@flowerbug
Succotash comes from North America originally native American nations of the north, Narragansett mostly. The bean was used in a dish of the same name frequently combined with other things mainly corn.
i was hoping to have further back because the overall bean origin is further south and into central and south america, so was hoping to find some references to that. so far, no luck, so perhaps the USoA Northeast is the place of origin.
the name is NE as it comes from the words for broken corn kernels.
ok here is some history cited on the tribe:
"The oral history of the Mohegan tells that they came from “west by north” of another country, that they passed over great waters, that they had once lived beside a great body of water affected by tides, and from this they obtained their name – Muh-he-con-nuk – which means “great waters which are constantly moving”. They faced great famine and migrated toward the east where they found many great bodies of water, but none which flowed and ebbed.
As with other eastern tribes, corn was one of the principal foods of the Mohegan. Corn was prepared in a number of ways, including making hominy of the kernels and making a stew of beans and corn called succotash. Succotash is a basic American Indian dish. Among the Indian nations of the Northeast, succotash was kept simmering at all times so that any hungry visitor or family member could be fed."
( – promoted by navajo) The oral history of the Mohegan tells that they came from “west by north” of another country, that they passed over great waters, that they had once lived beside a great body of water affected by tides, and from this they obtained their name – Muh-he-con-nuk – which means...
nativeamericannetroots.net
and to get to the word part:
"
Origin of succotash
First recorded in 1745–55, Americanism; from Narragansett (English spelling) msíckquatash “boiled whole kernels of corn,” cognate with Eastern Abenaki (French spelling) mesikoutar; further origin uncertain, perhaps equivalent to Proto-Algonquian mesi⋅nkwete⋅wali (unattested), from mes- “whole”+ -i·nkw- “eye” (hence, “kernel”) + -ete·- “be cooked” + -w- + -ali plural suffix (all morphemes unattested)"
from
https://www.dictionary.com/browse/succotash