The Value of Ethnographic Research for Sustainable Diet Interventions: Connecting Old and New Foodways in Trinidad
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Studies of the everyday in modern life, of the changing character of such humble matters as food, viewed from the perspective of production and consumption, use and function, and concerned with the emergence and variation of meaning, might be one way to try to renovate a discipline now dangerously close to losing its purpose.Sidney Mintz [1] (p. 102)
2. Methods/Methodology
3. Results
‘Consumption activity is the joint production, with fellow consumers, of a universe of values’.Mary Douglas and Baron Isherwood [16] (p. 67)
3.1. (Local) Flavour
Grandmother would make her own green seasoning. … If you have your own garden, you saving some pennies … and well when you are making your own seasoning, you know what you are putting in it, unlike this stuff [she points to Maggi seasoning powder] (research participant in her fifties).
[When I was growing up] we used coconut from the tree. The [hot] pepper sauce my mother would have made, we didn’t have to buy [it]. Pimiento, celery, cive [chive], okro [okra], we would grow it in the yard. We never used all purpose seasoning packets, we used our own fresh green seasoning. … Now, most people don[‘t] cook and they would use fast food, like KFC and them thing. And you don[‘t] know what goes in it, not all of it is good for the health (research participant in her forties).
Things [are] better, but [I am] missing long time days. It’s not like you can just go to a garden and pick the stuff. … And we became more dependent on this kind of stuff [points to Maggi]. Health-wise it may be a little bad. Chemicals and stuff. We never used to use chemicals, we used plain fertilizer alone—we used to go and cutlass our garden, weed it, we didn’t use the herbicide. … Before, you would make your own fertilizers, with orange peels, skin from the mango, any little scraps of anything. … It was other things, back then. … [Before] we weren’t using any chemicals to get ripe faster. … back then, it grows on the tree, it ripe[ns], and when it [is] ripe, you eat it (research participant in her forties).
We used to plant a lot of garden. We never buy stuff. … We used to plant pumpkin, bodi [green beans], carilli [bitter melon], cabbage, green peas, corn, [scotch bonnet] pepper, pimiento [pepper], melongene [aubergine], and all the green seasoning. Only salt and those basic things we bought. We planted a lot of ground provisions as well, eddos [taro]. … We sold it at Marabella market. … And then the place that we used to plant was taken away. … I don’t know what the story went but somebody bought it and they tell my family they can’t plant there anymore. … You hearing a lot of things like he going to put houses on it to sell, we going to build a factory. … When the land was taken, you couldn’t plant anymore so we just had a kitchen garden (research participant in her forties).
The practices of mixed cropping, inter-cropping, and inter-culture of trees and vegetables presented a picture of sufficient confusion to have the slaves’ agricultural methods dismissed as being backward and inefficient. The origins of many of these practices were in the slaves’ ancestral homelands of west and central Africa and, hence, the product of several thousand years of agricultural experimentation (Innis 1961: 19). Trials and testing were continuously undertaken in the provision grounds, where the possibilities for new combinations of mixed cropping were enhanced as cultigens of the New World, Europe, and South-east Asia were added to those from Africa [26] (p. 17).
3.2. Colour
We use [ketchup] for everything: stewing meat, fried chicken, pelau. We’ll love it in a pelau, it goes with anything. Stews, fried food, pizza … You used to make your own ketchup with this thing called roucou—it’s like a vegetable—and you done ketchup to give colour to things. Colour is important. The meat have to be real dark. It’s like a perception: if it is not dark, it [is] not cooked (research participant in her thirties).
I don’t know, I like to cook with colour. Remember people eat with their eyes. When you see something, you like it. It captures your interest in wanting to eat it (research participant in her thirties).
I make Trini rice: I use food colouring to colour it red, green and white. Colour is important. I don’t like to cook white rice, just white rice alone. I just add saffron. It is something that inspire me, that give me some inspiration. … Trinis like pretty thing. And when you make a dish like that, it just show up the food. Everyone says ‘who make that?’ And people seeing it and want to eat it (research participant in his thirties).
Long time [ago] they use[d] roucou: it’s a tree with a pod, they have little red seeds, instead of the ketchup they used the roucou. Well, they put more chemicals in the ketchup now, you know. Roucou is more creole, creole … it tastes local. Some people don’t have the trees any more so they won’t make the roucou (research participant in his forties).
Roucou doesn’t need anything to it. Get the pod—it is hairy on the outside—but inside you have the seeds. You put them in boiling water. You let it stand and then you rough it up a bit to put the colour and then you bottle that (research participant in her fifties).
Normally we would put the ketchup, but the roucou is cheap and healthier. It doesn’t have the acid. … They use it with meats to give a rich colour. You use it with meats. It is a dark reddish … It is healthy, because it is herbal. It would come from your kitchen garden … I remember my aunt, she had a sweet hand. … I don’t know if it was the roucou. But I do know that she didn’t use anything but the roucou. … Now everything is instant. Nobody want[s] to take the time to go through all that [preparation] (research participant in her forties).
Even in the early decades of the twentieth century, the ground seeds of the annatto (a native shrub) were used to colour coconut oil [in Jamaica]. Known elsewhere in the Caribbean by the Amerindian name ruku, annatto gave the oil a pinkish or reddish tint which was transferred to the meat and codfish cooked in it. This practice appears to be an adaptation meant to achieve the reddish or orange colouring effected by the palm oil so widely used in West African cuisine.([32]; my emphasis)
4. Discussion
4.1. Intervention 1
4.2. Intervention 2
5. Conclusions
Funding
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Wilson, M. The Value of Ethnographic Research for Sustainable Diet Interventions: Connecting Old and New Foodways in Trinidad. Sustainability 2023, 15, 5383. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15065383
Wilson M. The Value of Ethnographic Research for Sustainable Diet Interventions: Connecting Old and New Foodways in Trinidad. Sustainability. 2023; 15(6):5383. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15065383
Chicago/Turabian StyleWilson, Marisa. 2023. "The Value of Ethnographic Research for Sustainable Diet Interventions: Connecting Old and New Foodways in Trinidad" Sustainability 15, no. 6: 5383. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15065383
APA StyleWilson, M. (2023). The Value of Ethnographic Research for Sustainable Diet Interventions: Connecting Old and New Foodways in Trinidad. Sustainability, 15(6), 5383. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15065383