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domingo, 20 de abril de 2014

Tortilla Thursday Trouble Presents Today´s Short Story
A blue movement: A short history of BLUEBERRY


The blueberry may be small, but it´s no youngster. Botanist estimate that blueberries burst onto the scene more than 13,000 years ago!
Blueberries are indigenous to North America. When Europeans arrived on the continent, the Native Americans were already enjoying blueberries year-round. They dried blueberries in the sun and added them whole to soups, stews and meat, or crushed them into a powder rubbed into meat as a preservative. According to legend, Native Americans gave blueberries to the pilgrims to help them make it through their first winter.
The Native Americans were just as energized by blueberries as people are today, and developed folklore around the dynamic little blue fruit. Tribal elders recounted how the Great Spirit sent “star berries” to ease the children´s hunger during a famine. They called blueberries “Star Berries” because the blossom end of each berry – the calyx- forms a perfect five-pointed star.

The Native Americans used blueberries for medicinal purposes and developed one of the first blueberry baked goods, which they called Sautauthig (pronounced sawi-taw-teeg). Sautauthig became popular among the settlers too, and many historians believe it was part of the first Thanksgiving feast.

-Pinkie Pie

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