
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
After decades of racism, persecution and forced assimilation, Native Americans had lost many of their traditional foods and recipes. Award-winning chef Sean Sherman has made it his life’s mission to bring them back from the brink of extinction.
He tells Graihagh Jackson about a “feral” childhood spent on a vast reservation in South Dakota, USA, and how his impoverished community was forced to rely on highly processed, government-supplied commodity foods, which he says have had serious and long-term health implications for his people.
A successful but highly stressful career running restaurant kitchens pushed him to the point of burnout – he explains how a recuperation mission to Mexico led to an epiphany about his own food heritage and a meticulous effort to revive it and rid it of colonial influences.
He’s since written an award-winning cookbook, set up a non-profit to educate others about North America’s native cuisines, plans to open a restaurant next year, and tells us he wants to make his indigenous food movement a global one.
(Picture: Sean Sherman. Credit: Heidi Ehalt/BBC)
4.7
319319 ratings
After decades of racism, persecution and forced assimilation, Native Americans had lost many of their traditional foods and recipes. Award-winning chef Sean Sherman has made it his life’s mission to bring them back from the brink of extinction.
He tells Graihagh Jackson about a “feral” childhood spent on a vast reservation in South Dakota, USA, and how his impoverished community was forced to rely on highly processed, government-supplied commodity foods, which he says have had serious and long-term health implications for his people.
A successful but highly stressful career running restaurant kitchens pushed him to the point of burnout – he explains how a recuperation mission to Mexico led to an epiphany about his own food heritage and a meticulous effort to revive it and rid it of colonial influences.
He’s since written an award-winning cookbook, set up a non-profit to educate others about North America’s native cuisines, plans to open a restaurant next year, and tells us he wants to make his indigenous food movement a global one.
(Picture: Sean Sherman. Credit: Heidi Ehalt/BBC)
5,441 Listeners
1,802 Listeners
7,615 Listeners
306 Listeners
89 Listeners
1,751 Listeners
1,079 Listeners
342 Listeners
98 Listeners
892 Listeners
266 Listeners
2,090 Listeners
1,039 Listeners
838 Listeners
356 Listeners
63 Listeners
405 Listeners
763 Listeners
474 Listeners
246 Listeners
140 Listeners
4,197 Listeners
699 Listeners
39 Listeners
2,981 Listeners