Tuesday, March 7, 2017

Journal 7 By Alec


Staple Foods
 For almost all Sierra Leoneans, rice is the staple food, consumed at virtually every meal. Other things are of course eaten, such as a wide variety of fruits, seafood, potatoes and cassava. However these are often considered to be just snacks and not real food. Real food is rice, prepared numerous ways, and topped with a variety of sauces made from some combination of potato leaves, cassava leaves, hot peppers, peanuts, beans, okra, fish, beef, chicken, eggplant, onions, and tomatoes. Bones, particularly chicken bones, are a delicacy, because their brittle nature makes the sweet marrow inside easily accessible. Along the street there are snacks, such as fresh mangoes, oranges, pineapple, or papaya, fried plantains, potato or cassava chunks with pepper sauce, small bags of popcorn or peanuts, bread, roasted corn, or skewers of grilled meat or shrimp. Local bars in some towns and villages will also sell poyo the sweet, lightly fermented palm wine tapped from the high tops of palm trees.
Customs
 Sometimes villages, and some families within villages, will have specific taboos or proscriptions against eating certain foods. These are usually attributed to a law handed down from someone's ancestor, perhaps the founder of the village. The taboo can be a restriction against certain kind of meat or a certain oil, or even against food prepared a certain way. Violation is usually seen as a risky proposition, and can incur the ill feelings of would-be guardians either living or dead. Food Customs at Ceremonial Occasions, such as weddings, funerals, initiations, and memorial services demand the preparation of large platters of rice, distributed to guests until they are full. Depending on the occasion, a portion may also be offered to the ancestors, to honor their memory. Another common practice in this sense is to pour liquor on the ancestors' honor in the corners of a house. Other food traditions vary with region or religion. Kola nuts are highly valued in and of themselves, and are often associated with greetings, diplomacy, provisions of respect, religious rites, and initiation ceremonies. High in caffeine concentration, they are also used as a stimulant, a clothing dye, and even in the preparation of medicines.
Rice topped with one of the many sauces used

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3 comments:

  1. I picked your journal 7 as one of my other favorite journal because it's super detailed and that picture at the bottom looks super good and i'm lowkey hungry.

    ReplyDelete
  2. ALec, your journal is great. The picture of the food looks great and now I am hungry.

    ReplyDelete
  3. It seems like every religion and custom has rites involving food. It is such an essential part of life in more ways than one. I miss okra.

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