СƵ

Skip to content

Lillooet Chef David Wolfman's first cookbook published

Chef David Wolfman’s first cookbook, Cooking with the Wolfman: Indigenous Fusion has been praised as “glorious,” “stunning” and “both a storybook and a cookbook…a good read and a fine cooking course in one.
pix
Chef Wolfman’s Mexican Chocolate Spice Cake would make a wonderful Valentine’s Day cake.

Chef David Wolfman’s first cookbook, Cooking with the Wolfman: Indigenous Fusion has been praised as “glorious,” “stunning” and “both a storybook and a cookbook…a good read and a fine cooking course in one.”

Chef Wolfman is well-known to people in the Sea to Sky Corridor and Lillooet area. He is from the Xaxli’p Nation (his mother was Dolores Diablo) and he has visited this area to catch up with family and teach cooking classes.His new book was written in collaboration with his wife Marlene Finn, who is Metis.

It was recently selected ‘Best Cookbook in Canada’ (in English) by Gourmand International, the only international competition in the sector. The book will now represent Canada in the World Cookbook Fair in Frankfurt, Germany in May 2018.

Chef Wolfman said he’s “thrilled” that the book will be competing internationally at the Fair. He says he has many inspirations but one of his biggest is the “country food” created by Indigenous people across Canada and throughout North America.

David Wolfman is a classically trained Chef andCulinary Arts Professor at George Brown College of Applied Arts and Technology in Toronto.

For almost 20 years,he was the host of and executive producer of‘Cooking with theWolfman,’ an APTN program featuring hisIndigenous fusion recipes.

Lured by the smell of baking bread, he learned to cook in his mother’s kitchen. It was a way for the young boy to spend quality time with her and listen to stories of her life and of the Xaxli’p people.

After his mother left Xaxli’p in the 1950s, she met Rubin Wolfman, a railway employee and they settled in Toronto.

When she made salmon for dinner, her son recalls, Dolores Wolfman would be homesick. She told her family she was accustomed to being able to “just go and get the salmon. We had an abundance of this.”

Writing recently in The Globe and Mail, Angela Sterritt said, “Wolfman is beinglauded as an innovator and an inspiration– one who championed Indigenous flavours and techniques well before the mainstream North American food scene paid attention.“ Sterritt in turn cited the words of Dr. Lenore Newman, the Canada Research Chair in Food Security and the Environment: “David Wolfman takes a cuisine that was treated in Canada as almost an historical artifact and made it as a living cuisine again."

Chef Wolfman observes that while there were significant variations from region to region and from season to season, the traditional diets of Indigenous peoples of North America were very healthy - high in protein and nutrients, low in salt, sugar and almost without refined carbohydrates. They included large and small game, waterfowl, eggs, fish and seafood, tubers, berries, tree roots, grasses, seeds and cultivated food crops.

The new cookbook features recipes reflecting that heritage but developed for a modern palate – Slow-Cooked Ginger Caribou Shanks, Blackened Sea Scallops with Cream of Pumpkin and Mexican Chocolate Spice Cake (see the recipe below).

Mexican Chocolate Spice Cake

MAKES 8 SERVINGS

This is a moist cake made in the Mexican tradition of combining vanilla and cocoa with cayenne pepper and other spices. There’s just a hint of spice, so you can ramp it up if you want more kick. The batter can also be used to make cupcakes, but I use a round cake pan. Just a little dusting of icing sugar and fruit, and you’re done!

2 cups (475 mL) all-purpose flour 1 tsp (5 mL) baking soda 1 tsp (5 mL) ground cinnamon 11⁄2 tsp (7.5 mL) cayenne pepper 1 cup (250 mL) butter, plus 1 tsp (5mL)

for greasing baking pan 1⁄2 cup (120 mL) sifted cocoa powder,

plus 1 Tbsp (15 mL) for dusting 3⁄4 cup (180 mL) brewed black coffee at room temperature 2 eggs, beaten 2 cups (475 mL) sugar 1⁄2 cup (120 mL) buttermilk 1 Tbsp (15 mL) vanilla 1⁄4 cup (60 mL) icing sugar

TO SERVE (OPTIONAL):

Handful fresh raspberries Whipped cream

1 Preheat oven to 375F (190C).

2 Sift flour, baking soda, cinnamon and cayenne

into a mixing bowl. Sift again. Set aside.

3 Melt 1 cup (250 mL) butter in a large saucepan over low heat. Add 1⁄2 cup (120 mL) cocoa powder and whisk until smooth. Whisk in the coffee and heat to lukewarm. Remove from heat.

4 Add the eggs, sugar, buttermilk and vanilla to the cocoa mixture and stir to combine. Whisk in the dry ingredients very lightly. Small lumps are okay.

5 Butter a 9 by 9 inch (23 × 23 cm) cake pan and dust with cocoa powder. Pour in the batter.

6 Bake for 30 minutes. Let cake cool for 20 min- utes, covered with a clean tea towel before loosening edges and inverting onto a serving plate.

7 Sift icing sugar onto the top of the cake. Serve with fresh berries or whipped cream if desired.

From the book Cooking with the Wolfman: Indigenous Fusion, by Chef David Wolfman and Marlene Finn, © 2017. Published by Douglas & McIntyre. Reprinted with permission of the publisher.

push icon
Be the first to read breaking stories. Enable push notifications on your device. Disable anytime.
No thanks