Boroña

Boroña is a type of bread made with corn in northern Spain. This cornbread (Galician: broa or boroa in Asturian: boroña in Cantabria: cornbread, of Celtic origin, compare Welsh and Breton baran bread) is a bread made with cornmeal. It is a traditional food from the regions of Galicia, Asturias, Cantabria, the Basque Country and northern Castilla-Leon (areas of León, Palencia and Burgos), Spain. It has been widely used in rural areas until the mid twentieth century. It is usually cooked in an oven wrapped in cabbage leaves.

In Cantabria, by extension, it is called borona, the corn plant bread, and is called "flour corn bread" flour.

History

Before corn reached the Iberian Peninsula from the American continent, there and was a type of cornbread, s mixed bread made from barley and rye [0] which was eaten in northern Spain, as shown by the calf of the behetrías Castile, the fourteenth century, [1] as follows Cantabrians documents stating in the fifteenth century. [2]

After the arrival of the Spaniards to the New World in 1492, was still called borona for breads made with millet that the authors of the time attributed to the Basques, [3] although that bread had been consumed in more northern sites.

The term borona reappears in 1619 in the town of Oseja Sajambre, located in the Picos de Europa, in a context that suggests it was about corn bread, [4] so this would be the reference historically oldest known so far, the cornbread as we understand it today.

In 1794 Jovellanos speaks of "cornbread or cornbread" that was eaten in the Principality of Asturias in the Report of the Economic Society of Madrid.[1]

Features

The mixture of wheat flour (spelled flour) and corn (2/3 corn flour and other wheat flour) makes the interior color of cornbread a pale yellow. The dough mass is usually put into a mold. It can be rectangular, though now usually toroidal shape. The traditional recipe includes in the dough some slices of chorizo and various meats including prime rib ('costiella'). The dough goes with the mold in an oven and cooked at relatively low temperatures overnight.

Serve

To serve cornbread opens in half and the meat content inside to be eaten with bread dough baked rolls over.

References

  1. RODRÍGUEZ DÍAZ, Elena E. (2010). La Senda del Arcediano y el camino del Beyo: nuevos documentos para su historia. Madrid, Spain: Boletín de Letras del Real Instituto de Estudios Asturianos. p. 107.

Further reading

  • 1. ↑ Gonzalo CORREAS,Vocabulario de refranes y frases proverbiales, 1627; Diego de VALERA, Tratado de las epístolas enviadas por mosén Diego de Valera (1441–1486), ed. Mario Penna, Madrid, 1959
  • 2. ↑ Fabián HERNÁNDEZ, Becerro de las behetrías de Castilla, Santander, 1866.
  • 3. ↑ Rosa Mª DEL TORO MIRANDA, Colección diplomática de Santa Catalina del Monte Corbán, Santander: Fundación Marcelino Botín, 2014. ↑
  • 4. Gabriel ALONSO DE HERRERA, Obra de Agricultura (Alcalá, 1513), ed.Thomas Capuano, Madison, 1995; Martín FERNÁNDEZ DE ENCISO, Suma de geografía que trata de todas las partidas y provincias del mundo (1519), ed. José Ramón Carriazo, Salamanca, 2003
  • 5. ↑ Gaspar Melchor de JOVELLANOS, Informe de la Sociedad Económica de Madrid al Real y Supremo Consejo de Castilla, Madrid: Cátedra, 1982.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.