What's Up Yukon, September 13, 2017

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whatsupyukon.com

September 13, 2017

BonTon Butcherie & Charcuterie Bar Open 9am to 11pm Off Sales 9am to 11pm Clean, Quiet, Comfortable Rooms 110 Wood Street, 667-2641 Whitehorse

STACEY’S BUTCHER BLOCK

Tradition comes back to Dawson City

Live Music Thursday Nights 7pm-11pm Sunday Open Mic Night 3pm-7pm

by Gabriela Sgaga

W

Game Processing

• custom cut & wrap

• custom sausage making

PORTER CREEK MALL

867-393-2565

Here’s Our Lineup... EVERY WEEK

Thursday Jam Nite

Friday Sep 15:

with Patrick Jacobson

Leg Up Hands Down

Sunday Sep 17:

Jennihouse

Friday Sep 22:

The House Cats

Band Hours 7:30 pm to 10:30 pm

Best Western Gold Rush Inn

411 Main Street, Whitehorse, 668-4500

Sundays

Ben Mahony

hen Shelby Jordan was looking to change her career, she came across an idea that piqued her interest. “I’ve always wanted to learn a trade. I like working with my hands and with food, and I like being creative,” says the long-time Dawson resident. “At one point, I read a book that had an old butcher in it, and I thought, I could do that.” Jordan decided to quit her job and enroll in Thompson Rivers University in Kamloops, B.C, for a 10-month retail meat processing program. “It’s longer than most courses because it teaches the intricacies of butchering the whole carcass, not just bits and pieces for grocery store sale,” Jordan says. “It’s old school that’s kind of gone away – you learn how to cook and use all the parts.” Jordan was the only female in the course. She says her classmates were cool with that, on the whole, and were even impressed when she had to carry a 183-poundide of

pork over her shoulder from hook to table. “The men offered to carry it for me. I said I didn’t need help, but maybe a spotter in case I fall over,” she says with a smile. Jordan also learned about charcuterie - a French word for any smoked, dry-cured or cooked meat - and received instructions in how to run a business. Upon returning to Dawson, she was ready to start working on opening up a butchery. She and her partner sold their off-grid house and moved into town in order to have running water for the business. She spent the next year building the facility she would need in their new back yard. Jordan found the name BonTon while researching Dawson meat shops during the Gold Rush. “There used to be a store named BonTon Meat Shop for Ladies,” which intrigued her, she says. “[The expression] bon ton is associated with something stylish, upper class. That’s the style I was looking for, to present something

Some of the meats prepared in traditional style by BonTon Butcherie & Charcuterie in Dawson City

Breakfast Menu: Week days 7-11 am Weekends until 2 pm

PHOTO: Shelby Jordan, courtesy of BonTon Butcherie & Charcuterie

True Goldrush Atmosphere

Just days left to enjoy our Swiss Specialties!

•Tatar’s Hat •Fondue Bourguignonne WOLF’S DEN •Fondue chinoise RESTAURANT •Cheese Fondue A cozy cabin nestled •Raclette in the Yukon Forest

CLOSED SUNDAY SEPTEMBER 24 RE-OPENING FRIDAY OCTOBER 27 AT 4PM

Open 7 days a week, 8am-9pm | 393-3968 | wolfsden.ca

Tell us about wine Tell us about beer Tell us about yourself

Gabriela Sgaga lives off the grid in her West Dawson cabin with her sled dogs. She enjoys mushing, skijoring and writing about everyday life in the Yukon.

’ PHO’ 5 Star Restaurant Chez Noodle

Open 7 Days a Week

We’re looking for Columnists With Spirit! * See animals in rut!

GO W I

* Walk, bike, run anytime.

LD!

* Open daily 9:30am - 6:00pm to October 9th

* Guided bus tours at 10am, 2noon, 2pm & 4pm

Please email our editor: editor@whatsupyukon.com

on a higher level.” BonTon Butcherie & Charcuterie opened in June of this year. Jordan is quick to note, however, that BonTon is not a store. Rather, it sells direct to the customer, as well as holding occasional “pop up shops”. “I like engaging with customers about cooking and trying something new, but I’m not into retail,” she says. She sources and buys only Yukon raised meat, processes it and, when it’s ready, lets people on her mailing list know what she has and when it is available. She also does custom orders, rents out her kitchen to caterers, and her hanging cooler to hunters. Traditional methods of curing and preserving meats and wild game have always interested Jordan. In order to learn properly, she went to Italy for a week to take part in an industry course at the Italian Culinary Institute, along with top chefs from around the world, on how to make salami the traditional way. Hers is now the only facility in the Dawson area producing inhouse smoked, cured and dried meat products. Jordan says there has been a lot of trial and error since she started her business, but she remains passionate about bringing locallysourced meats to Dawson and offering a variety of traditionallymade products. “I always thought, ‘How can I get what I want?’, then realized that others think that way too,” she says. “The demand is starting – people are wanting to eat local and better quality foods.” But passion for the traditional ways requires commitment. “Making salami takes a lot of work,” she says. “You have to check the aging room three to four times a day for humidity, temperature and air exchange levels,” she explains. Then she adds, with a grin, “Now, if I want to go on holiday, I need a house sitter, a dog sitter and a salami sitter.”

(867) 456-7300 Yukonwildlife.ca #yukonwildlife on

Vietnamese Cuisine Health Conscious Choice Licensed Gluten Free Options

DINE-IN OR TAKE-OUT

PHONE: 633-6088

Yukon Centre Mall - 2nd Avenue


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