
Description
Corn Dance: Inspired First American Cuisine tells the story of Loretta's journey and of the dishes she created along the way. Alongside recipes that combine the flavors of her Oklahoma upbringing and Indigenous heritage with the Southwest flair of her Santa Fe restaurant, Loretta offers entertaining and edifying observations about ingredients and cooking culture. What kind of quail might turn up in your vicinity, for instance; what to do with piñon nuts, sumac, or nopales (cactus paddles); when to add a bundle of pine needles or a small branch of cedar to your braise: these and many practical words of wisdom about using the fruits of the forest, stream, or plain, accompany Loretta's insights on everything from the dubious provenance of fry bread to the Potawatomi legend behind the Three Sisters--corn, beans, and squash, the namesake ingredients of Three Sisters and Friends Salad, served at Corn Dance Café and now at Thirty Nine Restaurant at First Americans Museum in Oklahoma City, where Oden is the Chef Consultant.
Amply illustrated and adapted to bring the taste of Native tradition into the home kitchen, Corn Dance invites readers to join Loretta Oden on her inspiring journey into the Indigenous heritage, and the exhilarating culinary future, of North America.
Product Details
Publisher | University of Oklahoma Press |
Publish Date | October 03, 2023 |
Pages | 264 |
Language | English |
Type | |
EAN/UPC | 9780806190785 |
Dimensions | 10.2 X 7.2 X 0.9 inches | 2.2 pounds |
About the Author
Reviews
"Corn Dance is an irresistible invitation into Potawatomi chef Loretta Oden's kitchen. For Oden we need a bigger word than "chef." She is an artist, a renowned leader in the movement to revitalize Indigenous foods, a creator, a rememberer, and a storyteller. She tells stories with food--stories about the land, gardens, history, family, life--and helps us savor it all. I want to sit around her table with the grandmothers, shelling beans and shucking corn while she stirs up a new sauce that brings it all together, with flavors and ingredients from the four directions. We are in her debt for this bighearted book, which is sweet, savory, and wise."--Robin Wall Kimmerer (Citizen Patowatomi) author of Braiding Sweetgrass: Indigenous Wisdom, Scientific Knowledge and the Teachings of Plants
"Loretta is a true inspiration and role model. Years before anyone else, she broke new ground and opened up new paths for what is possible when she brought Indigenous foods into a restaurant setting with her Corn Dance Café. I am proud to call Loretta a friend and mentor, and am so excited to see her stories, recipes, and philosophy in the form of this beautiful cookbook! Pilamayeyelo, Loretta, for all you have done!"--Sean Sherman (Oglala Lakota) Founder, The Sioux Chef / Owamni / NATIFS / Indigenous Food Lab
"Loretta Barrett Oden is a legend. A trailblazer in the field of Indigenous cuisine, she remains an influential voice in the food sovereignty movement today. Corn Dance is a culmination of her lifetime of travels through Indian Country. The stories and recipes contained here present a balance of traditional ancestral dishes and the chef's own original creations within the context of a life lived with and for the Native community."--Nico Albert Williams (Cherokee Nation) Founder and Executive Director of Burning Cedar Sovereign Wellness and Executive Chef of Burning Cedar Sovereign Kitchen
"Loretta's enchanting storytelling and delightful recipes bring us together to celebrate the deeply complex cultural history of our First American relatives, bridging our modern world with the foods and medicines that have healed our lands and our bodies for centuries. This book satisfies the hungry historian and is practical for any home cook. Corn Dance offers us a way to connect directly with the abundance of nature and the sacred foods of First Americans."-- Caesaré Assad, Founder and Food System Consultant, Centipede Collective
"Through her knowledge, food, and activism, Loretta has blazed a trail for Indigenous women like me who seek to revive our connection to our land and our food as a way to heal in all the ways that word intends. With Corn Dance and her recipes using traditional ingredients, Loretta is inviting a larger community to know the abundance of our ancestors so that we may forge a better future for our Earth and its people."--Crystal Wahpepah (Kickapoo Tribe of Oklahoma) Chef-Owner of Wahpepah's Kitchen
"Wonderful stories and recipes for food I can attest to being satisfyingly delicious!"--Wes Studi (Cherokee Nation) award-winning actor, musician, and artist
Earn by promoting books