Showing posts with label comfort food. Show all posts
Showing posts with label comfort food. Show all posts

Monday, March 9, 2026

It's March! Time to Celebrate Irish Food!

It's March!  March is Irish-American Heritage Month.

Wishing you a happy holiday in advance.
Happy Saint Patrick's Day!

 

A Journey Through Irish Food in Ireland and America

Irish cuisine has always been a bit like Ireland itself — humble on the surface, but full of stories, surprises, and a quiet resilience that sneaks up on you. When Irish immigrants crossed the Atlantic, they brought recipes, techniques, and food philosophies that would eventually seep into the American kitchen in ways most people don’t realize.

The Roots: What Irish People Really Ate ~ A cuisine shaped by land, weather, and a whole lot of dairy

Ireland’s earliest cooks weren’t chasing Michelin stars. They were working with what the land gave them — and the land gave them oats, barley, wild greens, seafood, and dairy.

  • Cattle were wealth, so milk, buttermilk, soft cheeses, and butter were everyday staples.

  • Meat was for special occasions, which is why so many Irish dishes are vegetable-forward, grain-forward, or dairy-driven.

  • Think oatcakes, simple broths, and hearty porridges — the original slow food movement.

The Potato? Late arrival, Instant icon

The potato didn’t show up in Ireland until the late 1500s, but once it arrived, it became the Beyoncé of Irish agriculture — wildly popular, incredibly versatile, and feeding millions.

  • It was nutritious, easy to grow, and perfect for Ireland’s climate.

  • Dishes like champ, colcannon, and boxty emerged from this potato-powered era.

Of course, the potato’s tragic failure in the 1840s reshaped Ireland forever — and set the stage for one of the most influential food migrations in history.

Feast days, Folklore, and Food!

Irish cuisine is deeply tied to ancient Celtic celebrations.

  • Samhain (Halloween) featured colcannon with hidden charms, nuts, and fruit bracks.

  • St. Patrick’s Day was historically a break from Lenten fasting — a rare chance to enjoy meat and eggs.

Food wasn’t just sustenance. It was storytelling.


When Irish Food Came to America

The immigrant kitchen: humble, hearty, and resourceful

When millions of Irish immigrants arrived in America in the 19th century, they brought a cooking style built on simplicity, thrift, and comfort.

  • They stretched the ingredients.

  • They cooked big meals for big families.

  • They leaned into stews, breads, and one-pot wonders.

This approach blended seamlessly into the emerging American comfort-food culture.

FYI. Corned beef and cabbage: the most famous Irish dish that IS NOT Irish

Here’s the twist: in Ireland, beef was historically expensive. Pork was the everyday meat.


But in America, Irish immigrants found
affordable corned beef in Jewish delis.


They paired it with cabbage — one of the cheapest vegetables — and boom!

An Irish-American classic was born.

It’s a culinary love child of two immigrant communities.

Soda bread: from Irish staple to American symbol

Irish soda bread existed long before the diaspora, but in America, it became a nostalgic anchor.

  • During the Great Depression, its cheap ingredients made it a lifesaver.

  • For Irish-Americans, it became a taste of home, even if the American version is often sweeter and richer than the Irish original.

The Irish influence on American comfort food

Irish immigrants helped shape the American palate in subtle but lasting ways:

  • The rise of stews and casseroles

  • The popularity of simple, hearty breads

  • A cultural embrace of resourceful, no-waste cooking

  • The blending of Old World traditions with New World ingredients

Their food philosophy — humble, hearty, and home-centered — became part of America’s culinary DNA.

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CONCLUSION:

Irish cuisine isn’t flashy. It’s not trying to impress you. It’s trying to feed you, comfort you, and remind you that simple food can carry centuries of history.

When Irish immigrants brought those traditions to America, they didn’t just preserve their heritage — they helped shape a new one.

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REFERENCES:

Hudson Valley Magazine.The Origins and History of Corned Beef and Cabbage.” Hudson Valley Magazine, 10 Mar. 2021. HudsonValley Magazine

ManyEats. Paul, Gerard. “History of Corned Beef: From Irish Export to St. Patrick’s Favorite.” ManyEats, 5 Apr. 2021. ManyEats

MeatChefTools. Wagner, Rodney. “Unpacking the Tradition: Why Corned Beef Is Associated with Irish Heritage.” MeatChefTools, 1 Jan. 2025. MeatChefTools

Origin Story Guide. Maruf, Mo. “How Did Corned Beef Become Irish?Origin Story Guide, n.d. kitchprep.com

ShortFoodBlog. Pacheco, Jacob. “Uncovering the Truth: Is Corned Beef and Cabbage an Irish Meal?ShortFoodBlog, 18 Sept. 2025. shortfoodblog.com

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Watercolor Saint Patrick`s Day set. Clover ornament. For design, print or background
© Photographer: Anna Maslikova | Agency: Dreamstime.com



Saturday, September 7, 2024

Foodie Nuggets: Much Ado About Mushrooms

If you have been following this foodie blog then you know that my love affair with mushrooms began the same time that I started dating my late husband, I shared those details in this blog post:
This short post (or food blurb) is just an add-on to tell you more things I have discovered about this wonderful fungi!  Did you know that there is such a thing as a Mushroom of Immortality?


“Reishi/lingzhi has been referenced as far back as 100 B.C. as a supplement used to improve human health.” It is called a Mushroom of Immortality and you can grow it on your own. They're quite tasty. Just don't believe for one minute that they will make you live forever.  




Here is a wonderful veggie soup will get you through the winter months. Totally comfort food!  It includes a variety of mushrooms:  cremini, shiitake, and reishi. 


Also, if you love Asian noodles, you'll love this Reishi Mushroom Ramen Bowl.





SEPTEMBER IS NATIONAL MUSHROOM MONTH!

Thursday, November 30, 2023

Which Clam Chowder is on Your Menu?

Do you like clam chowder? New York OR New England? Manhattan or Boston?  Red OR White?

I prefer the white or New England clam chowder. But I'll eat either one that's served to me.

New York vs. New England: Who has the better clam chowder?

chowder






Quick Manhattan Clam Chowder Recipe | Allrecipes

~ https://www.allrecipes.com/recipe/256170/quick-manhattan-clam-chowder/


New England Clam Chowder - Spend With Pennies

~ https://www.spendwithpennies.com/new-england-clam-chowder/


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NOTES:

Sometimes people call New England clam chowder Boston clam chowder. So if you hear somebody say Boston clam chowder, it's just New England clam chowder by a different name. But I've never called it Boston chowder.  Also, I have never called Manhattan clam chowder, New York chowder.  Come to find out there is a Long Island clam chowder which combines "two types of clam chowder: New England and Manhattan" and results in a "creamy, tomato-based clam chowder".  

Some recipes don't add corn. But I add corn to mine.  I thought I was being clever.  Plus I knew my kids liked corn.  However, a little food history research revealed that earlier chowder recipes also added corn.

If you don't have clams, you can make it vegetarian (and then you'll really appreciate the addition of corn to the recipe).

  • "Chowder is a type of soup or stew often prepared with milk or cream and thickened with broken crackers, crushed ship biscuit, or a roux. Variations of chowder can be seafood or vegetable."  (Wikipedia)
  • "The word chowder is a corruption of the French chaudière (“cauldron”), and chowder may have originated among Breton fishermen who brought the custom to Newfoundland, whence it spread to Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, and New England."  (Brittanica)
  • " ... a soup is usually made with stock or broth and can have vegetables, meat or fish as ingredients and is generally not very thick. A chowder may have the same ingredients, but is more chunky, creamy and thick, much like a stew." (Soup vs Chowder)




Which clam chowder is on your menu?





Sunday, June 18, 2023

Food Blog Spotlight: Hungry Couple's Soups, Stews and Chowders

One of the main reasons I started publishing this foodie blog was to shine a spotlight on all of the awesome food blogs that are already out there.  Many scientists make fantastic discoveries and the majority of them have two things in common.  
  • Number 1, the discovery is usually accidental, i.e. they stumbled upon it.  
  • Number 2, whatever they discovered, it's been there all along!  

That's how I find awesome food blogs and I am not ashamed to say that I accidentally found the wonderful food blog called Hungry Couple.  


I got so excited at having found it that totally I forgot what my initial blog search was for.  LOL.  The blog posts archives go all the way to 2008 and they have recipes for drinks, desserts, breakfast, dinner ideas, and my favorite comfort food ... soups, stews, or chowders.  January may be the official soup month but I can eat soup all year round.  Soups, stews, and chowders are my comfort food.

I would have been happy to spend the entire day perusing the Recipe Index.  But I was anxious to share these wonderful comfort food recipes with my blog visitors.  Why keep all the fun to myself?  Enjoy!

Image Credit:  Amazon.com











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