Now we come to corn, a plant that’s been a staple in New Mexico for a thousand years. (Roos, 2021)
Corn was incorporated into the Pueblo Food Experience project, an experiment in which Roxanne Swentzell, permaculturist and cultural advocate, of Santa Clara Pueblo organized twelve participants to spend three months eating only pre-contact foods, meaning foods that were growing in New Mexico prior to the arrival of the Spanish in 1598. Participants’ health improvements were significant: “Two people had lost over fifty pounds each, one woman with severe arthritis could close her hands fully again, and each had far more energy than before.” (Withnal, 2024)
Was all of this due just to corn? Surely not. But corn is a whole culture, and it is a key part of the culture Swentzell was defining with her experiment. Another New Mexican food expert, Lois Ellen Frank, explains how corn is grown: “Corn, beans and squash, called the Three Sisters by many tribes, serve as key pillars in the Native American diet and are considered a sacred gift from the Great Spirit. Together, the plants provide complete nutrition, while offering an important lesson in environmental cooperation. Corn draws nitrogen from the soil, while beans replenish it. Corn stalks provide climbing poles for the bean tendrils, and the broad leaves of squashes grow low to the ground, shading the soil, keeping it moist, and deterring the growth of weeds.” (Frank, 2020) How corn grows is a cultural metaphor. Corn and the people who have lived on this land a long time have evolved together – they are co-adapted. Swentzell explains this idea:
“Putting the environment and us together created a profound thing. Some unexpected ‘fit’ started a domino effect of health, not just in our physical bodies but also in our spiritual lives and lifestyle. I realized that we, the people of this landscape, needed to find our right place again in the system. I once read that it takes twenty generations in the same location for a species (humans included) to genetically adapt to that environment. The Pueblo Food Experience was the result of this experiment.” (Swentzell & Perea, 2016)
I’m not from here. But I like this idea of co-planting so as to make corn grow, co-adaptation so that some foods “fit” better with some human microbiomes — I just know that I can eat well here. If I step around sopapillas and flour tortillas, which annoy my gut, I can easily eat corn tortillas, tamales, tacos, tostadas, posole, chicos, champurrado …
I notice other wonderful features that corn and I have in common, features not shared by wheat. Corn is a kind of symbol of many-ness. Look at all the kernels nestling together: corn and I are polytheistic. The manyness of being Hindu pairs well with like-minded Pueblo spiritualities. And leaving aside the forced adoption of the communion wafer, Catholicism in New Mexico honors saints in a dramatic riot of images whose worship makes me feel at home.
On the other hand is the culture of wheat, insisting on singularity.
Wheat adoption was accelerated by a transition away from subsistence mixed-plot farming. Amaranth, a component of standard mixed cropping in New Mexico and based on Pueblo cultivation, was outlawed in order to promote wheat use. (Nowell, 2021) By the 1930s the typical landscape was wheat and barbed wire; both were imported habits that delegitimized the prior norms of growing amaranth and corn and using shared fields. Wheat became established as symbolizing being well off and modern. (deBuys, 2015)
With increased industrialization, corn became a monocrop. Wheat did this to corn!
coadaptation: 20-generation thinking
Holding onto corn as a support in my argument of personal belonging, I feel satisfied to note all the ways that corn clearly belongs here. Corn cultivation started in New Mexico at least 600 years ago, which is well before the twenty generations Swentzell names as the time span for co-adaptation. Corn arrived in the region – the valley of the Rio Grande – earlier still: around 700CE. Twenty generations is about 500 years, so twenty generations back is around 1500.
Wheat, the interloper, only arrived …
Well, wheat arrived around 1598.
That’s actually not too far off twenty generations ago. So – could wheat be co-adapted to this place, too?
Frank makes an argument about local identity and wheat: “Bread made from wheat was introduced to the New Mexico pueblos in horno ovens, constructed from adobe and earth, further changing the corn-based diet. Once these foods were woven into the Native American diet, in many instances, they became inseparable from the identity of the People.” (Frank, 2023)
But there’s the explicit forceful introduction of wheat for communion wafers, there’s the prohibition against amaranth – which was and is called pigweed – and there’s the colonial disrespect for corn-eating peoples —
Catholic history in New Mexico causes tension, and at the same time Catholic faith is very much embedded here. Syncretism is typical of New Mexican culture; it’s a source of resilience. Pueblo religions and Catholicism are intertwined. If I throw in my own Hinduism, or any other more recently transplanted religion, could I consider that spiritual culture here is co-planted? Is it possible to change the Three Sisters into the Trinity and back again? And if we look closely, isn’t wheat, too, made of many clustered seeds, cute and cuddling godheads?
The amorphous forms that represent Pueblo spirituality feel familiar to me. Architect Rina Swentzell, also from Santa Clara, explains the importance of a simple gray stone in the pueblo: “That place out of which the breath flows, it is the place that we flow in and out of to connect with the other levels of existence that are there simultaneous to this one, but usually all that marks that very incredible place in the earth is a gray stone that is not even special-looking.” (knmedotorg, 2009) In my father’s village in Gujarat, there is a mound on a corner that gets bathed in milk, garlanded, kum kum applied. I asked my mother what it was. She said she didn’t know, maybe Hanuman, maybe Ganesh, maybe Kali — I like the polyphony of interpretations. To me, this is what polytheism means, this cacophony of immanence. Like with corn, being able to use that lens in the pueblos here makes me feel a certain sense of being understood — the same reassurance I get from corn culture.
When I ask my mother, the arbiter of my understanding of my own Indianness, how a polytheistic viewpoint can be the source of so much sectarian violence in India, she explains Hinduism by breaking it down into a lot of categories. She ends by saying, “And Krishna will rebalance dharma and kill the bad people.” This was not what I, with my starry-eyed vision of tolerant multiculturalism, was hoping to hear.
hornos, soil regeneration, and new farmers: connecting past and present
A structure that dots the landscape, that I thought had one assigned function, has a more layered meaning than I have been telling myself. Hornos are earthen egg-shaped ovens visible in many yards and especially noticeable within pueblos. They are used for pueblo bread: a lofted, round, white loaf. I have wondered at their ubiquity: aren’t they signs of cultural capitulation? Ole Bye, who builds hornos in New Mexico, wonders the same thing. (Bye, 2024) It turns out hornos are actually extensions of the technique of pit fire cooking that was already in use pre-contact; in local Tewa language the ovens are called pantes. (Swentzell, 2008) They are not, in fact, strictly for pueblo bread. They are used to cook game and to dry corn for chicos, a food of dried corn kernels that has been eaten for centuries. They are also used for pizza, which has nothing one way or the other to do with the battle of belonging that I am fighting with history, reminding me that history is in a constant, dynamic interaction with the present. Belonging is an evolution. It may not be a fixed state that I will one day, imagining crossing a finish line, achieve.
In fact, the soil here in New Mexico, the ground itself, is being restored and renewed by small farmers up and down the Rio Grande and around the state, many of whom are new here. They are working on soil enrichment and heritage seed renewal, correcting past use that depleted soil due to short-term tactics like overgrazing and monocropping. There are local bakeries where I live, like Bread Shop, Wild Leaven, and Tomorrow and Tomorrow, whose owners are turning out breads made from carefully sourced, sustainably-farmed grains that are part of regional community networks.
It turns out my gut, which I rely on to guide me to comfort, may be wrong. Or at least how I’ve interpreted my gut is wrong. Research shows it’s not a gluten-heavy grain that causes indigestion but the fact that it is common to use short fermentation times for bread, times too short to break down sufficient amounts of gluten proteins and certain hard-to-digest carbohydrates. Long fermentation breads might go a long way in reducing the bloating and irritation I associate with wheat. (Suter & Békés, 2020) Fermentation, of all things! It’s what I’ve already written about: fermentation is messiness, it’s feisty. Its wildness is endemic to processing wheat. And being at ease with more mess is what increases the ability to problem-solve in real world ecologies: I am confronted with my own conclusion.
conclusion: a messy field
I have been looking for belonging, and as a result I’ve been telling myself a story about colonial oppression tied to wheat grain, the glorious correctness of corn, possessing a special understanding based in polytheistic logic, and migration as a form of belonging. My little story gives me a special sense of being in the right place.
But my story is wrong!
There are not camps of battle, wheat on one side, corn on the other. There’s just a messy field. Picking through a messy field is complicated, but if you take the time to learn what’s there and sort it out, you’ll eventually get what you need to eat.
A messy field within a messy story sounds about right for where I belong, where I feel understood. It’s even paradise just for a minute.
Thank you to Valentine Cadieux and Ole Bye for fecund discussions about the ideas in this article.
A version of this piece was adapted for live delivery and first presented by the author as part of a PechaKucha event. You can view it here:
🔗 Broken by Bread – PechaKucha Presentation (https://www.pechakucha.com/presentations/broken-by-bread)
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