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Are you pemmiCAN or pemmican't? Pemmican is from the cree word for processed fat.

Max Miller covers pemmican.

summerizerPemmican: dried meat, fat, and survival

  • Pemmican is a North American survival food: dried meat pounded and saturated with fat, with shelf life measured in decades.
  • The name comes from Cree, and many Native nations made related foods under different names and local methods.
  • One 1859 source defines it as dried, pounded meat saturated with fat and gives one pound as equal to four pounds of ordinary meat.
  • Older food records include venison, beaver, elk, duck, rabbit, fish, and the buffalo version used by Lewis and Clark.
  • "Buffalo" and "bison" are used interchangeably because period sources do, even though the animal is scientifically bison.

Making the pemmican

  • Start with about two pounds, or one kilogram, of very lean bison or other meat, trimmed of visible fat.
  • Slice the meat very thin, preferably across the grain, and firm it briefly in the freezer when thin slicing is difficult.
  • Dry the strips at the lowest oven setting, with a catch pan below, until they are brittle enough to snap.
  • Historical drying used sun, racks, a small fly-chasing fire, stone pounding, and later Richardson's malt-kiln and malt-mill method.
  • Grind the dried meat into a coarse powder; a mortar and pestle works, but a blender does it faster.
  • Melt suet or other fat over low heat, then mix it into the powdered meat and optional dry ingredients.
  • Optional additions include Zante currants, sugar, saskatoon berries, chokeberries, and later salt.
  • Use roughly equal weights of fat and dried meat only as a starting point, because excess fat makes the finished food greasy.
  • Pack the mixture tightly into hide, tins, molds, or small pans, then cool it until firm.

How it tasted

  • Raw pemmican breaks crumbly and tastes like beef jerky wrapped in a heavy mouth-coating layer of fat.
  • Chokeberries do little for the flavor; sugar might help, but the main rule is not using more fat than needed.
  • It is tolerable when hunger matters more than pleasure, and cooking it is the better path.

Explorers and stored food

  • Lewis and Clark made buffalo pemmican for the plains journey and reserved flour, parched meal, and corn for the Rockies.
  • Their journals tie pemmican to huge meat needs, with one buffalo feeding the party for about twenty-four hours.
  • Alexander Mackenzie relied on pemmican, buried ninety pounds for his return, and cooked it with parsnip tops or wild onions.
  • Mackenzie's low-provision meals also included a fish-roe pudding thickened with flour and fat.

Métis trade and the Pemmican War

  • The Métis made pemmican a major trade commodity through large seasonal bison hunts.
  • Hunting parties could return with enormous supplies, and one bison cow could make a ninety-pound bag.
  • The Hudson's Bay Company and North West Company both depended on this food for fur-trade travel and northern work.
  • Selkirk's Red River colony intensified food pressure after Highland Clearances settlers arrived under Hudson's Bay Company control.
  • Governor Miles Macdonell's Pemmican Proclamation restricted hunting and export of food from the region.
  • The Métis and North West Company ignored the order, violence followed, and the Battle of Seven Oaks came in 1816.
  • The conflict ended when Britain pushed the rival companies toward the 1821 merger.

Cooking pemmican

  • A later western method boiled pemmican with water, flour, wild onions, or potatoes into rubaboo.
  • Another method fried it with onions and potatoes, or alone, as rechaud.

References

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[-] psud@aussie.zone 3 points 5 days ago

I can't say I thought of using my malt mill for pemmican. Grinding is the headache

[-] jet@hackertalks.com 2 points 5 days ago
[-] psud@aussie.zone 3 points 5 days ago

It is, but the malt grinder could do bulk and is also electric

this post was submitted on 03 Jun 2026
3 points (71.4% liked)

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