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Funny enough for the most part we eat pretty much what everyone else eats. We've assimilated to 'white' culture (which is really a mix of everyone's culture, something I find awesome) and so we eat what everyone else does, but fail to take into consideration many of the dishes were actually ours in the first place! The settlers grew plants indigenous to the areas they settled in, with help from local natives, and also learned to cook with our ways, since they were growing crops they knew little about, primarily the Indian staples: beans, corn and squash* which all were plants domesticated by the natives back in at least 3000 years before BCE.
I guess diets evolve. Even just a hundred years ago all our diets weren't very varied unless we had access to money, which most didn't. I'm sure our ancestors would be astonished at the grocery stores we have and boggle at all the food.
I really do need to do more to embrace my own culture and make sure I pass on our recipes. I'd hate for them to fade away. My aunt has worked hard, going from pow wow to pow wow, gathering recipes from any Tribal Person that would share them. She really should write a book.
*An interesting aside, many Nations call these vegetable the Three Sisters, as they were grown together and dependent upon one another. There are stories of the Three Sisters in many NA mythologies. They aren't deities, but rather legendary women who helped domesticate and bring dependable food sources to The People.
(Hey, I blab a lot. Can you tell I've been partnered up with an anthropologist for over a decade? LOL!)