Have you eaten corn on the cob before? What other ways have
you eaten corn? I would guess that you have also had creamed corn or corn mixed
in with other vegetables. I am almost certain that you have also had popcorn! Did
you know that corn was first grown in Mexico and Central America? El Salvador
was one of the first places to ever have corn!
I eat corn every day in El Salvador, sometimes for all three
meals! Although sometimes I eat corn on the cob, most of the time I eat corn
tortillas. The tortillas in El Salvador are much thicker than the tortillas you use to make tacos. A traditional Salvadoran lunch or dinner always comes
one or two tortillas, but some people love tortillas so much they will eat
three or four! Another corn dish is also the most popular Salvadoran food! It
is called a pupusa. A pupusa is made with the same dough as a tortilla, but a
filling is added before it is cooked. The most common pupusas are stuffed with
cheese and beans, but you can also put pork or shrimp inside a pupusa. Pupusas
are served with a tomato sauce and a special coleslaw called cortido. Sometimes
we eat pupusas for dinner or sometimes we eat them for breakfast.
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| Salvadoran tortillas are thicker and smaller than Mexican tortillas. |
Many people in El Salvador grow corn. Just like in rural
Illinois, there are a lot of corn fields here. A big difference, however, is
that Salvadoran don’t use tractors or machines that farmers in Illinois use. This
is because El Salvador is very mountainous and tractors won’t work in many
places here. It is very hard work to take care of a corn field by hand!
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| This hilly and rocky corn field needs to be taken care of by hand. |
We just celebrated the first harvest of the corn in El
Salvador. In early August the corn has finally grown enough for people to eat
it. Each stalk of corn can produce two types of corn: elote and maiz. Elote is what
the corn is called when it is first ready to be eaten. If you leave elote on
the corn stalk for a longer period of time it turns into maiz. You can make
different food with elote than you can with maiz, and they taste different.
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| Picking elote from the corn stalks. If we left this corn on the stalks longer it would become maiz. |
When towns celebrate the first harvest of the corn, people
can buy tamales, atole, which is a drink made out of corn and cinnamon and
elote that you eat right off the cob.
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| A quick snack of atole and elote. |
There is also usually dancing and
singing! My favorite tradition, however, is electing a queen of the corn. Many
rural towns have a corn-husk dress making contest. Girls and their families
will work for over 3 months to create dresses made completely out of corn
materials! There is a fashion show off all the corn dresses, and the winner
becomes the queen of the corn for that year.
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| Contestants wait to show off their corn dresses! |
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| Here is the Queen of the Corn 2016 |
Abrazos,
Mrs. Mulherin
Here are some questions that go along with my blog. See if you can answer all the questions!
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B91xK8CIpJ_tVGpFNE9xT1VUSXc/view?usp=sharingMrs. Mulherin
Here are some questions that go along with my blog. See if you can answer all the questions!






We love hearing about your adventures. It sounds like you are doing very well there. Best wishes!
ReplyDelete-The Pignatelli Family