"and the other early settlers had learned the cornbread techniques of the natives, but it's difficult to say when the Europeans first created their own style of cornbread by mixing corn with wheat. In the 1630s, clearly stated that the Virginian settlers had "plentie" of bread, made from wheat, corn, and rye. But were they mixing these grains together? ... What all the early settlers in North America likely learned from the native populations was how to make corn "pone," which in the various native languages is oppone, apan, suppawn, etc. Captain Smith mentions pones as early as 1612. The indigenous ones were probably thin cakes baked in front of the fire or actually in the ashes of the fire, and, of course, they didn't originally have any wheat in them. But to Europeans these pones probably seemed a bit dense. They didn't have any leavening, after all, and they probably didn't have any shortening. All they contained, most likely, was cornmeal, water, and maybe salt. One Dutch visitor to called the pones "good but heavy." That's putting it nicely."
January 1, 1970