Bannock vs Frybread - What's the difference?
bannock | frybread |
An unleavened bread made with oatmeal in Scotland, and with cornmeal or wheat flour in Canada, baked in a pan.
* 2007 , , Turtle Valley , Vintage Canada, ISBN 9780676978865, p. 54,
(US) Fried bread; a Native American food, found throughout the Americas, particularly among Native Americans of the Southwestern United States and currently popular among many North American tribes as well as other ethnic groups. It is often an important symbol to Native Americans and is served especially on special occasions. Often made primarily of wheat flour and/or maize (corn) flour leavened by yeast, baking powder, or eggs, or by a combination of these rising agents, and then fried in lard, tallow, or vegetable oil. Probably of pre-Columbian tradition in which cornmeal would have been used.
As nouns the difference between bannock and frybread
is that bannock is an unleavened bread made with oatmeal in Scotland, and with cornmeal or wheat flour in Canada, baked in a pan while frybread is fried bread; a Native American food, found throughout the Americas, particularly among Native Americans of the Southwestern United States and currently popular among many North American tribes as well as other ethnic groups. It is often an important symbol to Native Americans and is served especially on special occasions. Often made primarily of wheat flour and/or maize (corn) flour leavened by yeast, baking powder, or eggs, or by a combination of these rising agents, and then fried in lard, tallow, or vegetable oil. Probably of pre-Columbian tradition in which cornmeal would have been used.bannock
English
Noun
(en-noun)- My father's bannock was nothing but lard, flour, salt, and baking powder patted into big rounds and cooked on sticks over a campfire.