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Friday, April 3, 2026

How Children's Recreational Rhymes, Chants, Parodies, Singing Games Etc. Were Spread Worldwide BEFORE The Internet

Edited by Azizi Powell

This is Part I of a two part pancocojams series about the spread of children's recreational rhymes, chants, songs including parodies, and singing games throughout the world before the internet became available to the general public (before 1993-1994 and particularly before YouTube was first launched in 2005)

This post presents my list of how children's recreational rhymes, chants, songs including parodies,  singing games etc. have been spread worldwide before the internet was available to the general public and particularly before YouTube was first launched. I believe that after those dates the internet and particularly YouTube have been important ways that children's recreational rhymes and singing games etc. have been and continue to be spread throughout the world.

Click ___ for Part II of this pancocojams series. That post presents excerpts from online articles and  selected quotes from several online discussion threads on this subject.

The content of this post is presented for folkloric purposes.

All copyrights remain with their owners.

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CHILDREN'S RECREATIONAL RHYMES INCLUDE
-jump rope rhymes, including single rope, Double Dutch jump rope etc.
-hand clap rhymes (partner hand clap rhymes, group hand clap rhymes) etc.
-ball bouncing rhymes
-and some rhymes that are chanted without any accompanying physical activity

****
HOW CHILDREN'S RECREATIONAL RHYMES, CHANTS, PARODIES, SINGING GAMES ETC.
WERE SPREAD WORLDWIDE BEFORE THE INTERNET 

These entries also apply to the dissemination of English language (and other languages) children's nursery rhymes 
 
These entries aren't presented in any particular order.

Word of mouth

AI Overview definition: "Word of mouth is the passing of information, opinions, or recommendations from person to person through spoken, informal conversation rather than written or formal advertising")

-telephone conversations -learning a new rhyme, singing game etc. via telephone communication with a person who doesn't live in your neighborhood, city, state, or nation 

-formal and informal communication at schools/universities that include students/professors from more than one location in your nation and/or overseas 

-written communication with children, teen, and/or adult "pen pals" within your nation and/or outside of your nation 

summer camps and other formal and informal gatherings of children/teens  that includes people from multiple locations, including from other nations

****
Mass Media

Wikipedia definition: "Mass media refers to the forms of media that reach large audiences via mass communication. It includes broadcast media, digital media, print media, social media, streaming media, advertising, and events."

-books, magazines, newspapers, scholarly journals/dissertations (These entries pertain to children's rhymes. singing games etc.) 

-vinyl records, videocassette recorders (VCRs), (compact disc (CDs), Digital Versatile Discs (DVDs). and their linear notes particularly for vinyl records; including children's records, folk records, and records from multiple genres that have song tracks that include actual or adapted children's rhymes. singing games etc. 

-radio, television, movies, theater productions, and commercials (These forms of mass media include actual or adapted children's rhymes, singing games etc.; including multiple genres of music concerts, and including stand up comedy.)  

-advertisement (ads) that include actual or adapted children's rhymes, singing games etc.

****
Travel, Visits, Relocation
-travel, visits, or relocation to another location where you hear or learn a rhyme, singing game etc. that is new to you or a different version of a rhyme, singing game etc. that you already knew

- travel, visits, or relocation to another location where you share a rhyme, singing game etc. that you know; this especially occurs in these occupations: teachers (including those that teach English as a second language) , missionaries, the peace corp. and other overseas volunteer positions, and soldiers.

****
This concludes Part I of this pancocojams series. 

Thanks for visiting pancocojams.

Additions and corrections to this list are very welcome.

Thursday, April 2, 2026

Jamaican Children's Parodies Of "I Believe I Can Fly" That Mention Easter Buns

Edited by Azizi Powell

This is Part III of a three part pancocojams series on Jamaican Easter bun (also called "spice buns".

This post presents some information about R. Kelly's 1996 R&B/Pop song "I Believe I Can Fly". That post also presents several Jamaican  children's parodies of "I Believe I Can Fly" that include references to "Easter bun".

In addition, this pancocojams post compares those Jamaican children's parodies 
of "I Believe I Can Fly". with some United States children's parodies of that song. 

Click https://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2026/04/easter-bun-jamaican-tradition-recipes.html for Part I of this pancocojams series. That post showcases a YouTube video about Jamaican Easter buns and other Jamaican Easter food traditions. This showcased video includes a demonstration of how to make homemade Jamaican Easter buns (spice buns).

Click https://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2026/04/the-history-and-cultural-traditions-of.html for Part II of this pancocojams series. That post presents the history of and other information about Jamaican Easter buns (also called "spice buns")..

The content of this post is presented for social and cultural purposes.

All copyrights remain with their owners.

Thanks to all those who are quoted in this post.
-snip-
Click https://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2018/10/comparisons-between-united-states.html 
 for the closely related 2018 pancocojams post entitled "Comparisons Between United States Versions & Jamaican Versions Of Children's Parodies Of "I Believe I Can Fly, I Got Shot By The FBI"

Also, click https://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2025/07/archived-links-for-pancocojams-posts.html 
for a pancocojams post entitled "Links For Pancocojams Posts About "I Believe I Can Fly" Parodies".

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INFORMATION ABOUT THE SONG "I BELIEVE I CAN FLY"
From https://genius.com/R-kelly-i-believe-i-can-fly-lyrics 
“I Believe I Can Fly” is a song written by, produced and recorded by American artist R. Kelly, featured in the soundtrack of and known as the hit single from the film Space Jam, released on November 26, 1996. “I Believe I Can Fly” was later internationally released on Kelly’s 1998 album R..

[...]

“I Believe I Can Fly” also received similar success in eight other countries by topping the charts, including in the UK. The song was certified gold in seven countries, including France and Germany, and certified platinum in the United States and the United Kingdom.

“I Believe I Can Fly” went on to win three Grammy Awards, and was ranked at number 406 on Rolling Stone Magazine’s 500 Greatest Songs of All Time, published in 2004.

[...]

Since the release of “I Believe I Can Fly”, many covers and parodies have been made of the song."

****
INFORMATION ABOUT JAMAICAN EASTER BUNS
Source #1
From https://seasonedskilletblog.com/jamaican-easter-bun/ "Jamaican Easter Bun Recipe (Spice Bun)" By Taneisha Morris, Mar 26, 2023, Updated Mar 20, 2026

"Jamaican Easter Bun, also known as spice bun, is a sweet spiced bread dotted with rum-soaked fruit, coated in a delicious honey-fruit glaze. Serve this Caribbean delicacy with your Jamaican Easter feast or as an anytime snack with cheese!

[…]

Jamaican Easter buns are sweet and moist with a hint of savoury flavour. They are a traditional fare for Easter and I can’t imagine the Easter holiday without bun and cheese! Once March rolls around, you can be sure to find supermarkets in Jamaica stocked with all kinds of bun. Of course, it can be eaten throughout the year but it’s a special treat during the holiday. "...

****
Source #2
From https://jamdownfoodie.com/jamaican-easter-bun/ Delicious Jamaican Easter Bun Recipe: Sweet and Spiced Delight by Yaniki Tucker (no publishing date given]

Jamaica is a primarily Christian nation and all Christian holidays are held sacred there. Easter is no exception and the observance of Easter starts as early as Ash Wednesday. Ash Wednesday is the start of Lent and generally, people decide to give up one indulgence during this time. Many people choose to give up eating red meat and chicken and stick with eating fish and seafood. At the end of Lent, which is marked by Good Friday, people begin the feast of Easter with a spiced bread dubbed Easter Bun and fried fish. The bread is a sweet bread that is studded with dried fruit and heavily spiced with nutmeg, cinnamon, cloves and allspice. It is traditionally eaten with Jamaican processed cheese but it is also very delicious with mild aged cheddar cheese."...
-snip-
This page continues with a recipe and baking instructions.

****
EXAMPLES OF UNITED STATES 
CHILDREN'S PARODIES OF THE SONG "I BELIEVE I CAN FLY"

[Pancocojams Editor's Note: I'm presenting the United States examples before the Jamaican examples because this song and its children's parodies originated in the United States.
 
Example #1:
I believe I can fly.
I got chased by the FBI. (or less often "I'm being chased by the FBI").
It's all because of those collards greens
that I ate with those chicken wings.
I believe I can fly.**
See me running through that open door.
I believe I can fly.
I believe I can fly.
-African American boys & girls (ages 7-12), Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, collected by Azizi Powell, 1999

**
Example #2
I believe I can fly!
I got shot by the FBI.
All I wanted was a chicken wing.
From McDonalds or Burger King.
I still believe I can fly!
I got caught by the Pepsi Guy.
All I wanted was a Mountain Dew!
He shot me with his 42.
I'll always believe I can fly!
Until the day I die.
A clown hit me with a pie.
And was that one hot guy.
I believe I can soar.
I got killed by an open door.
All I needed was 20 cents!
For a package of junior mints.

HOPE THIS HELPS its the full song
-Hollie, 2007, 
http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20070526124029AA1nFbA ""what is The lyrics to the funny i believe i can fly?" I Believe I Can Fly Funny Lyrics" [This site is no longer available]

**
Example #3
I believe i can fly
i got shot by the fbi
all i wanted was a chicken wing
french fries from burgerking
i believe i can soar
got caught robing a dollar store
all i wanted was a balloon
but they gave me some loony toons
i believe i can fly
-angiiemary, http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Uw06X9WZ59I "i believe i can fly", 2010

****
Example #4
"I believe i can fly

I got shot by the fbi

All i wanted was a chicken wing

So i blew up burger king

I believe i can soar

I got hit by an apple cooooore

I hit my dog with a frying pan

He hit me back with a mini-vaaaaaaaaan!"
-snoopdawgproductions, Published on Nov 8, 2012, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LYlVpjke9Vs

****
Example #5
"I believe I can fly

I got shot by the FBI

All I wanted is some chicken wings, cornbread, and collard greens

I believe I can soar

I got a whoopin at the grocery store

I told my daddy I can't take no more

I got shot by the FBI"
-Mari and mike, Jun 25, 2014, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ArMTpyrncak 

****
Example #6
"In third grade, i heard some kids singing this...

I believe i can die
I just got shot by the FBI
all i wanted was a chicken wing.
how did i end up in burger king?
my mom hit me with a frying pan...
so i hit her back with 3 trashcans
thats how she ended up in the hospital....
and how i got this popsicle"
-hiMay 15, 2015, https://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2013/10/childrens-parodies-of-i-believe-i-can_2.html [comments]

****
Example #7
”I believe I can fly, I got shot by the FBI. All I wanted was some chicken wings, and some fries from Burger King. I believe I can soar, FBI broke down my do-oo-or. I believe I can fly." Was the version I remember."
-8bhizzel8, 2024, 
https://www.reddit.com/r/nostalgia/comments/1az97ml/i_believe_i_can_fly_i_got_shot_by_the_fbi_finish/ "Nostalgia "I Believe I Can Fly"

****
Example #8
"mine was completely different! I’m from the SF bay area and this was the early 2010s:

“I believe I can die

I got shot by the ice cream guy

all I wanted was a popsicle

but instead I went to the hospital

he hit me with a frying pan

so I hit him with a minivan

then I thought i was superman”
-guitartheater, 2025,
https://www.reddit.com/r/nostalgia/comments/1az97ml/i_believe_i_can_fly_i_got_shot_by_the_fbi_finish/ "Nostalgia "I Believe I Can Fly"

****
Example #9
"Born in 1991 in Oregon. My friends and I sang this version all the time in 2nd-3rd grade probably:

I believe I can die

I got shot by the FBI

All I wanted was a chicken wing

At the local Burger King

I believe I can die

I got ran over by the ice cream guy

All I wanted was a popsicle

But wound up in the hospital

I believe I can die"
-
Anonymous, December 29, 2025 https://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2013/10/childrens-parodies-of-i-believe-i-can_2.html [comments]

****
Example #10
"I believe I can fly I got shot by the FBI All I wanted was a chicken wing and some of those collard greens I believe I can soar I got a whoopin at the grocery storeeeeeeeee"
-Sufficient_Ad7660, 2026, 
https://www.reddit.com/r/nostalgia/comments/1az97ml/i_believe_i_can_fly_i_got_shot_by_the_fbi_finish/ "Nostalgia "I Believe I Can Fly"

****
EXAMPLES OF JAMAICAN CHILDREN'S PARODIES OF THE SONG "I BELIEVE I CAN FLY"

Example #1
"I know this: I believe i can fly I believe i can touch the sky i been shot by an fbi but the fbi never had a gun so he shot me with a easter bun but easter bun never had no cheese so he shot me with a gung peas gung peas never have no seed so he shot me with a mango seed mango seed never have no hair so he shot me with beer but beer never have cork so he shot me a bobocloth"
Tyrone Sings13, 2015, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ArMTpyrncak [video given above]
-snip-
Read my note about this version in the Comparison section immediately below

**
Example #2
"i believe i can fly i got shot by an FBI the fbi never have nuh gun so him shot me with a easter bun the easter bun never i have nuh cheese so shot me with a gungo peas the gungo peas never have nuh seed so him shot me with a mango seed the mango seed never have nuh hair so him shot me with a red strip beer the red strip never have nuh cork so him shot with a bomboclat
-Faith, 2013, https://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20090624005743AAxbczS

**
Example #3
"Jamaican version: I believe I can fly I got shot by a FBI ,FBI never have no gun so he shot me with a easter bun ,easter bun never have no cheese so them shot me with a red stripe bear,red stripe bear never have no cark so them shot me with a ......etc.

Hot_Adhesiveness_846, 2023, 

https://www.reddit.com/r/nostalgia/comments/jy6ghl/i_believe_i_can_fly_i_got_shot_by_the_fbi_all_i/

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Please add to this compilation by sharing examples of Jamaican (or other Caribbean) children's parodies of "I Believe I Can Fly" in this pancocojams post's discussion thread below.

For the folkloric and cultural record, please remember to add where you first sung or first heard this parody (the nation/city/ town ot the city/state if in the United States) and when (decade or year that you first sung or first heard this parody. Additional information that you  share about your version of this parody would be appreciated.
 
****
COMPARISONS BETWEEN UNITED STATES CHILDREN'S PARODIES AND JAMAICAN CHILDREN'S 
PARODIES OF THE SONG "I BELIEVE I CAN FLY"*

*I've directly heard some examples of United States children's parodies of "I Believe I Can Fly". I've also come across LOTS of online examples of United States children's parodies of this song. In contrast, I've only come across three examples of Jamaican children's parodies of "I Believe I Can Fly". Consequently, this comparison may not be completely accurate.

United States children's parodies 
-always use a storytelling format that include some fanciful but also violent elements such as being chased by the FBI and/or some other person/group for supposed wrong doing; also being whooped (i.e. beaten by) their mother or someone else, and/or landing up in a hospital, and other occurrences

-usually feature the person at a fast food restaurant (such as Burger King of KFC) or at a grocery store wanting to buy something that is usually sold at some off those fast food restaurants (such as "chicken wings" and "fries", i.e. "French fries", or "Junior Mints" candy) or wanting to buy some food products that aren't sold at any of those restaurants or grocery stores (such as already cooked "collard greens" and already cooked cornbread). 

Jamaican children's parodies 
-contain cultural content that is very familiar to Jamaicans but rarely  rarely known in the United States.

Read this YouTube comment that was given as a reply to Example #1 of the Jamaican children's parody examples [given in this pancocojams post immediately above] and my rely to that comment [Unfortunately, the YouTube policy that prohibited comments for children's videos deleted all of the comments for this video and many more.]
 

Here's the only comment that was written in reply to Example #1:

"Tyrone Sings what u make no sense at all 😂😂🚹"

-Jeremiah Grant, 2018, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ArMTpyrncak 

**
The reason why Tyrone Sing13's version probably makes no sense to most people in the United States is that it is full of cultural referents from Jamaica that aren't known to people from the United States.

Here's the comment that I wrote on October 1, 2018 in response to Jeremiah Grant's comment

"+Jeremiah Grant, actually Tyrone Sings13 's example does make sense from a Jamaican (and possibly other Caribbean) standpoint. References to "easter buns" are found on various websites, including one that notes that "The Jamaican Spice Bun is eaten year-round however it is a must with cheese have during the Easter season.". "Gung peas" = "gungo peas", also known as "pigeon peas", "mango seeds" are self explanatory. Finally, I think it's likely that Trone Sings13 meant to write "so he shot me with a bobocloth". The probable meaning for "bobocloth" (more often also given as "bloodcloth" and a "bombocloth") is the cloths that were used before the invention of "maxi pads" and "tampons"

****
The few Jamaican children' parodies of "I Believe I Can Fly" that I've come across are far less violent than the United States children's examples. They include Jamaican cultural references (such as Easter bun and ) that are well known in Jamaica but aren't known to most people in the United States.

-Unlike the examples of United States children's parodies of this song, the Jamaican children's parodies of "I Believe I Can Fly" that I have come across use a trading rhymes textual style*

- The 
inclusion of the word "bombocloth" ("bobocloth") in some Jamaican children's parodies of "I Believe I Can Fly" ( or the allusion to that word that may also be  in Jamaican Example #3 given above) make those examples more gross than their United States counterparts. But, then again, what may be a small subset of United States children's parodies of "I Believe I Can Fly" include the risque (sexualized) word "ding-a-ling"**. And what may also be a small subset of United Kingdom children's parodies of "I Believe I Can Fly" include the equivalent term "dangly bits". **
-snip-
*Here's my explanation about trading rhymes 
from 
http://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2018/10/childrens-trading-rhymes-such-as-hush.html:
"Trading rhymes" is my term for a category of children's rhymes in which throughout the rhyme one defective item is traded (exchanged) for another item which also turns out to be defective. The last word in the first line of each verse rhymes or near rhymes with the last word in the second line:
Example:
Hush little baby, don't say a word,
Papa's gonna buy you a mockingbird.

And if that mockingbird won't sing,
Papa's gonna buy you a diamond ring.

Or the example includes internal rhymes within each trading item line:
Example:
Pie too sweet I wanna piece of meat
Meat too rough I wanna ride a bus

**
Probably the most widely known example of "trading rhymes" in the United States is "Hush Little Baby, Don't Say A Word" (Papa's gonna buy you a mockingbird").

The trading rhyme format that these Jamaican examples use is in contrast to almost every United States example of "I Believe I Can Fly" parodies that I've come across.

** Here's an example of a "I Believe I Can Fly" children's parodies that include the risque (sexualized) word
 "ding-a-ling":
"My son told me this one today from his school.

 

I believe I can die

I got shot by the FBI

All I wanted was a chicken wing

Then I got shot in the ding-a-ling

-snip-
**Also, here's an example of a "I Believe I Can Fly" children's parodies that include the risque (sexualized) words "dangly bits":, Both of these comments are also from the discussion thread of that same 2013 pancocojams post:


the ones that came up in my school were i belive i can fly i got shot by the fbi all i wanted was a bag of chips but thats all i remember it was more from 2005-2007
- Anonymous, September 12, 2015 

**

Reply

**

Yep, I know this is old but it was "but I got shot in the dangly bits", haha!
-Anonymous, January 14, 2017 


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This concludes Part III of this three part pancocojams series.

Thanks for visiting pancocojams.

Visitor comments are welcome.

The History And Cultural Traditions Of Jamaican Easter Buns

Edited by Azizi Powell

This is Part II of a three part pancocojams series on Jamaican Easter bun.

This post presents the history of and other information about Jamaican Easter buns (also called "spice buns")..

This post showcases a YouTube video about Jamaican Easter traditions particularly around food. That video includes a demonstration of how that video host makes Easter buns.

This post includes selected comments from that video's discussion thread.

Click https://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2026/04/easter-bun-jamaican-tradition-recipes.html for Part I of this pancocojams series. That post showcases a YouTube video about Jamaican Easter buns and other Jamaican Easter food traditions. This showcased video includes a demonstration of how to make homemade Jamaican Easter buns (spice buns). This post includes selected comments from that video's discussion thread.

Click https://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2018/10/comparisons-between-united-states.html for Part III of this pancocojams series.That post presents some information about R. Kelly's 1996 R&B/Pop song "I Believe I Can Fly". That post also presents several Jamaican  children's parodies of "I Believe I Can Fly" that include references to "Easter bun" . In addition, this pancocojams post compares those Jamaican children's parodies of "I Believe I Can Fly". with some United States children's parodies of that song. 

The content of this post is presented for social and cultural purposes.

All copyrights remain with their owners.

Thanks to all those who are quoted in this post.

****
ARTICLE EXCERPTS
These excerpts are given in no particular order and are numbered for referencing purposes only.

https://seasonedskilletblog.com/jamaican-easter-bun/ "Jamaican Easter Bun Recipe (Spice Bun)" By Taneisha Morris, Mar 26, 2023, Updated Mar 20, 2026
"Jamaican Easter Bun, also known as spice bun, is a sweet spiced bread dotted with rum-soaked fruit, coated in a delicious honey-fruit glaze. Serve this Caribbean delicacy with your Jamaican Easter feast or as an anytime snack with cheese!

[…]

Jamaican Easter buns are sweet and moist with a hint of savoury flavour. They are a traditional fare for Easter and I can’t imagine the Easter holiday without bun and cheese! Once March rolls around, you can be sure to find supermarkets in Jamaica stocked with all kinds of bun. Of course, it can be eaten throughout the year but it’s a special treat during the holiday. 

There are two ways to make Jamaican Easter buns; with yeast or with baking powder/soda. We are using the latter in order to make a quick bread. Make this once and it will be requested for every holiday because it’s the best Jamaican Eastern bun recipe!

 

Here’s Why You’ll Love this Recipe

So Delicious – this is moist and sweet, with subtle notes of warm spices. The rum-soaked fruit has sweet bursts of flavour that make this a mouthwatering snack.

Jamaican Tradition – it’s not a Jamaican Easter without a spice bun and cheese! This is a holiday essential.

Customizable – this recipe has many variations so make it to suit your preferences. (I have a few helpful suggestions for variations.)

Who Brought Easter Bun to Jamaica?

When the British colonized the island of Jamaica during the 1600s, they brought the tradition of the hot cross bun, a sweet spiced bread baked with raisins. The spice bun is the Jamaican version of the English hot cross bun."...

**
Source #2
From https://wiredja.com/index.php/lifestyle/the-surprising-4-000-year-history-of-easter-bun-that-nobody-told-you-about "The Surprising 4,000-Year History Of Easter Bun That Nobody Told You About" WiredJA News Team #2  Lifestyle,  31 March 2026

..."The Bun That Never Rots

Medieval English people were convinced that a bun baked on Good Friday would never go mouldy. So they hung them from the kitchen ceiling. Just … dangling there, above the family, year after year. The old ones would darken and harden into something closer to stone than bread, and the family would leave them up there — little blackened guardians swinging in the draught — until the next Good Friday, when fresh ones went up and the old ones finally came down.[3]

"They hung the loaves from the ceiling like sausages. The bread would never mould. It protected against evil spirits and illness until the following Good Friday, when it would be replaced."

The Queen's Contraband

Here's where it gets political. By the 1500s, the hot cross bun had become so loaded with meaning — part sacred, part superstitious, part Catholic — that the English Crown decided it was a problem. In 1592, Elizabeth I's London Clerk of Markets dropped a decree: selling spiced buns was now illegal, except at burials, on Good Friday, or at Christmas.[5]

Why? England had broken with Rome under Henry VIII. The Protestant establishment looked at those cross-marked buns and saw Catholic holdovers. Papist bread. The punishment wasn't jail — it was confiscation. Get caught baking, and every last bun went straight to the poor.[5]

The English response? They baked at home. Kitchens across the country filled with the smell of contraband cinnamon and contraband cloves. Some got caught. Their buns were seized on the spot and handed to the poor — who, one imagines, were not complaining.[5] The ban stretched into the reign of James I. Didn't matter. You can't kill a bread that people believe keeps evil spirits away. The bun survived. It always survives. And before long, it got on a boat.

Chapter IV

Crossing the Caribbean Sea

May 1655. Seven thousand English soldiers wade ashore near Spanish Town, Jamaica. They're part of Oliver Cromwell's "Western Design" — a grand plan to smash Spanish power in the Caribbean that had already gone badly wrong in Hispaniola. Jamaica's entire Spanish population at the time? About 2,500.[6] The English took the island in days. Spain tried to get it back, lost the battles of Ocho Rios and Rio Nuevo, and formally gave up in the Treaty of Madrid, 1670.

With the soldiers came everything English. Language. Law. Church. And food — including the tradition of eating spiced, cross-marked buns on Good Friday.[7]

But Jamaica wasn't Surrey. Jamaica was 90 degrees in the shade with humidity you could wring out like a cloth. It was sugar cane and rum, allspice trees growing wild in the hills, and molasses running dark and thick from the plantation mills. Jamaica wasn't going to make English buns. Jamaica was going to make something else.

[…]

What the Bakers Did

The people who actually made the bread — enslaved Africans, and later, free Black Jamaicans — took that prissy little English cross bun and broke it apart. They threw out the cross. Scrapped the dainty round shape and baked it as a fat, dark loaf. Swapped the honey for molasses, because that's what the plantations produced by the barrel.[7] Some threw in stout. Some used Red Stripe. They packed it with dried fruit — raisins, currants, candied peel — and laced it with the allspice that grew in their own backyard, a berry that somehow tastes like cloves and cinnamon and nutmeg all at once.[8]

[…]

What came out of the oven was denser than cake, darker than bread, and didn't taste like England at all. It tasted like Jamaica. Sweetened with the same molasses that had made plantation owners rich and enslaved people miserable. Spiced with the island's own pimento. The Jamaican Easter Bun wasn't a copy. It was an answer."

****
Source #3
From https://jamdownfoodie.com/jamaican-easter-bun/ 
Delicious Jamaican Easter Bun Recipe: Sweet and Spiced Delight by Yaniki Tucker (no publishing date given]

Jamaica is a primarily Christian nation and all Christian holidays are held sacred there. Easter is no exception and the observance of Easter starts as early as Ash Wednesday. Ash Wednesday is the start of Lent and generally, people decide to give up one indulgence during this time. Many people choose to give up eating red meat and chicken and stick with eating fish and seafood. At the end of Lent, which is marked by Good Friday, people begin the feast of Easter with a spiced bread dubbed Easter Bun and fried fish. The bread is a sweet bread that is studded with dried fruit and heavily spiced with nutmeg, cinnamon, cloves and allspice. It is traditionally eaten with Jamaican processed cheese but it is also very delicious with mild aged cheddar cheese."...
-snip-
This page continues with a recipe and baking instructions.

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Example #4
From https://www.keshiasakarah.com/blog-1/blog-post-title-three-n4k56 "How did easter bun reach the Caribbean?", May 28 [no year given], Written By Keshia Sakarah, Chef, Food Writer and Owner of Caribe’

"Bun and cheese is a staple Caribbean snack enjoyed by us at home all year round but especially during Easter. With it being popular during this time of year, I had to ask myself why and how did this deep, rich, spiced bread become a favourite of West Indians.

The origins of spiced bun are not quite clear, however, it is widely believed that bun and cheese was derived from English hot cross buns, which were traditionally eaten by the British on Good Friday, with the cross symbolising the crucifixion of Jesus.

The tradition eventually became a staple in Caribbean culture, when English 'missionaries' brought Christianity to the island of Jamaica in the 17th Century. Easter gradually became observed on the island along with the eating of hot cross buns.

In true Caribbean style, over time, the snack was developed and adapted where it was made into a loaf with the addition of molasses, spice and sometimes malt or Guinness. Researching recipes and comparing spiced bun to hot cross buns, I noticed the absence of yeast makes spiced bun feel more like a dense cake in comparison to the buns which are essentially a sweet, spiced bread. Check my recipe for it, super simple to make"

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This concludes Part II of this three part pancocojams series.

Thanks for visiting pancocojams.

Visitor comments are welcome.

Wednesday, April 1, 2026

Jamaican Easter Buns (A Video and A Recipe For Homemade Easter Buns)


 

Grace Foods, Apr 6, 2011

Mazie and Paulette Rhoden, the General Manager of Crimson Dawn Ltd. talk about cooking traditions during the Easter period which include the Jamaican favourite - Easter Bun!  Stick around to the end for a quick interview with Hope Kerr of Dairy Industries.

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Edited by Azizi Powell

This is Part I  of a three part pancocojams series on Jamaican Easter bun (also called "spice buns".).

This post showcases a YouTube video about Jamaican Easter buns and other Jamaican Easter food traditions. This showcased video includes a demonstration of how to make homemade Jamaican Easter buns (spice buns).

This post includes selected comments from that video's discussion thread.

Click https://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2026/04/the-history-and-cultural-traditions-of.html for Part II of this pancocojams series. That post presents the history of and other information about Jamaican Easter buns (also called "spice buns")..

Click 
https://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2018/10/comparisons-between-united-states.html for Part III of this pancocojams series.That post presents some information about R. Kelly's 1996 R&B/Pop song "I Believe I Can Fly". That post also presents several Jamaican  children's parodies of "I Believe I Can Fly" that include references to "Easter bun" . In addition, this pancocojams post compares those Jamaican children's parodies of "I Believe I Can Fly". with some United States children's parodies of that song. 

The content of this post is presented for social and cultural purposes.

All copyrights remain with their owners.

Thanks to Mazie for hosting this classic Jamaican television series. Thanks also to Paulette Rhoden for sharing information about Jamaican Easter traditions in this episode of that television show. Thanks also to all those who are quoted in this post.

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WHAT ARE JAMAICAN EASTER BUNS?
From  AI Overview

Jamaican Easter buns, specifically the "bun and cheese" tradition, evolved from British hot cross buns brought to the island in the 17th century. Over time, Jamaicans adapted the recipe, changing the small, yeast-based buns into a dense, spiced, molasses-heavy loaf often made with Guinness stout.

[...]

The Cheese Addition: A crucial part of the tradition is pairing the spiced loaf with cheddar cheese (particularly popular through Tastee Cheese, a brand manufactured in Jamaica since 1968).

Cultural Significance: This combination became a staple during the Easter season, particularly during Lent, serving as a staple cultural food regardless of religion."...
-snip-
Here's a definition for the word "stout" as it is used in this AI Overview write-up:
https://dictionary.cambridge.org/us/dictionary/english/stout
"stout
noun 

a dark, bitter type of beer"
-snip-
Recipes for Easter Buns don't always include stout or any other alcoholic beverage.

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SELECTED COMMENTS FROM THIS VIDEO'S DISCUSSION THREAD

1. @melissaG0707, 2012
"I enjoyed the video very much, the first guest brought back many Easter memories for me

I will def give the  bun a go"

**
2. @1-blackcakequeen778, 2017
"I've been making my own Easter buns for quite some time now. The prices too high. If you stock up on the ingredients, namely the spices they will last a long time. Sweet likkle Jamaican ladies love their beautiful proper accent."

**
3. @saulbenjamin6368, 2017
"easter in jamaica was a very peaceful and quiet time all that bun eating stuff wow those days was special in jamaica at easter time love my likkle island very much"

**
4. @JADBTV, 2022
"When i was a child i love her shows her cooking mouthwatering"

**
5. 
@Rj-nq4ml, 2023, 2023
"I come here every Easter to make a bun for my Jamaican mother in law , she loves it"

**
6.@cleopatrie, 2024
"Aunty Mazie, the original influencer."

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ONE RECIPE FOR JAMAICAN EASTER BUNS

[Pancocojams Editor's Note: This link to this recipe is given in the Grace Food video that is embedded at the top of this pancocojam post..There are many other recipes for how to make traditional Jmaican Easter buns. Some of these recipes can be found online]

https://gracefoods.com/recipe-a-z/recipe/1575-homemade-easter-bun Homemade Easter Bun

"Preparation time 10m

Cooking time 1h

Ingredients

For 8 Person(s)

 

Recipe

2 ounce(s) Margarine

1 bottle(s) stout

1/2 cup(s) wine

1 teaspoon(s) vanilla

1/2 tablespoon(s) Browning

1 tablespoon(s) Guava Jam

1 medium egg (optional)

8 ounce(s) dark sugar

1 pound(s) counter flour

1 teaspoon(s) nutmeg

1/4 teaspoon(s) salt

1 teaspoon(s) cinnamon powder

1 tablespoon(s) baking powder

1 tablespoon(s) mixed spice

1/4 pound(s) mixed peel, chopped

1/4 pound(s) raisins, soaked

 

Homemade Easter Bun Directions

Melt Margarine and allow to cool, then add stout, wine, vanilla, Grace Browning, Guava Jam and beaten egg (if used).

Stir in the sugar and mix until all the granules are dissolved.

Mix together all the dry ingredients then add the chopped mixed peel and raisins.

Combine liquid mixture with dry ingredients and mix well.

Scrape the batter into a greased loaf pan 12"x4"x3".

Bake in a preheated oven at 180°C/350°F or until a skewer inserted comes out clean.

Cool on a cooling rack.

To Glaze: Combine 2 tablespoons honey with two tablespoons water and bring to a boil; remove from flame and use a pastry brush to apply it over the surface of the bun.

To Serve:  Serve with slices of cheese.

Yield:  1 loaf"

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This concludes Part I of this pancocojams series.

Thanks for visiting pancocojams.

Visitor comments are welcome.