Great Canadian Baking Show contestant hosts cooking classes as part of Decolonize YQR series - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 09:10 PM | Calgary | -11.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Indigenous

Great Canadian Baking Show contestant hosts cooking classes as part of Decolonize YQR series

A Cree and Nakoda baker is using her traditional food knowledge as a way to bring Indigenous people and non-Indigenous people together in Regina.

Jodi Robson gives virtual class on how to make boulette soup, a Mtis dish

Jodi Robson standing in front of a colourful background of a bison painting. She is wearing red and has on a red patterned apron.
Jodi Robson hosted a cooking class on boulette soup Tuesday for the Regina Public Library. (Richard Agecoutay/CBC)

A Cree and Nakoda baker is using her traditional food knowledge as a way to bring Indigenous people and non-Indigenous people together in Regina.

Jodi Robson,from Okanese First Nation in Saskatchewan, wasfeatured on season 3 of CBC's Great Canadian Baking Show.

Working with Reconciliation YQR and the Regina Public Library, Robson has been doing virtual cooking classes over Zoom as part of an online series of events called Decolonize YQR.

"[Decolonize YQR] is an opportunity to build a bridge between the First Nations people in the community and non-First Nations people," Robson said.

"There's a lot of misconceptions and preconceived notions that frankly aren't true. I would like to see those erased and knowledge be shared and understanding be built that doesn't exist currently."

Tuesday's event was a how-to on boulettesoup, a traditional Mtis dish.

Robson said sinceit'spronounced "bullet" soup, people often believe the name has something to do with hunting, as the meatballs look like buckshot bullets, butbouletteis simply the Michifword for meatball.

Robson said her boulette soup is as close to traditional as possible

Bullet soup and bannock made by Jodi Robson
Robson says she likes to make her boulette soup as close to the traditional recipe as possible. (Submitted by Jodi Robson)

"It's literally just meatballs, sometimes some potatoes, a little bit of flour mixed in to make kind of a thin broth," she said.

"I don't like to spice it up because that's not the comfort food I recognize when I have boulette soup."

She said she grew up with boulettesoupandher grandmother would have guests over on New Year's Day to enjoy some warm soup during the chilly weather.

"Boulette soup is an opportunity to reconnect during the hard winter months and visit and welcome the new year with a good feeling," she said.

Jodi Robson and her daughter Tallica hosting a cook-a-long. They are behind a table with a slow cooker, cutting board with ingredients and mixing bowls.
Robson and her daughter Tallica hosted the cook-a-long on Tuesday evening for Decolonize YQR. (Submitted by Jodi Robson)

An ingredient list was sent out prior to the event soparticipants couldfollow along cooking with Robson.

During the event, Robson shared stories about thesoupand questionswere encouraged.

"I think these types of events are important because they provide an opportunity to ask questions in a comfortable settingwe are not going to be judged, no question is stupid, no one is going to be upset," she said.

"Even if it's something that's very uncomfortable about Indigenous people, it's fine.I'll answer you as best as I can."

Robson said these sorts of eventshelp build a community as well.

"There's a lot of people who join every single class so it feels like you're building a family online," she said, adding that many non-Indigenous peopleattend her classes.

Wide range of topics

Courtney Bates-Hardey,the events co-ordinator at the Regina Public Library, saideverybody is welcome to join.

"It's a way for people to really participate in reconciliation and learn more about what they can do," she said.

Bates-Hardey saidthe events are different every month there are food-based events like Robson's as well as history and culture events.

Next month, Elder Harry Francis will be speaking on what it was like to grow up on the reserves in the '50s and '60s, and what his work entails as a leader and healer.