This recipe has no exotic Japanese American ingredients. It's all American. As I've said in my Southern
biscuits and gravy post, I am heavily influenced by the way the women who raised me cooked, which was my Japanese American grandmother and mother. However, I do switch it up and cook Southern, New Mexican, and American Indian once in a while.
While traditional American Indian food is for another post, it is funny to think about the American Indian influences on modern cuisine today. Already pish-poshing? How you liking your popcorn at the movies? Corn cultivation and domestication is all thanks to the indigenous people of the Americas. We tend to forget when we sit down to beans, sweet potatoes, cranberry, and turkey every year, but American Indian influences go beyond Thanksgiving.
And let's not forget the potato, which may seem like an old European staple, was brought back from the Americas by the Spanish.
In fact, according to
What's Cooking America, the first chowders in America were eaten by American Indians. However, you cannot necessarily say that they introduced Europeans to chowder, because chowders are in every culture.
Bacon and pigs, however, was introduced to the Americas, and made it a better place. hehe!