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Soapberry Contest

 
2010 Soapberry Contest    
 

Soapberry Throwdown from Kathy Dye on Vimeo.

 
Watch this video of SHI's 2nd biennial soapberry contest held during Celebration 2010. (TRT: 3:48)

(Video Library)

 



WINNERS OF SOAPBERRY CONTEST, SEAWEED CONTEST ANNOUNCED


Two people have taken top prizes for traditional-food contests at Celebration 2010.

David Williams of Angoon won first place in the biennial black seaweed contest. Doris McLean of Yukon, Whitehorse, took first place in the institute’s second soapberry contest. McLean collected the berries last fall and preserved them over the winter to compete in the contest.

“I cooked them and jarred them and put them away for this,” McLean said. “I’m just beating it with sugar and water and smashing it up and putting a little other juices in there.”

Other winners of the soapberry contest were Louise Gordon of Atlin, British Columbia, who took second place, and Fran Neumann of Carcross, Yukon, who took third place.*

Wilbert Kadake of Kake won second place in the seaweed contest.

The institute sponsors the contests to introduce young people to traditional Native foods and to highlight the health benefits of traditional Native cuisine.

Sealaska Heritage Institute is a private, nonprofit founded in 1980 to administer cultural and educational programs for Sealaska Corporation. The institute is governed by an all-Native Board of Trustees and guided by a Council of Traditional Scholars. Its mission is to perpetuate and enhance Tlingit, Haida, and Tsimshian cultures of Southeast Alaska.
 

CONTACT: Rosita Worl, SHI president, 907-463-4844

* Due to staff error, Louise Gordon was initially announced as the third-place winner. She won second place, and Fran Neumann won third place.


Radio Actualities

  1. Doris McLean, 1st Place, Soapberry Contest: TRT: :18I cooked them and jarred them and put them away for this. I’m just beating it with sugar and water and smashing it up and putting a little other juices in there. (mpeg) (wav)

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Soapberries are considered a rare treat among Native people and often are served at ceremonial gatherings. The small, red-orange, translucent berries usually are found near glaciers. The bushes vary in growth habit – in Miranda Belarde Lewis froths soapberries by hand at a T’akdeintaan Ku.éex in Hoonah, 1998.Klukwan, the branches fall over and lay on the ground whereas they stand tall in Glacier Bay. Soapberries are tiny, so people harvest the berries by beating the branches with their hand or a stick over a bucket. The berries fall into the bucket with this method, allowing for significant harvests in a short period of time.

To prepare, a small amount of berries is mixed with water and whipped into a froth. Soapberries are very bitter, so people often add sweeteners, such as chopped apples and bananas or they whip the berries with juice from fruit cocktail instead of water. It’s very important to keep the berries free of oil, as it will affect the frothing. People whip soapberries in a very clean bowl made of metal or glass (plastic is not recommended).

Historically, people whipped soapberries with their hands or with a wooden whisk. The whisk was made by shaving sections of wood toward the end of a stick and stopping before the shavings fell off. Today, Native people sometimes still use their hands to froth soapberries served at ceremonies, although it’s now more common to use an electric mixer.

Soapberries may be harvested when they are green or red, and some people prefer to eat them green. The froth of green soapberries appears white, while red soapberries produce a pink color. 

Compiled from information provided by Nora Dauenhauer, Johnny Marks, Anita Lafferty, Helen Sarabia, Margaret Martin and June Pegues.
 

Soapberry Names

Tlingit Haida Tsimshian Scientific
Xákwl'ee Xaptl'íit Ash

Shepherdia Canadensis