As inflation soars, access to Indigenous foods declines

Jessica Pamonicutt, executive chef of a Native American catering company in Chicago, serves roasted turkey tamales, part of a contemporary Indigenous meal she cooked for Elders at the American Indian Center of Chicago, on Aug. 3, 2022. (Claire Savage/Report for America via AP)

Janie Pochel, an advisor to the Chi-Nations Youth Council, is pictured at the First Nations Garden in Chicago, on Aug. 3, 2022. The garden was established in the spring of 2019 and is host to many traditional Indigenous crops including prairie sage, sweetgrass and strawberries. (Claire Savage/Report for America via AP)

Jessica Pamonicutt, executive chef of a Native American catering company in Chicago, displays the contemporary indigenous meal she cooked for Elders at the American Indian Center of Chicago, on Aug. 3. (Claire Savage/Report for America via AP)

CHICAGO — Blueberry bison tamales, harvest salad with mixed greens, creamy carrot and wild rice soup, roasted turkey with squash. This contemporary Native American meal, crafted from the traditional foods of tribes across the United States and prepared with “Ketapanen” — a Menominee expression of love — cost caterer Jessica Pamonicutt $976 to feed a group of 50 people last November.