Like the menu at Sean Sherman’s James Beard Award-winning restaurant Owamni, the recipes in “Turtle Island” abstain from using any colonial ingredients, such as wheat, sugar, chicken, beef and dairy. It was a challenge Sherman set out for himself early on in his career to only cook using the foods that are Indigenous to North America.
Squash and Pepita Tartlets
Makes 10 to 12 tartlets.
When ground with a little oil and sweetener, pepitas form a dough that creates a crisp, crunchy shell for these little tartlets, filled with roasted squash and apple. (As a topping, you can toss some pumpkin seeds and amaranth with maple syrup and bake for a few minutes until crunchy.) Like all Indigenous desserts, this one is free of refined sugar, wheat and dairy, and it’s also nutrient-dense.
For the filling:
- 2-lb. piece Lakota winter squash, red kuri squash or kabocha squash, seeded
- 1 c. boiling water
- 1 tsp. dried pineapple weed or chamomile
- 1 Gala apple, cored and cut into chunks but not peeled
- ½ c. maple syrup
- 1 tsp. fine sea salt
- ½ tsp. agar-agar powder
For the tart shells:
- ¼ c. sunflower oil, plus more for muffin tin
- 8 oz. pepitas (about 2 c.)
- ¼ c. amaranth flour
- 1½ tsp. maple syrup
- 2 tsp. agave syrup
Directions
Make the filling: Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper.
Set the seeded squash on the baking sheet cut-side down and bake until very soft, about 1 hour. (Leave the oven on.) Discard the squash skin and measure out 2 packed cups of roasted squash.