indigenous peoples
This salmon recipe does not attempt to recreate the sacred preparations of our Native Americans. Instead, it borrows from the simple wisdom of cooking salmon over cedar, allowing smoke and wood to deepen its natural richness–food both rooted and relevant.
This bread brings those two native ingredients together in a way that feels both old and new: earthy acorn flour balanced by the honeyed depth of American persimmons. It is not a recreation of any single tribal preparation, but rather a respectful nod to the flavors that once defined this continent’s fall harvest.
This pemmican recipe follows the traditional method while adapting it for the modern kitchen. It is dense, rich, and sustaining—food meant to be respected rather than rushed.
Across forests, prairies, rivers, and deserts, Indigenous communities developed foods that could withstand hard travel, lean seasons, bitter cold, and long journeys. No printed labels, no measuring spoons, no standardized recipes—only observation, patience, and knowledge carried forward from one generation to the next.