Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Indian ice cream (Alaska)

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Type
  
Dessert

Created by
  
Alaskan Athabaskans

Region or state
  
Alaska

Place of origin
  
United States of America

Indian ice cream (Alaska) httpsd1k5w7mbrh6vq5cloudfrontnetimagescache

Alternative names
  
Native ice cream, Alaskan ice cream

Main ingredients
  
dried fish or meat, fat, berries

Similar
  
Berry, Meat, Fish as food, Kulfi, Akutaq

Alaskan Indian ice cream, is a dessert made of dried fish (esp. pike, sheefish or inconnu, whitefish or cisco, freshwater whitefishes) or dried moose or caribou meat and fat and berries (esp. cowberry, bilberry, cranberry, bearberry, crowberry, [high-bush] salmonberry, low-bush salmonberry, raspberry, prickly rose) or mild sweeteners such as roots of Indian potato or wild carrot mixed and whipped with a whisk or formerly hand made by Alaskan Athabaskans. Most common recipe for Indian ice cream consisted of dried and pulverized tenderloin of moose or caribou that was blended with moose fat in a birch bark container until the mixture was light and fluffy.

Both akutaq (Eskimo ice cream) and Indian ice cream are also known as native ice cream or Alaskan ice cream in Alaska. Not to be confused with Canadian Indian ice cream (or sxusem) of First Nations in British Columbia and kulfi (or Indian ice cream) from Indian Subcontinent of Asia.

The "ice cream songs" used to be sung during the preparation of Alaskan Athabascan Indian ice cream.

References

Indian ice cream (Alaska) Wikipedia