this post was submitted on 03 Nov 2023
6 points (87.5% liked)

Indigenous and Local Cuisines

62 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 8 months ago
MODERATORS
 

I got some sumac today and I'll likely be trying out this recipe I've been eyeing for a while πŸ‘€ For those interested, there are variants of this recipe using dried sumac as well

top 1 comments
sorted by: hot top controversial new old
[–] [email protected] 2 points 7 months ago

I tried doing this a few years ago with some sumac that grew right in my yard (never knew it was edible!) and I can attest that it makes a delicious drink.