@CBCdocs
  @CBCdocs
CBC Docs | Corn Soup: A guide to this traditional recipe, by a chef and a knowledge keeper @CBCdocs | Uploaded March 2021 | Updated October 2024, 10 hours ago.
The making of traditional corn soup is knowledge that has been passed down through multiple generations of the Six Nations of the Grand River in Ontario.

For Karl Docksteader, making the soup represents a chance for his old life as a Red Seal Chef and new life as a community leader to come together.

He, along with Edgar Ahosenae, a knowledge keeper, work together to create this soup using the traditional methods.

As we learn about the soup and how it’s made, we also learn about how the process is deeply rooted in the culture. From the way the corn is harvested, to the way hardwood ashes are used as part of the process, to the way the soup is distributed to the elders of the community as an acknowledgement of the work they do. All from a humble bowl of corn soup.

More Shows:
bit.ly/CBCDocs-WatchMore

Stay Connected:
Twitter: bit.ly/CBCDocs-Twitter
Facebook: bit.ly/CBCDocs-Facebook
Instagram: bit.ly/CBCDocs-Instagram
Corn Soup: A guide to this traditional recipe, by a chef and a knowledge keeperDiscovering new species in the ancient canopies of Canadas tallest trees | Wild Canadian Weathereven mosquitoes weather the storm!New year, new Nature of Things!“The RCMP was created just to forcefully remove Indigenous people off their lands” | YintahAsian, queer and uncomfortable: all the things I would say to my younger self | The Lunchbox DilemmaThe Toronto Raptors’ biggest fan is as famous as the players: How Nav Bhatia became the SUPERFANSeal pups plunge into the icy St. Lawrence for the very first time | Wild Canadian WeatherPolar bear tracker follows mother bear as she teaches cubs to hunt | The Nature of Thingsits all in your headWhen I was 4, my kindergarten teacher told my parents to give me a proper English nameCanadas goldilocks lizard spends her day finding the right temperature | Wild Canadian Weather

Corn Soup: A guide to this traditional recipe, by a chef and a knowledge keeper @CBCdocs

SHARE TO X SHARE TO REDDIT SHARE TO FACEBOOK WALLPAPER