EGAD a good video but the old "myth". This version is rather elaborate in cooking steps.
I hear it repeated a lot, but I've never found anybody repeating this that has ever tried to use a forged hoe to make the cakes over a fire. Was the blade removed from the handle? Was there water present to cool the blade so it could once again be a tool, for if it was air cooled then it would likely have been softened, perhaps too soft and a ruined tool... not a healthy thing for a slave to do. I guess there was water since the food need lots of water. How many people per cooking hoe, or were there a lot of hoes used?
OR..., Was there a tool in the kitchen, also called a "hoe", because it had a shape similar to a garden hoe, and IT was used outside to bake the food?
See How the Hoe Cake (Most Likely) Got Its Name by Rod Cofield
OR..., is it a bastardization of a Native American word?
"Nookik" is an Eastern Woodland Native culture word for parched corn, that was then pounded into a flour. It's also called Psindamóoan, Tassmanáne, Gofio, and many other names by Native cultures throughout North America, and it was called pinole by the Spaniards, and rockahominy by Virginians. There are several documented methods for consumption of this essential survival food. One is straight dry powder, followed by a good quantity of water. Another is making a porridge out of it and water.
Now nookik, became in English, "nocake"...., which is what it was called in New England and it's a slight variation from that, to "hoecake". This complies with the principles found by the observations of the Grimm brothers (same guys as the fairy tales) of consonant shift as words cross into different cultures and are used over long periods of time. The porridge version when every thick could've been baked on a hot rock, no garden tools needed, and very easily could've been called hoecake by whites...
LD
Last edited: