this post was submitted on 14 Feb 2024
4 points (75.0% liked)

Indigenous and Local Cuisines

61 readers
1 users here now

πŸ„ Welcome! 🌾

β€’ About Us

The purpose of our community is to preserve recipes and culinary techniques of indigenous and local communities around the globe via recording, compiling and archiving them in this shared space.

Feel free to explore cuisine fusions, build off of older recipes and create new ones too! (Bonus points if you use ingredients forageable in your area πŸ˜‰)

====>---------------------------<====

We're planning on creating digital recipe books at the end of each year compiling all of your contributions (given consent of course), so please stay tuned.

Depending on the contributions we could even consider creating a wiki πŸ‘€

β€’ Code of Conduct

  1. Racist, Imperialist, general Supremacist attitudes and bigotry of all kinds (gender, age, sexuality, ethnicity) are NOT welcome

  2. We take credits very seriously - are you reposting a recipe from a creator online? Include credits.

  3. No Spamming/Irrelevant Advertising (Relevant promotion is permitted)

β€’ Posting Etiquette

Feel free to format your recipes however you like as long as you provide all the necessary information concerning:

  1. Flair in the post title indicating country/continent/region, culture and/or tribe/community name (p.e. adding a [Māori] or [West Egypt] in front of the title)
  2. Flair in the post title indicating whether a recipe is/can be vegetarian or vegan (p.e. adding a [VT] for vegetarian, [VG] for vegan) Otherwise don't add any relative flair
  3. Execution of recipe
  4. Credit (when applicable)
  5. As always, pictures are much appreciated (but not 100% necessary)

founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
 

Carob is a highly underrated wild legume that is mainly cultivated and native to the Mediterranean and West/Southwest Asia that looks like this:

I first became aware of its baking potential when my mother started using carob flour to make me and my sibling poundcake for school when we were kids. It may have a distinct taste but there was an inherent richness and taste profile that made it so enjoyable even as a main ingredient.

That being said, I also decided to share this recipe - besides with the goal of introducing you to this awesome legume - due to the current fate of the cocoa agricultural industry. The cocoa industry has been infamous many years now, mainly for their colourful crimes against humanity and the concept of labour, human rights and sustainable development.

Recently as many people including myself have noticed from the significant rise in chocolate prices around the world, something has befallen the cocoa industry once more. A swollen shoot viral disease is plaguing farms across West Africa and the supply of our beloved chocolate has taken a significant hit^[1 https://gna.org.gh/2024/02/ghana-loses-over-500000-hectares-of-cocoa-farms-to-swollen-shoot-viral-disease/]^[2 https://www.esmmagazine.com/supply-chain/ivory-coast-cocoa-output-seen-lower-as-swollen-shoot-disease-spreads-255915].

With that in mind, it is important to be mindful of what we consume and how much of it we consume. For both economic and environmental reasons broadening our palettes can do us a lot of good. This recipe besides being very delicious and nutricious can be a great way to introduce new flavour profiles into your life without sacrificing the small pleasures of desserts containing cocoa.^___^

no comments (yet)
sorted by: hot top controversial new old
there doesn't seem to be anything here