Grandma’s Wartime Kitchen: Old-School Sustainability from the Home Front
The kitchen table was as much a part of Canada’s war effort as the factory floor. Picture it: a narrow 1940s kitchen with a wood or coal stove radiating heat, ration books fanned open beside a jar of sugar no bigger than a teacup, rows of gleaming preserves stacked like sentries along the counter, and two fresh loaves of bread cooling under clean tea towels. The air carried the mingled scent of yeast, stewed fruit, and something savoury stretching its way into tomorrow’s supper.
Make Your Own Ancestral Girl Dinner: 12 Fridge-Friendly Foods That Last
Not every meal needs a recipe. Sometimes it just needs a spoon and a jar. These 12 make-ahead or slow-fermented foods have nourished generations — and they still hold their own on today’s snack plates.
Snack Plates and Sustenance: How Girl Dinner Became a Cultural Flashpoint with Ancestral Roots
It started with a ceramic plate, a piece of cheese, some grapes, a wine glass wheeled in tight. No flame. No stove. No recipe. Back in 2023, TikTok user Olivia Maher—sister of Olympic rugby star Ilona Maher—named it “Girl Dinner”. In a video testimony, she described it as a “medieval peasant meal” she loved. The clip went viral, sparking millions of videos of minimalist meals that looked like they were thrown together—or maybe just unearthed from a ragged fridge. (Glamour, The Hans India, Cultura Colectiva)
Solo and Sustained: Eating Alone as Ritual, Survival, and Rebellion
The hum of the fridge. The tap leaking, soft as breath. The kettle rattling, forgotten and still full. There’s an avocado on the counter that went bad yesterday. A heel of bread. One last hardboiled egg, peeled already, shrivelled a little. One pickle. A triangle of cheese. Three olives, maybe four, soft, salty, slumped.
The Snack Plate Across Cultures: Small Meals with Big Stories
You walk into a kitchen in Beirut, Busan, Barcelona, Bamako. You sit. You wait. You don’t get one plate—you get six. Ten. Fifteen. Some small, some smaller. A pickled thing, a fried thing, a thing cured in salt or smoked in the firepit out back. Chickpeas mashed with garlic. Eggplant blackened to silk. Anchovies glistening in oil. Kimchi sharp as a slap. Carrots steeped in vinegar. Olives, dozens of them, wrinkled or slick or stuffed with almonds.
Not Just Snacks: Women’s Hidden Food Labour in History
Girl dinner, they say, is effortless. A scoop of hummus, a heel of bread, the last of the berries, some pickled beans from a jar so old the label’s curling. It’s a meal that doesn’t pretend to be anything but enough.
But “effortless” is a myth.
Ukrainian Prairie Stories: Recipes and Roots Across the Land
When people speak of Canadian food, it’s often in generalities—maple syrup, poutine, butter tarts. But the real story of Canadian cuisine is one of interwoven legacies. Ukrainian food, especially on the Prairies, is not just a cultural layer; it is a foundational thread in how rural communities fed themselves, celebrated, and built resilience on new soil.
From Baba’s Hands to Bake Sales: Ukrainian Honey Cakes in Rural Alberta
In Ukrainian tradition, medivnyk is a dense, dark honey cake spiced with cinnamon, cloves, and sometimes coffee or cocoa. Though simple in its, ingredients the cake was rich in symbolism and carefully reserved for feast days—especially Christmas, New Year’s, and major weddings. In some regions, it was part of ritual offerings, tied to both the sweetness of life and the warmth of shared gatherings.
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.
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.
Perogies Across the Prairie: From Hand-Stuffed Dumplings to Freezer Staples in Saskatchewan
Saskatchewan’s landscape—sweeping plains, black soil, and harsh winters—offered both challenge and familiarity to Ukrainian immigrants who began arriving in the 1890s. Many came from agricultural backgrounds in Western Ukraine, regions that shared the open skies and grain-rich horizons of the Prairie provinces. The land promised opportunity but required adaptation.
Rye and Resilience: The Ukrainian Bread Legacy in Manitoba’s Parkland Region
In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, waves of Ukrainian immigrants arrived in the Canadian Prairies, many settling in what is now known as Manitoba’s Parkland Region—especially around Dauphin, Ethelbert, and Sifton. Seeking land, freedom, and survival, these newcomers brought more than just labour and language. They brought food traditions that were deeply tied to the rhythms of the earth—and none more foundational than rye bread.
Indigenous Foodways of Edmonton: Rediscovering Traditional Flavours
Edmonton rests on Treaty 6 territory, the traditional lands of the Néhiyaw (Cree), Niitsitapi (Blackfoot), Métis, Nakoda (Stoney), Dene, Haudenosaunee (Iroquois), and Anishinaabe (Ojibway/Saulteaux) peoples. This place is not just a backdrop for food—it is a living landscape of knowledge, culture, and memory.
A Taste of Italy: Italian Cuisine in Edmonton
Italian immigrants arrived in Alberta in small numbers as early as the 1890s, often settling in mining towns like Coleman and Blairmore. By the 1920s and again after World War II, larger waves of immigration brought families from Calabria, Abruzzo, Sicily, and Veneto to Edmonton.
Edmonton’s Oldest Restaurants: A Taste of History
Edmonton is a city that wears its age quietly. While much of its modern identity has been shaped by oil booms, arts festivals, and growing immigration waves, the story of its food is told in tucked-away diners, enduring bakeries, and family-run restaurants that have outlived trends.
The Origins of Cinnamon
Cinnamon comes from the inner bark of trees in the Cinnamomum genus. The most prized variety, Cinnamomum verum (or Ceylon cinnamon), is native to Sri Lanka. Other types, particularly Cinnamomum cassia, originated in China and Southeast Asia and are often sold under the same name, especially in North America.
Beyond the Barbecue: The Real Roots of Canadian Summer Foods
Every Canada Day, backyards across the country fill with the familiar scents of grilled meat, corn on the cob, and something sweet with strawberries or maple. The scene is familiar, but often misunderstood. What we now think of as “classic Canadian summer food” is not a product of modern convenience—it’s the result of generations of knowledge, trade, migration, and resilience.
The History and Heritage of Focaccia
When you think of Italian bread, your mind might jump to crusty ciabatta, a fluffy ciabattina, or maybe even pizza. But there’s one humble flatbread that has a story as rich and layered as its texture — focaccia.
Northern Flavours
Smoke curls lazily from the stovepipe of a log cabin tucked into the spruce-lined banks of the Nagwichoonjik (Mackenzie River). Inside, the air is thick with the scent of juniper and freshly caught arctic char simmering over the fire. A cast-iron pan crackles as bannock browns to a golden crisp, its dough flecked with wild herbs gathered from the forest floor. It’s not just a meal—it’s memory, survival, and ceremony passed down through generations.