Is This History About Casava True Because I Dont Believe - Education (2) - Nairaland
Nairaland Forum › Nairaland General › Education › Is This History About Casava True Because I Dont Believe (5386 Views)
| Re: Is This History About Casava True Because I Dont Believe by phemmyfour: 5:39am On Aug 12, 2021 |
Before cassava came, we had yam |
| Re: Is This History About Casava True Because I Dont Believe by Kondomatic(m): 5:53am On Aug 12, 2021 |
TheEnygma:This is false. Unless you're talking about a different specie of cassava. The one in the Eastern Nigeria is harvested around 10 and within 24 months!. In fact, a seasoned farmer would tell you that the ones harvested within 10 months are wasted because the tubers have just finished growing in length and not in girth. They have lesser starchy flesh and a thick central vascular fibre. Melts easily too. You can not harvest a cassava in 3 months. The earliest one can attempt to harvest cassava is in 6 months(very wasteful) unless you're talking about a new or maybe modified specie. |
| Re: Is This History About Casava True Because I Dont Believe by TheMan3: 7:33am On Aug 12, 2021 |
kannex:I think there is garri in Brazil. Most potoguese slaves where taken to Brazil. So that could be the origin |
| Re: Is This History About Casava True Because I Dont Believe by gregyboy(m): 7:53am On Aug 12, 2021 |
During diring the European trade in Africa, crops were sold by Europeans to make money, including clothes Many crops were introduced to Africa but didnt survive and many African crop was introduce to Europe didnt also survive too The melon seed crop was introduce from Asia to africa, also rice |
| Re: Is This History About Casava True Because I Dont Believe by emmanuel1277: 7:54am On Aug 12, 2021 |
BritishAirways:Bros I didn't read mine from wikipedia I first heard it from my grand ma before my parents told me too |
| Re: Is This History About Casava True Because I Dont Believe by gregyboy(m): 8:02am On Aug 12, 2021 |
tchidi066:Water yam was introduced by the Portuguese to the benins... Pineapple = eden-bo meaming whitemans fruit was also introduced by the Portuguese to the benins notice the bo in ebo meaning whiteman |
| Re: Is This History About Casava True Because I Dont Believe by Passionnn: 8:07am On Aug 12, 2021 |
illicit:And plantain. |
| Re: Is This History About Casava True Because I Dont Believe by gregyboy(m): 8:09am On Aug 12, 2021 |
Most tribe didnt eat pounded yam, they mostly consumed platain with soup or ate the yam boiled Before you can make pounded yam, you must first have pistol and mortal which wasnt really available then... So how did all these tribe claiming pounded yam pound The truth is only the benins who were wood carvers could make pounded yam Pounded yam and egusi is an edo food adopted by many Nigerians after the collapse of kingdom https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&source=web&rct=j&url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/3171994&ved=2ahUKEwjBqsrx9qryAhVwDmMBHd9TDNoQFnoECAQQAQ&usg=AOvVaw3iE3TQG7pXFD2L-NMouiYv I have written on this on Nairaland before now Click the link and enlighten yourself
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| Re: Is This History About Casava True Because I Dont Believe by gregyboy(m): 8:15am On Aug 12, 2021 |
siofra:Pounded yam was recently adopted by Nigerians from edos, every other tribe ate thier tubers without pounding it... They didnt have the skill to carve wood to pound their yams only the benins were wood carvers in history |
| Re: Is This History About Casava True Because I Dont Believe by CUMIN: 8:22am On Aug 12, 2021 |
Same thing as maize |
| Re: Is This History About Casava True Because I Dont Believe by angiography(m): 8:33am On Aug 12, 2021 |
@op Do you know that even up to 1950's, food made from Cassava were not popular in rural Yoruba villages/towns. In fact, my father once told me that first person that are fufu in their village was called into a meeting and was labelled a lazy man. Pounded yam was the main stay. Fresh pounded yam, and fermented pounded yan |
| Re: Is This History About Casava True Because I Dont Believe by Depressed101: 9:01am On Aug 12, 2021 |
kannex: op I have always asked my self that question, most of the food we eat in nigeria today were not introduced to us until the 19th century.. Are food are greatly influenced by our colonial masters.. I asked my grandma same question years (blessed mother may her soul continue to rest in peace) she told me there was a cassava, but not the type we have now, that one was bitter and black when cooked, it contained alot of cyanide. She told me there was no eba or garri. Just black bitter fufu. Achicha, lucost beans,Yam and other nutritious local foods |
| Re: Is This History About Casava True Because I Dont Believe by Depressed101: 9:05am On Aug 12, 2021 |
gregyboy:the binis where not wood carvers they were bronze sculptors, ibos curved artifacts from wood, |
| Re: Is This History About Casava True Because I Dont Believe by Depressed101: 9:09am On Aug 12, 2021 |
pek:the guy is correct, there was always cassava in Southern Nigeria but not the species that we currently have, that one was introduced to us |
| Re: Is This History About Casava True Because I Dont Believe by gregyboy(m): 9:09am On Aug 12, 2021 |
angiography:Before your father's started eating pounded yam what were they eating, boiled tubers. I dont think Yorubas were skilled in wood carving except eastern Yorubas that benin taught wood carvings... Everybody claiming pounded yam these days makes it annoying and they remove the fact that before you make pounded yam you must have pistol and mortal to piund which comes from wood carving... Which majority tribes were unskilled at.... Even the melon plant for making egusi was introduced by the Portuguese from asia to the benins as exchange for their own crop.. But today all tribes drag pounded yam and egusi delicacy with we benins The processing of Cassava into garri could be trace to niger delta, since they get their starch swallow from garri As for the rest they began eating pounded yam after the fusion of nigeria They hate their tubers of boiled yams with oil and their soup, like that |
| Re: Is This History About Casava True Because I Dont Believe by gregyboy(m): 9:15am On Aug 12, 2021 |
Depressed101:Are you kidding me bro... Benin were skilled in both wood carvings and metal artworks along with clay molding You will have to go along way to prove the igbos were wood carvers hope you wont bring one igbo ukwu artwork as a refrence point... We even exported our wood carving techniques to the Eastern yorubas im owo
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| Re: Is This History About Casava True Because I Dont Believe by Depressed101: 9:15am On Aug 12, 2021 |
TheEnygma:stop digracing yourself, go and ask your grandparents... Just because Wikipedia wrote it. doesn't mean it's correct... Literally anybody with an account on Wikipedia can write anything.. |
| Re: Is This History About Casava True Because I Dont Believe by Depressed101: 9:19am On Aug 12, 2021 |
gregyboy:look if you want to talk history, don't talk to me with what you read and found on the internet .. I will have to take you to my home place, where I personally have a collection of historically artifacts including wood, and iron carvings of, masquerade masks, flute and music instruments some dating as far back as 200+ years ago.. |
| Re: Is This History About Casava True Because I Dont Believe by kannex(op): 9:22am On Aug 12, 2021 |
What i can say is that the history concerning casava is questionable because if you say they pound yam, cocoyam, during the Sixteen century this african never new how to carve wood or even up to the extend of carving mortal and pistol so how come the nigerian that was taken away by during the slave trade era came back to introduce this processing even when the brazilian and other that they claim this crop originated from never process garri or fufu. This is one question that i need asnwer to |
| Re: Is This History About Casava True Because I Dont Believe by gregyboy(m): 9:24am On Aug 12, 2021*. Modified: 9:48am On Aug 12, 2021 |
Depressed101:Those masquerade mask in igob land were recent invention the best they had was masquerade covered with beads and neated grasses to cover their face... Brass casting could have been purchased and were limited to the few populace The igbos were naked bush people who had no sense of belonging That wood work i posted there is from 16c which 1500Ad....equivalent You igbos that were eating raw leaves without oil or maggi, and having the whitemen for breakfast ooh please |
| Re: Is This History About Casava True Because I Dont Believe by Jamesbiodun(m): 9:39am On Aug 12, 2021 |
Why all the arguments, have you forgotten our forefathers are taking as slave to all these country, don't you think they can take the cassava stem with them and the Portuguese sees what the Nigerians have planted, Americans adopt it and now they took credits of it just like Wikipedia just said, Wikipedia is not always right , have you forgotten it is someone handwork. |
| Re: Is This History About Casava True Because I Dont Believe by Jamesbiodun(m): 9:43am On Aug 12, 2021 |
kannex:no one can answer your question people just believe in in what they see online and does not question it.Did Wikipedia knows cure for diabetes? Hell no but we have it here ![]() |
| Re: Is This History About Casava True Because I Dont Believe by gregyboy(m): 9:45am On Aug 12, 2021 |
Depressed101:Most soups were vegetables untill the Portuguese brought melon seeds to the edos Pineapple in edo is called whitemans fruit They took many crops from different continent to united state and Europe most of the crops didnt grow there thats why they still stuck with their vegetables delicacy, Asians were the continent God blessed with so many food crops most of the crops today were gotten from asia and taken to other continent |
| Re: Is This History About Casava True Because I Dont Believe by gregyboy(m): 9:51am On Aug 12, 2021 |
Jamesbiodun:No cure for diabetes bro my uncle used herbal Medication last 4years and he still returned to the sand... After so many herbs |
| Re: Is This History About Casava True Because I Dont Believe by Depressed101: 10:12am On Aug 12, 2021 |
gregyboy:I already know this, but I don't agree with your last statement, I believe all continents were equally blessed with variety of crops.. We have cocoa, we have palm oil, we have cocoa yam, ground nut, and host of other important crops. We are blessed.. |
| Re: Is This History About Casava True Because I Dont Believe by newdawn2017(f): 10:32am On Aug 12, 2021 |
BritishAirways:then encyclopedia britainica is the best to use for history research |
| Re: Is This History About Casava True Because I Dont Believe by Nobody: 10:44am On Aug 12, 2021 |
kannex:same question have been asking. well for me , i believe cassava has been here before dey came |
| Re: Is This History About Casava True Because I Dont Believe by kannex(op): 2:51pm On Aug 12, 2021 |
[quote author=Jamesbiodun post=104704129]no one can answer your question people just believe in in what they see online and does not question it.Did Wikipedia knows cure for diabetes? Hell no but we have it. Thank you my broda na im i dey tell some people say no b all histry ware dey r wiki b true |
| Re: Is This History About Casava True Because I Dont Believe by kannex(op): 2:53pm On Aug 12, 2021 |
gregyboy:So na Portuguese bring afang too abi?? |
| Re: Is This History About Casava True Because I Dont Believe by kannex(op): 2:55pm On Aug 12, 2021 |
cassidy1996:Thank u jare even me too i believe say casava don dey before dis oyibo people come. |
| Re: Is This History About Casava True Because I Dont Believe by kannex(op): 2:57pm On Aug 12, 2021 |
TheMan3:As at what year did the brazilian started drinking garri. |
| Re: Is This History About Casava True Because I Dont Believe by gregyboy(m): 3:10pm On Aug 12, 2021 |
kannex:I never said anything like that read and understand |
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op I have always asked my self that question, most of the food we eat in nigeria today were not introduced to us until the 19th century.. Are food are greatly influenced by our colonial masters.. I asked my grandma same question years (blessed mother may her soul continue to rest in peace) she told me there was a cassava, but not the type we have now, that one was bitter and black when cooked, it contained alot of cyanide. She told me there was no eba or garri. Just black bitter fufu. Achicha, lucost beans,Yam and other nutritious local foods
people just believe in in what they see online and does not question it.