18 Recipes That Celebrate Indigenous American Food Traditions (2024)

This year, we're giving thanks to Native American cuisine.

By Mackenzie Filson
18 Recipes That Celebrate Indigenous American Food Traditions (1)

Many thanks are owed to the Native Americans who first roamed the land and cultivated so many foods still enjoyed today, like corn, squash, and beans. Thanksgiving is a day to give thanks, but it's also a solemn day of mourning for many Indigenous Americans grappling with the painful history. And while many Indigenous Americans opt out of the festivities altogether, some use the day to celebrate family, nature, and the riches of the land. Which is why we've decided to celebrate traditional Native American foods with Thanksgiving dishes created by Indigenous chefs like bison meatballs, three sisters, and wild rice with root vegetables.

It might not be surprising to know that the "first Thanksgiving" didn't resemble what we were often taught in school. There was likely no stuffing, turkey, or pumpkin pie. But there was definitely no shortage of options, as Native Americans marked celebratory meals with plenty of fish, produce, and wild rice. Want a fully Indigenous-inspired Thanksgiving meal? Pair our whole roasted trout with roasted turnips, fried cornbread, and wild rice pudding for dessert.

Indigenous Americans originated many classic dishes that just might surprise you too, like fried green tomatoes, succotash, and tamales. Did you know? Grilling salmon on cedar planks also has roots in tribes of the Pacific Northwest, where salmon is revered as a sacred food to tribes all across the region.

In general, Indigenous cooking isn’t necessarily about using pre-colonization ingredients, but about using what is local to you, and using food to build community. Want to figure out what foods are native to your area? This native land map is a great place to start. And if you're looking to spread awareness for Native American food sovereignty, consider checking out Native American Food Sovereignty Alliance, First Nations Development Institute, and Native American Agriculture Fund.

1

Succotash

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We love using this combo of sweet and savory veg to make a fresh side dish that will lighten up any meal. Historically, the corn, zucchini, and lima beans would be cooked alongside some form of fresh or dried meat, but in this case, we've opted for bacon, which adds some nice crispy texture and porky flavor.

Get the Succotash recipe.

2

Three Sisters Dish

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The benefits of an Indigenous Mesoamerican Three Sisters garden (that's corn, beans, and winter squash) go beyond supplying a powerhouse trio of nutritional ingredients. These gardens also exemplify the genius of companion planting—i.e., planting different crops near each other so they work together to improve each other's growth, and the health of the soil they are planted in.

Get the Three Sisters Dish recipe.

3

Cedar Plank Salmon

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Tribes across the Pacific Northwest revere salmon as a sacred food, and using a cedar plank for grilling the fish is a practice that can be traced back to the Nez Perce, Yakima, and Umatilla tribes. And in our opinion, grilling over cedar plank is the most foolproof (and delicious!) way to grill salmon with the added bonus that it requires no flipping over a grill.

Get the Cedar Plank Salmon recipe.

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4

Roasted Turnips

Turnips, much like radishes and parsnips, turn irresistibly sweet when roasted. This recipe is for purple-top turnips, which tend to be larger and thicker-skinned than Japanese varieties like hakurei. If your radishes are small and sweet, you can forgo peeling off the skin and leave them in larger pieces—halved or quartered should do it. They'll need less time to roast too, so start checking at 15 minutes.

Get the Roasted Turnips recipe.

5

Bison Meatballs

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These meatballs will have you questioning why you don't cook bison more often. Flecked with sweet cranberries and wild rice, these savory bite-sized balls of goodness are great as an appetizer, or served alongside for a hearty and healthy meal.

Get the Bison Meatballs recipe.

6

Chayote With Dried Green Chile

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Related to the squash family, chayote is very mild and will pick up all of the flavors in your pot. If you can't find it, you can easily substitute zucchini.

Get the Chayote With Dried Green Chile recipe.

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7

Tamales

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Corn, or maize, is a crucial ingredient in Native American cuisine, and no dish exemplifies that appreciation quite like tamales. Tamales aren’t just fun to eat, they’re a great solo or group project for anyone who loves to cook. Make it a party by involving your friends, enlist your partner or spouse for a different kind of date night, or get the whole family involved.

Get the Tamales recipe.

8

Wild Rice With Root Vegetables

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This hearty wild rice salad is infinitely adaptable. Feel free to swap out the vegetables listed for whatever looks freshest at your farmers' market or grocery store.

Get the Wild Rice With Root Vegetables recipe.

9

Roasted Delicata Squash

Delicata squash is a winter squash that doesn't get enough attention. Its small size makes it much easier to handle than other squashes and it cooks much faster. When roasted, the squash gets creamy and sweet, and we can't get over how cute the flower-shaped slices are!

Get the Roasted Delicata Squash recipe.

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10

Best-Ever Pozole

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Pozole is a sacred dish that can be traced back to the Zuni pueblo people. Don't let the time commitment on this fantastically flavorful pozole recipe scare you. It's as easy as bringing water to a boil and letting it simmer away while you multitask on other things going on in your life. The longer you let the soup simmer, the better it will be.

Get the Best-Ever Pozole recipe.

11

Whole Roasted Trout

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Trout's delicate flavor is the perfect match for citrus and herbs, which is why we love to roast it whole, filling it with all our favorite aromatics.

Get the Whole Roasted Trout recipe.

12

Fried Green Tomatoes

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Nothing complements a juicy, tart green tomato quite like a crunchy, slightly sweet cornmeal crust. A classic remoulade is our condiment of choice, but if you don’t feel like whipping one up from scratch, making a simple two-ingredient spicy mayo will absolutely do the trick.

Get the Fried Green Tomatoes recipe.

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13

Wild Rice Pudding

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If you've only ever had wild rice in savory dishes, you're in for a treat. The maple syrup coaxes some seriously complex flavors from the rice; it becomes incredibly aromatic, with notes of vanilla, toasted nuts, and a jasmine-like floral flavor that plays beautifully with fresh fruit.

Get the Wild Rice Pudding recipe.

14

Best Baked Catfish

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Catfish makes us think of lazy summer days spent at the lake, and we love it for that. Baking your catfish makes this meal much easier, with no worry of oil getting everywhere. We still bread it in cornmeal, much like Native American tradition, which lends a crispy exterior that gives away to tender, flaky fish.

Get the Best Baked Catfish recipe.

15

Grilled Bone-In Bison Steaks With Crisped Potatoes

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Once a critical food source to Native Americans, bison is mild, lean, and once again growing in popularity in North America. If you love this, try our bison burgers next!

Get the Grilled Bone-In Bison Steaks With Crisped Potatoes recipe.

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16

Roasted Butternut Squash

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Butternut squash is a fall staple. The deep orange squash is super-versatile and works well as roasted butternut squash soup, as a bacon butternut squash side, or is pretty perfect on its own, simply roasted with olive oil, salt, and pepper. (Best tip: Get your oven SUPER hot for best results.)

Get the Roasted Butternut Squash recipe.

17

Fried Cornbread

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The simple, quick batter is shallow-fried to give that crispy exterior. Once slathered in butter and honey, it will put all other cornbread to shame.

Get the Fried Cornbread recipe.

18

Harvest Chicken Casserole

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This satisfying casserole has ALL of your fall favorites—Brussels sprouts, sweet potatoes, cranberries. Make it for a big crowd for Thanksgiving, then make it all fall long—it's a make-ahead DREAM.

Get the Harvest Chicken Casserole recipe.

18 Recipes That Celebrate Indigenous American Food Traditions (2024)

FAQs

What are some traditional Native American foods? ›

The most important Indigenous American crops have generally included Indian corn (or maize, from the Taíno name for the plant), beans, squash, pumpkins, sunflowers, wild rice, sweet potatoes, tomatoes, peppers, peanuts, avocados, papayas, potatoes and chocolate.

What are indigenous foods examples? ›

Wild/indigenous foods include wild plants, animals and insects that are not cultivated or reared in captivity and are sometimes considered minor or underutilized species, and include roots and tubers, vegetables and leafy vegetables, fruits, insects, amphibians, reptiles, birds and mammals gathered for food (FAO and ...

What are some Native American foods eaten in the US today include __________? ›

It is important to note that many of the foods eaten today were first used in Native American cuisines. These foods include potatoes, beans, corn, peanuts, pumpkins, tomatoes, squash, peppers, melons, and sunflower seeds. The second contribution involves the structure of the United States' government.

What do they eat on Indigenous Peoples Day? ›

Some Indigenous foods that you may recognize include tomatoes, many varieties of squash, potatoes, corn, beans, cacao, a myriad of berries and nuts, and more. Traditional Native cuisine also includes meats such as buffalo, moose, elk, bear, deer, seal, whale, lobster, and more.

What is a famous Native American dish? ›

Indigenous Americans originated many classic dishes that just might surprise you too, like fried green tomatoes, succotash, and tamales. Did you know? Grilling salmon on cedar planks also has roots in tribes of the Pacific Northwest, where salmon is revered as a sacred food to tribes all across the region.

What are three common foods in Native American culture? ›

The three sisters (corn, beans, and squash) were the major staples of Native American agriculture, and were always grown together.

What is the most popular indigenous food? ›

Some of the most well-known Indigenous foods are the Three Sisters—corn, beans, and squash—as they were staple foods. This trio grows well together in the same soil and comes together to form many nutrient-dense dishes, such as Three Sisters soup or stew.

What is a first food indigenous? ›

Indigenous peoples throughout North America have historically depended on a wide variety of species for food. These traditional foods are widely referred to as first foods in native communities. First foods have provided sustenance and promoted health in native communities for countless generations.

What are indigenous snacks? ›

Snacks were often enjoyed right on the trail—a few berries or dried seeds plucked from the wild plants. Some were eaten right on the spot, and some may have been carried home to share or save for another day.

Is cornbread Native American? ›

Cornbread is a quick bread made with cornmeal, associated with the cuisine of the Southern United States, with origins in Native American cuisine. It is an example of batter bread. Dumplings and pancakes made with finely ground cornmeal are staple foods of the Hopi people in Arizona.

What is an indigenous feast? ›

FEASTS AND GIVEAWAYS

They are held throughout the year to acknowledge the help received from the spirit world, our relatives and ancestors, and other members of the community. Feasting gives us the opportunity to honour all those who have helped us, to feed them and express our respect for what they have done for us.

What delicacy was used as fertilizer by indigenous peoples in America? ›

While fish parts were not the primary fertilizer used in this farming method, they were occasionally employed to enhance the soil fertility. The Native Americans used a technique called "three sisters" farming, which involved growing corn, beans, and squash together in a mutually beneficial manner.

What did natives eat for breakfast? ›

Corn porridge was popular among the Native Americans, who called it “sofkee” or “sofgee” and eventually became popular with the colonists. As you might wonder, hoecakes and johnny cakes – otherwise known as corn bread – were also breakfast staples.

What is traditional Cherokee food? ›

Some Cherokee favorites include cornmeal-dredged fried crawdads, wild onions cooked with eggs, fried hog meat, fried fish, brown beans, bean bread, greens such as kochani, poke sallet and watercress, and desserts such as grape dumplings and kanutsi.

What is traditional Navajo food? ›

Traditionally, the Navajo farmed vegetables, including beans, squash, and corn, which grew in many colors and was eaten dried (and ground) or fresh. The Navajo hunted deer and other small mammals for protein. Today sheep are raised in the territory for wool, and mutton is one of the tribe's most popular food sources.

What did Native Americans cook? ›

They made many kinds of bread, mush, spoonbread, and dumpling from fresh or dried corn, pulses, acorns, and nuts. Corn and beans went into a dish like succotash. Cornmeal mush or broiled fresh or dried corn evidently served as the base of countless vegetable, meat, and fish stews.

What foods did Native Americans introduce? ›

As much as three-fifths of the world's agricultural crops originated in the Americas. Without the Columbian Exchange, there would be no tomatoes for Italian food, no hot chile peppers for Indian cuisine, and no dietary staples like potatoes, squash, beans or corn.

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