Mennonite cuisine

Russian Mennonite zwieback[1]

Mennonite cuisine is food that is unique to and/or commonly associated with Mennonites, a Christian denomination that came out of sixteenth-century Protestant Reformation in Switzerland and the Netherlands. Because of persecution, they lived in community and fled to Prussia, Russia, North America, and Latin America. Groups like the Russian Mennonites developed a sense of ethnicity, which included cuisine adapted from the countries where they lived; thus, the term "Mennonite cuisine" does not apply to all, or even most Mennonites today, especially those outside of the traditional ethnic Mennonite groups.[2] Nor is the food necessarily unique to Mennonites, most of the dishes being variations on recipes common to the countries (Netherlands, Poland, Ukraine, Russia, Latin America) where they reside or resided in the past.[3]

Mennonites do not have any dietary restrictions as exist in some other religious groups. Some conservative Mennonites abstain from alcohol, but other Mennonites do not, with Mennonite distilleries existing as early as the late 16th century.[4]

  1. ^ Voth, Norma Jost, "Mennonite Foods & Folkways from South Russia, Volumes I", pp. 35-55. Good Books, 1990. ISBN 0-934672-89-X
  2. ^ "A celebration of food and faith". Canadian Mennonite. Retrieved July 24, 2020.
  3. ^ Andrew J. Bergman. "The Mennonite Obsession with Yerba Mate". MateOver Matter. Retrieved July 24, 2020.
  4. ^ "Ontario Mennonites and the Production and Use of Alcohol". Ontario Mennonite History. Retrieved July 30, 2020.

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