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Indigenous

6 indigenous cookbooks to warm you up

While pop culture is exploring Paleo diets, indigenous people have been practicing this from time immemorial. Here are some great cookbooks featuring recipes from Indigenous people across Turtle Island to inspire every day acts of cultural resurgence in the kitchen.
(Workman Publishing)

Its that time of year, leaves are changing, the cool winds are blowing in, and the autumn harvest is rich with hearty delights! While pop culture is exploring Paleo diets, indigenous people have been practicing this from time immemorial.

Here are some great cookbooks featuring recipes from indigenous people across Turtle Island to inspire every day acts of cultural resurgence in the kitchen.

Let us know what your favourite indigenous cookbooks are, especially those little-known community cookbooks!

1. Where People Feast: An indigenous Peoples Cookbook

(Arsenal Pulp Press)
by Dolly Watts, Annie Watts

Where People Feastfocuses on Canadian west coast native cuisine, which takes advantage of the area's abundant seafood, game, fruits, and vegetables with ingredients both exotic (oolichan, venison, grouse) and common (salmon, crab, berries).

Dolly Watts and her daughter Annie are from the Gitk'san First Nation in British Columbia, and are the proprietors of the Liliget Feast House in Vancouver, the only First Nations fine dining establishment of its kind. For almost two decades, Dolly and (later) Annie have focused on serving native cuisine that is both traditional and modern; while many recipes are steeped in history, others are contemporary takes that acknowledge other cuisines both near and far.

For Dolly and Annie,Where People Feastis the culmination of a lifetime's work dedicated to introducing people to the extraordinary foods that are truly North American. Recipes include Smoked Salmon Mousse, Indian Tacos, Venison Meatballs, Alder-Grilled Breast of Pheasant, Blackberry-Glazed Beets, Wild Rice Pancakes, Seaweed and Salmon Roe Soup, and Wild Blueberry Cobbler.

2. A Feast for All Seasons Traditional Native Peoples Cuisine

(Arsenal Pulp Press)
by Andrew George Jr.

Andrew George, of the Wet'suwet'en Nation in Canada, is a well-respected chef and instructor who has spent the last 25 years promoting the traditions of First Nations food. InA Feast for All Seasons, written with Robert Gairns, he has compiled [indigenous] recipes that feature ingredients from the land, sea, and sky; elements of an enduring cuisine that illustrate respect for the environment and its creatures, and acknowledgement of the spiritual power that food can have in our lives.

The 120 recipes include delectable, make-at-home dishes such as: Salmon and Fiddlehead Stirfry, Stuffed Wild Duck, Barbecued Oysters, Pan-fried Rabbit with Wild Cranberry Glaze, Clam Fritters, and Wild Blueberry Cookies. The book also features recipes with exotic ingredients that provide a fascinating glimpse into the history of native cuisine: Moose Chili, Boiled Porcupine, Smoked Beaver Meat, and Braised Bear.

This unique cookbook pays homage to an enduring food culturegrounded in tradition and the power of nature that transcends the test of time.

3. Spirit of the Harvest

(Workman Publishing)
by Beverly Cox and Martin Jacobs

This carefully researched cookbook presents 150 authentic recipes from across the United Sates incorporating many indigenous ingredients hailed today for their healthfulness and flavor, including: wild rice, corn, beans, sunflower seeds, venison, buffalo, fowl, and fish. Spirit of the Harvestfeatures traditional dishes from the Cherokee, Chippewa, Navajo, Sioux, Mohegan, Iroquois, Comanche, Hopi, Haida, and many other North American tribes.

Among them are recipes for such varied dishes as Cherokee Red and Green Mixit, Choctaw File-Crawfish Stew, Wild Rice and Venison Stuffed Pumpkin, Indian Tacos, Navajo Peach Crisp, Roast Duck Stuffed with Wild Rice and Wild Muschrooms, Elk Stew with Acorn Dumplings, Smoked Salmon soup, Ember Roasted Buffalo, Skokomish Steamed Seafood, Mohegan Succotash, Iroquois Leaf Bread, and Whipped Raspberries and Honey. Many recipes come from noted cooks who are members of the different tribes, and all recipes can be easily prepared using modern kitchen techniques.

4. Modern native Feasts: Healthy, Innovative, Sustainable Cuisine

(Arsenal Pulp Press)
by Andrew George Jr.

Andrew George Jr. was head chef for Aboriginal foods at the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver. His imaginative menus reflect the diverse new culinary landscape while being mindful of an ages-old reverence for the land and sea, reflecting the growing interest in a cuisine that is rapidly moving into the mainstream to become the "next big thing" among food trends.

Andrew also works actively at making native foods healthier and more nutritious; his recipes are lighter, less caloric, and include Asian touches, such as bison ribs with Thai spices, and a sushi roll with various cooked fish wrapped in nori. Other dishes include venison barley soup, wild berry crumble, sea asparagus salad, and buffalo tourtiere.

5. Nishnabe Delights

(Woodland Studios)
by Mary Lou Fox, illustrated by Martin Panamick

Nishnabe Delights is a book of recipes collected from Ojibwe and Odawa People of Manitoulin Island and the North Shore of Lake Huron.

This wonderful cookbook features traditional foods like Roast Partridge, Roast Venison, Sweet and Sour Rabbit, Blueberry Fish Pudding, Roast Goose, Fish Soup, Rabbit Sandwich Spread, Roast Beaver, Berry Cobbler, Smoked Sucker, and other delights.

6. Kakhwakon Cookbook

(Mohawk Indian Housing Corporation)
Community cookbook sponsored by Mohawk Indian Housing Corp.
PO Box 402, Rooseveltown, NY 13683

This is a Mohawk Community Cookbook. Kakhwakon means good food in the Mohawk language. The book contains a collection of recipes from community members. Traditional native food recipes include Corn Soup, Indian Tacos, Corn Bread, and Fried Bread.

*The Paleolithic diet, also popularly referred to as the caveman diet, Stone Age diet and hunter-gatherer diet, is a modern nutritional diet designed to emulate, insofar as possible using modern foods, the diet of wild plants and animals eaten by humans during the Paleolithic era.

This article was initially published inMuskrat Magazine.Edited and republished withpermission.

Let us know what your favourite indigenous cookbooks are, especially those little-known community cookbooks via CBC Aboriginal on Facebook, or on Twitter @cbc_aboriginal.