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Bread Anchors the Web of Life
Can you name me a culture that doesn’t have a bread they call their
own? I’ve tried and I can’t think of one.
From the unleavened flat breads of the middle east to the cornbreads of
the Americas, every group has at least one form of the sustenance that
keeps body and soul together.
The evolution of breads is fascinating because the staff of life is so
essential that it has come to represent both individual and community
life.
The phrase "breaking bread" rarely refers to a solitary activity. In
many cases the story of bread is also the saga of the survival of a
people.
This is certainly true of the indigenous peoples of North America, the
tribal peoples who live on this land they call turtle island. Many kinds
of bread were made here, from the ground corn, acorns, beans, nuts and
seeds that grew naturally on this land.
How did the tribal peoples survive in the 19th century when they were
placed in reservations and separated from many of their traditional food
sources?
The answer is a story of survival despite tremendous odds, and it is
also the story of how fry bread came into being, because fry bread was not
a traditional food here.
In the 1800s the United States government supplied the tribes who were
living in reservations in the Midwest and West with government-issue food.
The flour, oil, baking powder and cows milk brought to the people were
not foods indigenous to these lands. It is a tribute to the ingenuity of
native people that they came up with fry bread as a way of using these
strange, new food supplies and staying alive in the process.
Fry bread also came to symbolize inter-tribal unity because many tribes
began to share it at intertribal gatherings.
Some of these get-togethers are called powwows. They occur all over the
United States all year long, but there are more of them in the summer
months.
The term "powwow" is from the Algonquin language group, and it means
medicine. These get-togethers are a form of medicine; it is healing for
the tribes to gather together in celebration and ceremony.
The food served is an integral part of the spiritual and community
experience of these yearly gatherings. Everything from the songs and
prayers that are sung while preparing the food, the love that is put into
its cooking and the inter-tribal friendships that form when people work
side by side to create the event are essential ingredients as necessary as
the flour and water itself.
This attitude toward food and community life is called the web of life
and the web of relationship, and it is the breath of tribal life .
No one goes hungry. Everybody eats together at the powwow, and this
creates a powerful sense of community where nobody is a stranger.
How to make Frybread
One way to taste frybread is to make it yourself. This recipe makes 8-10
small ones or 5 big flat ones for Indian tacos.
2 cups flour
3 tsp. baking powder
1 tsp. salt
1 cup milk
Deep hot fat in frypan or fryer
Sift dry ingredients. Lightly stir in milk. Add more flour as necessary
to make a dough you can handle.
Kneed and work the dough on a floured board with floured hands until
smooth. Pinch off fist-sized limps and shape into a disk — everyone has
their own characteristic shapes (shape affects the taste, by the way
because of how it fries).
Fry in corn oil (about 375 ) until golden and done on both sides, about
5 minutes. Drain on absorbent paper.
Frybread can be combined with many other things to make delicious meals
and desserts. Here are a few things that combine nicely as toppings served
with frybread:
- Ground meat: buffalo, beef, chicken or fish can be served.
Ground buffalo can be found at some natural foods markets and is
prepared like hamburger meat. It is delicious sautéed with garlic and
onions and a healthy meat since it is much lower in fat than beef. Top
this Indian taco with a little sprinkling of grated cheese.
- Tomato-based sauces and taco preparations taste great on frybread.
- Strawberries and whipped cream.
- Dribbled honey and cinnamon or powdered sugar.
Last but not least, I have a suggestion of a wonderful Native American
CD to listen to while making your frybread: "Matriarch" by Joanne
Shenandoah, a Grammy-nominated Iroquois singer/songwriter.
Also, here is a Web site that will give you more information on the
history of the powwow:
www.learn-history-documentary.com/native-american/powwow/default.htm
We are fortunate to have many inter-tribal gatherings that occur every
year in the U.S. and Canada. Here is a good link to information on powwows
and a calendar.
http://www.powwows.com/cgi-bin/powwowcal.cgi
Many are both open to the public and good places to bring the family on
a weekend.
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