When you visit the Land of Enchantment you must try the oven bread; I live in New Mexico and this is really great tasting bread. Thanks PBS for showcasing our Native American heritage! Get the bread (and more) at the Pueblo Cultural Center in Albuquerque where you can also see demonstrations & dances and please don't forget to eat at the restaurant there--you won't forget us.
I just started making my own bread, and even though I use a bread machine, it still gives me a unique sense of well being to take it out and taste it fresh, knowing I'm going to give some to friends and they're going to love it. So I can't even imagine what an extra bump that gets from doing it their way.
I had a wonderful friend from Santa Clara Pueblo who once had me over there at 4am...I woke up the dogs driving up, heheh! My friend honored me with helping him bake 24 loaves for Santa Clara day. He's gone over the bridge some years ago, but I will never forget all our adventures to many of his friends at several Pueblos through northern New Mexico ~~~~ and now, may the rains come for all the places that thirst across mother earth. Blessings for all the ancient ways and the peoples that through so much have kept their ways alive. Taos Peublo is very special.My yearly pilgrimage to harvest dance only stopped with too many clueless tourists ignorantly being disrespectful. If you attend a dance or any ceremony you are allowed to attend, please know it's not a show of entertainment being offered to you , it's sacred prayers (and ways most non-natives will never have access to, so as to protect those ways, and rightly so If you cannot open and respect, even things you may not understand, then please go somewhere else to have your visit).
Someone needs to tell that dude that Play-Doh is non-toxic. Which means you can eat it!! (I think it's actually dough...but colored.) He keeps saying, "Play-Doh I can eat" and it makes me laugh. Sorry....I'm a teacher. I'm paid to know this stuff!
When you visit the Land of Enchantment you must try the oven bread; I live in New Mexico and this is really great tasting bread. Thanks PBS for showcasing our Native American heritage! Get the bread (and more) at the Pueblo Cultural Center in Albuquerque where you can also see demonstrations & dances and please don't forget to eat at the restaurant there--you won't forget us.
Baratunde is one of the smartest fellows on the planet. It pleases me greatly to see him doing this.
100% agree with you've written.
I can smell it in air, takes me back to childhood.
I just started making my own bread, and even though I use a bread machine, it still gives me a unique sense of well being to take it out and taste it fresh, knowing I'm going to give some to friends and they're going to love it. So I can't even imagine what an extra bump that gets from doing it their way.
Ben and Debbie are the best. If you're in Taos come drop by and get an authentic taste of Taos.. from the original people.
Loved this, though for an episode about food it was sad to never see it get eaten and appreciated.
I had a wonderful friend from Santa Clara Pueblo who once had me over there at 4am...I woke up the dogs driving up, heheh! My friend honored me with helping him bake 24 loaves for Santa Clara day. He's gone over the bridge some years ago, but I will never forget all our adventures to many of his friends at several Pueblos through northern New Mexico ~~~~ and now, may the rains come for all the places that thirst across mother earth. Blessings for all the ancient ways and the peoples that through so much have kept their ways alive. Taos Peublo is very special.My yearly pilgrimage to harvest dance only stopped with too many clueless tourists ignorantly being disrespectful. If you attend a dance or any ceremony you are allowed to attend, please know it's not a show of entertainment being offered to you , it's sacred prayers (and ways most non-natives will never have access to, so as to protect those ways, and rightly so If you cannot open and respect, even things you may not understand, then please go somewhere else to have your visit).
Time to book a trip to Taos! 😁
Native humor!!
I LOVEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE this story!!! Thank you (taha)
I love that bread.
Interesting and beautiful...their bread🥰
The foods of enchiladas , tacos, came from Mexican cuisine..(mentioned in video)
Beautiful episode! Thank you (in English...)
That looks like some tasty bread. I wonder why natives here in the east don't do something similar.
Someone needs to tell that dude that Play-Doh is non-toxic. Which means you can eat it!! (I think it's actually dough...but colored.) He keeps saying, "Play-Doh I can eat" and it makes me laugh. Sorry....I'm a teacher. I'm paid to know this stuff!
♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️Taos❤❤❤❤❤❤
👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽
👀👀👀👀👀👀👀👍👍👍👍👀👍👍
You always pronounced the h in horno. I learned to pronounce it with a silent h.
So which is it?
No H. Or-no.
Silent H……❤
He did not even wash his hands first before preparing that bread, not very comforting at all.
I noticed that immediately! I kept yelling at the screen: “WASH YOUR HANDS!”
You don't know that. Her process was well underway, why do you think you saw everything @RebellionWarrior just to be contentious perhaps?
He probably washed off camera
There’s something called video editing