Ah, ok. So despite the edit and apology, you’ve cancelled her for life. Got it.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ok. In the chickpea stew recipe, it clearly references “stews found in South India and parts of the Caribbean” right there in the first sentence.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are they claiming they created the dishes? Are they calling it American cuisine? I have my doubts, but please provide links to prove me wrong.
Look at Alison Roman with her “chickpea stew” and “gentle lentils”.
https://cooking.nytimes.com/recipes/1019772-spiced-chickpea-stew-with-coconut-and-turmeric
And here she is talking about the lentils and mentions the South Asian origin of dal: https://anewsletter.alisoneroman.com/p/gentle-lentils
She did not claim either as American cuisine, and did not claim to invent anything or discover a new ingredient.
She only acknowledged dal after several commenters on her Insta called her out. And she acted like she’d never heard of the dish before.
Anonymous wrote:Ok. In the chickpea stew recipe, it clearly references “stews found in South India and parts of the Caribbean” right there in the first sentence.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are they claiming they created the dishes? Are they calling it American cuisine? I have my doubts, but please provide links to prove me wrong.
Look at Alison Roman with her “chickpea stew” and “gentle lentils”.
https://cooking.nytimes.com/recipes/1019772-spiced-chickpea-stew-with-coconut-and-turmeric
And here she is talking about the lentils and mentions the South Asian origin of dal: https://anewsletter.alisoneroman.com/p/gentle-lentils
She did not claim either as American cuisine, and did not claim to invent anything or discover a new ingredient.
Ok. In the chickpea stew recipe, it clearly references “stews found in South India and parts of the Caribbean” right there in the first sentence.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are they claiming they created the dishes? Are they calling it American cuisine? I have my doubts, but please provide links to prove me wrong.
Look at Alison Roman with her “chickpea stew” and “gentle lentils”.
Anonymous wrote:Are they claiming they created the dishes? Are they calling it American cuisine? I have my doubts, but please provide links to prove me wrong.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are they claiming they created the dishes? Are they calling it American cuisine? I have my doubts, but please provide links to prove me wrong.
+1 Heaven forbid people appreciate cultures other than their own!
How many people making these recipes know what part of the world they originate from? Do they know the cultural context?
Anonymous wrote:I look at my Instagram feed and am met with beautifully displayed and watered down versions of Asian, middle eastern and and African cuisines. The girls making these recipes are not immigrants or POC but young, white rich women who “learned to cook in their kitchen and are foodies.”
I look at their recipes and it makes me a little sick. They’re using ethnic spice mixes and combinations of sauces that have so much history and context regarding the regions of the world in which they originate. I think of how white people used to eat pb&j now eat chicken curry and Korean tacos and naan.
As a POC it bothers me that our culinary heritage is discarded while a random white American person takes the basic idea and adopts it and presents it as their own.
So frustrating!