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Andrew Coppolino searches for soul food in Waterloo Region

Food columnist Andrew Coppolino marks Black History Month with a look at the historical and cultural roots of soul food in Waterloo Region.
Desmond Bailey takes a close look at okra growing on the Afri-Can FoodBasket plot at the McVean startup farm in Brampton, Ont. (Janet Davison/CBC)
Canada began formally recognizing Black History Month in1995 with a motion carried unanimously in the House of Commons.

We celebrate this rich culture during the month of Februarywith the food prepared at restaurants here in Waterloo Region, and at the same time this is a good opportunity torecognize the way that food exists in a larger historical context.

It is estimated that between the 15th and 18th centuries, 12 million Africans were captured and sold as slaves in North America.

What the slaves brought with them, from countries such as Senegal, Nigeria, Guinea and Benin,were ingredients and cooking techniques that have nowbecome part of our culinary culture.

Key ingredients

There are a number of now-household ingredients that originated in Africaand have nowbecome an important part of North American cuisine. They include:

  • Okra: theslender tubular green vegetable isperhaps one of the most familiar ingredients.It acts as the thickening agent in the popular gumbo, a quintessential stew-like dish of Louisiana. Slaves in the southern United States likely brought okrawith them from Senegal where they had been cooking it much earlier in history. Now, the southernU.S. has adopted it as its own.
  • Red peas: acentral component of the pork dish "Hoppin' John".
  • Watermelon.
  • Black-eyed peas.
  • Sorghum: agrass that is used to make a molasses-like syrup.
  • Peanuts: these were not found in America before the 15th centuryand likely arrived withthetrans-Atlanticslave trade in the southernU.S., where they are also known as "goober peas."
  • Rice: there are thousands of varieties of rice consumed in the world which come from two basic families that originated in either China or Africa. The latter was being planted in South Carolina commercially by the 1600s and also came to North America viathe slave trade.

Soul food staples

"Soul food" as a concept didn'tcome into use until the 1960s, but it likely evolved out the "Great Migration" of the early 20th century when African-Americans moved north from their southern homes. When they built restaurants, the food they served collards, grits,jambalaya, fried chicken and cornbread eventually came to be calledsoul food;food that reminded them of their southern homes.

These dishes are usually now categorized as foods that come from the heart and soul of the chef and restaurant, and whichcapture the comfort-food past of their ancestors. They also capture the history of entire peoples.

In Waterloo Region,there are several Caribbean restaurants that serve classic dishes like jerk chicken,goatroti,callaloo,ackeeandsaltfish using the techniques and ingredients from hundreds of years ago.

Similarly, Ethiopian restaurants prepare a range of chicken, lamb and beef dishes which you eat with pieces of injera bread as your utensils as well as good options for vegetarian fare with dishes like split green peas or lentils in red pepper sauce and spices like berbere, an African blend.

Finding truth through food

Why is the food of Black History Month important? Recognizing the deeper past of these foods and the cultures they grew out of helps us understand and appreciate both the people and their businesses today.

It is an archaeology of sorts that acknowledges the millions of people cruelly torn from their African homes centuries ago, and the foods,techniques and narratives that have subsequently enriched our food culture in North America and Waterloo Region.