Monday, March 21, 2011

Hominy

Not the small town in Oklahoma where Philip and Mona live.  I am talking about the hominy that is made from corn.  Until today, I had no idea there are two colors of hominy.  I have eaten the white hominy before.  Mom used to make hominy when I was a kid and I hated it when served alone.  Dad used it to make pozole and menudo.  Debbie has been making pozole using the white hominy.  Yesterday, Deb made another pot of pozole and used yellow hominy.  The yellow hominy kernels are smaller than the white ones, but seem to taste the same.  I checked the www about hominy and found some interesting info about it. 

What is hominy?

Hominy refers to corn without the germ. It is served both whole or ground. Hominy is boiled until cooked and served as either a cereal or as a vegetable. Hominy may also be pressed into patties and fried. This dish is especially popular in the southern United States. Samp is another name for coarse hominy. Hominy ground into small grains is sometimes called "hominy grits."


American colonists used the words "hominy" and "samp" interchangeably to mean processed corn. The colonists, unfamiliar with corn, had to learn from the Indians how make the tough grain edible. The pioneers prepared hominy by soaking the kernels in a weak wood-based lye until the hulls floated to the surface.

Colonists usually kept both a samp mill and an ash hopper near their kitchens. A samp mill was a giant mortar and pestle made from a tree stump and a block of wood, which was hung from a tree branch. The branch acted as a spring. The samp mill was used to crack hard kernels of dried corn into coarse meal. The ash hopper was a V-shaped wooden funnel. Wood ashes were put into the funnel, and then water was run through the funnel to make lye. The lye was then used to soften the corn hulls and create hominy.

An English traveler in 1668 once described hominy as similar to the English dish, "Hasty Pudding." Hasty pudding and hominy were the instant cereal of colonial times.


The word samp fell out of use but the word "hominy" was eventually joined with the word "grits" in the American South. In the rest of America, hominy referred to the whole kernels which were skinned but not ground; in most of the South, "hominy" came to mean the coarsely-ground skinned kernels used to make the dish known as "hominy grits" or plain "grits."

In New Orleans, the whole kernels are still called "big hominy" and the ground ones are known as "little hominy."

In the American Southeast, grits are eaten with everything--country ham, shrimp, fried fish, eggs, cheese, gravy, etc.--to this day.


In the Southwest, big hominy is called "posole," and it is used to make hearty stews of hominy, chile peppers, and pork. Southwesterners and Mexicans will also grind small hominy until it is very fine and use it for tamale and tortilla dough. 

The word "hominy" is from the American Algonquin Indian word "ustatahamen".  Yeah, no wonder the pale faces changed that to "hominy".  Hominy is essential a corn kernel that has the outer shell removed and then the kernel is boiled to create hominy.  How and why did someone figure out how to remove the kernel shell to make hominy?  Dunno.

Caddo Indians made a thick soup called "sagamite."  The soup was made using hominy made from Indian Corn.  Whattayaknow?  I always thought sagamite was what my butt did as I got older.

In some South American countries, people make various soups and stews known as "mote".  Not the big ditch filled with water around the castles.

Why did someone name the town, Hominy?  Well, apparently the name has nothing to do with corn.  "Hominy" is derived from the Osage Indian word for "night walker."  More correctly, the town was named for a nearby creek which was named after an Osage tribal leader, Ho'm-Mo'n-I'n or Walks in the Night.  Maybe he was a sleep walker as a young person? 

Well, that's what I learned during lunch while eating pozole.  If you have not tried the recipe that I posted a month or two ago, please do.  It is good stuff. 
Have a good day!!

1 comment:

Karen said...

Veeerrrryy interesting my dear Watson!