Showing posts with label cooking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cooking. Show all posts

Thursday, December 10, 2020

Apache Indian Women's Domestic Life in Photographs

 Apache Indian Women's Domestic Life in Photographs


Two Apache Indian Women Cooking at a Campfire


Apache Indian woman with baby (Papoose)

Apache Indian Family on Horseback Crossing the Ford in the River

Apache Indian Woman Holding Her Baby (Papoose) in a Cradleboard.

Apache Indian Woman Getting Water 

Apache Indian Woman Gathering the Wheat

An Apache Indian Woman in the Corn Field.


Monday, August 18, 2014

Shawnee Indian Food And Cooking Techniques

Shawnee Indian Food And Cooking Techniques




 Pan-Handle of West Virginia

NATIVE AMERICAN INDIAN FOOD AND COOKER
 1762. Heckwelder says at that time their principal food consisted of game, fish, corn, potatoes, beans, pumpkins, cucumbers, squashes, melons, cabbages, and turnips, roots of plants, fruits, nuts, and berries. "They take but two meals a day. The hunters or fishermen  never go out in the middle of the day, except it be cloudy. Their custom is to go out on an empty stomach as a stimulant to exertion in shooting game or catching fish. "They make a pottage of corn, dry pumpkins, beans and chestnuts, and fresh or dried meats, pounded, all sweetened with maple sugar or molasses, and well boiled. They also make a good dish of pounded corn and chestnuts, shellbarks and hickory nut kernels, boiled, covering the pots with large pumpkin, cabbage, or other leaves. "They make excellent preserves from cranberries and crab apples, with maple sugar. "Their bread is of two kinds; one mode of green, and the other of dry corn. If dry, it is sifted after pounding, kneaded, shaped into cakes six inches in diameter, one inch thick, and baked on clean dry ashes, of dry oak barks. If green, it is mashed, put on broad green corn blades, filled in with a ladle, well wrapped up and baked in ashes. "They make warrior's bread by parching corn, sifting it, pounding into flour, and mixing sugar. A table-spoonful with cold or boiling water is a meal, as it swells in the stomach, and if more than two spoonsful is taken, it is dangerous. Its lightness enables the warrior to go on long journeys and carry his bread with him. Their meat is boiled in pots, or roasted on wooden spits or coals." The original Indian method of making sugaV is said to have been in this manner: The sap from the maple trees was gathered and placed in large wooden troughs which they haggled out with their tomahawks. Hot stones were then thrown into the sap which was made to boil in this way, and the process continued until it was reduced to the required consistency.

Saturday, January 21, 2012

Native American Photos of the Apache Indian Tribe


Native American Pictures of the Apache
Color Photograph of Apache Warrior

Apache Indian Women Cooking

Apache Indian Scout Clothing

Apache Indian Corn Fields

Apache Indian Women

Apache Indian Photograph from Arizona
Color Picture of Apache Ceremonial Clothes, Dress
Apache Men and Women Gambling
Color Photo of Apache Houses
Apache Indian Scout Drawing
Apache Indian Warrior
Apache Indian Bag with Bead Design
Apache Indian Clothing, Two Hats
Apache Indian Children
Apache Childrens Dress Clothes
Apache Indian Girl
Apache Indian Bride
Two Apache Indians on Horseback Crossing a River
Apache Indians by a pool of Water
Apache Brave and Boy Making a Fire
Apache Indian Camp
Apache Indian Clothes, Dress
Apache Indian Girl
Apache Indians on Horseback at the River
Apache Indians at the River
Native American Pictures of Apache Male
Apache Indian Hut or House
Apache Indian Woman Cutting Mescal Plants
Apache Indian Women Tending to the Mescal Plants
Apache Indian Baskets
Apache Indian Houses
Apache Indian Designs on a Blanket
Apache Indian Girl
Apache Indians on horseback Crossing A River
Apache Indian Medicine Man Conducting a Ritual
Apache Woman Maternity Belt
Apache Indian Ritual Cap and Medicine Bag
Apache Indian
Apache Indian Village
Apache Art Design in Sand
Apache Rituals and Cermony
Apache Woman Dress
Native American Picture of a Apache House or Teepee
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Native American Apache Warrior Dress

Apache Religion, Customs, spirituality, dress

Apache Indian Picture

Apache Warriors House in Arizona

Apache Indians of New Mexico

Apache Indian Warriors in New Mexico

Apache Men and Women at a New Mexico Reservation

Famous Apache Chief Geronimo Photographed When He Was Young

Apache Tradition of Telling Stories to the Young

Famous Apache Chief Geronimo on Horseback

Apache Family Photographed in Front of Their House in Arizona


Apache Hunters

Apache Village and Houses with Women and Childen

Apache Woman and Child

Famous Apache Indian Chief Geronimo

Native American Indian Apache Girl

Apache Hunters on Horseback

Drawing of an Apache Scout and Dress, Clothes

Apache Indian Elder

Apache Indian Scouts

Apache Indians with Children

Apache Indian Hunting Party

Apache Indian Woman Dress Clothes

Apaches Delivering Hay to Fort Apache in Arizona

Apache Indian Photographed in Front of House in Arizona

Apache Indians Photographed in Village in Texas

Color Photograph of Apache House (teepee) in New Mexico