Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you don't have another culture, what are you bringing to the school multicultural potluck? Just a regular side dish? I tried to sign up for chocolate chip cookies and the organizers told me it should be a traditional food from my household.
I'm really trying here, but these events come up multiple times a year and there doesn't seem room for people who don't have other cultures. I mean we're mostly British and German but it's been a couple hundred years and we have no ties to any of that food. I don't even feel like we have regional foods from the US that my family regularly eats (they did not want regional US foods though). I sort of felt like chocolate chip cookies were one of my family's specialties. If we don't have one, should we just pick someone else's culture and make a dish?
I'm from Germany. Would you like me to link some fairly easy recipes for you that are authentic and often used?![]()
Anonymous wrote:If you don't have another culture, what are you bringing to the school multicultural potluck? Just a regular side dish? I tried to sign up for chocolate chip cookies and the organizers told me it should be a traditional food from my household.
I'm really trying here, but these events come up multiple times a year and there doesn't seem room for people who don't have other cultures. I mean we're mostly British and German but it's been a couple hundred years and we have no ties to any of that food. I don't even feel like we have regional foods from the US that my family regularly eats (they did not want regional US foods though). I sort of felt like chocolate chip cookies were one of my family's specialties. If we don't have one, should we just pick someone else's culture and make a dish?
Anonymous wrote:I'm from the US South, and for our multicultural night, I always brought 2 buckets of KFC. There was never any leftover.
Anonymous wrote:My family is only 3 generations removed from Switzerland/Germany and 5 from the Ulster Scotts, but if we didn't have another option I'd probably bring one of those dishes. We're also British, but back from the time of the Revolutionary War. I didn't grow up eating any of them and neither did my kids, but I think identifying with that background would be fun for my kids.
DH's family is Mennonite, which is a religious sub-culture more than an ethnicity (the group originally hailed from the Netherlands but that was centuries ago) and he did grow up eating their unique food and my kids are familiar with it, so that's what we'd actually do.