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Elders of the Seven New Tribes

This pod is about living life in harmony with all creatures of the world. Here we share ways to live in harmony with our surroundings. To share wisdom. This is based on the old Tribe group of the same name. Brother Air Wizard had started that tribe, I bring it here in hopes to bring about a change in...(more)
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Feel free to post new ways of living that will bring us back in harmony with our surroundings. I know that someone had mentioned the Foxfire series. Someone have a link to share on that?
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  WhiteWolf : The Journeyer

Fry bread gets fit

WhiteWolf said Oct 21, 2007, 3:22 PM:

 

Fry bread gets fit
http://www.argusleader.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20050831/LIFE02/508310314/1004/LIFE


To give the traditional treat a healthier spin, an SDSU instructor cooks
up two versions for a cultures class

Virginia Perez
vperez@argusleader.com
August 31, 2005
Mmmm, fry bread.

Many Native Americans hold South Dakota's official bread in high regard
- too high, says journalist Suzan Shown Harjo, whose January column in
Indian Country Today suggesting people give up fry bread for their
health prompted some outrage.

The spell of fry bread is strong - a quick poll of 45 Native Americans
across the country reinforces that. Only one respondent said he would
give up fry bread forever because of fat. Others said they would cut
back but wouldn't stop nibbling completely.

Virgil Taken Alive, a morning disc jockey at KLND radio in Little Eagle,
has had six heart bypass surgeries. He has cut back on fry bread, but he
hasn't given it up.

“Whenever they serve it, I love to eat it,” Taken Alive said.

Considering the loyalty the tempting golden brown disks inspire, it's
safe to say fry bread is here to stay. So is there a way to make it more
heart-friendly, especially for a culture that faces high obesity rates
and related health risks?

Native American culture and food expert Valerian Three Irons tinkered
with his traditional recipe to find out.

Three Irons, a diversity and service learning associate at South Dakota
State University
in Brookings, teaches about Native American culture to
students from schools around the country to prepare them to be immersed
in reservation life, where they will work and reside for 10 weeks.

“Food is a big part of Indian culture, so it's important they learn
about it,” Three Irons said. This fall, Three Irons has three students:
Erin Wright from Goucher College in Baltimore, Michaela Raikes from
Stanford University in Palo Alto, Calif., and Miranda Blue from Carleton
College
in Northfield, Minn. Only Wright had tried fry bread before
coming to South Dakota.

The first session of “Fry bread 101” began in the Volga home of Three
Irons, where he and his wife, Mary, taught all there is to know about
fry bread. They prepared two versions, original and whole wheat.

As Three Irons turned the mushy dough into the Native American delicacy,
he told his great-grandmother's fry bread creation story.

Fry bread goes back to the time when steamboats came up the river, Three
Irons said. Traders from the boats often would do business with the
Native Americans. One trader wanted Native women to slaughter and render
a pig for him. As the women prepared a meal for the man, they decided to
save time by using the oil from the pig to cook corn dough, and fry
bread was invented.

When the original and whole-wheat fry bread finished cooking, Three
Irons analyzed the whole-wheat bread. As he held it in his hand, he
noticed a difference in weight and said, “There's calories missing.” He
then sliced samples for the students.

Three Irons noticed a little difference in taste but particularly in
texture. Of the students, Wright preferred the taste of the original,
Raikes said she could not tell the difference and Blue said, “They're
both yummy.”

“I kind of expected there to be a difference because there is a
difference in the main ingredient,” Three Irons said. “I thought the
texture would be the same, but I found it to be a little more coarse.
But the taste is similar and a little bit drier.”

If they had to choose one over the other, all three students said they
would choose the whole wheat because it's healthier.

Dietitian Teresa Beach with Sioux Valley Hospital has analyzed the
health benefits of the two recipes.

Three Irons' original fry bread recipe contains 282 calories in a
3-ounce piece about 5 inches in diameter, and the whole-wheat version
contains 250 calories. The whole-wheat version has 7 grams of fiber; the
original, 2 grams. There were 46 grams of carbohydrates in the
whole-wheat fry bread and 52 grams in the original.

The significant difference was in the type of oil used in the
whole-wheat version. Three Irons chose canola oil for the whole wheat
over soybean oil to give it a healthier monounsaturated fat, Beach said.

“The total fat in the healthier version was 4.5 grams, and for the
not-so-healthy 4.1 grams,” Beach said. “It's just that it's a better
type of fat.”

A welcome option
After the fry bread preparation, the Three Irons and the students were
joined for an Indian taco dinner by SDSU Director of Diversity Allen
Branum and his wife, Jan.

Three Irons said a blessing and instructed the students on how to build
an Indian taco. All three chose the original fry bread over the whole
wheat, but Branum decided to try the healthier version. He generally has
a preference for whole-wheat breads, but after a few bites, he decided
he liked the original version better.

“The regular is what I'm used to. It has a flavor that is more
addictive,” Branum said. “I'm very pleased there is a whole wheat out
there, and I will dine on both in the future.”

Once people realize there isn't much of a difference in taste, they
might start using whole-wheat flour, Three Irons said, but they have to
try it first.

Does he think people would ever quit eating fry bread?

“No.”

THREE IRONS FRY BREAD: WHOLE WHEAT:
8 cups of whole-wheat flour
3 tablespoons baking powder
3 tablespoons Splenda
1 tablespoon salt
1 cup dry milk
4 tablespoons canola oil
4 cups warm water

Three Irons Fry Bread: Original
8 cups white flour
3 tablespoons baking powder
3 tablespoons sugar
1 tablespoon salt
1 cup dry milk
4 tablespoons soybean oil
4 cups warm water

For both: Blend 4 cups of flour with the rest of the dry ingredients in
a large bowl. Add the wet ingredients, and mix with a spoon. Slowly add
4 more cups of flour. Gently knead the dough to form a ball. Be cautious
to not overwork the dough because it will become tough.

Heat 3 to 4 inches of oil in an electric skillet, large cast iron frying
pan
or deep fat fryer to 368 degrees (the higher temperature is
important to prevent too much oil from soaking into the bread). Test the
oil by dropping a small half-dollar-size piece of dough into the oil.
When the oil is ready, the dough will bubble up and float to the top.

From the large ball of dough, pull off a small piece and flatten, using
your hands or a rolling pin, to about a half-inch thickness and about 4
to 5 inches in diameter. Punch a small hole in the center, and put into
the hot oil. Cook until golden brown on one side, and turn over until
browned on both sides. Drain on paper towels.

Wojapi pudding
4 pounds berries or fruit
(any combination of blueberries, raspberries, chokecherries,
buffaloberries, etc. will work)
4 cups water
2 cups sugar
Half a package of cornstarch to thicken
Mash the berries or fruit (with peaches, it is good to cook them a
little first). Save some of the water to mix up the cornstarch. Put
mashed fruit, sugar and water into a pan, and bring slowly to a boil.
Remove from heat, and stir in cornstarch mixture (be sure the cornstarch
mixture isn't lumpy). Place back on low heat, and stir well until
thickened to the consistency of pudding. Can be served as a dip for fry
bread.


Commodity foods haven't offered best health benefits Native American
culture and food expert Valerian Three Irons says fry bread is not the
only culprit in the high rate of obesity, heart disease and diabetes
among Native Americans.

In the 1950s, the U.S. Department of Agriculture began distributing
foods to people with certain income guidelines, Three Irons said. On the
reservation, those foods came to be known as “commods,” short for
commodity foods.
Among the foods distributed included white rice, fruit packed in heavy
syrup, white flour, canned meats with an inch of hardened lard on top
and peanut butter topped with grease. These resulted in fat, unhealthy
people with “commod-bods,” Three Irons said.

“An excess amount of any one thing is a killer,” Three Irons said.
He thinks a better way to address health epidemics is through education
and a few adjustments to the commodity program.

“Commodity programs can change. They've proven that with the use of
juices and the introduction of buffalo over hamburger,” Three Irons
said. “So this is another one they can do by changing bleached flour
with whole-wheat flour.”
Virginia Perez