When Columbus set out from Spain, his objective was to get King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella into the black pepper business. He believed that the islands he landed on in the Caribbean were off the coast of China. When the natives showed Columbus chi...
People have been making cheese for over 5,000 years. Cheese has many advantages over milk. It is easy to travel with, takes up less space, and lasts longer. In America, cheese making was a skill that was passed from mother to daughter. Selling chees...
The staples of the Mediterranean diet - wheat bread, wine and olive oil - were not present in the Americas before Columbus. When the Spanish colonists settled in America, the foods they brought with them from the Mediterranean were blended into the ...
The Aztecs and Incas cultivated the tomato and in 1519, Hernando Cortez became the first European to see one. He sent some to the Spanish settlements in the Caribbean and from there back to Europe. In this program we find out why the tomato was read...
This program is an overview of the series Burt Wolf: What We Eat. It looks at the forces that led to the voyages of Columbus and their continuing effect on our world. It is a general synopsis of the most pertinent historical data presented in the se...
When Columbus came ashore on Cuba, on November 4, 1492, the Natives gave him corn. The cultivation of corn quickly spread around the world because it grows almost everywhere and can be eaten by man or animal. We learn how Native Americans planted an...
Over 10 million slaves were transported from Africa to the Americas, bringing with them their knowledge of how to grow and cook their traditional foods. The slaves came from many different tribes with many different diets. This program shows the maj...
The first serious cultivation of coffee as a cash crop took place in Yemen during the 1400's. Islamic pilgrims spread it throughout the Muslim world. This program looks at the discovery of coffee, its ability to control the economy of major nations ...
First cultivated in the Andean Mountains of South America about 7,000 years ago, the potato fed the great Inca Empire and their Spanish conquerors. The potato became a staple of the sailors' diet because it prevented scurvy. Germany and the British ...