Cranberries
This episode traces cranberries from sacred Wampanoag food to American industrial icon. Indigenous peoples called them sassamanash and used them in pemmican for preservation. Colonial adoption led to commercial shipping by late sixteen hundreds. Henry Hall's eighteen sixteen discovery of sanding techniques sparked intentional cultivation across Massachusetts and Wisconsin. Industrialization transformed brutal hand-picking into water harvesting with mechanical egg beaters, creating iconic flooded bogs. Ocean Spray's nineteen thirty cooperative formation, followed by innovations like juice cocktail and Craisins, made cranberries ubiquitous. Yet this billion-dollar industry rarely acknowledges the indigenous knowledge that made it possible, raising questions about appropriation and cultural reclamation. https://amzn.to/42YoQGI This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
4 episodios
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