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The traditional Irish boiled dinner consists of pork, known as “back bacon” or “rashers,” potatoes and cabbage, carrots or parsnips.
However, pork and lamb, other prominent meats on the island, were often hard or impossible for the impoverished working people of Ireland to afford, so they usually ate only vegetables and starches, Grant said.
When the new immigrants arrived in America, they found that corned beef, an inexpensive meat that was easily acquired, could be boiled with potatoes and cabbage, and provided a cheap source of protein that could not be found in Ireland, Grant said.
The famine began when a potato disease known as “late blight” infected and destroyed vast amounts of the country’s potato crop, a staple nourishment for the nation’s small farmer class.
The population of Ireland was depleted by 20 to 25 percent during the Great Famine, when starvation and disease caused people to drop dead on the sides of roads and sparked a mass exodus from the nation.
Traditional Irish fare was not the only thing altered by Irish emigration, Grant said.
“St. Patrick’s Day historically has been totally different in Ireland,” Grant said. “It was a religious day. You went to Mass, you went for a meal, and that was it.”
Former Mayor Raymond Flynn, who grew up and still lives in South Boston, echoed Grant’s statements. “You wouldn’t see a single person in Dublin with a beer or other drink in their hands,” because of the reverence for the religious holiday, said Flynn.