Dill in the Boreal: How Ukrainian Herbs Naturalized Along Prairie Fencelines

When Ukrainian immigrants began arriving in Canada in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, many brought more than just tools and textiles. Tucked into coat linings or sewn into satchels were precious seeds from the Old Country—reminders of the land they left behind and essential for the lives they hoped to build. Among the most prized were herbs: dill, caraway, lovage, parsley, and sorrel.

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Canada, Canada Food Stories, Food History, Food Heritage Recipes & Roots Canada, Canada Food Stories, Food History, Food Heritage Recipes & Roots

Holubtsi on the Homestead: Cabbage Rolls and Root Cellars in Alberta’s Ukrainian Settlements

Between the late 1890s and the 1930s, thousands of Ukrainians arrived on the Canadian Prairies, seeking land, freedom, and the possibility of a better life. Alberta, with its vast stretches of forest-prairie edge and fertile soil, became home to some of the largest Ukrainian settlements in Canada. Places like Vegreville, Lamont, Mundare, and Andrew emerged as cultural strongholds where faith, language, and food could survive in a new land.

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