The Kiskadee is a bird native to Guyana and often referred to in Edgar Mittelholzer's brilliant novel, The Life and Death of Sylvia (1953). The bird is so named because its cry seemed by French colonists to be enquiring: "Qu’ est ce qu’il dit?". So what did he say? This blog is about two key topics: EDGAR MITTELHOLZER (his life and his works) and ME (my encounter with Mittelholzer and tales of life in Guyana).

Monday, 22 September 2014

Pomeroon Chip: Quinch

A Quinch...desiccated coconut filling (dyed red) in a cassava bread casing. The lady I bought this dessert from proudly announced they were made in Victoria Village: the history of which astonishes me. Just one year after full emancipation in 1838 eighty-three freed Africans managed to pool together 30,000 guilders. This money was used to purchase a plantation called Northbrook and evolved into a village that was later renamed Victoria (connoting their victory but also a reference to Queen Victoria under whose reign they had been freed). This village (the first of many villages to be set up by freed Africans) became one of the leading exporters of coconut and cassava produce.


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