Most likely. It is probably similar to grits or polenta, and I assume it's from an older time period.
Corn was popular and was made into corn mush which is like soup. They grew squash and beans.
The food Samp is a porridge or a cornmeal mush and is made of coarsely ground corn. The name Samp is of South African origin or nasump meaning softened by water.
Many of the Indians ate mush, consisting of corn and water.Yumm!
Polenta, it's an Italian dish! Cornbread, corn muffins, and cornmeal mush can also be made from ground corn. A non-food use of ground corn is to make ethanol, a biofuel commonly used to power automobiles in the western hemisphere.
You mush up fruits and veggies.
Yes, although the corn used is not the yellow, sweet, corn, that non-native people only see. The Iroquois use Flint Corn, which is a type of hominy corn. The flint corn is used to make the corn bread, corn soup, and mush.
Corn. Corn meal mush and a kind of corn bread called kneel down bread.
It should not be a problem. In the old days people would cook a pot of corn mush and leave it on the table all day long. As long as it's covered, of course, so insects don't get in it!
by feeding the birds to mush of are food there is a goose that cant fly because it ate to mush so OUR food
They ate Corn meal mush, beer, cider and cake.
At 4-6 weeks start offering water and a mush made out of kitten food, soon it will get the idea.
mush