Edmonton Celebrates Ukrainian Cuisine
Just over six months ago, life was looking very different for Nataliia Bodnrchuk. She left Ukraine with her family while she was also pregnant with twins.
Saloon in Edmonton
But on Saturday, the now-mother-of-four was among a dozen volunteers from the group Free Store for Ukrainian Newcomers. And they were hard at work making a variety of cultural dishes at Cook County Saloon in Edmonton.
“When you come with nothing, with only a suitcase, you need to build everything from the zero,” she said.
“This is a good opportunity for me. First and foremost we are trying to give Canadians and Ukrainians part of Ukraine to buy Ukrainian dishes.”
The work was made possible by Matthew Potts. He was head chef of Cook County Saloon, who offered the restaurant’s kitchen to the group to help make meals to sell. With the proceeds going toward buying essentials for newcomers settling in Canada.
About 100 kilometres south of Edmonton
Potts, who is from Samson Cree Nation about 100 kilometres south of Edmonton, said he was inspired to offer his kitchen to the group out of a shared sense of solidarity in the face of overcoming adversity.
“I see a lot of similarities in regards to how Indigenous people are treated and how Ukrainians are treated in the current situation that they’re in,” Potts said about facing systemic oppression.
“I think it’s quite beautiful what they’re doing in the kitchen … usually on a Saturday mornings, I’m in here by myself prepping away,” he said.
“It’s quite beautiful, standing back there and getting to listen to all of them, speak their native tongue and really have fun with it.”
Cook County
Potts adds that the experience has been the melding of different worlds as the volunteers brought their Ukrainian cuisine into a restaurant known for its southern-style “cowboy” esthetic.
“It reminds me of my first time coming into Cook County. It is eye opening and being ‘Whoa’ this is really stepping back into history, and really seeing an old style of Alberta that we don’t normally get to see anymore.”
“Two of the people in the kitchen … owned their own restaurants in Ukraine,” Krissa-Moore said.
“They have all this great knowledge, this great experience and so we’re like, ‘Well, let’s start making some Ukrainian food.'”
The process has been an emotional one for both Krissa-Moore and the volunteers.
“It’s also beautiful that it has that Canadian twist being at this country saloon … I think it’s a good way to welcome them into Edmonton and show that we are a mix of so many different cultures.”
Edmonton Celebrates Ukrainian Cuisine.
The team prepares food items such as perogies, cabbage rolls, pies, and cupcakes.
They freeze some of these items after preparation, making them available for online pre-order through the group’s website.