I was thinking about this. Is there a place you can go and try the actual food the Indians ate before European colonization? I don't know an answer to that question, but after doing a bit of reading and viewing, I realize I've already eaten a lot of Indian food. I saw a video online of a Cherokee restaurant, and it had a lot of down-home cooking.Apparently, Europeans did not have a lot of the beans we eat nowadays. Green beans and kidney beans are a New World crop. The Europeans didn't have lima beans either. Many beans are New World crops. They had fava beans, lintels, and several others. Many Indian tribes lived primarily on 'the three sisters', corn, beans, and squash. Many squash varieties are from the New World. Corn (maize) is a New World crop.Some of the Indian tribes, among the 'civilized tribes' in the eastern part of the US, like the Cherokee, farmed corn and ate a harder version of corn bread. I am from the southeast and I grew up eating corn, green beans, corn bread, and we had some squash in our diet but it wasn't a major thing. Cucumbers are gourds and they are European, and we ate a lot of those.My grandmother ate corn and beans out of her garden every day. The bacon grease in it is a European thing, since Europeans introduced the pig to the Americas. She ate corn bread a lot, too, a version of Indian food, you could say, along with biscuits made from European crops. So I grew up eating a mix of Indian food and European food. Much of 'down home' cuisine is made from Indian food. Bell peppers and hot chili peppers are from the New World as well. As far as how they actually cooked it in pre-colonial times, I don't know if we can know that for sure or not. Indians are known for eating fry bread, but I think that was a later development, like from when the Cherokee were given government supplies to eat on the Trail of Tears. It would be interesting to know if they did something similar with corn flower