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Chinook
by George Hosier II - March 8, 2007
Moose Nose Stew
I peered dubiously into the depths of the Styrofoam cup clenched
in my 14-year-old hand. Experimentally I dabbed at the contents
with my flimsy plastic spoon. I could identify a thin broth with
globules of grease skating on the surface, a few grains of white
rice, and some shreds of meat. But what was this other stuff? Some
of it looked like wide, small diameter rubber bands. There was
also a quantity of an amorphous, porous gel-like substance. At my
elbow somebody was talking. Nearly hypnotized with morbid
fascination as I was, it was difficult to tear my gaze away from
the Styrofoam cup, but when I managed to do so, I beheld Moose
Hole elder, Jacob Thaddeus grinning at me. The beating of drums
and Athabascan singing that accompanied the current dance made it
difficult to hear what he was saying. I leaned closer.
“Moose nose stew.” He jabbed a finger at my Styrofoam cup. “Eeee,
so good! My daughter, he cook for potlatch. Make you strong!”
He was right. It did make me strong. Just hearing the stuff
identified was already having that effect on me. I felt my abdomen
muscles tighten. I found myself clenching my teeth together with a
strength I did not know I possessed, as I held back an undeniably
strong impulse to gag.
As a young feller growing up in Moose Hole, Alaska, I attended
quite a few potlatches. I will never forget the experience. Very
few white men have even heard of a potlatch, even fewer know how
to spell it, but it is a miniscule percentage of modern white guys
who have actually had the privilege of attending one. I hold my
head high today, proud to be among the initiated ones. Of course,
when I first came to Alaska, I didn’t know what a potlatch was
either. The first time I heard the word, I assumed it was
something that kept a honey bucket from accidentally popping open.
Boy was I wrong!
It turned out that a potlatch is a North-Western Native American
tradition that involves a lot of food, gifts, food, singing, food,
dancing, food, speechmaking and more food. A potlatch can go on
for days. In spite of the description at the beginning of this
article, some of my most vivid gastronomic fantasies are rooted in
the memories of those potlatch feasts. If it wasn’t for the
dancing, I think every participant would gain 15 pounds during the
course of a ceremony.
Nowhere before or since have I seen a row of tables groaning under
the weight of such a smorgasbord. It was the best food Alaska has
to offer, all in one spot—for three days straight. At the time I
found it bewildering and cruel to be expected to choose between
moose liver, caribou stroganoff, grizzly chops, Dall sheep roast,
alder smoked salmon, bison sausage and deep-fried ptarmigan. Of
course, that’s not even counting the washtubs of potato salad,
baskets of fry bread and five-gallon coolers of red Kool-Aid. For
condiments and side dishes we could fill in the cracks with
crowberry jam on sourdough biscuits, low bush cranberry and orange
salad, currant and rose hip chutney and a steaming cup of Labrador
tea! Excuse me for a moment while I wipe the drool off of my
keyboard.
Now, believe it or not, the purpose of this article is not to wax
loquacious about five-star potlatch dining. I’m just laying the
background for my main point. You see, alongside all of this
trusted and lip-smacking food came other dishes. These were
traditional foods borne reverently to the table by grinning
Athabascan women, accompanied by a laughing, chattering, leaping,
wrestling knot of kids. The arrival of these dishes, however, did
not provoke quite as much enthusiasm among we descendents of those
pale-faced interlopers who had stumbled upon the Great Land only
yesterday as Raven calculates time.
There were delicacies such as roasted porcupine, boiled beaver
tail, salmon head soup baked lynx and fried muskrat. Everybody who
tasted them lapsed into a raving monologue about how delicious
they were. Clearly, the flesh of these animals contained some sort
of neurotoxic alkali, which induced instant insanity. I vowed to
avoid them.
In spite of myself, one potlatch I narrowly avoided becoming a
victim when I was offered a cup of Eskimo ice cream. “Ice Cream”.
The name sounds so innocent and all-American; deceptively evoking
nostalgic memories of birthday parties and Fourth of July
celebrations. Flavors like vanilla and cookies ‘n’ cream and
raspberry ripple flood to mind at the mention of the term. Around
me, giggling Athabascan kids were gobbling the Eskimo ice cream
out of Styrofoam cups.
Styrofoam cups? That was a red flag! Jolted out of my nostalgic
coma, I shook my head to clear it. All my senses klaxoning a code
red alert, I tiptoed to the table where the Eskimo ice cream was
being served. I tried to appear nonchalant as I stole furtive
reconnaissance glances at the concoction. The best that I could
determine, it was not icy, and it didn’t appear to contain any
cream. Suddenly, a cute little girl loomed before me, thrusting a
Styrofoam cup in my face. Graciously, I flailed out at her,
sending her sprawling before fleeing to the opposite corner of the
community hall to cower, trembling, in the corner.
Gradually, my blood pressure began to subside, and I became able
to hear something beyond the jack hammering of my own heart, and
the gasping rasp of my breathing. What I began to hear was a
slurping noise. It came from Klondike Clancy who happened to be
sharing my corner. He was a bear of a man swathed in furs and
beadwork and beard hair, packing a Ruger .44 magnum and 14-inch
Bowie knife on a gun belt. At the moment, he was meticulously
spooning the last dregs of Eskimo ice cream from a Styrofoam cup.
“What is that stuff?” I shuddered.
A couple of decayed teeth appeared within the tangled thicket of
his beard, and his eyes twinkled. For Klondike Clancy, that was as
close to a big grin as it got. “Agaduk.” He warbled. For such an
imposing hulk of a grizzled mountain man, he sure had a
disconcerting voice. He sounded like a Vienna Choir boy. Rumor had
it that he had talked like that ever since a hunting accident
years ago. Something about his .44 firing before he had gotten it
clear of its holster.
“Yeah, I know it could gag a duck, but what is it?”
“Agaduk! Aqudak! Akutaq! However you say it, it’s Eskimo ice
cream. You should try some. It’s delicious.”
“But what’s in it!”
“Traditionally, the Eskimo cook whips seal oil until it is creamy
and then folds in freshly fallen snow and tundra roots. Aqudak was
served on festive occasions, such as a young man's first
successful polar bear hunt or wedding.” Clancy fancied himself to
be a historian.
“You’re telling me you’re eating seal oil, snow, and tundra
roots?”
“Oh, no, no, no! The Athabascan version was made from whipped
caribou-leg marrow, cooked meat flakes, and berries.”
I felt myself getting strong again. “Oh, that’s much better.” I
paused a moment to allow my gag reflex to subside. “So you’re
eating whipped caribou-leg marrow. Nice.”
Klondike Clancy laughed, then. It was a sound like wind chimes
being batted by a kitten. “They don’t make it that way anymore.
Not at all! Nowadays, you just stir frozen berries into a mixture
of half sugar and half Crisco. Very Fred Meyers. You better get
yourself some before it’s all gone.”
I just stared at him, speechless for a moment. Finally, I
stammered, “Well, it certainly sounds healthy enough. They say
that berries have lots of antioxidants.”
“Yep. I see they have a couple of cups left. You better grab some
before I do.”
“Aw, no, really. I couldn’t. You go ahead and help yourself. I
think I’ll just have me one of those delicious cups of moose nose
stew.”
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