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Immigrants in Belize

BELIZE has long been a country of immigrants. British timber-cutters imported African slaves in the 18th century, and in the 1840s Mexican Mayans fled a civil war. More recently, North American sun-seekers and retired British soldiers have discovered its coast. Light- and dark-skinned men stand side by side on the country’s flag.

The latest migration is from elsewhere in Central America. Thousands of Salvadoran refugees arrived in the 1980s. More recently, Guatemalans have come seeking land. Of Belize’s 300,000 people, 15% are foreign-born. Thanks to higher birth rates, mestizos have overtaken creoles (of mixed African ancestry) to become the biggest group, making up half the population.

Belize now has more native speakers of Spanish than of English or its lilting cousin, Belizean Creole. English remains the lingua franca and the only official tongue. But Spanish is gaining ground: many posters for an election on March 7th are in Spanish and Dean Barrow, the (creole) prime minister, reads translations of some speeches. Naturalisation ceremonies are bilingual, and speaking English is not required for citizenship. Schools teach in English, but Spanish lessons are mandatory.

Migrants are also redrawing the map of the country. While in the rest of Central America people are moving from the countryside to cities, since 2000 the urban share of Belize’s population has fallen from 47% to 44%, as immigrants have set up border towns. In Cayo 7,000 new households have sprung up. Many are in Salvapan, a Salvadorean district complete with tortilla shops on the edge of the capital. It is likely to grow further: land stretching miles into the jungle has already been divided into lots.

The population boom brings relief and strain. Most migrants are of working age, and keep the sugar, banana and citrus industries competitive by toiling for low wages in harsh conditions. But with almost a quarter of Belizeans telling census officials they are unemployed, not all locals welcome the new arrivals. And as Spanish becomes more important, monolingual creoles are losing service jobs.

Along the border, Guatemalans poach game and plants from Belize’s national parks. Last month Belizean soldiers killed a Guatemalan while he harvested palm leaves. The state has had to build roads to remote migrant outposts in the jungle.

Land may yet cause rows as it becomes scarcer. The smart concrete homes of Salvapan, with swings in neat gardens, are a class above the clapboard houses in the creole south side of Belize City. Nigel Encalada of the Institute for Social and Cultural Research, a state-run body, says Central Americans have snapped up land and home loans faster than locals have. “Some say Belizeans have too much pride to apply for help, whereas immigrants are willing to stand in line,” he says. And few creoles seem inclined to move out to the sticks.

Despite these frictions, relations between ethnic groups are generally good. It helps that political parties are not divided along ethnic lines, and that politicians have courted the newcomers’ votes. Giving out land is a favourite tactic: in some regions you can tell when a district was built by checking when the politicians depicted on its yard signs were in power.

In January Belize made over a thousand immigrants citizens, just in time to register them to vote. Some congressmen reportedly paid the $150 fee themselves. With a welcome mat like that, Belize’s immigration boom is unlikely to slow.

Source:  The Economist

Belize Maya Ruin – Spotlight on Cerros

Cerro Maya

Cerros (Cerro Maya) – “Maya Hill”

With a Spanish name that translates to “Maya Hill”, Cerro Maya is located on a peninsula across from the town of Corozal and in the Bay of Chetumal. Archaeological research at the site suggests that it functioned as an important coastal trading center during the Late Preclassic Period (c.a 350 B.C. to A.D. 250). Its tallest temple rises 21 meters above the plaza floor and overlooks the Caribbean Sea which has been steadily eroding numerous prehistoric buildings along the north coast of the site.

Read more…

Chicken Curry with Coconut Milk

This dish is a good change from the norm.  It’s an excellent meal with a Belizean flair especially when served with white rice and fried plantains.

Preparation Time: 15 mins. | Cook Time: 120 mins.

Ingredients:

2 tbsp Vegetable Oil
2 Large Onions, grated
3 cloves Garlic, chopped
2 tsps Turmeric
2 tsps GRACE Curry Powder
1 tsp Cumin Seeds
1 lb (450 grams) Chicken Breast, cut into strips
2 tsps GRACE Hot Pepper Sauce
1 ½ tbsp Lime Juice
½ cup GRACE Coconut Milk
6 medium Tomatoes, chopped
2 tbsp GRACE Tomato Ketchup
½ tsp Salt
½ cup *Chicken stock
1 clove  GRACE Curry Powder
GRACE Vinegar or Lime

Directions:

Heat oil in frying pan/ skillet. Gently sauté onions and garlic until softened (do not burn). Stir in turmeric, curry powder and cumin seeds. Fry for 3 minutes then add chicken, cover and cook for 7 minutes. Stir in Grace Hot Pepper Sauce, limejuice, Grace Coconut Milk, tomatoes, Grace Tomato Ketchup, salt and stock. Bring to a boil stirring occasionally for 10 minutes or until thickened.

Note:  Recipe courtesy GraceKennedy (Belize) Limited.

Guacamole with Chips

This is an excellent treat when entertaining friends or family.  Its easy to prepare and is a healthy alternative to other dips.

Preparation Time: 5 mins. | Cook Time: 0 mins.

Ingredients:

2 large Avacados
1 small Onion (finely chopped)
1 tbsp Grace Coconut Oil
2 tbsp Fresh Cilantro (chopped)
1 green or red Sweet Pepper (finely chopped)
1 large Tomato
1 tbsp Malher Garlic Powder
1/2 tsp Malher Garlic Powder
1/2 tsp Mahler Black Pepper
1/2 tsp Sugar
1/2 lime grated rind and juiced
Cilantro
1 pack Tortilla chips
1 tsp Grace Habanero Pepper Sauce
pinch salt

Directions:

Cut Avocados lenghtwise and remove seed.  Scoop out Avocado flesh with a spoon. Chop the Avocados roughly and place in a bowl, add lime juice. Use a masher to break up the avocado until amost smooth . Do not over mash.

Add Onion, Tomato, Malher Garlic Powder, Malher Black Pepper, Cilantro, Grace Coconut Oil and Grace Habanero Pepper Sauce to taste.

Mix well.

Note:  Recipe courtesy GraceKennedy (Belize) Limited.

10 Maya Foods that Changed the World’s Eating Habits

Join us as we thank the Maya for some of the most incredible foods that have moulded our cultures throughout the times. Here’s a list of 10 Maya foods that changed the world’s eating habits:

maya-foods-vegetables-fruits

The ancient Maya civilization — which ranged from the Yucatán Peninsula to Chiapas and Tabasco states, part of Veracruz state and as far south as Honduras — is well known for perfecting architectural techniques that produced towering cities, and for developing an advanced written language and creating books centuries before anything comparable appeared in Europe. The Maya also were gifted mathematicians who developed the concept of zero. And their astronomers, through centuries of patient observation, created a 365-day solar calendar that varies by less than 2 seconds from the one we use today — more accurate than what Cortés was using when he landed in 1519.

Lost among the laurels heaped upon the Maya, though, is credit for their agricultural wizardry. When the conquering Spanish started carrying Maya food staples back to Europe and to the Caribbean, Asia and Africa, it changed the world’s eating habits. We’re not talking about the Yucatán’s deliciously exotic lime-and-achiote concoctions but food you buy every day in Safeway’s produce aisles. Just try to get through a day without:

Chocolate

Organic cacao chocolateLegions of chocoholics would argue that the Maya’s “food of the gods,” made from the toasted, fermented seeds of the cacao tree, is the New World’s greatest gift to civilization. Though Cortés learned of chocolate from the Aztecs, they had acquired it through trade with the Maya, who first cultivated it about 3,000 years ago. Maya and Aztec aficionados drank their chocolate bitter and spicy; sugar was unknown before the conquest. Even today, chocolate in the Yucatán may be flavored with paprika, annatto or even pepper. But it was more than a drink to the Maya, who believed it came from the gods and formed a bridge between heaven and earth. Cacao seeds were an early form of money, and archaeologists have uncovered counterfeit seeds made of clay.

Vanilla (vainilla)

The elixir from the world’s only known edible orchid, probably first cultivated by the Totonaca in neighboring Veracruz state, had become a common flavoring for the Maya’s chocolate drinks by the 1500s. Vanilla, too, was adopted by the Aztecs, who introduced it to Cortés. Spanish and Portuguese explorers who brought it to Africa and Asia in the 16th century named it vainilla, or “little pod.” Southern Mexico’s jungle is still the only place the Vanilla planifolia orchid grows wild, pollinated by native, non-stinging bees that produce Maya honey. Today’s prized Tahitian vanilla, which came from Mexican stock, requires hand-pollination.

Corn (maíz)

maya-corn-maizeEvery elementary-school kid knows corn was the most important food in the Americas. The Popul Vuh, the Maya “bible,” attributes humankind’s very existence to this domesticated strain of wild grass. In its creation myth, the “Creators and Makers” fashioned man from tender kernels of yellow and white corn after failed attempts with mud and wood. Though corn was a dietary staple in most of Mexico as long as 6,000 years ago, it was the Maya who first cultivated it around 2500 B.C., abandoning their nomadic ways to settle in villages surrounded by cornfields.

Chiles

Chiles were cultivated in the Americas as long as 7,500 years ago. Blame Christopher Columbus for mistaking them as relatives of black pepper, native to southern Asia, but give him credit for spreading them throughout the world. The release of endorphins, increased heart rate, mental stimulation and euphoria provoked by chiles’ capsaicinoids — the ingredient that makes them taste hot —qualifies them as psychoactive plants. Southern Mexico’s Capsicum annuum species, with its many cultivars, is crucial to nearly every fiery cuisine in the world.

Tomatoes (tomates)

Even the Italians had to make do without tomato sauce before Columbus set out for the New World. Precursors originated in Peru, but the tomato as we know it came from the Yucatán, where the Maya cultivated it long before Cortés first encountered one in an Aztec market around 1520. Native versions were small, like cherry tomatoes, and probably yellow rather than red. Two years after Cortés brought the tomato back to Spain, it made its way to Naples — then under Spanish rule — where invention of the pizza made tomato sauce a necessity of life. Once believed poisonous because they are related to the deadly nightshade, tomatoes are now a staple of nearly every cuisine in the world.

Black beans (frijoles negros)

maya black beansArchaeological digs indicate the black bean originated in southern Mexico and Central America more than 7,000 years ago. With their meaty flavor and velvety texture, black beans are still the favorite in and around the Yucatán, where they may turn up in almost any dish. They have spread widely throughout Latin America, the Caribbean, and the southern United States, becoming an important part of the many regional cuisines.

Avocado (aguacate)

From its origins in southern Mexico, where it was prized as an aphrodisiac — the Aztecs called it ahuacatl, meaning “testicle,” and kept their daughters indoors during harvest season — the avocado spread north to the Rio Grande and south to central Peru before Europeans encountered it. The sexual association carried through the 19th century, when growers who wanted to cultivate avocados commercially first had to mount a campaign to persuade the public that eating avocados did not equate to licentiousness. Mexico is still the world’s main source of avocados.

Sweet potato (camote)

Sweet potatoes are native to the tropics from the Yucatán to Venezuela, and the Maya domesticated the plant at least 5,000 years ago. By 2500 B.C., sweet potatoes had spread throughout the Caribbean and South America. Sweet potatoes belong to the genus Ipomoea, which includes morning glories. Though commonly confused with the yam, what we know as yams are simply another variety of sweet potato. True yams are native to Africa; when slaves from that continent were deposited in North America they adopted sweet potatoes as a substitute for the tuber they had eaten in their homeland and called it by the familiar name.

Squash (calabaza, calabacita)

maya-squashThough corn and beans are better-known Mexican natives, squash predates them by several thousand years; Maya people domesticated several varieties of squash as early as 8000 B.C. Oils from these seeds were the main source of dietary fat before the Spanish introduced beef and pork. Though the native plants included cucumber, zucchini, patty pan and butternut squash, great quantities of pumpkin — la calabaza grande — defines the Yucatán diet even today. Toasted, ground pumpkin seeds still appear on menus even more than the flesh.

Papaya

Though it’s more closely associated with Hawaii now, all indications are the papaya originated in the tropics of southern Mexico and Central America. After the Spanish carried seeds to Panama and the Dominican Republic, cultivation spread throughout South and Central America, the Caribbean, Europe, the Pacific Islands, India and parts of Africa. It has became naturalized in many areas and still grows wild along Mexican roadsides. Hawaii, where papayas first arrived in the 1800s, is the only U.S. state to grow them commercially.

maya papaya

So there you have it, the next time you are enjoying a complimented meal of Corn, Avocado, Chiles, Tomatoes, Squash, Papaya, Black Beans, Sweet Potato, Vanilla or Chocolate — do remember to thank the ancient Maya.

Source:  Chaa Creek

Luncheon Meat Chop Suey

This meal is a quick and easy alternative for cooks on-the-go.  With basic ingredients found in most fridges and pantries it’s sure to quickly become a favorite.

Preparation Time: 5 mins. | Cook Time: 15 mins.

Ingredients:

1 can Grace Luncheon Meat (diced)
1 cup water
1 teaspoon Malher Consome
2 tablespoon Grace Soy Sauce
1 clove garlic, minced
2 stalks celery (chopped)
2 medium carrots (sliced)
1 small sweet pepper (chopped)
2 cups cabbage (coarsely chopped)
Broccoli (chopped)
Cauliflower (chopped)
1/4 cup Grace Vegetable Oil
2 teaspoons corn starch

Directions:
In a bowl, dissolve corn starch in 4 tbsp of water and set aside. Heat 3 tbsp Grace Vegetable Oil in a frying pan. Add Garlic and onions, saute for 2-3 minutes. Add Carrots, Celery, Broccoli and Cauliflower stirring occasionally for 3 minutes. Add Sweet Pepper and Cabbage. Add Malher Consome and Grace Soy Sauce. Add Grace Luncheon Meat. Pour in corn starch. Continue to cook for 2-3 minutes until slightly thicken.

Serve warm with white rice.

Note: Recipe courtesy GraceKennedy (Belize) Limited.

Pineapple Stir Fried Shrimp

This tasty recipe goes well when served with white rice.  Your plate will be filled with both flavor and color and it’s sure to be a favorite.

Preparation Time: 5 mins. | Cook Time: 15 mins.

Ingredients:

1/2 Pineapple (Diced)
1/2 Onion (Diced)
1 sm Carrot (Grated)
Grace Habanero Pepper Sauce
2 tbsp Grace Mustard
Grace Vinegar
3 tbsp Grace Soy Sauce
1 cup Pineapple Yus Juice Mix (Mixed)
4 tbsp Corn Starch
1 lb Shrimp
2 tbs Grace Vegetable Oil
1 tsp Malher Garlic Powder
1 tsp Malher Black Pepper
1 tbsp Malher Consome

Directions:

Clean and devein Shrimp.  Wash with Grace Vinegar and drain.  Season with Malher Black Pepper, Malher Garlic Powder and Malher Consome.

Place a frying pan on stove, glaze with Grace Vegetable Oil, let oil heat up for a few minutes.  Add Carrots and Onions.  Let cook for 2-3 minutes, add Pineapple, Shrimp, Grace Mustard and Grace Soy Sauce.  Cook on high for 7 – 10 minutes, stir occasionally.  Add Corn Starch, allow to simmer for 2-3 minutes or until gravy is to desired thickness.  Serve with Noodles or Grace Coconut White Rice.  Top with Grace Habanero Pepper Sauce and garnish with Pineapple slices.

Note:  Recipe courtesy GraceKennedy (Belize) Limited.

Cuts Like A Knife

Check out Belizean Songstress, Melonie Gillett’s, new music video…

Caribbean Music in Belize

Documentary about the music of the Caribbean and the influence within the Garifuna Culture in Belize.

Gungude (Garifuna Porridge)

This delicious porridge originates from the Garifuna culture.  It has quickly become a favorite and is likely to warm the hearts of many who indulge in this flavorful porridge.

Preparation Time: 0 mins. | Cook Time: 10 mins.

Ingredients:

1/2 cup Gungude Powder (Sun Dried Green Plantains)
3 cups Water
1/2 can Grace Condensed Milk
1/2 can Grace Evaporated Milk
1/2 sachet Grace Coconut Milk Powder
pinch of Salt
2 tsp Benjamins Vanilla Essence
2 tsp Benjamins Nutmeg Extract

Directions:

In a deep pot, bring 2 cups of Water to a boil. In a bowl pour in 1 cup water, stir in Gungude Powder. Pour mixed Gungude mixture in pot of boiling water. Stir in Grace Evaporated Milk and Grace Condensed Milk. Stir for 5 – 10 minutes to get the thickness you desire. Stir in Benjamins Vanilla Essence and Nutmeg Extract. Continue stirring for 5 minutes. Serve hot or cold.
Garnish with Grated Nutmeg or Malher Cinnamon Powder. (Gungude can also be done with Sun Dried Green Bananas)

Note: Recipe courtesy GraceKennedy (Belize) Limited.