10 Vegan Native American Recipes You Need To Try - Best of Vegan (2024)

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Culture Tuesdayis a weekly column in which Best of Vegan EditorSamantha Onyemenam explores different cultures’ cuisines across the globe through a plant-based and vegan lens. Before you start exploring vegan Native American recipes, you might want to click hereto read her original column aboutNative American cuisine.

10 Vegan Native American Recipes You Need To Try - Best of Vegan (2)

Culture Tuesday – 10 Vegan Native American Recipes You Need To Try

This is a complementary piece to the article on Native American cuisine. In this piece, you will be introduced to 10 vegan Native American recipes. These recipes are great for appetizers, breakfast, lunch, and/or dinner meals. They are all rather easy-to-follow recipes making them great additions to your cooking repertoire.

Table of Contents

Tortilla, Fry Bread, Biscuit Dough by The Fancy Navajo

10 Vegan Native American Recipes You Need To Try - Best of Vegan (3)

In this recipe, Alana teaches how to make the perfect doughs for tortilla, fry bread, and biscuits in a way that’s easy to remember and follow.

Traditionally, these recipes are eyeballed by experienced home cooks without measurements being taken. Therefore those new to making these breads and pastries have to go through a lot of trial and error to discover the right combination of ingredients to make these breads and pastries to desired textures, consistency, and flavor.

Click here for the full recipe.

Blue Corn Mush by The Fancy Navajo

10 Vegan Native American Recipes You Need To Try - Best of Vegan (4)

Blue corn mush is a beloved and popular Native American breakfast food. It is made through a heated combination of roasted blue cornmeal, juniper ash, and water and sometimes topped off with locally sourced and/or indigenous fruits and seeds.

It is flavorsome, fragrant, nutritious, and filling.

Click here for the full recipe.

Apache Sunflower Cake by Chef Otaktay

10 Vegan Native American Recipes You Need To Try - Best of Vegan (5)

Unlike western cakes which are sweet, contain a rising agent, and are mostly baked in a pan set in a hot oven, Apache Sunflower Cakes are savory, do not contain a leavening agent, and they have fewer ingredients than the average cake, and they are fried. Therefore, the resulting dish is denser with a more pronounced flavor.

In this recipe, Chef Otaktay combines four ingredients- sunflower seeds, salt, water, and flour, and fries them till firm and perfectly golden to make a delicious sunflower cake.

Click here for the full recipe.

Choctaw Banaha Bread by The Chickasaw Nation

10 Vegan Native American Recipes You Need To Try - Best of Vegan (6)

The name of this bread was not misspelled. Banaha bread is a Choctaw-Chickasaw dumpling-esque boiled bread made from a cornmeal dough. The dough is made through a combination of cornmeal, baking soda, salt, and hot water. This dough is wrapped in corn shucks, which can be described as a natural foil paper (tin foil/aluminum foil), and cooked in boiling water until the cornmeal mixture becomes firm and holds its shape well.

Click here for the full recipe.

Blueberry and Peach Salsa by First Nations

10 Vegan Native American Recipes You Need To Try - Best of Vegan (7)

Blueberry and peach salsa is a fresh sweet, savory, and spicy condiment made through a combination of blueberries, peaches, tomatoes, spring onions (green onions/scallions), lime juice, salt, pepper, minced garlic, and herbs. It is often served with blue corn tortilla chips as a snack or appetizer.

Click here for the full recipe.

Wojapi by First Nations

10 Vegan Native American Recipes You Need To Try - Best of Vegan (8)

Wojapi is a sweet berry condiment. It is made from chokeberries (can be substituted with blueberries) which are cooked in simmering water until they disintegrate. The broken-down berries are combined with a natural sweetener and a thickener (such as cornstarch or arrowroot) to create a soft jam-like consistency and a condiment that can be served on bread, drizzled over desserts or other dishes, including savory ones, which it can give a complementary and contrasting flavor to.

Click here for the full recipe.

Three Sisters Stew by The Chickasaw Nation

10 Vegan Native American Recipes You Need To Try - Best of Vegan (9)

Three Sisters Stew is one of the most popular Native American dishes. It is made from the three sisters – squash, corn, and beans – plants grown together as they nourish and support each other while providing great nutrition to those who consume them.

The stew is made by simmering the three sisters, onions, garlic, tomatoes, potatoes, barley, and black pepper in water over a long period of time to make a filling, hearty, nutritious, and delicious meal.

Click here for the full recipe.

Corn, Blueberry and Wild Rice Salad by First Nations

10 Vegan Native American Recipes You Need To Try - Best of Vegan (10)

Although this is a salad, it can also be eaten as a complete meal. It is sweet, savory, spicy, and fragrant through a balanced mixture of blueberries, maple syrup, sweetcorn, lime juice, cucumbers, jalapeño peppers, purple onions, and wild rice. The ingredients are left to marinate together prior to being served in desired quantities as a side dish or main meal.

Click here for the full recipe.

Kanuchi by The Indigenous Goddess Gang

10 Vegan Native American Recipes You Need To Try - Best of Vegan (11)

Kanuchi or kanunchi, is the Cherokee name for hickory nuts. It is also the name given to the flavorsome light sauce made from these nuts.

The process of making the dish, kanuchi, starts with the handling of the hickory nuts. They are pounded in a kanona (a mortar and pestle made from a hardwood tree trunk) until their natural oils are released and the nuts become softer and can clump together to form balls. These balls are crumbled into water as it boils to impart flavor, oil, and thickening properties into it. Undissolved bits of it are strained out and the water is left to continue boiling until it thickens to a creamy consistency. The resulting sauce is seasoned with maple syrup and salt then ladled over starchy foods such as sweet potatoes and wild rice to give them more flavor.

Click here for the full recipe.

Cherokee Bean Bread by Cherokee Speaks

Cherokee bean bread is made through a combination of cornmeal, baking soda, salt, and cooked pinto beans (with some of the hot cooking water). While hot, the combination is kneaded into a dough and cooked in boiling water until it becomes firm.

Click here for the full recipe.

Author: Samantha Onyemenam.

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10 Vegan Native American Recipes You Need To Try - Best of Vegan (2024)

FAQs

What is the most eaten vegan food? ›

Most vegan diets include beans in at least one meal per day, including lentils, chickpeas, black beans, pinto beans and many more. Many vegans consume soy-based proteins such as tofu and tempeh; their mild flavor makes them a great substitute for meat in stir-fries, soups and stews.

Were there vegan Native Americans? ›

There is no specific tribe of Native Americans that is exclusively vegetarian or vegan. However, some Native American tribes traditionally placed a strong emphasis on plant-based foods in their diets.

How to do the 7 day vegan challenge? ›

How does it work? No meat, poultry, seafood, dairy or eggs for 7 days (any 7 straight days). Announce to your friends, family, followers that you're doing the challenge. Add your name to the list of Challengers.

What is a super vegan? ›

Super vegans are committed to a plant based diet and look for products certified by The Vegan Society, Cruelty Free International and other reputable organisations. There are multiple benefits of veganism but most people are attracted to the impact it has on farmed animals and fish.

Which native tribes are vegan? ›

The Brokpa tribe of Ladakh, for example, has thrived while eating a plant-based diet for more than 5,000 years—all while living in harsh Himalayan terrain. Plant foods provide all the nutrients and vitamins that the Brokpa need to live healthy, active lives at 15,000 feet.

What food did the Native Americans eat? ›

Small animals were plentiful, and many groups ate rabbits, rats, squirrels, mice, and chipmunks. Water and land birds such as quail and grouse were also important food for California Indians, especially for those groups that lived in the marshy Central Valley.

What tribe was vegan? ›

How the Brokpa tribe's thousands of years of practising veganism are coming to an end due to climate change. In the rugged inhospitable terrain of the Himalayan foothills lies a fertile valley in Ladakh, India providing sanctuary to the Brokpa tribe.

How to go 100% vegan? ›

You could start by removing meat or dairy one day a week and go from there. Or you could try changing one meal at a time, having vegan breakfasts during your first week, adding a vegan lunch during week two and so on.

Which country is #1 for vegans? ›

INDIA. Undoubtedly the vegetarian capital of the world, the urban Indian population is quickly accepting veganism as a way of life. A lot of traditional cuisines already have many vegan dishes which are eaten by everyone. Vegan food is easily available in western and south Indian restaurants too.

Which race is more vegan? ›

Research has found that about 8% of Black Americans are vegan or vegetarian, which is much higher than the 3% rate among Americans of other ethnic groups.

Where is the hardest place to be vegan? ›

Japan. Fish is the main food in Japan and if you think that ramen noodles and miso soup would be perfect for vegan then you are wrong. Most of the traditional Japanese cuisines are prepared from fish even the soya sauce. However many Buddhist temples eat Buddhist vegetarian food, but the options are very few.

What foods do vegans love? ›

Protein from beans, legumes, nuts, seeds, tofu, tempeh and seitan, along with healthy fats from avocado, nuts, seeds, and coconut and olive oils, can also keep your blood sugar stable. High-protein vegan diet: Protein is one of the nutrients often lacking in a vegan diet.

Are Oreos vegan? ›

Many vegans refer to Oreos as “accidentally vegan,” meaning they don't contain animal products — but they weren't created to be a specifically vegan treat. Oreos do not contain milk, eggs, or any other animal-derived products, so they are technically vegan in that sense. Plant-based cookies and cream lovers rejoice!

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