Posted on Jul 27, 2022
Native Americans across Midwest embrace traditional foods rejected by centuries of colonization
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Scavenging for food can be a great hobby and possibly life sustaining but one must be careful. When I lived in Montana there were a lot of people who went into the forrest to scavenge. Every year there were people who ate toxic fungus that were poisonous and some died.
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Interesting article.
I recall reading some recipes from the 1800s for many of the traditional foods and how to prepare them because they are not edible unless prepared properly. We have a restaurant at the Indian Pueblo Cultural Center that serves some traditional food, but the last time I knew it did not include items like acorns, cattails, sunflowers, tuna (from cactus) . . . of course in every region there are items that are not everywhere. Wondering if people have opened regional restaurants and cafes. I would like to imagine there is interest in the history of food native to our nation and the various cultures of people native to our nation, prior to colonization and after.
I recall reading some recipes from the 1800s for many of the traditional foods and how to prepare them because they are not edible unless prepared properly. We have a restaurant at the Indian Pueblo Cultural Center that serves some traditional food, but the last time I knew it did not include items like acorns, cattails, sunflowers, tuna (from cactus) . . . of course in every region there are items that are not everywhere. Wondering if people have opened regional restaurants and cafes. I would like to imagine there is interest in the history of food native to our nation and the various cultures of people native to our nation, prior to colonization and after.
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