Bring Indigenous Recipes and Traditions to Your Thanksgiving Table (2024)

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    Chef Tilsen-Brave Heart shares her recipes that put a contemporary spin on traditional Lakota ingredients.

    Hopefully it’s not breaking news at this point in our nation’s collective evolution that the first Thanksgiving wasn’t a festive harvest gathering with cheery pilgrims and Native Americans sharing a table overflowing with roasted turkey, sweet potatoes, and pumpkin pie.

    “For us, it wasn’t a cornucopia of amazing,” says Chef Kimberly Tilsen-Brave Heart, a member of the Oglala Lakota tribe in South Dakota and co-owner and executive chef of Et-i-quette Catering, a Rapid City-based indigenous artisan boutique catering company. “It was a massacre.”

    Indeed, the disturbing truth is that Columbus’s 1492 arrival in North America unleashed centuries of clashing between Europeans and Native Americans, with millions of Native Americans being slaughtered and any remaining survivors eventually being forced off their ancestral lands and cornered onto reservations. Needless to say, there’s little evidence that Native Americans actually shared in a meal to celebrate North America’s first harvest by Europeans.

    So how do we, at least anyone who has lived in the dream world of the annual tradition of the friendly autumn feast come to terms with that?

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    “We are living in a colonized society,” Chef Tilsen-Brave Heart says. “Many people in the United States think native people don’t exist anymore. We do and we’re alive and we’re thriving. We’re beautiful people with rich history and rich culture. And we are modern, too. We are chefs and lawyers and doctors just like all the other people. What people can do is learn about our indigenous foods, know our history. That’s a way of decolonizing.”

    So what about Thanksgiving? Chef Tilsen-Brave Heart, for one, is not averse to it. Her suggestion? “Bring indigenous food and history and people into your dinner table. No matter where you are, you’re living on the ancestral lands of indigenous tribes. You can do some minimal research to find out the tribes that lived there. Learn about them and understand the real history of Thanksgiving.”

    Bring Indigenous Recipes and Traditions to Your Thanksgiving Table (4)

    Bring Indigenous Recipes and Traditions to Your Thanksgiving Table (5)

    1. Chef Kimberly Tilsen-Brave Heart, a member of the Oglala Lakota tribe in South Dakota and co-owner and executive chef of Et-i-quette Catering.2. Et-i-quette Catering’s charcuterie and crudité treat boxes, filled with smoked elk, buffalo jerky, and other Lakota treats.

    For National Native American History Month, a newly designated celebration of Native American history and culture that spans November, she has created a special menu to help people learn about the culinary traditions of her people.

    “This is my form of decolonizing,” she says. “It’s my way of empowering myself and my children and my people and my community.”

    So this Thanksgiving, think about honoring the original inhabitants of North America. You can do your own research to come up with indigenous recipes where you live, or enjoy this menu that Chef Tilsen-Brave Heart has put together, based on traditional Lakota products with a modern twist.

    INSIDER TIPIf you happen to be in the Rapid City area, be sure to order one of Et-i-quette Catering’s charcuterie and crudité treat boxes, filled with smoked elk, buffalo jerky, and other Lakota treats. Where should you take it? “We go to Sylvan Lake all the time,” says Chef Tilsen-Brave Heart. “It’s a beautiful lake in the [Black] Hills. Pick up some wine from Firehouse downtown, or a growler from Hey Camp Brewing Co., and you’ve got yourself the perfect, socially distant picnic.”

    Bring Indigenous Recipes and Traditions to Your Thanksgiving Table (6)

    Magic Pumpkin Squash Soup

    “Squash is a big part of our diet,” Chef Tilsen-Brave Heart says. “I’m going to be transparent—I didn’t like squash growing up. I didn’t like the texture. But as I became older and a chef, I have found ways to make it more palatable.”

    Since winter prevented growing food year-round in the Dakotas, the Lakota became experts in preserving food.

    “Wasna is the original food of the Lakota people,” says Chef Tilsen-Brave Heart. “It’s dried buffalo and dried chokeberries ground up and made into patties, then preserved in buffalo pouches. That’s how the Lakota survived through winter.”

    They also dried their squash in spirals so they could eat it year-round, cutting off spirals as needed to add to their soups. Squash soup continues to be a perennial favorite.

    Ingredients:

    • 1 large butternut squash
    • 1 tbsp. garlic powder
    • Kosher salt
    • Black pepper
    • Olive oil
    • 1 stick butter
    • 1 medium yellow onion
    • 1 can organic pumpkin puree
    • 2 cups coconut milk
    • 4 cups chicken broth or vegetable stock
    • Roasted pumpkin seeds (for topping)

    Instructions:

    • Peel and cube the butternut squash, toss with olive oil, sprinkle with 1 tbsp. garlic powder, kosher salt, and cracked brown pepper, and place on a baking sheet. Roast at 425 degrees for 20 minutes
    • In a large stockpot, sautée the chopped medium yellow onion in 1 stick melted butter; sprinkle with salt until translucent
    • Add 1 can organic pumpkin puree
    • Add 2 cups coconut milk
    • Add 4 cups chicken broth or vegetable stock
    • Add the roasted butternut squash
    • Simmer for 30 minutes
    • Blend with an immersion blender
    • Top with roasted pumpkin seeds
    Bring Indigenous Recipes and Traditions to Your Thanksgiving Table (7)

    Bison Stew

    “We are very bison based,” Chef Tilsen-Brave Heart says. In the 1800s, the U.S. government massacred the buffalo to kill off the Native Americans, so a lot of Native Americans lost their methods in preparing buffalo and are only recently relearning to cook with it. “The stew is a way to make it easy,” the chef says. “It’s a straight-up staple in every Lakota home. We have it at ceremonies, funerals, celebrations. I would say, on average, everyone’s eating bison stew once or twice a week.”

    Ingredients:

    • 2 lbs. buffalo meat
    • 3-4 tbsp. olive oil
    • 1 tbsp. garlic powder
    • 2 tbsp. kosher salt
    • 1 tsp. black pepper
    • 1 tsp. paprika
    • 1/2 tsp. turmeric
    • 3-4 bay leaves
    • Mirepoix (chopped onions, carrots, celery)
    • 6-8 cups beef broth/stock or water
    • 6-8 russet potatoes
    • 1 can diced tomatoes

    Instructions:

    • Braise 2 lbs. buffalo meat (1-inch cubes) with half an onion (finely chopped), in a warmed stockpot with 3-4 tbsp. olive oil
    • Spice 1 tbsp. garlic powder, 2 tbsp. kosher salt, 1 tsp. black pepper, 1 tsp. paprika, 1/2 tsp. turmeric, and 3-4 bay leaves
    • After browned, add mirepoix (chopped onions, carrots, celery) and can diced tomatoes
    • Add 2 cups water or stock/broth and simmer on medium-low heat for 30-45 minutes or until tender. (Stir occasionally; more water or stock/broth may be needed.) Times will vary with the size of meat and location
    • When the meat is tender, add 6-8 cups beef broth/stock or water, bring back to boil. Add 6-8 russet potatoes, peeled and cut into 1-inch pieces or bigger
    • Cook an additional 15-20 minutes until potatoes are fork-tender
    • Remove from heat and let stand for 10-15 minutes
    • Serve
    Bring Indigenous Recipes and Traditions to Your Thanksgiving Table (8)

    Wild Rice, Cranberry, and Bison-Stuffed Mushrooms

    “We eat all kinds of mushrooms traditionally,” Chef Tilsen-Brave Heart says. “And I love wild rice. We were nomadic so we traded with woodland tribes. Our tribe went all the way into Canada and down past Wyoming. And cranberries are an indigenous berry. I’ve included all of these ingredients.”

    Ingredients:

    • 1 lb. ground bison
    • 1 lb. Italian sausage
    • 3 tbsp. butter
    • 1 yellow onion
    • 6-8 baby portabella mushrooms
    • 1/4 cup dried cranberries
    • 1 cup wild rice (optional: purchase wild rice from Red Lake Nation Foods)
    • 2 cups bone broth or vegetable stock
    • Olive oil
    • Kosher salt

    Instructions:

    • Preheat oven to 350 degrees
    • Melt 3 tbsp. butter with a half chopped yellow onion. Sauté
    • Wash and clean 6-8 baby portabellas, remove stems, and chop; add to the butter and yellow onion
    • Add 1/4 cup dried cranberries
    • Add 1 cup wild rice, continue to sauté all together (you are popping the wild rice; it will become fragrant)
    • Add 2 cups bone broth or vegetable stock, lower heat, and cover to simmer; set timer for 25 minutes
    • In another pan sauté 2 tbsp. butter and the other half of your chopped yellow onion; cook until translucent
    • Add 1 lb. ground bison, 1 lb. Italian sausage, and 1 tbsp. garlic
    • Cook until brown over medium heat
    • Add wild rice and bison mixture together
    • Drizzle olive oil and sprinkle kosher salt over portabellas
    • Stuff with bison/wild rice mixture
    • Bake for 15 minutes
    • Serve warm

    Buffalo, Cranberry, and Wild Rice Meatballs With Blackberry Wojape

    “Most indigenous tribes, wherever you are in the country, have some form of wojabe—or berry soup,” says Chef Tilsen-Brave Heart. “Sixth Nations and Mohawks, for example, do this with strawberries. We do it with blackberries. I never grew up on meatballs, but I’m always looking for ways to blend contemporary concepts with indigenous ingredients.” She adds that she always has leftover bison from the meatballs, which is how the wild rice, cranberry, and bison-stuffed mushroom recipe came about—to use up the leftover bison.

    Ingredients:

    Meatballs

    • 1 lb. buffalo (can be substituted with beef)
    • 1/4 lb. Italian sausage
    • 1 cup wild rice
    • 1/2 cup yellow onion
    • 3 cups chicken bone broth
    • 1/2 cup rehydrated cranberries
    • 2 tbsp. Worcestershire sauce
    • 1/4 cup breadcrumbs (optional)
    • 1 egg
    • 1 tsp. salt
    • 1 tsp. garlic powder
    • Dash of paprika

    Blackberry Wojape

    • 1 cup blackberries (or any berries of your choosing)
    • 1 cup sugar
    • 1 1/2 cups water

    Instructions:

    Meatballs

    • Clean wild rice with cold water
    • Sauté wild rice with 1/2 cup yellow onion and some oil for 5 minutes, allowing the rice to gently pop
    • Add in 3 cups bone broth per 1 cup wild rice
    • Add in rehydrated cranberries, cover, and simmer for 45 minutes
    • Add in 1 cup finished wild rice to buffalo
    • Add 2 tbsp. Worcestershire sauce
    • Add 1/4 cup breadcrumbs (optional)
    • Add in 1 tsp. salt, 1 tsp. garlic powder, and a dash of paprika
    • Place meatballs on a baking sheet with parchment paper and bake at 375 degrees for 25 minutes or until internal temp is 165 degrees

    Blackberry Wojape

    • Add into a pan: 1 cup blackberries, 1 cup sugar, 1 tbsp cornstarch, and 1 1/2 cups water
    • Render down for about 10 minutes

    Drizzle blackberry wojape on top of the meatballs and enjoy!

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    Bring Indigenous Recipes and Traditions to Your Thanksgiving Table (2024)

    FAQs

    What did the Indigenous people eat for Thanksgiving? ›

    There are only two surviving documents that reference the original Thanksgiving harvest meal. They describe a feast of freshly killed deer, assorted wildfowl, a bounty of cod and bass, and flint, a native variety of corn harvested by the Native Americans, which was eaten as corn bread and porridge.

    How do you honor Indigenous on Thanksgiving? ›

    1. Learn about the land you occupy.
    2. Listen, follow and support Indigenous voices.
    3. Rewrite your food tradition.
    4. See Native American movies.
    5. Patronize Native American and Indigenous brands and businesses.
    Nov 22, 2021

    What do Indigenous people think of Thanksgiving? ›

    For many Native Americans Thanksgiving is not a heartwarming holiday marked by gathering with family and serving others, but rather “a reminder of genocide, colonialism, and oppression, it's a symbol of smallpox blankets, Christianity, land grabs and manifest destiny,” artist Tony Abeyta says.

    What is Native American inspired Thanksgiving dinner? ›

    7 Ways to Experience Native American Cuisine this Thanksgiving
    • Three Sisters Succotash. “Three Sisters” refers to the main crops seen in many Native American nations throughout North America: corn, beans and squash. ...
    • Salmon on Cedar Stakes. ...
    • Wojapi. ...
    • Pemmican. ...
    • Frybread. ...
    • Poyha. ...
    • Tamales.

    What do Indigenous people do during Thanksgiving? ›

    Now, regardless of the day's ambiguous origin, many Native Americans will gather with friends and family and use the day to eat good food (many of the classic Thanksgiving dishes are inspired by indigenous foods) and give thanks.

    How do you honor indigenous people? ›

    There are no set rules on how to mark the day, though there are some recommended activities. You can look up — and formally acknowledge — which Indigenous lands you're on, attend a community or virtual event and support Indigenous causes, businesses and authors.

    What did the Pilgrims do to the natives on Thanksgiving? ›

    Re-informing the history of Thanksgiving

    James wrote a scathing indictment of the Pilgrims. He described how they desecrated Native American graves, stealing food and land and decimating the population with disease. The speech was deemed inappropriate and inflammatory and James was given a revised speech.

    How do you respect Native American culture? ›

    Treat the entire family with respect. Be careful what you say about another relative or friend of the family. Be careful what words you use to describe the environment of the individual, the family, the community, and a Native American Tribe. Avoid the usage of negative words and descriptions.

    How many natives were killed on Thanksgiving? ›

    Several times this happened because of the massacres of Native people, including in 1637 when Massachusetts Colony Governor John Winthrop declared a day of thanksgiving after volunteers murdered 700 Pequot people.

    Do Native Americans believe in God? ›

    Second, most native peoples worshiped an all-powerful, all-knowing Creator or “Master Spirit” (a being that assumed a variety of forms and both genders). They also venerated or placated a host of lesser supernatural entities, including an evil god who dealt out disaster, suffering, and death.

    Why did the Pilgrims fight the natives? ›

    “Those are some very nice answers, the cause of the war was because the Pilgrims who are also known as colonists became greedy for land and they began to treat the natives very poorly. There was also a mysterious murder of John Sassamon, who was a liaison between the Colonists and the Wampanoag people.

    What are 5 traditional Native American foods? ›

    The “Magic Eight” — corn, beans, squash, chiles, tomatoes, potatoes, vanilla, and cacao — are eight plants that Native people gave to the world and are now woven into almost every cuisine. Like many cuisines, Native American cuisine is not static.

    What meat did Native American eat? ›

    Depending on where they lived, Natives consumed alligators, bears, beavers, buffalo, caribou, deer, moose, ducks, elk, rabbits, a variety of fish (salmon, smelt, bass, trout, sturgeon, etc.), geese, insects, opossums, raccoons, squirrels, turtles, seals, shellfish and whales, to name a few animals.

    Who did Native Americans worship? ›

    According to Harriot, the Indians believed that there was "one only chief and great God, which has been from all eternity," but when he decided to create the world he started out by making petty gods, "to be used in the creation and government to follow." One of these petty gods he made in the form of the sun, another ...

    What types of food did the Pilgrims and natives eat for Thanksgiving? ›

    Although turkeys were indigenous, there's no record of a big, roasted bird at the feast. The Wampanoag brought deer and there would have been lots of local seafood (mussels, lobster, bass) plus the fruits of the first pilgrim harvest, including pumpkin.

    Did the Native Americans eat turkey on Thanksgiving? ›

    According to a contemporary account of that event by colonist Edward Winslow, the settlers and Native Americans dined on venison, fish and shellfish as well as corn and other vegetables. While “fowl” may have been served, that may well have referred to seasonal waterfowl like duck or geese, rather than turkey.

    Did the Pilgrims eat with the natives on Thanksgiving? ›

    Following a successful harvest in the autumn of 1621, the colonists decided to celebrate with a three-day festive of prayer. The 53 surviving are said to have eaten with 90 indigenous people in what became known as the first Thanksgiving.

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