Making Inuit Bannock - Palauga

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  • Опубліковано 7 жов 2024
  • This is a video for the Inuit Cultural Onine Resource. Watch and learn how to make Inuit bannock or palauga. A tasty podcast best served with jam and tea. This is one of many video podcasts on sharing Inuit culture as part of the Inuit Cultural Online Resource. We could not have made these without the financial support of the Canadian Heritage Gateway Fund.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 23

  • @roguetopilikon1648
    @roguetopilikon1648 9 років тому

    This is very similar to how my dad used to make this. It was delicious!

  • @zhinka1
    @zhinka1 12 років тому +6

    this is not all that traditional. cattail flour or filbert flour should be used instead of wheat flour. It is very easy to pound the dried cattail roots to make a nice flour.
    It should be mentioned that white flour was not used until after we were almost wiped out

    • @corrinenolan344
      @corrinenolan344 Рік тому

      Bannock comes from Scotland anciently. It wasn't made with anything indigenous to turtle Island. It would have been made with barley or oats.

  • @bigauntieenergy
    @bigauntieenergy 7 років тому

    recipe turned out perfect! :)

  • @VAMPIRELLAMYDUNGEON
    @VAMPIRELLAMYDUNGEON 4 роки тому +1

    what roots can be pounded into flour in the mojave desert?
    .

  • @mandylord1217
    @mandylord1217 8 років тому +5

    he's cute😙

  • @zacharyd8697
    @zacharyd8697 5 років тому

    That’s delicious

  • @chwoonie
    @chwoonie 6 років тому +3

    Ooo he cute.

  • @williambyrd6975
    @williambyrd6975 7 років тому +1

    Ordinary way we always made pancake mix

  • @fifek2000
    @fifek2000 9 років тому +6

    Since when Inuits eat flour???

    • @Andy-ir1sj
      @Andy-ir1sj 6 років тому +1

      since about the same time they use 45 gallons of water to wash their hands !!

    • @realmetis8002
      @realmetis8002 5 років тому +6

      @RedRock3t82 since the white man put them on reserves and settlements and the government told them they could not live off the land and gave them flour 300 years ago.................... thats when

    • @amariahnaukatsik2659
      @amariahnaukatsik2659 Рік тому

      When those colonizers came!

  • @terryi8892
    @terryi8892 6 років тому +1

    A fat kinda fry bake with raisins :)))

  • @captainpegs07
    @captainpegs07 9 років тому

    Anyone know how much to use if substituting powdered milk?

  • @laurawhigham8492
    @laurawhigham8492 Рік тому +1

    Now I have a better use for the the silly “pasta” server! Thank you for sharing this 🩷

  • @hannahsutherland6724
    @hannahsutherland6724 7 років тому +1

    I wanted to see a granny making the bannock...disappointed...

  • @bigd3985
    @bigd3985 7 років тому +1

    Bannock is scottish. The name bannock is a Scottish word. Stealing a people's culture is not good.

    • @catherinerice3062
      @catherinerice3062 6 років тому +12

      Big D Stealing their land is even worse.

    • @cherilewis1060
      @cherilewis1060 6 років тому +3

      It was given to natives by Scottish people, because native people didn't have white flour, they had cornflour. They traded for wild meat or fish, in the beginning. My mother in law told me. She was born in 1903.she also traded for clothes, trading her indian baskets . trading skills was big then.my brother told me about his friends family came from Scotland & didn't know about how to make bannock , so natives taught them &they were very grateful, because they were poor and having a hard time. I'm glad Chinese people didn't feel that way about rice.

    • @Centurion0419
      @Centurion0419 5 років тому +1

      Scottish word? It’s English like all of Scotland, so it’s the English word used for palagua, it’s food not a culture, if we act like that Americans or anyone that isn’t Asian can’t can jasmine rice jasmine because it is not their culture?