, instead of lima beans|left Succotash has a long history. It is believed to have been an invention of indigenous peoples in what is now known as
New England, as corn and beans are two of the "Three Sisters" natives grew together - corn, beans, and squash - which thrived from their symbiotic cultivation. The practice was taught in the 1600s to early white settlers in the
Plymouth and
Massachusetts Bay Colonies. By the 1760s English soldier and explorer
Jonathan Carver indicated succotash was prepared by numerous tribes of midwestern North America:One dish however, which answers nearly the same purpose as bread, is in use among the
Ottagaumies, the
Saukies, and the more eastern nations, where Indian corn grows, which is not only much esteemed by them, but it is reckoned extremely palatable by all the Europeans who enter their dominions. This is composed of their unripe corn as before described, and beans in the same state, boiled together with bears flesh, the fat of which moistens the pulse, and renders it beyond comparison delicious. They call this food Succatosh.British colonists adapted the dish as a
stew in the 17th century. Composed of ingredients unknown in Europe at the time, it gradually became a standard meal in the
cuisine of New England and is a traditional dish of many
Thanksgiving celebrations in the region, as well as in
Pennsylvania and other states. Because of the relatively inexpensive and more readily available ingredients, the dish was popular during the
Great Depression in the
United States. It was sometimes cooked in a
casserole form, often with a light pie crust on top as in a traditional
pot pie. After the
abolition of slavery in the United States, freed slaves in the
American South returned to
Africa and introduced the dish to the region. == Preparation ==