Sagamite
Sagamité is a Native American stew made from hominy or Indian corn and grease (from animal fat). Additional ingredients may include vegetables, wild rice, brown sugar, beans, smoked fish or animal brains.
Type | Stew |
---|---|
Main ingredients | Hominy or Indian corn and grease; vegetables, wild rice, brown sugar, beans, smoked fish or animal brains |
Caddo sagamité was thick soup made from corn flour, that had previously been parched and ground into a fine meal. Beans and acorn flour could be added.[1] The Caddos served the stew in large earthenware pots, for crowds during ceremonies.[2]
Sagamité was used in ceremonies to celebrate welcomed guests by tribes such as the Peoria, Huron, Osage, and early Caddo tribes of Arkansas.[1] According to the Illinois State Museum, the Peoria fed sagamité to explorers Father Jacques Marquette and Louis Joliet during the explorers’ 1673 journey to the Mississippi River.[3]
See also
- Atole
- Cornbread
- Hominy
- List of maize dishes
- List of stews
- Food portal
Notes
- Harrington, 170
- Harrington, 249
- "Odd Wisconsin Archive: Beer and Sweet Corn". wisconsinhistory.org. Archived from the original on 21 September 2013.
References
- Harrington, Mark Raymond (1920). Certain Caddo Sites in Arkansas. New York: Museum of the American Indian, Heye Foundation. p. 308. ISBN 978-1143324321.
ASIN B00086J6HY