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submitted 1 week ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

Sean Sherman walks through an expansive commissary kitchen in South Minneapolis, his eyes lighting up with excitement. He isn’t taking in the kitchen as it is—dormant but well-equipped with an industrial smoker, a walk-in sausage-making area, and plentiful storage space. Instead, he’s seeing the future of his Meals for Native Institutions initiative, when the space is up, running, and realizing a long-term vision to introduce more Indigenous foods into the American food system.

Sherman, an Oglala Lakota tribal member with an unassuming demeanor, a soft smile, and a signature long braid hanging down his back, has endeavored to revitalize Native American food traditions since 2014, when he founded The Sioux Chef, a catering and educational enterprise. His focus is on “decolonized” food—made without Eurocentric ingredients such as beef, pork, chicken, dairy, wheat flour, and cane sugar—most notably at his acclaimed Minneapolis restaurant, Owamni.

Sherman still cooks at his restaurant, but these days, he has his sights set on a triad of initiatives that bring him closer to the goal of making the U.S. food system more inclusive and indeed more Indigenous. The opening later this year of an Indigenous Food Lab satellite in Bozeman, Montana, is part of that vision. So too is his cookbook Turtle Island (Clarkson Potter), which I coauthored, covering Native foodways across North America.

But in this moment, Sherman is most excited about Meals for Native Institutions, which will provide schools, hospitals, penitentiaries, and community centers with large-format Indigenous foods.

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[-] [email protected] 4 points 1 week ago

Excited to see this. I've eaten at Owamni and the food is good by the way, anyone in the area should try it out if you can spare the $$$. Anytime it comes up on the /r/Minneapolis :stormfront: sub, crakkkers pop up complaining that the food is not good (sorry you hate interesting food that doesn't cater to your palate, it's good) and overpriced (it is in fact pricy, but just think of it as a tiny bit of reparations and you're getting very novel and different gourmet food for way less than gourmet prices) (god forbid we pay to support fair wages to extremely marginalized people).

this post was submitted on 24 May 2025
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