A few years ago, I ordered DNA testing kits for me and my husband. I do not think he was thrilled with his Christmas gift.
He teased me when our results came back showing he had a more purebred bloodline than I have. His ancestors were primarily of German ancestry, and I am of Scandinavian, mainly Norwegian, descent. Somehow our “mixed marriage” has worked more than 30 years.
Later, my results were updated showing that I am more Norwegian than he is German. Now it was my turn to tease him.
Every now and then I receive a new “leaf” to add to my digital family tree on the company’s platform. One of my distant cousins must be a genealogist. After connecting with her family tree recently, I traced my heritage back to the early 1700s in Norway, when life must have been a matter of survival.
My U.S. roots go back to my great-grandfather who bought a ticket on a ship to America in about 1869. He had a trunk containing all his possessions. He was a farmer at heart and by name, because our shared last name meant “rural farm” in Norwegian. As I look at his portrait, which is now in my home, I can see he was a small, wiry man who had a long, bushy beard.
Like other early farmers across the country, he cleared acres of land with horses and plows and grew fields of wheat. The early settlers established stores and churches that dotted the countryside to form small towns.
These early immigrants were self-sufficient and had all the basics of a healthful diet covered. They had chickens and cows for a regular fresh supply of eggs and milk. They grew gardens, hunted, fished and raised animals for meat and milk. They preserved meat by using salty brines, smoking and drying to survive the cold months on the northern Plains.
Many people still do all of these activities, or at least some of them. However, we have many other options to get food on our tables.
Earlier generations cooked over fireplaces, which also provided heat in the homes. According to historic records, dinner was often a big meal in the center of the day. The basics of cooking were passed down from mothers to daughters, and cookbooks did not become popular in U.S. homes until after World War II.
In early days, everything was “cooked from scratch” since frozen and packaged foods were not invented. Without electricity, they had no refrigerators, freezers or any appliances.
Our ancestors couldn’t search an app on a phone for a recipe. They couldn’t order pizza delivery either. Coolers for food storage and water bottles for regular hydration were not invented, nor were air-conditioned tractor cabs.
Times have changed from those early agrarian efforts. They managed to survive many challenges leading to our presence today. We all need nourishment, even when we are working in different ways from our ancestors.
Source: ndsu.edu
Photo Credit: istock-mailson-pignata
Categories: North Dakota, General