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  2. Corn snake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corn_snake

    The corn snake is named for the species' regular presence near grain stores, where it preys on mice and rats that eat harvested corn (). [9]The Oxford English Dictionary cites this usage as far back as 1675, whilst other sources maintain that the corn snake is so-named because the distinctive, nearly-checkered pattern of the snake's belly scales resembles the kernels of variegated corn.

  3. Modernist Bread - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modernist_Bread

    The Cooking World notes breadth of the book: "Another work that finds inspiration in a variety of sources, industrial as well as artisanal, offering a defense of high-fructose corn syrup alongside a guide to caring for wild sourdough starters, and debunking the idea that water purity affects the rise and flavor of the bread." [4]

  4. Pone (food) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pone_(food)

    Pone is a type of baked or fried bread in American cuisine, and the Cuisine of the Southern United States. Pone could be made with corn, or some other main ingredient could be used like sweet potato. This style of bread, eaten cold as a breakfast food, was a staple food of the cuisine of the Thirteen Colonies. [1]

  5. The Ultimate Guide to Proofing Bread Dough - AOL

    www.aol.com/ultimate-guide-proofing-bread-dough...

    Our Absolute Best Homemade Bread Recipes. 1 / 25. The Best Bagel. ... The post The Ultimate Guide to Proofing Bread Dough appeared first on Taste of Home.

  6. Cornbread - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cornbread

    Corn pone (sometimes referred to as "Indian pone") is a type of cornbread made from a thick, malleable cornmeal dough (which is usually egg-less and milk-less) and cooked in a specific type of iron pan over an open fire (such as a frontiersman would use), using mostly bacon grease, but later, butter, margarine, shortening, or cooking oil. Corn ...

  7. Bizarre Foods with Andrew Zimmern - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bizarre_Foods_with_Andrew...

    Lungfish, white ants lured by drumming, matoke (steamed green bananas), braised goat with peanut and sesame sauce, grasshopper, squirrel, millet bread, goat stomach lining and intestines, Nile perch, rotten goat meat from a Ugandan drive-through, roasted corn, mixed grill (intestine-encased organs), cane rat with tilapia from Lake Victoria and ...

  8. Bannock (Indigenous American food) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bannock_(Indigenous...

    Bannock's functionality made it simple to cook and consume while conducting daily activities at home, or hunting, trapping, fishing, and gathering out on the land. [10] European colonization dramatically changed the traditional ways of Indigenous Americans, including the relationship they had with bannock. Whereas bannock was once a food of ...

  9. Johnnycake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Johnnycake

    [citation needed] The common bread consumed in the Bahamas in 1725 was made of corn and flour. According to Mark Catesby , an English naturalist who visited North America and the Caribbean in the early 1700s, "Their bread is made of Maiz, or Indian Corn, and also of Wheat; the first they cultivate but not sufficient for their consumption.