© 2008 Program ENERGY Program ENERGY is funded by SEPA grant number 5R25RR020469-05 Food on the...

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Transcript of © 2008 Program ENERGY Program ENERGY is funded by SEPA grant number 5R25RR020469-05 Food on the...

© 2008 Program ENERGY Program ENERGY is funded by SEPA grant number 5R25RR020469-05

Food on the Frontier

© 2008 Program ENERGY Program ENERGY is funded by SEPA grant number 5R25RR020469-05

Where did pioneers get the foods they ate?There were no grocery stores.

There were no restaurants.

© 2008 Program ENERGY Program ENERGY is funded by SEPA grant number 5R25RR020469-05

…caught or hunted,

Everything a person on the frontier ate had to be…

© 2008 Program ENERGY Program ENERGY is funded by SEPA grant number 5R25RR020469-05

…grown,

© 2008 Program ENERGY Program ENERGY is funded by SEPA grant number 5R25RR020469-05

…gathered,

© 2008 Program ENERGY Program ENERGY is funded by SEPA grant number 5R25RR020469-05

…or prepared before it could be eaten.

© 2008 Program ENERGY Program ENERGY is funded by SEPA grant number 5R25RR020469-05

There was no electricity on the frontier, so cooking was

done over an open fire……or on a woodstove.

© 2008 Program ENERGY Program ENERGY is funded by SEPA grant number 5R25RR020469-05

As more people came to an area, general stores opened.

These stores carried staple items.

© 2008 Program ENERGY Program ENERGY is funded by SEPA grant number 5R25RR020469-05

One common staple was cornmeal.

Cornmeal is dried ground corn.

© 2008 Program ENERGY Program ENERGY is funded by SEPA grant number 5R25RR020469-05

Program ENERGY

is funded by a

Science Education Partnership Award

from the

National Center for Research Resources/National Institutes of Health

in partnership with the

Food Science and Human Nutrition Department

at

Colorado State University