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Frybread (also spelled fry bread) is a dish of the indigenous people of North America that is a flat dough bread, fried or deep-fried in oil, shortening, or lard.. Made with simple ingredients, generally wheat flour, water, salt, and sometimes baking powder, frybread can be eaten alone or with various toppings such as honey, jam, powdered sugar, venison, or beef.
Fry bread, Navajo Nation Luke E. Montavon/AFP/Getty Images Golden, crisp rounds of fry bread are a taste of home for many in the Navajo Nation, as well as a reminder of a tragic history.
Soda bread made with raisins is colloquially called "Spotted Dog" or "Spotted Dick". [3] In Ireland, the flour is typically made from soft wheat, so soda bread is best made with a cake or pastry flour (made from soft wheat), which has lower levels of gluten than a bread flour. In some recipes, the buttermilk is replaced by live yogurt or even ...
Other languages do offer hints of European influence, however, for example Navajo: bááh dah díníilghaazhh "bread that bubbles" (i.e. in fat), where "bááh" is a borrowing from Spanish: pan for flour and yeast bread, as opposed to the older Navajo: łeesʼáán which refers to maize bread cooked in hot ashes [7] Likewise, Alutiiq alatiq comes from the Russian: ола́дьи, romanized ...
Recipe: How to make Slow Cooker Navajo Steamed Corn Stew Navajo steamed corn stew with mutton and zucchini made by Denee Bex, a Diné gardener living in Fort Defiance, Arizona. As told by Denee Bex.
A bread of cassava, baked on a griddle. Banana bread: Quick bread: United States [1] Dense, made with mashed bananas, often a moist, sweet, cake-like quick bread, but some recipes are traditional yeast breads. Bánh mì: Yeast bread Vietnam: A variant of the French baguette, a Vietnamese baguette has a thin crust and white, airy crumb.
It is often lightly oiled and toasted on a griddle to melt the cheese, then served with either salsa, pico de gallo, chile, guacamole, and sour cream, as an appetizer or entrée. Sopaipillas; Sopaipilla (or sopapilla) – a puffed fried quick bread with a flavor similar to Indian fry bread. The New Mexico version is very large.
Today, the Navajo have largely conformed to the norms of American society; this is by and large reflected in their eating habits. Government subsidy programs have contributed to a shift in focus in Native diets at large from traditional habits to modern, processed foods, whose nutritional value differs greatly from that of traditional Native foods. [4]