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Title: Corn Soup Liquor ... O'niyustagi'
Categories: Soup Amerind Vegetable
Yield: 1 Servings

  No Ingredients Found

The liquor in which the corn bread was boiled was carefully drained off and kept in jars or pots as a drink. It is said that the Indians were not fond of drinking water and preferred various beverages prepared from herbs or corn. One writer, James Adair, in "History of the American Indians" (London 1775), p. 416 in discussing this subject says: "Though in most of the Indian nations the water is good, because of their high situation, yet the traders very seldom drink any of it at home; for the women beat in mortars their flinty corn till all the husks are taken off, which having well sifted and fanned, they boil in large earthen pots; then straining off the thinnest part into a pot they mix it with cold water till it is sufficiently liquid for drinking; and when cold it is both pleasant and very nourishing; and is much liked even by genteel strangers." Source:*"Iroquois Uses of Maize and Other Food Plants, New York State Museum Bulletin #144," by Arthur C. Parker, p. 71 Shared by: Norman R. Brown 2/93 Submitted By BILL CHRISTMAS

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