(no subject)
Feb. 27th, 2015 03:18 amI'm getting all sorts of reminders that today, the 27th of February, is National Milk Tart Day. (I have a lot of South African sites on my feed.) Here are two links to recipes for melktert, or milk tart, a custard-based tart with a shortbread crust:
http://capemalaycooking.me/2014/02/27/national-milk-tart-day/
http://www.jacarandafm.com/post/happy-national-milk-tart-day/

Looks tasty! I think I need to try making this.
http://capemalaycooking.me/2014/02/27/national-milk-tart-day/
http://www.jacarandafm.com/post/happy-national-milk-tart-day/

Looks tasty! I think I need to try making this.
(no subject)
Date: 2015-02-28 06:41 am (UTC)Call it racial snobbery.
That, or it's another example of the old saying that the difference between a dialect and a language is that a language has an army.
The interesting thing is that Wikipedia seems to consider Flemish a "dialect" and Afrikaans a "language". I'm under the impression that this is what most who study the languages think, if forced to say anything about it.
From the Wikipedia page on the Dutch language:From the page on Flemish:From the article on Afrikaans:Now, having been to each of these places I can definitely agree--as you say--that Flemish speakers consider that they speak something different from what Dutch speakers speak, regardless of what some people in some country they don't even live in think; and the Afrikaans speakers definitely consider that they speak something different, regardless of what some people in some far-off cold continent may think. I haven't heard myself what Dutch speakers think about either of the others, but I suspect they don't think about it much.
Like so many of these situations much of this is culturally constructed, and where one draws the line between dialect and language, and what either is called is also culturally constructed.
(I don't know if you've heard a Flemish person rant about Dutch people. It's a thing. A pretty impressive thing once you get one going. Alcohol seems to help :) South Africans, in my experience, mostly don't think about Dutch people except when they show up as tourists.)
That Dutch-looking Afrikaans word "voortrekker" is itself pretty culturally-loaded. There's even a monument, although I haven't visited it.
(no subject)
Date: 2015-03-02 12:12 am (UTC)*hugs*