Heavenly Kiya I agree but it should not cost you a fortune to learn your family history.i remember a time when the internet was young that I could find out a lot of information like phone numbers and addresses of people I knew just by typing in their name free of charge... now they charge everything..I used to be able to find out who had a specific area code and digit phone number. If I have a predator calling me everyday why should I have to pay to keep that monitored?
Yeah was a lot easier to obtain information back than I remember yellow page phone number I think you have to pay for that now. Smh different times we’re living in
Here's a history lesson... rice came to the Americas on a ship that crashed... long after Europeans had begun taking over. A wild rice like grain called Manoomin is native to the great lakes region but while you and I couldn't tell it from other wild rice it's technically not rice... in a strictly botanical sense. It is unlikely that the Cherokee had access to very much of this Manoomin as it grew in the Chippewa Nation, and would have had to be traded for. So the history of this recipe is limited to be only as old as the mid to late 1600's... or else before that it was a rare treat and slightly different, if not entirely nonexistent. So there's how to date a recipe based on the availability of the ingredients.
"I'd like to be thought of as a giving person, a loving person." How many people strive for such a high goal? We would have a better society if that was our goal instead of things and money. Blessings to all who watch this video.
The elders who share their stories are truly treasures. My husband is half Seneca and we do our best to teach our daughters about both of our family histories.
My Great Grandma is Cherokee and married My Great Grandpa who was Scott-Irish. My Grandma used to make this for us when we were little. I never knew what it was called. Thanks for sharing!
Eating this with my grandma is one of my many favorite memories from my childhood .now I've padded this onto my children. I would love to sit and listen to Miss Edith for days, just to hear her knowledge
Thank you for sharing. I know virtually nothing about my Cherokee heritage...only found out fairly recently that I am part Cherokee. It gives me great joy to see you and listen to you, especially to learn about a native dish. I feel like you are very fortunate to have been able to learn and practice so much of Cherokee customs and culture. It's really sad you were not able to learn the language. Still you've been able to pass on so much to your grandchildren. They are fortunate for receiving Cherokee heritage from you. I hope they keep passing it along to future generations.
I remember as a child sitting in the woods and cracking open hickory nuts between 2 rocks until I was stuffed, 😊 such fond memories... Thanks to the precious lady for the recipe and the wisdom.
All that you share is a treasure. Your dresses are so beautiful. My mother was part Cherokee from Kentucky and she told us that her 5th grade teacher told her to be proud of her heritage, which made an impression on her because I knew it was still hard in those days. Thank you for sharing your story.
I miss kanuchi SO MUCH. Our traditional foods are so important for us to preserve. Like our language, our amscetral foods are also a part of who we are that make up the WHOLE of WHO we are. I miss being in the kitchen with my grandmother's making OUR food. It was tradition for them to tell stories and sharing memories of the past about how it was in thier time growing up. Stories about thier own mothers and the things they did in keeping with our traditions. How they made beds, pillows, blankets the old way. How it was tradition that before the girls got married and left home how the mother's would make these items and give them to thier daughters for thier new lives in thier new homes. They would tell stories to of the husbands building their marriage homes the traditional Cherokee way. And the recipes! Not just for foods, but for medicines. Many of these things I still use today. I am so happy they taught me how, and put into me the importance of learning. These things have actually helped me during the worst moments of my life, and through many illnesses. They taught me how to survive and to do it real well. I never fear when times are lean. With this knowledge, I KNOW me and mine will make it even if the WHOLE of society fails. ****Any young Cherokee girls out there who might be reading this and think the old ways are silly and outdated*****There is need of this knowledge being passed to you. It is important for the preservation and continuity of our people in SO many ways! 1) If any bad things happen in your life, these ways will help you make it through. The memories of your grandmothers will save you and your future families. The old way teaches you MANY lessons and becomes a part of who you will be when you become a woman and a mother. Honor the elders and listen to them. Honor our people, traditions, culture, and our languages. It isn't just our tribal identity, it's who we are as individuals inside the tribal identity. Each one of you who learns it takes a role in ensuring OUR survival as a tribal people. Learn these ways and keep them with you. Stay connected to it deeply. Know that there are not many full bloods left. That is very threatening, AND problematic to our people. I am a mixed woman. I think about it from the stand point of a registered mixed woman of our beautiful Cherokee Nation. It is sad for me. Many of the women before us felt they had no choice BUT to assimilate. Sometimes it meant their lives if they didn't. Some had no choice at all. It was FORCED on them. It was part of an old plan to kill the Indian, save the man and that agenda is STILL in force today. Us mixed people had no choice of what's in our gene pools. That was decided for us because of that agenda to assimilate and destroy the tribal peoples. If you are a full blood, please, take it in your heart to stay that way. I pray that you do listen. YOU girls today are the future and survival of our tribe and YOU are so important. This message does not come to you from a racially hateful place in my soul, it comes from the love of our ancestors before us and the hopes they had for us to survive and always be the principle people. I like everyone in the world, but we need our tribe to always be and never dissapear from this earth. No matter what the tribes do, You are the ONLY ones with the power to preserve and save our people. I can't even impress that importance onto you in a way that is adequate. It is very urgent. Peace, love, and many blessings to all you young Cherokee girls. You are the future mothers of an entire race of people and the only ones who can ensure that we will ALWAYS be the Cherokee Nation. Though my genes didn't give me the chance, I will use the Cherokee in me to encourage ALL of you girls. Always be proud that you are also American citizens, but first and MOST importantly, you are Cherokee Nation Citizens. You ARE the tribe. ❤❤❤
This makes me sad because my family tried to unlearn Cherokee ways. My great great grandma thought it would be better if we never looked back to see the family we left behind. She raised her daughter's as American as she could leaving us with a sense of sadness. We can't teach anyone the Cherokee ways because they were taken from us.
That's why girls should spend as much time as they can with mawmaw to learn cooking and medicines ;sewing etc it's gonna be lost forever if they don't learn !
Osiyo, wado and A'ho. Very profound are your words, yet I am Cherokee and a man who is just as important to our tribe as our women, the other half that makes us whole.
Osiyo. I have never had Kanuchi and I look forward to making this. My mother was part Cherokee and I was raised to be proud of my heritage. When I was in college, I had to take a language class before I could graduate and I was fortunate enough to take Cherokee from a nice Cherokee professor. She taught us so much about the language and our culture. Thank you for posting this video.
Made me so homesick. She said chalk bluff a tear fell out. When I cook traditional food everyone thinks it's weird. I don't know how many times I've heard "Wild onions whats that?" I miss everything I miss all the water, mountains the trees and food I miss Kanuchi the most. Dallas is so different.
Margaret Wilson we have inter tribal powwows, that's as close as DFW gets. Beautiful dancers. A bit of fry bread. A crossover hominy/elotes, etc. But Kinnuvchi makes me miss my grandmother... Glad to know Dallas doesn't feel like home. That really resonated with me, and I've been here 20+ years
Never mind people who think weird... it's part of YOU so they can get on board with it or go someplace else. I would LOVE to have even learned about my heritage but the Grandparents and etc were Christian and REFUSED to ever pass down anything, breaks my heart...
*My mother always made rice pudding, and would also make rice milk (no real milk in it), and give it to us when ever we had some fever or digestion problems as kids or babies, as a source of nutrition to prevent dehydration or hunger while sick ...*
Thank you for this show and all the knowledge it is passing on. My grandfather was Cherokee..his nickname was Cherokee as well...he didn't pass on much about the culture, he was a quiet man. I have learned a lot from this..thank u.
What a beautiful moment for me. I've known most of my life we are Cherokee but am just now learning we are part of the Keetoowah Tribe. I've Never heard of this Tribe but I am sooo excited to learn who I am...who my family is. My GG Grandma Ludie Mae Stanfield had such horrible life bc she was Black Cherokee and her death was horrid. I know very little about her or my GG Grandfather Bert Fowler was so vicious to her and my G Grandpa John Fowler. I AM SO PROUD to learn who I am. Thank you from the bottom of my heart for sharing with me.
What a beautiful lady. I could listen to her tell stories in that Oklahoma accent all day. It's so important to keep culture and traditions alive....ALL of them.
It’s not right to stop any human from expressing their culture and speaking the language of their ancestors. Don’t forget this same scenario happened in many Nations and not just the USA, Canada and South America, but also Australia, New Zealand, Africa and Polynesia.
Makes me cry, I was Picked on at school as I was different looking and one one called me Glenda they called me Hey Little Indian girl. I had a awful school life. Being part Cherokee and Greek mix I really looked Am Cherokee and was picked on awful. I learned from that and I am a Better person. I don't break easy. Great Lady
@@shym9933 that's you. Even now I get picked on for looking Mexican even though I'm Cherokee Shawnee and ojibwe. Youre probably a light skin so no one thought of you as looking different.
I was so happy to see this, I have a Edith Knight in my family book, I hope this is her. My family came from the Virginia into TN and KY but, I live in IL., Hope to see more.
Look at that beautiful young girl. She looked so happy. I hope with all my heart she was. Love, you are a national treasure and Keeper of your heritage.
Ty for the vid. My grandmother was half Cherokee and took care of me until I was 5. She made something called "hot salad". I have looked for the recipe on southern food channels and nobody ever heard of it. My grandmothers tribe was from Georgia. None of my family ended up in OK, or Ark. My great-grandmothers married Scots-Irishmen and eventually were in South-Central Ky. Is anyone familiar with hot salad? I know she put some very hot peppers in, cucumber, onions, vinegar, and some sugar. I have mixed that, but it's not like my grandmothers. She was born in the early 1890s. If you know the ingredients or recipe, please let me know. I am 73 and would love to make some before I pass on. Ty.
Hello shrimpymuscles, I'm 73 yrs old, from Smoky Mts TN. My version of what you mentioned would be called "chowchow". I grew up on it & made plenty of it. Many people just call it relish. Not so many people are into canning & preserving today( young people) but it's been lifelong for me. I enjoy it immensely & it's a commonsense way of life. Be blessed
@@sandraking9650 I learned how to make chow chow from my mother-in-law, but it was very different from my grandmothers hot salad. My grandmother used fresh ingredients . I don't think I had the hot salad year round. I can't imagine my grandmother buying any vegetables from a store. She had huge gardens. I'm going to turn 74 this coming Sunday. My mother didn't like spicy hot food. She just used fresh yellow onions and cucumbers. She added vinegar, water, oil, and salt and pepper.
Thank you so very much for sharing. I feel the strength of my ancestors flowing in my blood. I hear the call of my people and the knowledge of them calling to me always. Love to you all. Blessings
Thank you for preserving the traditions of the tribe. I only recently discovered of my Cherokee ancestry as well as rights to citizenship. Thank you for letting me discover our culture and history.
She is a Cherokee National treasure! I'm so proud to be in the same tribe. Oh! If more people were like her on the earth- it would be a better place to live.God Bless You!
My Cherokee sister shared this video with me. I have Hickory trees on our property. She and I will have to make this! Thank you for sharing so we can learn!
My grandmother used to make kanuchi I loved it as a kid but haven't had it In about 30 years! Thanks for the info....I'll be cooking some up this fall!
She reminds me of my mother R.I.P.. My mother was of Choctaw scotch Irish and African decent. But being part African American she did not get any recognition for being native, but as a child she made sure I knew about it via pow wows and having some native American friends.
very cool recipe, and cool woman. makes me wish i had gotten to meet any of my great grandparents or grandparents before they passed, there's a lot i would've asked them.
My great grandmother was approximately half Cherokee & her last name was Knighten. Here in Asheville, NC, western mountains. I don't want to "claim" anything... I just don't want any of this to die away from this world.
My great grandmother was Cherokee .i would stay 2 weeks of my summer break from school. Loved being with her and hearing stories like the first time seeing a airplane in flight she was around 13 or14 years old .
Do you have a recipie book? I would love to cook traditional native food for my children. We have 20% Blackfoot in their bloodline and we would love to teach them as much as we can of our ancestors. Thank you for your hard work and dedication. Much love❤
I've never heard of this. I am so thankful to you tube because we are able to come together without political or religious beliefs and share and enjoy our differences. This is the way I believe we were meant to live. I will never look at a nut in the same way again. Thank you so much for sharing your customs with the world
Sweet lady & quite a looker in her young days! ( I bet she stopped plenty of traffic) My grandmother made quilts too during the depression years they didn’t waste anything like people do today. Thanks for sharing this!✌️
We pronouce it a little different, but I learned to make something very similar from my grandfather in Alabama. (I am in my 60s). We are Cherokee. He liked to eat it with beans or sweet potatoes. He also liked to add sugar cane juice.
My Grandfather was a Spanish Apache from Lincoln New Mexico USA he would make something similar it was called Aroz Dulce con canella "sweet rice with cinnamon" I love this channel thank you for sharing
Native Americans had to apply for citizenship in the 1920s. I am Red Lake Ojibwa and have learned many traditional foods. Grain rice or wild rice was one I couldn't fathom nor mutton. Thank you for the lesson.
Actually, I like this recipe for one reason, it shows that the Cherokee, though the white settlers had moved in and food trading had begun, the Cherokee's introduction to rice... The good thing about this is that it shows that the Cherokee's still had their own culture, which was not the same as their caucasian neighbors. I made my own #Cherokee grandmother teach me the edible wild plants and how to cook them before she passed away, and it was different than that of other farmers around them. Digging roots of, and leaves of things such as narrow dock, broad dock, etc. The thing that I noticed was her embarassment by it, which should not have been the case. If you can forage it, why waste money buying in a store. In her time period it was a shame to not eat store bought breads, the same "white bread," made of bleached flour that has no nutrients, and has caused cancer. Give me the edible wild plants any day, at least it has nutritional quality, was not raised on a plat of ground that has been used to garden so many years that there is no minerals left in the soil. Thanks for the recipe. Maybe we'll swap recipes some day.
Wonderful! Can't wait for the Hickory nuts to drop this fall and try this. Did Native Americans harvest rice? Or did rice become a part of diet through trade?
That looks similar to the atoles we make in Central America. Except we make our with corn, or in my culture, we use cashews, the cashew one is tastier imo. Cool to see a native recipe, widh there were more out there to see.
This is my son's lauguge I know how greatest interpreter and a great conversation about these matters to be presence in his life the alphabeta the true story about usa
I know this is an older video so I don't expect an answer, but I'm wondering if the processing method for the hickory nuts, specifically the grinding with the hulls on, can be done with acorns as well? Would the acorn husks/shells come out if you did the straining and leaching at the same time after they had been ground and dried?
I wondered what those nuts were , till I saw that they were Walnuts! Seriously healthy to eat. I eat a small handful daily, and never learned that from the Cherokee. Maybe it’s our love of Walnuts that make me want to be nothing more than a loving and giving person too, just like Betty. Thank you
Miss Smith. God Bless you. You remind me of my Grandmother Pearson-Yancey. Your food we ate a lot of. Poke salid with Egg. Your meat you was cooking in that cast iron skillet looked so good..We use to eat hickory nuts, and Black walnuts. Sure wish I knew more about My Family. My great grandmother was full blood. Her last name was Morgan. Love this video.
“Learn as much as you can about your history it important to know who you are and where you come from“ ! Most touching part ❤️
Heavenly Kiya I agree but it should not cost you a fortune to learn your family history.i remember a time when the internet was young that I could find out a lot of information like phone numbers and addresses of people I knew just by typing in their name free of charge... now they charge everything..I used to be able to find out who had a specific area code and digit phone number. If I have a predator calling me everyday why should I have to pay to keep that monitored?
Yeah was a lot easier to obtain information back than I remember yellow page phone number I think you have to pay for that now. Smh different times we’re living in
I read this right as she was saying it. Too true.
Here's a history lesson... rice came to the Americas on a ship that crashed... long after Europeans had begun taking over. A wild rice like grain called Manoomin is native to the great lakes region but while you and I couldn't tell it from other wild rice it's technically not rice... in a strictly botanical sense. It is unlikely that the Cherokee had access to very much of this Manoomin as it grew in the Chippewa Nation, and would have had to be traded for. So the history of this recipe is limited to be only as old as the mid to late 1600's... or else before that it was a rare treat and slightly different, if not entirely nonexistent. So there's how to date a recipe based on the availability of the ingredients.
I read this comment just as she was saying it in the video. 💕
"I'd like to be thought of as a giving person, a loving person." How many people strive for such a high goal? We would have a better society if that was our goal instead of things and money. Blessings to all who watch this video.
The way she said it made me get all choked up! Very sweet lady!
Amen. Lovely lady.
This is what I strive to be as well. Her words touch me very deeply. This is what we need more of.
The elders who share their stories are truly treasures. My husband is half Seneca and we do our best to teach our daughters about both of our family histories.
My Great Grandma is Cherokee and married My Great Grandpa who was Scott-Irish. My Grandma used to make this for us when we were little. I never knew what it was called. Thanks for sharing!
She is saying hickory nuts correct, as in hickory nuts?
Yes ma'am we Cherokee are strong.. much love..wado
So it’s like oatmeal meal but probably 100 times better
Eating this with my grandma is one of my many favorite memories from my childhood .now I've padded this onto my children. I would love to sit and listen to Miss Edith for days, just to hear her knowledge
Thank you for sharing. I know virtually nothing about my Cherokee heritage...only found out fairly recently that I am part Cherokee. It gives me great joy to see you and listen to you, especially to learn about a native dish. I feel like you are very fortunate to have been able to learn and practice so much of Cherokee customs and culture. It's really sad you were not able to learn the language. Still you've been able to pass on so much to your grandchildren. They are fortunate for receiving Cherokee heritage from you. I hope they keep passing it along to future generations.
May you rest in peace miss Edith ❤💜
I remember as a child sitting in the woods and cracking open hickory nuts between 2 rocks until I was stuffed, 😊 such fond memories... Thanks to the precious lady for the recipe and the wisdom.
All that you share is a treasure. Your dresses are so beautiful.
My mother was part Cherokee from Kentucky and she told us that her 5th grade teacher told her to be proud of her heritage, which made an impression on her because I knew it was still hard in those days.
Thank you for sharing your story.
I miss kanuchi SO MUCH. Our traditional foods are so important for us to preserve. Like our language, our amscetral foods are also a part of who we are that make up the WHOLE of WHO we are. I miss being in the kitchen with my grandmother's making OUR food. It was tradition for them to tell stories and sharing memories of the past about how it was in thier time growing up.
Stories about thier own mothers and the things they did in keeping with our traditions. How they made beds, pillows, blankets the old way. How it was tradition that before the girls got married and left home how the mother's would make these items and give them to thier daughters for thier new lives in thier new homes. They would tell stories to of the husbands building their marriage homes the traditional Cherokee way. And the recipes! Not just for foods, but for medicines.
Many of these things I still use today. I am so happy they taught me how, and put into me the importance of learning. These things have actually helped me during the worst moments of my life, and through many illnesses. They taught me how to survive and to do it real well. I never fear when times are lean. With this knowledge, I KNOW me and mine will make it even if the WHOLE of society fails.
****Any young Cherokee girls out there who might be reading this and think the old ways are silly and outdated*****There is need of this knowledge being passed to you. It is important for the preservation and continuity of our people in SO many ways! 1) If any bad things happen in your life, these ways will help you make it through. The memories of your grandmothers will save you and your future families. The old way teaches you MANY lessons and becomes a part of who you will be when you become a woman and a mother. Honor the elders and listen to them. Honor our people, traditions, culture, and our languages. It isn't just our tribal identity, it's who we are as individuals inside the tribal identity. Each one of you who learns it takes a role in ensuring OUR survival as a tribal people. Learn these ways and keep them with you. Stay connected to it deeply. Know that there are not many full bloods left. That is very threatening, AND problematic to our people.
I am a mixed woman. I think about it from the stand point of a registered mixed woman of our beautiful Cherokee Nation. It is sad for me. Many of the women before us felt they had no choice BUT to assimilate. Sometimes it meant their lives if they didn't. Some had no choice at all. It was FORCED on them. It was part of an old plan to kill the Indian, save the man and that agenda is STILL in force today.
Us mixed people had no choice of what's in our gene pools. That was decided for us because of that agenda to assimilate and destroy the tribal peoples.
If you are a full blood, please, take it in your heart to stay that way. I pray that you do listen. YOU girls today are the future and survival of our tribe and YOU are so important.
This message does not come to you from a racially hateful place in my soul, it comes from the love of our ancestors before us and the hopes they had for us to survive and always be the principle people. I like everyone in the world, but we need our tribe to always be and never dissapear from this earth.
No matter what the tribes do, You are the ONLY ones with the power to preserve and save our people. I can't even impress that importance onto you in a way that is adequate. It is very urgent. Peace, love, and many blessings to all you young Cherokee girls. You are the future mothers of an entire race of people and the only ones who can ensure that we will ALWAYS be the Cherokee Nation. Though my genes didn't give me the chance, I will use the Cherokee in me to encourage ALL of you girls. Always be proud that you are also American citizens, but first and MOST importantly, you are Cherokee Nation Citizens. You ARE the tribe. ❤❤❤
This makes me sad because my family tried to unlearn Cherokee ways. My great great grandma thought it would be better if we never looked back to see the family we left behind. She raised her daughter's as American as she could leaving us with a sense of sadness. We can't teach anyone the Cherokee ways because they were taken from us.
That's why girls should spend as much time as they can with mawmaw to learn cooking and medicines ;sewing etc it's gonna be lost forever if they don't learn !
I love your last name
I love that my grandmother taught me what she called the old ways.
Osiyo, wado and A'ho. Very profound are your words, yet I am Cherokee and a man who is just as important to our tribe as our women, the other half that makes us whole.
Your strength gives me strength lovely lady, Edith Knight!
Osiyo. I have never had Kanuchi and I look forward to making this. My mother was part Cherokee and I was raised to be proud of my heritage. When I was in college, I had to take a language class before I could graduate and I was fortunate enough to take Cherokee from a nice Cherokee professor. She taught us so much about the language and our culture. Thank you for posting this video.
Made me so homesick. She said chalk bluff a tear fell out. When I cook traditional food everyone thinks it's weird. I don't know how many times I've heard "Wild onions whats that?" I miss everything I miss all the water, mountains the trees and food I miss Kanuchi the most. Dallas is so different.
Margaret Wilson we have inter tribal powwows, that's as close as DFW gets. Beautiful dancers. A bit of fry bread. A crossover hominy/elotes, etc. But Kinnuvchi makes me miss my grandmother... Glad to know Dallas doesn't feel like home. That really resonated with me, and I've been here 20+ years
Never mind people who think weird... it's part of YOU so they can get on board with it or go someplace else. I would LOVE to have even learned about my heritage but the Grandparents and etc were Christian and REFUSED to ever pass down anything, breaks my heart...
How nice to pass your recipes into next generation
Your culture is who you are. Dont be ashamed of it.
What a sweet loving lady, she warms my heart.
You said it perfectly .
*My mother always made rice pudding, and would also make rice milk (no real milk in it), and give it to us when ever we had some fever or digestion problems as kids or babies, as a source of nutrition to prevent dehydration or hunger while sick ...*
My mother made rice pudding quite often. I miss it and her so much.
Thank you for this show and all the knowledge it is passing on. My grandfather was Cherokee..his nickname was Cherokee as well...he didn't pass on much about the culture, he was a quiet man. I have learned a lot from this..thank u.
this video is beautifully made & very heartwarming
Nice doge
What a beautiful moment for me. I've known most of my life we are Cherokee but am just now learning we are part of the Keetoowah Tribe. I've Never heard of this Tribe but I am sooo excited to learn who I am...who my family is. My GG Grandma Ludie Mae Stanfield had such horrible life bc she was Black Cherokee and her death was horrid. I know very little about her or my GG Grandfather Bert Fowler was so vicious to her and my G Grandpa John Fowler. I AM SO PROUD to learn who I am. Thank you from the bottom of my heart for sharing with me.
What a beautiful lady. I could listen to her tell stories in that Oklahoma accent all day. It's so important to keep culture and traditions alive....ALL of them.
Thank you Grandma for the recipe, I will enjoy trying this with my family.
Yes it’s terribly important for everyone to know their heritage and history. Thank you 🙏 for your lovely video.
I am loving this so much. Food memories and mamas.💖
Thank you for sharing your story ❤❤❤
This video made me smile. Thank you.
I love your story and sharing a Cherokee tradition. Thank you!
It is not right to stop Native Americans from speaking thier language.
Lyle Johnson it’s heartbreaking. It makes me cry how they have been treated and still get treated
This happened in the past...This no longer happens. I am Native American Pima and Cherokee.
@@masuganut2082 Please tell me how "we get Treated"
Shy M what I am referring to is what One Nation Walking together says what happens on the reservations.
It’s not right to stop any human from expressing their culture and speaking the language of their ancestors. Don’t forget this same scenario happened in many Nations and not just the USA, Canada and South America, but also Australia, New Zealand, Africa and Polynesia.
Interesting... I enjoyed listening & learning about all of this. Thank you!
god bless you❤ i am also cherokee and trying to learn as much as i can about us cherokees
Makes me cry, I was Picked on at school as I was different looking and one one called me Glenda they called me Hey Little Indian girl. I had a awful school life. Being part Cherokee and Greek mix I really looked Am Cherokee and was picked on awful. I learned from that and I am a Better person. I don't break easy. Great Lady
I was never picked on because I looked different. What year are you talking about? because I am 60 and never had any issues in school or otherwise.
@@shym9933 that's you. Even now I get picked on for looking Mexican even though I'm Cherokee Shawnee and ojibwe. Youre probably a light skin so no one thought of you as looking different.
Greek and Cherokee sounds like a beautiful mix to me.
I was so happy to see this, I have a Edith Knight in my family book, I hope this is her. My family came from the Virginia into TN and KY but, I live in IL., Hope to see more.
Look at that beautiful young girl. She looked so happy. I hope with all my heart she was. Love, you are a national treasure and Keeper of your heritage.
I feel Blessed having been able to experience this video and your beautiful wisdom and soul. Thank you for this honor.
This is a beautiful woman & great soul ❤️
Thank you so much for sharing this. I love hazelnuts and learning about the foods the Cherokee made, used and ate.
when i watched this it made me cry because it reminded me of my great grandma
What a beautiful story thanks so much for SHARING YOUR beautiful life
Ty for the vid. My grandmother was half Cherokee and took care of me until I was 5. She made something called "hot salad". I have looked for the recipe on southern food channels and nobody ever heard of it. My grandmothers tribe was from Georgia. None of my family ended up in OK, or Ark. My great-grandmothers married Scots-Irishmen and eventually were in South-Central Ky. Is anyone familiar with hot salad? I know she put some very hot peppers in, cucumber, onions, vinegar, and some sugar. I have mixed that, but it's not like my grandmothers. She was born in the early 1890s. If you know the ingredients or recipe, please let me know. I am 73 and would love to make some before I pass on. Ty.
Hello shrimpymuscles, I'm 73 yrs old, from Smoky Mts TN. My version of what you mentioned would be called "chowchow". I grew up on it & made plenty of it. Many people just call it relish. Not so many people are into canning & preserving today( young people) but it's been lifelong for me. I enjoy it immensely & it's a commonsense way of life. Be blessed
@@sandraking9650 I learned how to make chow chow from my mother-in-law, but it was very different from my grandmothers hot salad. My grandmother used fresh ingredients . I don't think I had the hot salad year round. I can't imagine my grandmother buying any vegetables from a store. She had huge gardens. I'm going to turn 74 this coming Sunday. My mother didn't like spicy hot food. She just used fresh yellow onions and cucumbers. She added vinegar, water, oil, and salt and pepper.
Beautiful.
Thank you so very much for sharing.
I feel the strength of my ancestors flowing in my blood. I hear the call of my people and the knowledge of them calling to me always.
Love to you all.
Blessings
" I chased him till he caught me. " That made my day when she said that.
Same.
Thank you for preserving the traditions of the tribe. I only recently discovered of my Cherokee ancestry as well as rights to citizenship. Thank you for letting me discover our culture and history.
This video is very precious to me and it makes me miss my grandparents! Thank you for sharing!
She is a Cherokee National treasure! I'm so proud to be in the same tribe. Oh! If more people were like her on the earth- it would be a better place to live.God Bless You!
It's the stories told while sharing tradition that touch me so deeply. Wado.
Redbird1066 i
LOL! The Indians around here live on pepperoni hot pockets and Bud Light! LOL!
My Cherokee sister shared this video with me. I have Hickory trees on our property. She and I will have to make this! Thank you for sharing so we can learn!
My grandmother used to make kanuchi I loved it as a kid but haven't had it In about 30 years! Thanks for the info....I'll be cooking some up this fall!
She was a stunning girl ❤️ absolutely respect to you and I hope you rest in peace 🙏
I would love to come learn there with her for a while the things I've missed growing up.
Your gift is a treasure, thank you for sharing it with this undeserving world. A thousand blessings to you
Bless her soul. Rest in our adoration and love in God's presence Grandmother.
Enjoyed this! She made it look easy, however, it was actually labor intensive!
Thank you so much for this video, I am part Cherokee, I really want to know more about my heritage.
She had a blessed life and passed it on to others
What an amazing woman and human being. Bless her beautiful heart and soul. 🌹🕊❤️🌺
Thank you Mrs. Knight and Osiyo TV, my Granny was so proud of her Cherokee heritage and tried to teach me all she could. She was so awesome.
She reminds me of my mother R.I.P.. My mother was of Choctaw scotch Irish and African decent. But being part African American she did not get any recognition for being native, but as a child she made sure I knew about it via pow wows and having some native American friends.
I'm part Cherokee and I am proud. As soon as I saw this video I clicked on it.
Tradition, so important. Like a strong root. Preserve it. Thanks
very cool recipe, and cool woman. makes me wish i had gotten to meet any of my great grandparents or grandparents before they passed, there's a lot i would've asked them.
Beautiful story. ❣️🦋❣️
Thank you Edith. You are a giving person.
What a blessing to have this fine lady to learn from.
thank you for sharing... it is good that heritage be passed on to others . you are a great person
@OsiyoTV. Wado for these videos. As for me, I am learning Tsalagi and as much as the culture as there is so much knowlege to learn.
Thank you Mrs. Knight. I promise to always remember you as a giving, loving person for as long as I live.
My great grandmother was approximately half Cherokee & her last name was Knighten. Here in Asheville, NC, western mountains.
I don't want to "claim" anything... I just don't want any of this to die away from this world.
You don't need a stamp of approval from a tribal organization to claim anything. If you are cherokee then you are cherokee.
Me also. my ggrandpa married a full cherokee. We were from Bryson City area.
If you have one drop of Cherokee blood, you are Cherokee
My great grandmother was Cherokee .i would stay 2 weeks of my summer break from school. Loved being with her and hearing stories like the first time seeing a airplane in flight she was around 13 or14 years old .
Very cool. What a great lady.
I wish this lady had a recipe book or craft book or anything cuz I would buy it in a heartbeat!
Do you have a recipie book? I would love to cook traditional native food for my children. We have 20% Blackfoot in their bloodline and we would love to teach them as much as we can of our ancestors. Thank you for your hard work and dedication. Much love❤
That looks delicious!! I’m gonna try (emphasis in “try”) making it!! ♥️much love to my Native American sisters and brothers from a Rapa Nui sister 🗿🌴
A true treasure to be remembered an treasured, now an forever.
priceless.
Beautiful story. Good to remember traditional foods. What plants can be used. Hopefully it will be used.
I'm so glad I clicked to watch this video, thank you for sharing
I've never heard of this. I am so thankful to you tube because we are able to come together without political or religious beliefs and share and enjoy our differences. This is the way I believe we were meant to live. I will never look at a nut in the same way again. Thank you so much for sharing your customs with the world
Sweet lady & quite a looker in her young days! ( I bet she stopped plenty of traffic) My grandmother made quilts too during the depression years they didn’t waste anything like people do today. Thanks for sharing this!✌️
Amazing video - thank You for sharing!
Makes my heart so happy she makes me think of my gran I miss her so much .. Her spirit is so sweet
This was truely touching and actually I cried, I dont lmow why but I did. Much Love and GREATFULNESS from me to all of you!!@
What a beautiful lady & story !
I very much enjoyed this video.
I’m African-Cherokee-Blackfoot-French. She looks like my auntie! ❤️❤️❤️
We pronouce it a little different, but I learned to make something very similar from my grandfather in Alabama. (I am in my 60s). We are Cherokee. He liked to eat it with beans or sweet potatoes. He also liked to add sugar cane juice.
i love edith
My Grandfather was a Spanish Apache from Lincoln New Mexico USA he would make something similar it was called Aroz Dulce con canella "sweet rice with cinnamon" I love this channel thank you for sharing
Native Americans had to apply for citizenship in the 1920s. I am Red Lake Ojibwa and have learned many traditional foods. Grain rice or wild rice was one I couldn't fathom nor mutton. Thank you for the lesson.
Think ridiculous they had apply for citizenship when they ones born and raised on the lands.
Actually, I like this recipe for one reason, it shows that the Cherokee, though the white settlers had moved in and food trading had begun, the Cherokee's introduction to rice... The good thing about this is that it shows that the Cherokee's still had their own culture, which was not the same as their caucasian neighbors. I made my own #Cherokee grandmother teach me the edible wild plants and how to cook them before she passed away, and it was different than that of other farmers around them. Digging roots of, and leaves of things such as narrow dock, broad dock, etc. The thing that I noticed was her embarassment by it, which should not have been the case. If you can forage it, why waste money buying in a store. In her time period it was a shame to not eat store bought breads, the same "white bread," made of bleached flour that has no nutrients, and has caused cancer. Give me the edible wild plants any day, at least it has nutritional quality, was not raised on a plat of ground that has been used to garden so many years that there is no minerals left in the soil. Thanks for the recipe. Maybe we'll swap recipes some day.
My ancestors were the same way, totally embarrassed of anything not store-bought. WNC did a number on its people with that.
Carrie Geren Scoggins [Official] would love to learn from you about your knowledge of what your grandmother taught you!
Such a precious soul!
Wonderful! Can't wait for the Hickory nuts to drop this fall and try this. Did Native Americans harvest rice? Or did rice become a part of diet through trade?
That looks similar to the atoles we make in Central America. Except we make our with corn, or in my culture, we use cashews, the cashew one is tastier imo.
Cool to see a native recipe, widh there were more out there to see.
I wish there were American Indian Restaurants in Charleston, SC....yum!
I sometimes wish that I had been born 200 or so years ago. We have lost so much
Hickory, rice, sugar... What spices would you recommend to add? I'm thinking cinnamon and maybe a pinch of allspice? Or maple syrup?
Beautiful story. Beautiful woman. Beautiful ending words.
This is my son's lauguge I know how greatest interpreter and a great conversation about these matters to be presence in his life the alphabeta the true story about usa
I know this is an older video so I don't expect an answer, but I'm wondering if the processing method for the hickory nuts, specifically the grinding with the hulls on, can be done with acorns as well?
Would the acorn husks/shells come out if you did the straining and leaching at the same time after they had been ground and dried?
Great video. Lovely lady.
I wondered what those nuts were , till I saw that they were Walnuts! Seriously healthy to eat. I eat a small handful daily, and never learned that from the Cherokee. Maybe it’s our love of Walnuts that make me want to be nothing more than a loving and giving person too, just like Betty. Thank you
Miss Smith. God Bless you. You remind me of my Grandmother Pearson-Yancey. Your food we ate a lot of. Poke salid with Egg. Your meat you was cooking in that cast iron skillet looked so good..We use to eat hickory nuts, and Black walnuts. Sure wish I knew more about My Family. My great grandmother was full blood. Her last name was Morgan. Love this video.
How interesting. Thank you!