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    Home»Nutrition»The ‘1776 diet’: Colonists’ alcohol consumption was ‘staggering,’ and historians want you to know
    Nutrition

    The ‘1776 diet’: Colonists’ alcohol consumption was ‘staggering,’ and historians want you to know

    stamilhstgr0518@gmail.comBy stamilhstgr0518@gmail.comJuly 8, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
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    The '1776 diet': Colonists' alcohol consumption was 'staggering,' and historians want you to know
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    America's road to independence

    America’s road to independence was a journey of resistance, sacrifice, and the fight for freedom from British rule. Sara Martin with the Massachusetts Historical Society breaks it all down.  

    Many of the American colonists’ eating habits have made a comeback in recent years. They ate minimally processed, locallyeir meals

    Livestock and many Old World crops had already been introduced to North America by European explorers and settlers during the centuries before the nation’s founding

    Early settlers adapted European cooking traditions using ingredients available in North America, the Center for the Study of the Presidency and Congress (CSPC) reported

    Indigenous peoples introduced corn to the colonists, and it became a core ingredient in many of their recipes. Beans, squash, and potatoes were among the other crops that became incorporated into colonial cooking, according to the CSPC

    “Cornmeal appeared in dishes such as hasty pudding — a thick porridge similar to polenta — and johnnycakes, simple griddle cakes that were popular from New England to the South,” History Facts reported

    Cornmeal Johnnycakes, roast pork and cream cheese are distinctly early-American foods the CSPC has recipes for on its website

    Regional customs and crops greatly influenced what the colonists ate. Rice and okra grew well and were plentiful in the South, where French and African influences also shaped eating habits. 

    Dutch, English and German immigrants largely settled in the north and established the region’s culinary traditions

    Seafood such as rockfish and crab dominated the diets of early Maryland settlers, NPR reported

    Meat was a status symbol, local food historian Joyce White told the publication. Beef was prized, and chicken was often saved for egg production

    “If it’s your pig or cow coming from your plantation, you don’t want to waste it,” White said

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    Thomas Jefferson was known for his decadent tastes and a fondness for French wine and macaroni and cheese. Records show that black-eyed peas, turnip greens and ham were also part of the Founding Father’s diet

    Salted and preserved fish and meats, including bacon, sausage, liver pudding and offal, were staples of working-class people’s diets, while the upper classes indulged in such luxuries as white flour and sugar

    Early settlers adapted European cooking traditions using ingredients available in North America. They also drank a lot of beer. (Photo by MPI/

    Interest in these traditional foods has resurfaced in recent years as some Americans seek diets centered on whole, minimally processed ingredients

    Advocates of the Make America Healthy Again movement, for instance, have promoted organ meats, or offal, as some of the cheapest and most nutrient-dense foods people can eat

    Stews that evolved as ingredients became available were also common an America’s early days

    The amount of alcohol the colonists consumed was “staggering,” Adrian Miller, author of “The President’s Kitchen Cabinet,” told NPR

    “They were very open about how much they were drinking,” he said

    George Washington wrote a recipe for “small beer” in a journal he kept as a young colonel in charge of the Virginia militia during the Seven Years’ War, Fox News Digital previously reported. The New York Public Library houses the journal

    “Small beer,” according to the library, derives its name from the small amount of alcohol it contains. It was quick to make, safer to drink because the brewing process helped eliminate bacteria in the water — and it was an “everyday, mainstay beverage,” the library reported

    “While the 1776 Diet has some positives — such as emphasizing whole foods, home cooking and fewer ultra-processed foods — it’s not one I’d recommend following too literally,” registered dietician Lisa R. Young, adjunct professor of nutrition at New York University, told Fox News Digital

    “Colonial Americans often ate foods like salted ham, organ meats and other preserved meats out of necessity,” she said. “Today, we know it’s best to limit processed and cured meats because they’re high in sodium and saturated fat, and organ meats, while nutrient-dense, are best eaten in moderation due to their high cholesterol content.”

    Focus on the healthiest aspects of the 1776 diet, Young recommended. That includes plenty of fruits and vegetables, beans, whole grains, fish and lean proteins

    “Of course, you can emulate the Founding Fathers’ diet for the week of the 250th anniversary,” she said. “What you eat for a day or a week won’t matter much in the scheme of things.”

    Some of the Founding Fathers drank a lot of ale, often in the morning, Young noted

    “We shouldn’t emulate that,” she said

    LINK:Get updates and more at foxnews.com

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