Salt water taffy, clam chowder, baked beans, barbecue, candy bars, and most fast food items are some of the better known examples.
Given the United States' large size it is not surprising that distinct regional variations have evolved. The cuisine of the East Coast, for example, makes use of fish and seafood to much greater degree than that of the Midwest, where corn and beef are much more readily available. To some degree, easy transportation of perishable foodstuffs has diminished these difference in recent years, but many Americans will still associate certain foods with specific places, such as steak with Omaha and lobster with Boston.
Some describe American cuisine as the result of each immigrant community simply making use of whatever they could grow in their new home, or press into service from America's own native plants and game animals. This overlooks an important characteristic of American cooking, the fusion of multiple ethnic or regional styles into completely new cooking styles. The cuisine of the South, for example, has been heavily influenced by immigrants from Africa, France, and Mexico, among others. To a great or lesser degree, many of the dishes that were imported from elsewhere have been elaborated on extensively once adopted by Americans. Pizza, hamburgers, and ice cream are dishes imported from Europe but have attained a diversity within the United States far exceeding anything found in their home countries. Furthermore, American cooking has been widely exported outside its borders. Tex-Mex, Creole, and barbecue restaurants can be found in cities all around the world, and fast-food burger bars and pizzerias are even more popular.
| Arts of the United States |
|
Architecture Cinema Comic books Cuisine Dance Literature Music Poetry Sculpture Television Theater Visual arts |
American regional and fusion cuisines
- Barbecue
- California cuisine
- Euro-Asian cuisine, a kind of fusion cuisine
- Fast food
- Floribbean
- Cuisine of Kentucky
- Hawaiian cuisine
- Italian American cuisine
- Midwestern cuisine
- Native American cuisine
- New England cuisine
- New York City cuisine
- Pennsylvania Dutch cuisine
- Puerto Rican cuisine
- Southern cuisine
- * Cajun cuisine
- * Louisiana Creole cuisine
- * Soul food
- * Tex-Mex
- Southwestern cuisine
- * Tex-Mex
Particular American foods
- Amish Friendship Bread
- Apple Pie
- Boston baked beans
- Brownies
- Buffalo wings
- Buffalo steaks and burgers
- Chicago-style pizza
- Chili con carne
- Chocolate chip cookies
- Chop suey
- Corn dogs
- Corn on the cob
- Cream cheese
- Disco fries
- Fortune cookies
- French Fries
- Fried chicken
- Fudge
- Grits
- Grilled pizza
- Gumbo
- Hamburgers
- Hoagie
- Hot dish
- Hotcakes
- Hush puppies
- Ice cream cone
- Jambalaya
- Macaroni and cheese
- Pancake
- Peanut butter
- *Peanut butter and jelly sandwich
- Pecan pie
- Pecan pralines
- Popcorn
- Philadelphia cheesesteak
- Potato Chips
- Pumpkin pie
- Scrapple
- Shoo-fly pie
- Sloppy joe
- Sweet potato pie
- Thanksgiving Dinner (Roast Turkey, Cranberry sauce, etc.)
- Whoopie pies
See also
- Native American cuisine
- Cuisines of other countries
- Cuisine of the Southern United States
- Cuisine of the Southwestern United States
- Christmas food in the United States
- New England cuisine
- Cuisine of the Midwestern United States
External links
From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.
