Creole, griffe, quadroon, mulatto, or other? Whats my heritage?
I’ve been wondering this for quite sometime. My family was raised in Louisiana and I was even born in central Louisana but I am stilled confused exactly what I am classified. My mom’s family is creole by heritage and blood- her grandparents immigrants her mother and aunts spoke fluent subgroups of french up until the start of elementary. Although it is now lost on my generation. Her mom was mixed her mother a frenchwoman and her father some caribean. Although her father is mulatto by mom and black by his father. So my mom is a mixture of mulatto and creole I believe although they have something else to living close to the reservations they believe their is a mixture of indian blood somewhere along the line.
My father’s family is mestizo I think- he is half native american his mother of the reservation and his dad hispanic and black. He lived in hat part where they constantly married people of the same heritage so it was frowned upon when I was born because He and my mom were not the same nationality. His family is classified as strictly cajun and native american and look on creole’s as overly black.
I haven’t lived in Louisana for some years so Its still a bit murky to me. Unfortunately I have no idea what to classify myself though. My family is more drawn to Creole culture although we are raised by the standards of central Louisana rather than the south- not much for voodoo and french speaking. Excluding the community where my father lived I don’t think there are many french speaking people living in that parish although they still cook creole food like etouffe, red beans and rice, and sauce picante.
Physically I am red bone, I have very thick curly hair it falls in semi-tight little ringlets and is black- I have brown eyes although my sister has hazel and my father has green eyes. My body shape is thick which seems heriditary for all my sisters on my dad’s side have hour glass shape. I’m short 5’3 although my mother is 5’11 and she is concidered one of the shordest women on my mom’s side. My dad’s dainty though only near 5’8 or so and my sisters though grown are all barely at 5’0 even.
I hope someone can decipher this and I hope I didn’t drag on to long.
I would not bother.
Maybe you belong to the Human race.
Cooking Creole Cajun Red Beans.mp4
DJ ERV Getting His Cook On, Creole Cajun Camellia Red Beans!
Duration : 0:0:23
Betty’s Cajun Red Beans and Rice Recipe
In this video, Betty demonstrates how to make a zesty dish from the Deep South, Cajun Red Beans and Rice. This recipe makes a large amount, and it can be used as the main course of a meal. It is composed of a sauce made from red beans, vegetables, and spices, and it is served over a hot bed of white rice. Add a wedge of hot, tasty cornbread, and it tastes wonderful!
Ingredients:
(2) 15.5 oz. cans red beans, undrained (You may use pinto beans, kidney beans, chili beans—but no beans that have been already flavored with spices.)
½ stick butter or margarine, melted
1 cup chopped celery
1 cup chopped onion
½ cup sliced green onion
½ cup chopped green bell pepper
2 cloves garlic, minced
5 oz. diced cooked ham (I used Hormels canned smoked ham, but you may use leftover ham chunks.)
¼ teaspoon salt
2 teaspoons Creole seasoning
¾ teaspoon hot sauce (Tabasco or any type of hot pepper sauce may be used.)
1 cup water
2 cups hot, cooked white long grain rice
Saute 1 cup chopped celery, 1 cup chopped onion, ½ cup sliced green onion, and ½ cup chopped green pepper in ½ stick melted butter or margarine until tender. Add 2 cloves of minced garlic, 2 cans of red beans, 5 oz. diced cooked ham, ¼ teaspoon salt, 2 teaspoons Creole seasoning, ¾ teaspoon hot sauce, and 1 cup water. Cook, uncovered, over medium heat for 1 hour, stirring occasionally. While the red bean sauce is cooking, prepare your white rice. When ready to serve, arrange 2 cups of hot white rice on a large serving dish. Spoon bean mixture over the top, and serve immediately. If you like red beans and rice, this is a very flavorful version that you are sure to enjoy!
Duration : 0:7:47
Destination Haitian Cuisine
Haitian food is similar to the rest of the Latin-Caribbean (the French and the Spanish-speaking countries of the Antilles) however it differs in several ways from its regional counterparts. Its primary influence derive from French, and African cuisine, with notable derivatives from native Taíno and Spanish culinary technique. Though similar to other cooking styles in the region, it carries a uniqueness native only to the country and an appeal to many visitors to the island. Haitians use vegetables and meats extensively and peppers and similar herbs are often used for strengthening flavor. Dishes tend to be seasoned liberally and consequently Haitian cuisine tends to be moderately spicy, not mild and not too hot. In the country, however, many businesses of foreign origin have been established introducing several foreign cuisines into the mainstream culture. Years of adaptation have led to these cuisines (ie: Levantine from Arab migration to Haiti) to merge into Haitian cuisine.
Rice and beans in several differing ways are eaten throughout the country regardless of location, becoming a sort of national dish. They form the staple diet, which consists of a lot of starch and is high in carbohydrates. In the more rural areas, however, at great distances from the major cities, other foods are eaten to a larger degree such as mais moulu (mayi moulen), a dish comparable to cornmeal that can be eaten with sauce pois (sos pwa) [a bean sauce made from one of many types of beans such as kidney, pinto, or garbanzo beans, or pigeon peas]. Mais moulu can be eaten with fish (often red snapper), or alone, depending on personal preference. Tomato, oregano, cabbage, avocado, and red and green peppers are several of the many types of vegetables and fruits that are used in Haitian dishes. Banane Pésée (Bannan Pézé), flattened plantain slices that are fried in oil (known as tostones in the Dominican Republic and Puerto Rico), are eaten frequently in Haiti as both a snack food and as part of a meal. They are frequently eaten with tassot and/or griot, deep-fried goat and pork respectively.
Duration : 0:4:40
Cajun Navy beans & meatballs w creole celery p2
smithfield country ham brown gravy
Duration : 0:7:46
pernil
pernil
peach cobbler
smithfield country ham
over rice