Quench Magazine Spring 2022 issue no.370

Page 57

Photo credit: pytphotography

PROFILE:

Inez Cook The Sky’s the Limit By Tim Pawsey

It’s unlikely anyone has done more to introduce Vancouverites to

Indigenous cuisine than Inez Cook. Just prior to the city’s hosting of the 2010 Winter Olympics, Cook—who is originally from Bella Coola’s Nuxalk Nation—was attending the Okanagan Wine Festival. While there she noticed West Kelowna’s Kekuli Café, whose ‘Don’t Panic, We have Bannock’ sign is a fixture on the main highway. “I said to my good friend Remi (Caudron) ‘I can’t believe Kelowna has a Native restaurant but there isn’t one in Vancouver any more. And the whole world is coming here.’” Even though Cook had no direct business experience in restaurants, she went to work, opening Salmon n’ Bannock Bistro in 2010, with Caudron as her business partner. Launched to an appreciative audience with ongoing immense success, it remains to date the city’s only Indigenous owned and operated restaurant. Two years ago, the West Coast restaurateur became sole owner. While the Olympics may have been the catalyst, Cook says it was actually her ‘day job’ of 31 years that had motivated her to open her own restaurant. “As a flight attendant, when I travel I really like to try the foods of the land I’m in. Through flying, I’ve lived all over the world—in the Middle East, Africa and India, and elsewhere. The cool thing is that my dream always was to open a restaurant and take people on a journey.” An infant victim of the ‘Sixties Scoop,’ Cook credits her adoptive family for instilling in her early on a love of good food. As a youngster, she furthered her love of food by working in restaurants from age 13 on. Salmon ‘N Bannock allowed her the opportunity to explore her Indigenous past and learn more fully about her First Nations heritage. “What ended up happening is that I’m taking people on my own personal journey within. I’m learning about my own heritage and showcasing that.”

Indeed, in somewhat of a serendipitous manner, it was the restaurant that helped reintroduce Cook to her birth family, as Nuxalk Nation members eventually came by to check things out. As Cook researched her menu she discovered traditionally Indigenous ingredients (such as fiddleheads and huckleberries) are not always easy to source. But, always in pursuit of authenticity, she persevered. Today her house-smoked Sockeye salmon burger (on bannock, of course) is the bistro’s hallmark—although other tastes, such as bison pot roast, are also popular. The entire team at Salmon ‘n Bannock—from kitchen to front of house—is Indigenous, with people from several First Nations, including Long Plain, Muskoday, Musqueum, Nuxalk, Nuu-chah-nulth, Ojibway, St’at’lmc, Squamish and Ts’msyen—and Maori. Last year, in the midst of the pandemic, Cook was inspired to embark on opening another outlet, this time at Vancouver International Airport (YVR). Opening this spring as part of a licensed food court in International Departures, Salmon n’ Bannock On The Fly will introduce travellers to the Indigenous tastes that Cook has championed for the last decade. On the menu: a hot bison sandwich, the renowned house-smoked salmon burger, and power salad with Ojibway wild rice. It will be the first indigenous food to be served at the airport—against a mural painted by Cook’s friend, noted Quw’utsun’ artist Charlene Johnny. When Cook talks about ‘reconciliation’ she prefers to refer to it as ‘reconcili-action’, a process in which food can play a significant role. Ultimately, she truly believes it’s “about bringing people together, breaking bannock together and learning.”

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