Pennsylvania Dutch
Food is one of the most significant cultural contributions for which the Pennsylvania Dutch are recognised. The rich farmlands of the Pennsylvania Dutch Country are some of the most productive non-irrigated fields in North America. And you can taste it in the variety of foods which are the hallmark of these people.
Visit a farmer’s market in Lancaster County or one of the hundreds of restaurants boasting ‘homestyle Pennsylvania Dutch cooking’ and you’ll see that it is difficult to find something that won’t appeal to some palate. From desserts like funnel cakes and fastnachts to chow-chow, hogsmau, scrapple, and red beet eggs, there is a variety of unusual treats – as long as you’re not worried about counting calories.
The Pennsylvania Dutch brought a lot of folklore with them from the Old Country when they arrived in the Keystone State. And a good bit of it is still a part of the state’s culture.
Pow-wowing
Folk medicine2 using so-called ‘white magic’ with religious overtones has existed in Pennsylvania for more than 200 years. Many of the techniques were brought with immigrants from Germany and Switzerland in the 1700s and are passed down from generation to generation. Pow-wowing is still being practised today, albeit not so publicly. One Researcher’s aunt practised ‘white magic’ up until her death in the 1990s.
Here are a few samples of pow-wow health remedies:
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To cure a headache, place a buckwheat cake atop your head.
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To cure a tumour, rub it with the right hand of a corpse.
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To reduce a swelling, put hog manure in a left shoe and tie it over the swollen body part.
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To cure a cold, headache or toothache, sleep on a small, preheated pillow filled with hops.
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To cure rheumatism, put dandelion roots in whisky. After letting it sit for six weeks, take a drink or two daily.
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Another rheumatism cure was to wash the affected body parts in the water in which potatoes have been boiled.
Superstitions
Pennsylvania Dutch life was rife with superstitions. They ranged from sayings about the weather to things one should and should not do on religious holidays.
Some Good Friday superstitions include:
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Getting a hair cut on Good Friday will prevent toothaches the rest of the year.
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Digging in the garden will bring bad luck, but planting seeds will bring a plentiful harvest.
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Placing an egg laid on Good Friday under a bowl in your attic will prevent lightning from striking your house.
Some Pennsylvania Dutch Christmas superstitions include:
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Cows are given the power of speech on the night of Christmas Eve and anyone born on Christmas Day can understand what cows say.
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For three minutes on Christmas night, the water in all wells turns into wine.
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For good health, avoid bathing and changing your clothes between Christmas and New Years Day.
Some New Year’s superstitions include:
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To keep yourself healthy in the New Year, eat smoked sausage. For good luck in the New Year, eat boiled cabbage. But for the whole package of good health, wealth and happiness in the New Year, you should eat pork and sauerkraut
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If a family serves chicken on New Year’s Day, they will have financial difficulties for the rest of the year.
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Changing your undershirt or underwear on New Year’s Day can cause boils.
Some weather folklore includes:
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When a woman sleeps with her leg sticking out from under the cover, it is warm enough to plant corn.
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The weather on the fifth of the month will indicate what the rest of the month’s weather will be like.
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Early morning rain is like an old woman’s dance – neither last long.
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When a rooster sits atop a fence to crow, there’ll be rain all day.
It is no accident that we didn’t mention the Amish and related Mennonite sects earlier in this entry. While they are also part of the Pennsylvania Dutch culture, they are a small (roughly 10%), albeit very noticeable, segment of the overall population.
There are literally tens of thousands of ‘Pennsylvania Dutch’ in Pennsylvania who have nothing to do with the Plain People. But movies like Witness with Harrison Ford and the tourist-pandering trade in Lancaster County make people think that the Dutch are the Amish and that the Amish are the only Pennsylvania Dutch.
1 Linguists pedantically refer to them as Pennsylvania Germans.
2 The Guide cannot be held responsible if utilising these techniques proves to be ineffective.
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(Last Posting: Dec 18, 2002)
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