Cooking With Indigenous Ingredients: A Day With The Sioux Chef | On The Road
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- Опубліковано 19 лис 2023
- Travel alongside Cook's Country's Editorial Director Bryan Roof as he explores the communities and cuisines that make up the great American dinner table. In this episode, he travels to downtown Minneapolis with Toni Tipton-Martin to visit Sean Sherman's modern Indigenous restaurant: Owamni.
Check out Owamni: owamni.com/
Follow Sean on Instagram: / the_sioux_chef
Learn more about our visit: cooks.io/46nsXuN
Make our Thanksgiving menu inspired by Chef Sean Sherman: cooks.io/46pTYy4
Browse all our series content: cooks.io/3UHzA6L
Follow Bryan Roof on Instagram: / bryanroof
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I’m an avid ATK fan and honestly this is the best video content y’all produce. Bryan is such a thoughtful person and I learn so much about my own culture that I had no concept of prior. Thanks for all you do and I hope this series continues forever!
I have Sean's cookbook and have been cooking from it in the past month. It's been a revelation. The Whitefish salad and the Braised Turkey Thighs are great to try.
Easily one of the most impactful and purposeful restaurant of the past few years. I highly recommend visiting Owamni if you have the chance because it's completely singular. For me, it's hard to believe the food of "here" is completely unfamiliar to me, and that's a revelation.
You're telling a story which needs to be told. Beautiful
Sean makes me so proud to be a Minnesotan. Definitely checking out Owamni as soon as I can, thank you for this video!
"Just like indigenous people, indigenous plants are super resilient." This really resonates with me. I'm product of mestizaje in latin america, and I just realized I have no idea how my local ascendants even ate.
And it's crazy to think that was on purpose. As an Italian many of my ancestors surely took part in the subjugation of natives and cultural erasure was absolutely part of that. It's bonkers to think that after the violence and genocide people made a concerted effort to make sure Indigenous cultures (music, food ect) were almost unknown to what populations that remained. Meanwhile almost everyone cooks with things like beef and dairy everyday.
Like you said, you're a product of mestizaje, and so are Latin American cultures. It's quite likely that a few of the foods eaten today in your family's country of origin are variations (because of the addition of items introduced with colonisation, esp. dairy & cane sugar) of what your Indigenous ancestors ate.
This upload was well timed! I was having my check up with my doctor last week and she asked me what I was doing for thanksgiving. I explained that I always do a non-traditional, “Norman Rockwell” dinner with the turkey. (Last year I did turkey skewers using a Turkish marinade over an open fire) She recommended to me Sean’s cookbook Sioux Chef’s Indigenous Kitchen cookbook. Unfortunately, I had forgot about this until this video and hadn’t ordered the cookbook….but I’ve wronged that mistake before making this comment and look forward to getting it tomorrow.
Thanks for sharing and visiting his restaurant.
I know we need to do more but knowing things like this are thriving in my community makes me proud to be a Minnesotan. I know where we're going on our next date night
Yes! I live in Minneapolis and need to get to that restaurant soon.
@@shetaz905I was told to make reservations well in advance! Good luck!
@@grovermartin6874 I found out I could just walk in to the bar for happy hour!
thank you Cooks Country for giving us the stories behind the food, and also the tastiest recipes
One of the things I've always loved about living in a nation of immigrants, especially in a big city, is how easy it is to find ingredients for authentic recipes from around the world. I've been to Chinese, Japanese, Indian, Mexican, Thai, Korean, Puerto Rican, Ukrainian and Polish grocery stores, all of them less than an hour away from my apartment. The people who run these stores are dedicated to carrying on the traditions of their homelands, sourcing ingredients from far away and making their mark on American cuisine.
Besides that, the food found in our supermarkets comes from industrial farms across the country and across the border, grown on land that has been altered beyond recognition to allow non-native and genetically engineered plants to grow. It's hard for me to imagine cooking without this system of perpetual bounty.
But one of the sad results of this---something that had never occurred to me before watching this video---is that the food we eat has little connection to the soil we stand on. When we stole this land we did our best to scrape away everything that makes it unique. What we produce isn't considered intrinsically good; it's forever in competition with the "Old World" and often found wanting. Wisconsin Parmesan is a poor imitation of real Parmigiano Reggiano. "California Champagne" is a fraud.
Yet look at these Indigenous chefs and growers who see that this land is perfect as it is, who celebrate it rather than tear it apart, who find inspiration in the cedar that grows down the street. How lucky we are that Sean Sherman is willing to share his vision with us.
Love this!!! Grew up in the Black Hills, SD but am a northwesterner now and a culinary student. I found Chef Sherman's cookbook at my local library last year.
THIS IS THE CONTENT WE NEED. One of my favorites of the ATK video 'collection'. No recipe but fantastic information. I know no one in Minneapolis but I now want to go and eat at Owamni... I'll see if I can make it happen. 😎
I've been watching his menu through the seasons with my mouth watering, and filled with astonishment.
In all this time, I've been amazed that I could eat everything on the menu! ALL of the foods that my body produces antibodies to are from somewhere other than North America!
My plan is to make reservations for several days of meals about a year in advance, as I was directed, then find a nearby hotel, and fulfill a life dream by eating to exhilaration.
Oh yeah!! That wild rice dish looks so delicious!! And it's the kind of dish that makes my body feel good after I eat it.
Wow! Great season of episodes. This is interesting. Reconnecting with your heritage while using what’s around you is good for health of yourself, the spirit and the planet. Here in San Francisco, we have farmers markets six days a week all year round. They pop up in many neighborhoods with many different farms, bakers, food trucks, foragers, etc. It’s fascinating to see what’s going on in other parts of the country. Thank you Bryan.
I love this! I'm 27% Native American Indian. I know little about my food culture and I love this video. Keep up the wonderful work and kudos to Sean.
There is a standard for crickets. Mexican indigenous people regularly eat them.
If given a choice, they wouldn't. You can't digest the exo-skeletons. And they contain parasites.
This video was amazing and very enlightening! His restaurant is on my bucket list!
This is the most wonderful series. Very interesting topical and makes me want to learn more. Thank you for it.
Outstanding showcase and educational video!
This was absolutely amazing. I wish I knew more about my Iroquois Heritage. Thanks for this video!
Great work. Sadly not surprised by some of the comments but people need to know this is a thing that is happening. We live on stolen land and we have been benefiting from that fact for hundreds of years.
SO much amazing food in Vancouver, restaurants from the whole world; Japan, Iran, China, Brazil, Jamaica, Thailand, India, Portugal, Palestine, Germany, Ethiopia, Ukraine, Lebanon, Greece, etc... everything... except the people that lived right here...
A somber moment
This is awesome!! Thank you!
This was GREAT.
Thank you.
When I visited New Orleans with my kids, we stopped at the Aquarium & Insectarium. Yes, they were serving free samples of crickets and other insects. I decided to be brave and give it a try - they weren’t bad! Kinda tasty, actually, like trail mix seeds. I’d have no problem eating them again. 🐜
An inspiring episode. Beautiful. Thank you, made my day.
This is one of the best videos you've made. I learned so much.
Food IS medicine for the body and spirit.
I wish I traveled now. I'd go back to Minneapolis to eat.
Awesome is all I can say!
I just can't believe some of these comments at the way bottom (where they belong, I suppose)!
People knocking on something they have never tried to eat, or understand, says more about them than the content in this video.
Just sad, insecure folks who want to deflect off of themselves.
Bryan, I thought this was a great, thoughtful, and exciting video. Always something new to learn!
Yeah, imagine feeling so threatened by food.
Thank you! Loved this.
This was a wonderful video! Very informative and inspiring. Thanks for uploading! ❤
Outstanding story!
WHAT? There's no standard for Crickets? 🤣 Great segment! A Native American restaurant, Genius!
Except there is. There are specific ways to prepare them.
Is it? Is it genius?
I am so glad you posted this. I heard it on NPR.
Love that ethnobotnist!
This is a great story! Thank you for sharing it!
If you do not have The Sioux Chef's Indigenous Kitchen cookbook, you are missing out, because, especially me with little knowledge of indigenous cuisine, this was a great place to start filled with ingredients and combinations I have never used before, and with inspiration through background narration to guide you along the way on why they were used. What an amazing chef to learn from.
This is fascinating, thank you for this segment
About the crickets. All i have to say is what my Mom told us kids when we were little. She said, if you don't like it, you don't have to eat it, BUT you just can't look at something and say you don't like it, you have to actually TASTE it. If after you taste it, if you don't like it you don't have to eat it.
My mom was caring and told me not to eat bugs. You will get parasites so good luck.
My parents were exactly that way. My father was an airline pilot after the Korean War until he passed in 1991, and we traveled a LOT. If we knew we didn’t like something we didn’t have to eat it, but my younger brother and I really enjoyed almost everything 😊. I don’t believe in a supreme deity but I can get behind the idea that eat, drink and be happy is “proof that god loves us and wants us to be happy”.
Loved this. Thank you.
The original American food!
I'm from Canada but this is very educational! I don't think we have restaurants like that here.
this is beautiful. such a thoughtful piece that highlights how food can hold so much meaning behind it AND be delicious!
This video is awesome!
Awesome. 💪🫶✌️🙏
Well done.
Great work here. I'm looking up NATIFS market right now.
Love love this so much !
I would love to learn about the indigenous edible plants. Does that garden program have a book, or videos available?
I've been pulling mallows out of my garden for years, and had no idea i could eat them!
Really great vid! ❤❤
I hope to do 3 sisters succotash.
Nice shirt and food
Hemlock is poisonous, but "native evergreen hemlock trees" are not poisonous to humans. Needles have Vit. C, used in tea and cooking.
Linda Blackelk!! As in the black forager Alexis Nicole's friend??
lol, at all the right-wing triggered snowflakes complaining in the comments.
🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆
I want that education!
does he make Juniper blue bread? Common with California Native Americans.
I designed almost an exact same restaurant as a prospectus in 2003. My gf at the time even designed a sample webpage for the restaurant.
I wonder what prompted his epiphany? It would be fun if he saw my webpage and ran with it.
Where would he see it? Can we see it? That would be fun!
@marshak3305 It was 2003 on MySpace. I'm sure it's long gone. I wish I still had access.
Can Owamni overnight their food to L.A.? lol
Wow, I thought hemlock was poisonous. Is it a certain species or can you eat the needles on any hemlock?
It is. They just want white people to eat it.
We have at least two different trees here in North America that we refer to as "hemlock". We have what I was taught to call European Hemlock. It is definitely poisonous. (Ask Socrates...) We also have what many call "Hemlock Fir". I have heard from many people that it's not poisonous, but I would never take a chance on distinguishing between the two. I'll just take a plane to Minneapolis and let this very knowledgeable restauranteur pick it out for me.
It's like nightshade, tomatoes and i think eggplant are part of the nightshade family. Same as some pine needles make delicious tea and some will make you have to change your pants haha
I was thinking the same thing! Thank you to those who replied to explain!
Very fucking cool. I feel like Canada needs to move back towards this. Too much of our current farming is so wasteful
Everything is edible once. ❤
Not to raise over such a nice video, but is getting cedar branches from right outside an urban restaurant a good idea? What if they have been sprayed with chemical treatments?
Vee vill not eat zee bugzz, Klaus!!! 🥸👺🤮
This is what the WEF recommends we eat
Ugh, crickets. No thanks.
They are delicious. As are cicadas.
@@Facetiously.Esoteric I'll just have to take your word on that.
@@barbarac8422 I did a food demo with cicadas decades ago for Central Ohio parks and rec and made bread put of them, numerous finger appetizers, stir fry, and various chocolates. They are tasty. They have kind of an earthy mushroom flavor when cooked. You have to be careful though, people with crustacean allergies will react the same.
I even ate one raw for the reporters.
Lol
It was fun. CNN picked it up and I got calls from all over the world. My aunt even saw it on the jumbotron at a Cleveland Indians game. Lol
Can't knock it until you try it!
Yes you can. How much does Soros pay you and the "chef" in this horrible video. You are all a bunch of shills.@@MrPickles1987
Atk pushing insects off as food now? C’mon!
People have eaten insects as food for thousands of years.
There's plenty of cultures where insects are food.
@@namingisdifficult408If you read the Biblical dietary requirements, there are LOCUSTS that are recommended as food!
I don’t think natives were eating dishes that looked like that
This video could have been interesting if you left out the woke word salad. Hard pass. 👎
ATK sounding like a UC Berkeley professor.
What was woke about it? Please define woke. I bet you can’t do it.
You sound heavily vaxxed and boosted. Eat all the bugs you want.@@rpro59
unsub trump lover
Lol gotta unsub not because these wannabe travel channel vids suck but I don’t watch these vids for political bs and the decolonize shirt was the first thing I noticed so I’ll be getting cooking tips and product recommendations from a channel capable of doing that because apparently America’s test kitchen isn’t
looks like the t-shirt is working as intended. lol
Hey that's great! Don't let the door hit ya on the way out!
byeeee
Bye! You won't be missed.
ROFL @@tomelko
whats he hoping to decolonize?
Indigenous food systems. He talked about it repeatedly throughout the video.
Didn't they mostly eat bison jerky and pemmican? These foods seem too modern and too hipster.
I think I'll stick with my traditional THANKSGIVING fare while I celebrate everything that is great about America. #Trump2024
I'm not eating bugs and that wasn't lobster. "All the food is medicine" that means it tastes like crap.
Have you ever had a good soup?
It's a lobster mushroom, delicious and plentiful in late summer throughout northern Minnesota. Enjoy the chicken fingers.