From fish and fiddleheads to salmonberries and Spam, Alaskan cuisine
spans the two extremes of locally abundant wild foods and shelf-stable
ingredients produced thousands of miles away. As immigration shapes
Anchorage into one of the most ethnically diverse cities in the country,
Alaska's changing food culture continues to reflect the tension between
self-reliance and longing for distant places or faraway homes. Alaska
Native communities express their cultural resilience in gathering,
processing, and sharing wild food; these seasonal food practices
resonate with all Alaskans who come together to fish and stock their
refrigerators in preparation for the long winter. In warm home kitchens
and remote cafés, Alaskan food brings people together, creating
community and excitement in canning salmon, slicing muktuk, and savoring
fresh berry pies.
This collection features interviews, photographs, and recipes by James
Beard Award-winning journalist and third-generation Alaskan Julia
O'Malley. Touching on issues of subsistence, climate change, cultural
mixing and remixing, innovation, interdependence, and community, The
Whale and the Cupcake reveals how Alaskans connect with the land and
each other through food.