Belize Blog
About this blog
Joshua Berman spent 10 years touring, trip-leading, and teaching throughout Central America, and still believes there's no place like Belize. In this blog, he'll share his knowledge of this beautiful country.
Recent Posts
- Maya Marriage of Many: 12/12/12 in Belize
- On Assignment in Belize: Day in the Life of a Travel Writer
- DuPlooy's goes solar and other green building trends on the Macal River in Western Belize
- Hummingbird Garden at Green Hills Butterfly Ranch in Belize a new must-see
- Christmas in Belize at Barton Creek Outpost
- On Assignment in Belize for Moon Travel Guides
- Power to the People Mixes Renewable Energy & Voluntourism in Nicaragua
- Survivor Nicaragua: Let the Games Begin!
- Selling Belize Cheap: Hard case against cruise tourism, by Stewart Krohn
- Chocolate Making Workshops in Granada, Nicaragua (and yoga too)
- LOS MOKUANES: The hardest working fiesta band in Nicaragua
- Nicaragua Lunch of Champions: Gallo Pinto, Yucca, and Vitamina T
- On Assignment in Nicaragua
- HEAVENLY BELIZE: A Photography Book Worthy Of The Name
- Reducing Your Impact on Endangered Wildlife When Traveling

Book Explores Belizean Food and Its Place in the World
In Home Cooking in the Global Village: Caribbean Food from Buccaneers to Ecotourists, anthropologist Richard Wilk argues against the simplistic notion that in today's hyper-connected world, "…culinary diversity is disappearing under a monotonous food landscape of burgers and fries."
Rather, the advancing steamroller is only one way to look at globalization; another way is to "compromise and reduce [globalization's] impact by adapting and preserving local and ethnic traditions of food, music, dance, and language." Wilk says that instead of colonial and Western civilizations swallowing local cultures whole, it's much more of a global give-and-take; the same forces which created the small creolized country of Belize in the first place eventually helped create the notion of "Belizean food" and national identity.
Wilk addresses the country's evolution from colonial backwater to international tourist destination by looking at what people ate and what items were imported and exported from Belizean shores throughout its history. He also takes on the eternal Belizean conundrum: Why has such a rich, fertile chunk of Central America always imported so much tinned food from Europe and the United States?
Home Cooking (the book first came out in 2006 from Macmillan) includes recipes at the end of each chapter. I just tried cooking Belizean rice and beans with coconut milk, from the end of the final chapter, for twenty people. In a dining room thousands of miles away from Belize, it was a smash hit; our neighborhood tribute to global- and localization.
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