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NorthVideo

Bannock recipe: How to make a northern staple

On your next camping trip try northern-style bannock. Inuvik's tourism staff explain how to make this northern staple.

Inuvik's tourism staff offer a step-by-step guide

It's crumbly, soft and a little greasy.

Bannock is the bread of the North.

It's amust-have with any caribou or reindeer stewand goes well with some jam.

Most locals take the staple for granted because it's as common as sliced bread.But for visitors and newbies like the ones who gathered this week at Inuvik's Western Arctic Visitor Centre a piece of bannock is anovelty and a taste of the North.

Don't panic, it's easy to make

Inuvik tourism interpreterMaribeth Pokiak saysbannock gained popularity in the Beaufort-Delta region because it can be made on the land.

"It was easy for a hunter to throw flour into their sled and go hunting for days," Pokiak says.

"It was easy for them to mix the bannock mixture and throw it on the fire and have dinner already instead of bread. Bread takes hours to make."

Pokiak says bannockgoes back to the days of the fur trade and the introduction of flour by explorers and fur traders.

"The aboriginal people took that and made it into their own recipe," she says.

Before outsiders arrivedPokiak saysaboriginal people made a type ofbannock with a paste that was made from lichen and moss.

Today makebannockin the oven or over a campfire.

INGREDIENTS:

  • 2 cups flour
  • 4 teaspoons of baking powder
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 2 tablespoons of sugar
  • cup of lard
  • 1 egg
  • 1 cup ofmilk

VIDEO: How to make bush bannock:Tourism interpreter Alyssa Ross shows us her mother's recipe.