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Eat your way home

I asked Chef David Wolfman if he thought eating an all-Indigenous diet would transform me over time, and he laughed.
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Wolfman Canada's Godfather of Indigenous cuisine, Davild Wolfman, seen here teaching a group of aspiring chefs, reveals the way food transforms us—not through rigid definitions and diets, but as a path into an interconnected web of life and stories. PHOTO submitted

I asked Chef David Wolfman if he thought eating an all-Indigenous diet would transform me over time, and he laughed.

Wolfman is a television celebrity—the host of Cooking with the Wolfman, which ran for 17 years on the APTN—a professor, culinary artist, and the co-author of newly released Cooking with the Wolfman: Indigenous fusion cookbook, with his wife Marlene Finn.

The book, released in the fall of 2017, has already won several awards, including Best Cookbook in Canada from the Gourmand World Cookbook Awards. It's in contention for the prestigious Best in the World designation and will represent Canada at the World Cookbook Fair in May.

The book, he said, was a result of people always asking: "When are you doing a cookbook?" and finally making the time, to collect his best recipes, and compile them, to a standard he would feel proud of, while having fun.

As educators, Wolfman and Finn also wanted the book to be a "sharp how-to." But most of all, they wanted to honour their elders and share the stories that had been shared with them.

"What we really wanted to do is do what our ancestors have always done, what our moms have always done, and talk about the food. Talk about the gathering of the herbs, and the fish and how it was dried, and the way it was a real team effort for the whole family to get the food. They didn't just go and buy the food. There was a real respect for the food," Wolfman said.

Wolfman's mother, the late Delores Diablo, is Xaxl'ipmec, and grew up in the Fountain Valley, near Lillooet. She moved to Toronto after she got married, and David and his siblings were raised as "urban natives."

When he first visited his relatives in Xaxl'ip, Wolfman, trying to get his bearings, asked obsessively, "Is this native?"

His uncle would tease him: "See these wieners? These wieners are native," he'd jest drily. "See this frying pan? This frying pan is native."

Wolfman was looking for food to connect him with culture and place. "I had this big interest in going back home. The fascinating thing is I was a chef, so my relatives were saying to me, 'Oh, show me how to do that hollandaise. How do you make this sauce?' And I would say, 'Oh, can you show me how you dry the salmon?' I don't think that they realized the volume I was absorbing."

I think this is why he laughed at my question. You can't eat yourself Indigenous. You might be literally fuelled by the ingredients you consume, but you don't become the cuisine you eat. Although he defines his beat as "Indigenous fusion," he isn't as interested in defining or limiting or separating things apart, so much as he is interested in using food as a catalyst for coming together.

He'd always been the guy who wandered into the kitchen and sat down with a friend's Portuguese or Italian mom, absorbing their intimacy with the food, their techniques, learning everything he could. He traces that comfort back to standing on a milk crate at the stove at nine years old, stirring his first stew for his mother—the way she winked at him when he splashed a bit of meat over the edge of the pot, and assuaged his worries that he was going to get in trouble for making a mess, by picking it up and saying, "Oh, we better eat that one!"

"She made it really comfortable for me, and I realized from her that the sharing of the food and the knowledge was more important than the finessing and the garnishing and the bouquet garni and the spices."

After his mother died, Wolfman returned to Xaxl'ip, and sat outside the now-abandoned cabin she had grown up in. He saw the mountains, the window, the berry bush she had told stories about—the xosum berries she couldn't wait to eat, always eating them before they were ready, her impatience resulting in a stomach ache.

All these stories came rushing out of the landscape, out of his past, out of their time in the kitchen together. "It was like someone opened up a book and started telling me all these stories again. I wondered how am I remembering all these things, just sitting here?" He felt as if it was her spirit, telling him all these things.

Food is just food, said Wolfman. You have to sell it to people. He calls it "whetting people's appetites." He teaches his students, "I don't tell people when they come into my restaurant, 'Tonight you're gonna have a choice of eating a dead chicken or a dead fish.'" Part of what gets us hungry when we read a menu, he says, is the backstory. It's organic. It's grain-fed. It was gathered by hand under a huge blue sky. It was made for me by my grandmother whenever I went to visit.

Keeping the stories alive is what matters. And stories that are shared last longer, go farther, grow into something more.

"Food ties us together," said Wolfman. "Especially when you have respect for food, and you bounce different ideas off each other. Even if we're different, or have different beliefs, it doesn't matter. The end goal is that we sit together and eat together and tell stories and love the company. That's all."

The Velocity Project: how to slow the f*&k down and still achieve optimum productivity and life happiness. Pemberton's Cookbook Club will explore Wolfman's new book at its April 26 gathering at Stay Wild. More info at TracedElements.com.