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A Yukon News ChristmasSpecial
Michele Genest ✫
Ellen Davignon ✫
Michael Gates ✫
Jim Robb ✫
Keith Halliday ✫
Jesse Winter ✫
Jacqueline Ronson ✫
Ashley Joannou ✫
Stories by
Pho
to b
y Jesse Win
ter
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3Published by YUKON NEWS December 2013
3
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By Keith Halliday
For the pioneers, Christmas in the Yukon, far away from home, could
be a hard time. Robert Campbell’s men spent the first recorded Yukon Christmas at Fort Selkirk in 1848 cutting firewood, hunting for food and fixing gear. In 1849, their diary entry for Christmas Day reads: “Passed the day as we best could but melancholy thoughts of bygone days lengthened it considerably.”
Santa and good Christmas cheer even-tually found the Yukon. I remember my grandmother telling the story of Christ-mas 1918, when she and her brother cuddled under the furs and enjoyed a magical ride in the family’s horse-drawn sleigh out of town to her uncle’s wood camp near McCrae. The sky was full of stars and all you could hear were the horses breathing and the runners on the snow.
We now spend Christmas in her old cabin. I have to admit I enjoy watch-ing my kids split wood, melt snow and tromp down the path to the outhouse as we get ready for Christmas. It is a time
for family and, like in the old days, some-times family means working together.
I also enjoy the traditional tree hunt. Every year, we must confront that classic Yukon family debate: spruce or pine? I always vote for spruce, and I refuse to drill holes and stick in spare branches when we get home and realize the tree we picked is some kind of Charlie Brown reject.
When the children were little, we used to put the bigger ones on snow-shoes and drag the smallest in a little sled for our tree hunt. By the time we got eight boots, eight mittens, half a dozen snowshoes and the baby sled set up, there was always someone already shivering. I considered it a triumph if we made it more than a hundred yards from the truck.
Now we go on some grand adven-tures, often lasting longer than our short December days.
Santa has some difficulties visiting a traditional Yukon cabin. The roof doesn’t look strong enough for a flight of reindeer and the chimney is always hot. Some years, Santa seems to have stored
his gifts temporarily in the shed as he got set up, which can result in the mandarin oranges in the kids’ stockings being as hard as baseballs.
This encourages unfreezable gifts, as I pointed out to my daughter when she didn’t look very happy that one of the gifts with her name on it under the tree was a six-pound splitting maul.
Christmas dinner is always a feast. I go to extreme lengths to make sure the Yukon cranberry sauce and canned milk are not forgotten. My family also enjoys sweet potatoes with melted marshmal-lows on top, a Christmas dish apparently introduced to the Yukon by U.S. Army culinary ambassadors during the Second World War.
Sooner or later the magic has to end. Usually it happens on that corner on the road back to Whitehorse where smart-phones start working, and the kids find out via text message that their friends didn’t get axes and frozen oranges for Christmas.
Keith Halliday is a fourth-generation Yukoner. This will be his family’s 115th
Christmas in the Yukon watershed.
Off-grid with the kids
4 Published by YUKON NEWS December 2013
4- Jim Rob
Season’s Greetings from NGC Builders
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The Yukon NDP caucus wishes all Yukoners a
Merry Christmas and Happy New Year.
Liz Hanson, Leader of the Official Opposition
By Jim Robb
This scene in the above cabin interior and doorway kind of gives insight into the companionship and Christmas
cheer of the early days of the gold rush mining camps.Fifty some years ago, I met some old-timers that had
spent most of their lives on the Klondike creeks. They were unique, colourful characters.
The above painting reminds me of several that will al-ways stick in my mind. People like Ole Josvold who came to Dawson City alone in 1912. Only 22 years old, he was from Norway and was a blacksmith.
When cars started coming into Dawson around 1914, they often needed spare parts and ordering them in took about three months, which was quite a headache. So Ole made some in his blacksmith shop.
I used to enjoy having a beer with him. Ole remem-bered that when he was young in Dawson a foaming quart of beer brewed at the Klondike Brewery cost 50 cents.
Yes, Ole Josvold and people like him are gone now, but I will always remember them.
To all the good people of the Yukon, have a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year!
Story and cabin sketches by Jim Robb. Cabin interior drawn by W.H. Overend for the Illustrated London News, Dec. 25, 1897. From the Jim Robb Collection.
5Published by YUKON NEWS December 2013
5
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Merry Christmas from all of us at DRIVING FORCE!
Jesse Winter Yukon News Helene Belanger displays her homemade wreaths and other ornaments during Spruce Bog at the Canada Games Centre.
Jesse Winter Yukon News Helene Belanger displays her homemade wreaths and other ornaments during Spruce Bog at the Canada Games Centre.
6 Published by YUKON NEWS December 2013
6
What makes a reindeer a reindeer?
By Jesse Winter
“Anyone know the difference between a reindeer and a
caribou?”It’s a question that Jake Paleczny
loves to ask tourists and school groups at the Yukon Wildlife Pre-serve. It always gets a chuckle, he said.
So just what is the difference between reindeer and caribou?
Genetically, nothing, accord-ing to retired caribou expert Rick Farnell.
“They’re the same species. Rangifer tarandus finlandicus, I believe, is the scientific name for reindeer and in North America the scientific name is Rangifer tarandus
Jake Paleczny/Yukon Wildlife Preserve
Caribou at the Yukon Wildlife Preserve off the Takhini Hot Springs Road.
Jake Paleczny/Yukon Wildlife Preserve
Caribou at the Yukon Wildlife Preserve off the Takhini Hot Springs Road.
The Java ConneCTion will Close DeCember 23 for The holiDays anD will reopen on January 6. see you all in The new year!
The crew at the
Java Connection would like to wish all their amazing customers a very
merry Christmas.
7Published by YUKON NEWS December 2013
7
groenlandicus for Arctic caribou, or Rangifer tarandus tarandus is just caribou,” Farnell said.
There is one non-genetic dif-ference, though. The finlandicus subspecies in particular was domes-ticated generations ago by the Sami people, who live in northern Fin-land, Norway, Sweden and Russia.
When people think of reindeer, they typically think of Sami herds, with their brightly-coloured har-nesses and bells like the ones that Rudolph and his friends wear.
Farnell isn’t sure where the mythology around the animals came from. Reindeer is a Eurasian term for the animal, and caribou is a North American one. Wherever the confusion arose, it’s clear that humans and reindeer have a history that dates back much farther than Santa and his sleigh.
“We have cohabitated with them for many, many thousands of years. The fact that they got domesticated in certain parts of the world and
not in others is pretty irrelevant. They are part of the fabric of hu-man life in the North. I think truly, they are probably the most compo-nent species in most human endea-vour. They have fed us and made sure of our well-being everywhere across North America and across the world, actually,” Farnell said.
Pretty much anywhere that humans live in Arctic or subarctic climates, you find caribou artifacts that made life for people there pos-sible. Their hides and bones have been used as clothing and tools for eons, but Farnell said there is one thing in particular that makes cari-bou so vital to life up here.
“They have a rumen in their bellies that is able to break down lichen to get energy from that, and nutrition. That nutrition is only in their gut. It’s a very remarkable adaptation,” he said.
All energy for life on earth comes originally from the sun. Like all plants, the Arctic lichen absorbs
sunlight as it grows. But in order for that energy to be transferred up the food chain, something has to be able to eat it, and caribou are among the only ones that can, Farnell said.
Without them to convert that energy from lichen into meat that other animals can eat, it would be almost impossible for anything other than plants to live in such a harsh climate.
Farnell studied caribou exten-sively over his 30-year career, and was involved in archeological digs that uncovered evidence of human and caribou interaction thousands of years ago, but he’s never seen any proof of North American reindeer working with Saint Nicholas.
That makes sense, though. Santa comes from Holland, and his rein-deer come from Finland.
And as Paleczny tells his tour groups at the wildlife preserve, “there’s only one real difference: caribou can’t fly.”
2 0 4 C M a i n S t r e e t • w h i t e h o r S e • 6 6 7 - 2 4 0 9
Wishing All the Blessingsof Peace, Love and Joythis Christmas Season
and always!
Rita & Staff
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8 Published by YUKON NEWS December 2013
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9Published by YUKON NEWS December 2013
Letters to Santa from Jack Hulland’s
Grade 1 students
9 - Kids Page
May you have a joyous holiday season!
We APPRECIATEYour Business!
667-42472nd Floor, Hougen Centre
10 Published by YUKON NEWS December 2013
By Jesse Winter
Wisps of smoke curl around Randall
Tetlichi’s hunched shoul-ders, swept by the eagle feather in his hands. He’s kneeling before a small rise of sandy earth at the door of a sweat lodge outside Whitehorse.
It’s early December and his breath steams in the cold air as he quietly intones a prayer to the creator before taking his place inside the lodge.
This weekly sweat is just one of the myriad ways that Tetlichi works to maintain the traditions of his people. Originally from Old Crow, the Vuntut Gwitchin elder works at Yukon Col-lege as a spiritual leader and sort of cultural touchstone for the students.
As he settles himself on rough,
colourful blankets inside the lodge, steam begins to waft around a pile of heated rocks. Outside, the temper-ature dips below minus 20, and the trees are heavy with snow. As this year draws to a close, Tetlichi took some time to think back to the Christmases of his youth.
“Most of the men were still out on
the land, living off the land,” he said. “All the trappers were out and all the women were in town with the children. Going into Christmas, all the women were busy sewing. We made all our own decorations, our own orna-ments,” he said.
Instead of today’s gaudy plastic baubles with their riot-ous colours, the decorations of Tetlichi’s youth were fashioned out of pinecones and spruce boughs. Even bits of coloured paper were used, whatever the kids could get their hands on.
While the trappers were busy on the land, the women would sew and bake, making new boots and slippers and mitts for the town. As the dog teams began to return in mid-De-cember, children like Tetlichi would know that a big community feast was getting closer.
“As children, we’d get excited. By
Elder recalls Christmas past in Old Crow
Jesse Winter/Yukon News
Old Crow elder Randall Tetlichi.
10
206 Alexander St., Whitehorse Phone: 867-668-6543
TOLL FREE 1-866-628-3468www.eriksavu.ca
Monday to Wednesday 9:30 -6 Thursday & Friday 9:30 -8Saturday 9:30 – 6 Sunday 11-4Christmas Eve & New Year’s Eve till 4pm
Join us December 26th 10 -5 For our “Boxing Day Extravaganza”
Happy Holidays from the Staff and Management at
The Staff & Management wish everyone a Safe &
Happy Holiday
11Published by YUKON NEWS December 2013
December 15 you’d start to see teams of trappers coming back. We’d run out to meet those trappers and see what they’d bring,” he said.
“It was exciting to see them come back with moose meat, rabbits, ptarmigan, all sorts of things. They were our mentors, our idols. We looked up to them.”
The bounty from the land would yield a huge feast, with dancing, singing, and fiddle music until five or six in the morning. In the days leading up to the big party, carolers would go around to all the houses with a blanket to collect donations for the feast, singing on every doorstep.
Along with the trappers, there was a second homecom-ing at Christmas as well.
“We would celebrate the students who were coming back for the holidays from mission school. We’d have a feast for them, and we’d honour them. It was always excit-ing to see them come back. They’d look different, and they’d come back with different clothes, with different outfits,” Tetlichi said.
Presents were almost entirely homemade. Tetlichi re-members one gift in particular that he got from his father.
“It was a bow and arrow, and it had different kinds of ar-row heads that he made. I was always excited about that.”
As Christmas Eve drew closer, the community would look to the heavens and track the course of four stars: the three wise men and the Christmas star, Tetlichi said.
“On Christmas Day, the three wise men come together with the Christmas star. Even today, we still watch those stars.”
It’s been five years since Tetlichi went home to Old Crow for Christmas. Things are different in the community now, he said.
“Nobody’s on the land anymore. Everyone’s in town, working. Today, everybody comes to Whitehorse to shop. Some go to Edmonton, Vancouver, to get all this ready-made stuff and spend money. It’s really not like how it used to be.”
The collection blanket for the feast still happens, but nobody sings anymore. Today it’s more likely that a family will have an imported turkey on the diner table instead of moose or rabbit. Parents fly to Whitehorse, Edmonton or Vancouver to buy presents for their kids instead of making
them by hand.The dances end much earlier than they used to.“There was no alcohol back then. Celebrations at
Christmas used to be for our kids, but now people forget and they use alcohol.”
But Tetlichi said some of the old traditions are starting to come back. The ever-increasing cost of living makes it difficult to continue buying all the plastic toys and gadg-ets, and many people are looking to their past as a way forward.
“Slowly but surely, some of our traditions are starting to come back because our young people from Old Crow want to learn them. They want to learn how to drum and sing old songs.”
11
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12 Published by YUKON NEWS December 2013
Christmas at the Eagle Plains HotelBy Jacqueline Ronson
If you were to be stranded away from home at Christmas
time, you could do worse than the Eagle Plains Hotel.
“We’re the best-kept secret around,” said Cathy Brais, who moved to Eagle Plains, popula-tion 14, in 2008.
Secrets are easy to keep when they are hidden halfway up Canada’s most northern high-way, in the dead of winter, in almost 24-hour darkness.
But friends, co-workers, family and strangers at the Eagle Plains Hotel have found an unlikely place to call home.
Brais is the Yukon govern-ment’s road foreman for the Eagle Plains maintenance sec-tion of the Dempster Highway, between kilometre 286 and
kilometre 465 at the N.W.T. border.
Christmas is a quiet time of year for Brais and her road crew, and she always plans something to make it extra special.
Last year, that meant load-ing her hot tub onto her trailer and hauling it up to the Arctic Circle for a dip.
It was a bucket list item, she said.
The weather had not been co-operating, but turned for the better on Boxing Day.
Pretty much everyone in the lodge came out to witness the event, said Brais.
Seven people braved the cold and hopped in for a dip.
Peter Mather/www.petermather.com
New Year’s celebrations at Eagle Plains Hotel on the Dempster Highway in 2011.
12
867-668-3399 | 191 Range Road, Whitehorse | www.klondikemotors.ca
Happy Holidaysfrom all of us at
Klondike Motors.
Holiday Hours:December 24th open until noon
December 25th Closed December 26th Closed
December 31st open until noonJanuary 1st Closed
Happy Holidaysfrom all of us at
Klondike Motors.
Holiday Hours:December 24th open until noon
December 25th Closed December 26th Closed
December 31st open until noonJanuary 1st Closed
13Published by YUKON NEWS December 2013
“It was just a big photo shoot. I put my Christmas tree from my living room on my trailer and we lit up the Arctic Circle sign.”
It was a special treat for the hotel bartender’s daughter and son-in-law, who were visiting from Germany.
Brais also contributes to the festivities with about $1,000 worth of fireworks each holiday season, she said.
She’ll probably set some off on Christmas or Boxing Day, but most will be kept for New Year’s Eve.
“That’s my gig, every year,” said Brais.
Some holiday visitors are unexpected.
“We usually have a bliz-zard. The road sometimes closes, and we sometimes have truckers that are stuck here.
“They join us for Christmas din-ner. (The hotel staff) put the tables together in the restaurant, they decorate it. It’s just beautiful how
they decorate it. And we all sit down and we have turkey dinner and wine and chit chat. Just like family.”
There is a gift exchange, and the staff always bring a few extra presents in case of unexpected visitors.
Sometimes the visitors are very
unexpected. The driving on the Dempster Highway is treacherous at the best of times, and breakdowns are common.
Luckily for stranded travellers, Brais and her crew drive their section of highway every day, and are pre-
pared to rescue anyone who has run into trouble.
That’s what happened to a family headed for Inuvik on a recent Christ-mas Eve.
They broke down at 11 p.m. at 30 below, said Brais.
“They had blown a belt, about 15 kilometres south of Eagle.”
They built a fire in the bush to survive the night, she said.
The road crew found them at about 9 a.m. Christmas morning. They brought the family into Eagle Plains, fixed up them and their car, and sent them on their way.
No one would choose to spend Christmas in a broken down car on the Dempster
Highway, but assuming you’ve got the requisite survival gear and skills, just outside of Eagle Plains might be just the place to do it.
“If you have no other place to go for Christmas, this doesn’t suck at all, you know?”
“They join us for Christmas dinner. (The hotel staff) put the tables to-
gether in the restaurant, they deco-rate it. It’s just beautiful how they
decorate it. And we all sit down and we have turkey dinner and wine and
chit chat. Just like family.”
13
Smile and say Trees! Happy Christmas and a Merry New Year to all of our Yukon Friends and Family!
5 0 4 B M a i n S t r e e t • 6 6 7 - 4 3 7 2 • M o n d a y - F r i d a y 1 0 t o 6 • S a t u r d a y 1 0 t o 5 • w w w . a r o m a b o r e a l i s . c o m
It has been an honour to naturally serve our community this past 15 years; we look forward to seeing your smiling faces again in the New Year!!!
Big Hugs and Enjoy the Winter Solstice from Beverley, Fanny, Cathy, Egle and Michelle
NEW YEar’S rESolutIoN SalE 20% off Store Wide! oPEN - December 27, 28, 30 & 31st
Christmas Hours: Closed December 25 & 26th Closed: January 1-2 & 3rd open: Saturday, January 4th2014 Winter Hours: Closed Mondays Tuesday to Friday: 10-6 • Saturday 10-5
Bring some fresh conifer greens into your home as a sign to the woodland spirits, that they may find safe refuge from the cold in your home!
14 Published by YUKON NEWS December 2013
14
Merry ChristmasMerry Christmas
from
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Thurs & Fri 10 to 8 • Sun 11 to 4Boxing Day Sale! December 26th 10 to 6
Fresh Turkeys & Hams•Gift Baskets•Party Trays•
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15Published by YUKON NEWS December 2013
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16 Published by YUKON NEWS December 2013
By Ellen Davignon
We didn’t start out, that Christmas Day in 1946, to ruin our reputa-
tion as “that nice Porsild family, you know, the one that lives in that old two-storey log house on Lambert Street.” It was just that Jo and I had played the heck out of our new toys and were get-ting a little bored and fractious. Our easy-going Mum had finally blown a fuse and kicked… well… sent us out for some fresh air.
“Shame on you for acting that way. And on Christmas, too. Go outside and don’t come back until you’ve learned to behave!”
Dad had come home from Burwash Landing where he was building a lodge for the Jacquot brothers. We’d had our usual Scandinavian Christmas Eve, with roast goose dinner with all the trim-mings, followed by gathering at the piano for a sing-along, followed by the ripping and tearing into the modest pile of pakke under the tree. By mid-afternoon the next day, we’d exhausted the supply of candy pills in our nurse kits and were tired of reading our new books and, as I mentioned, had become somewhat disorderly and inclined to behaving badly.
We were arguing bitterly over some-thing trivial when Dad came into the kitchen for his mid-afternoon open-face cheese sandwich and a glass of home-brew that Mum had made especially for Christmas. Before sitting to his snack,
he had leaned down and given his wife a leisurely kiss. “Thanks, darling.”
“You’re welcome. How’s the beer? Here, give me a little drink, I haven’t tasted it yet.” She’d taken a small sip… “Hmm, not bad…” and smiled at Dad, returning the salute he’d given her mo-ments before. We had stopped arguing to watch. Dad was home for only a few days and there’d been a lot of kiss-ing going on. The moment over, we’d resumed our bickering.
“Girls, for heaven’s sake, stop your fighting!” Mum had sounded a little shrill. “Really, Bob, they’re just being impossible.” She’d paused, looking a tad wild-eyed, then gone on to the
“Shame…’ and the “Go outside…” part of our program and moments later, Jo and I had found ourselves out on the sidewalk, all dressed up in our snow-suits and felt boots, with no particular place to go.
Six-year-old Jo looked to me for leadership. “What are we going to do now?” she asked plaintively. “I dunno,” I replied. “Let’s go see what Nancy and Patsy got for Christmas.”
Frances Holt answered the door. “Hello, girls. Merry Christmas.” “Merry Christmas,” we answered in unison. “Can we come in and play?” Helge, a tall, good-natured Norwegian, came up behind his wife. “Sure, you can, they’re
‘Pray, think of us poor children…’
Courtesy of Ellen Davignon
Ellen Davignon and her younger sister, Jo, seen in the early 1940s.
16 - Davigion
95 LEWES BOULEVARD, WHITEHORSE, YUKON Y1A 3J4PHONE: 668-4628 WWW.PEAKfITNESSYUKON.cOm
Holiday Hours: Christmas EvE - DEC 24 - 8am - 4pm
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Merry Christmas and Happy New Year
from the staff at Peak Fitness
17Published by YUKON NEWS December 2013
in the front room.” As we started in, Helge asked, “What are your mother and dad up to?”
Jo looked at him soberly. “Oh, they’re busy kissing and drinking home-brew.”
Helge grinned. “Are they, now? Well, Merry Christmas, Bob!”
Frances gave her husband a little push. “Oh, Helge, stop! Go ahead girls, into the living room…”
We stayed at the Holt’s until playing with Nancy and Patsy’s new toys, so similar to our own, began to pall. Then we said our goodbyes and headed home again. Our steps slowed as we neared our house. “Do you think Mum is still mad?” Jo asked, anxiously. “Nah,” I said. “But we should visit Miz Layton. She doesn’t have any little girls – it’s very sad – and she’d like to have us come and visit on Christmas.”
We continued up the street, passing the white-and-green Lambert Street school before coming to the first of two small houses. Here lived Lenore Layton, my Grade 2 teacher, a pretty, young woman with shiny black curls and an equally shiny little husband named Laurie who often came to our classroom to visit his wife. “Hel-lo, Laurie!” we’d sing-song in response to Miz Lay-ton’s dainty hand signals. Now, Laurie opened to our knocking. “Lennie,” he called. “We’ve got company…”
Jo and I settled ourselves comfortably on the Layton’s chesterfield while Miz Layton went into the kitchen and Laurie put a Christmas record on the little gramophone in the corner. “I’ll be home for Christmas…” Bing Crosby’s mellow tones ushered Miz Layton back into the room carrying a tray bearing glasses
of something pale pink and a plate of cookies.
“Now,” she said, eagerly. “Tell us what Santa brought you this morning.”
“Oh, Santa doesn’t come to our house. There wasn’t anything under the tree.”
Both Miz Layton and Laurie blinked. “Nothing at all? Surely there was some-thing… Oh Laurie…” Miz Layton looked ready to cry.
Jo shook her head. “We got up early too, but he didn’t come. But it’s alright, we read books and ate some pills. Then Mum told us to go out and not come back ‘til we learned to behave…”
We ate all the cookies and drank all the lemonade and then said our goodbyes. “Please, come back anytime, girls. You can come here anytime you need to…” Miz Layton still looked a little teary.
It was almost dark on the street. “I want to go home now,” Jo said. “I can behave.”
“First we’ll visit the McBrides.” I nod-ded my head at the second small house.
The McBrides invited us in as if we’d been expected. “Are you out working up an appetite for din-ner?” Mr. McBride asked, with a twinkle in his eye.
“Oh, we don’t have Christmas dinner…” I didn’t consider all the special little dishes, along with the slices of cold roast goose from the night
before, that Mum had spent most of the day putting together for our Christmas Day smorgasbord, as dinner. “We’re just having leftovers.”
“Oh.” Mrs. McBride looked startled. There was an awkward silence, then she said, brightly. “Well, I’m sure it will be delicious, whatever you have, your mother is an excellent cook. And look at the time! Perhaps you should be getting home, your parents will be worrying…”
“Nah,” I said. “They don’t care if we stay out. They were drinking beer and told us to go away…”
Inevitably, we had to go home. “Here you are!” Dad beamed as we came in. “We were just thinking of sending out a search party!” Mum came in with hugs for each of us as she helped up take off our snowsuits and boots. “It’s almost suppertime! Where have you been?”
“Oh, here and there.” I said, airily. “We were telling about Christmas at our house. People seemed really surprised…”
Ellen Davignon is a longtime Yukon writer and author of The Cinnamon
Mine: An Alaska Highway Childhood.
17 - Davigion
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“Happiness is
as a butterfly which,
when pursued,
is always beyond
our grasp,
but which,
if you will sit down
quietly,
may alight upon you.”
Nathaniel Hawthorne, c. 1860
Cheryl BuchanTrager bodywork, NTS, RMT
is pleased to announce the new location for her practice at
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New cell # 867-335-6955
“Happiness is
as a butterfly which,
when pursued,
is always beyond
our grasp,
but which,
if you will sit down
quietly,
may alight upon you.”
Nathaniel Hawthorne, c. 1860
Cheryl BuchanTrager bodywork, NTS, RMT
is pleased to announce the new location for her practice at
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18 Published by YUKON NEWS December 2013
18
By Michael Gates
Christmas in 1896 was special for the tiny com-munity of Forty Mile, the jumbled assemblage of log cabins nestled at the junction of the frozen Fortymile and Yukon Rivers. For one thing, gold had been dis-covered 80 kilometres away on a tiny tributary of the Klondike River, but the magnitude of the new discov-ery had yet to be realized. For another, it was the first time that Santa Claus visited the Yukon.
When Santa first came to the Klondike
This illustration, placed in American newspapers during Christmas of 1897, portrayed the first Santa Claus to visit the Yukon.
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Season’s Greetings from the Yukon Kennel Club
We wish everyone and all your furry friends a safe and
happy holiday season.
For all updates on coming events please check out our Facebook page www.Facebook.com/YukonKennelClub or our website
www.YukonkennelClub.Com
Our up-cOming events fOr 2014:Come Meet the Dogs! March 1, 2014 •Yukon Kennel Club Dog Show •2014: June 13, 14 & 15
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19Published by YUKON NEWS December 2013
19
The native people clustered around the nearby Buxton Mission had not, to this point, celebrated Christmas, so Bishop Bompas, the Anglican mission-ary, had always maintained the regular routine during the holiday. Charlotte, his wife, and Margaret Mac-Donald, the teacher at the mission school, however, longed for something more.
This year, their wish for a traditional celebration came true. Reverend Harry Naylor, who had joined the church staff the summer of 1896, was determined to make Christmas special for the 20 or so native chil-dren they were schooling at the mission.
By a stroke of insightful forethought, a man named Wilson arrived at Forty Mile that year, bearing a pack filled with toys. According to Mrs. Phillie Engel, wife of a miner at Forty Mile, “Every white mother in Alaska was willing to pay its weight in gold for any pitiful looking little toy that bore the trademark of a city store.”
The three little Engel children woke up Christmas morning in their tiny log home at Fort Cudahy, a short distance from Forty Mile, to find their stock-ings filled with presents and candy. Then everyone bundled up against the frightful chill and they sped on their dog sled to join the festivities at the Anglican mission.
There, the waiting children were in a delirious state of expectation at the arrival of every guest. There was a wondrous Christmas tree, around which the gifts were arranged. The gaily decorated dolls, the tiny fig-ures, horses and wagons, and other “eccentric contriv-ances” were packed in bags of mosquito netting, as the usual wrapping materials weren’t available.
Finally Santa appeared, although to the seasoned eye, he didn’t meet the normal specification for a Santa Claus. Instead of a red suit with white trim and a black belt, he was attired in a heavy parka pulled close up around his face. The beard, though not white at all, was heavily dusted with white powder to impart the impression of the standard snowy whiskers.
The youngsters played a variety of games, the most popular of which proved to be blind-man’s buff. The heat radiated from the glowing stove while the chil-
dren played merrily in the cheery decorated interior of the old log building.
The party broke up at midnight, everyone having had a marvellous time. The Engels loaded their three tired children under the robes on the dog sled, and the youngsters were all sound asleep, still clutching their Christmas presents, when they arrived back at their snug little cabin.
A few days later, Charles Engel staked a fraction high up on Bonanza Creek, while Phillie remained at home, unable to travel. A short time later, she gave birth to their fourth child, a son named Jasper Talbot, who was baptized on February 10, 1897.
Season’s Greetings
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On behalf of the Government of Yukon, I send you warm Christmas greetings.
This is the time of year to be with family and friends and spread the spirit of generosity and peace.
During this season I hope you can spend time with loved ones, and celebrate the holidays with joy and good cheer.
Good health and happiness to you and yours in 2014.
Darrell Pasloski Premier
Merry Christmas and Happy New Year
3123 3rd Ave • Mon-Fri 10:00-5:30 • Sat. 10:00-5:00
Jesse Winter/Yukon News
The old Whitehorse Inn sign is lit up in front of the MacBride Museum.
21Published by YUKON NEWS December 2013
21
Best wishes for a wonderful holiday season!
You are invited to attend theCommissioner’s New Year’s Levee
Wednesday, January 1, 2014 • 2–5 p.m.Awards 2–4 p.m. • Reception 4–5 p.m.
The Long House at theKwanlin Dun Cultural Centre
Season’s greetings to al l
from Commissioner of Yukon
Doug Phil l ips
ECO OC NY Levee 3.375x4.625 N.indd 1 11/27/13 2:05:19 PM
22 Published by YUKON NEWS December 2013
22
Happy Holidays from office of
Grand Chief Ruth Massie Executive Office, Education, Finance and Administration, Circumpolar Relations, Natural Resources and
Environment, Self Government Secretariat, Justice, Health and Social and Yukon Native Language Centre.
Ut’àkwädích’e dzänù nàkwìtth’ät • Ut’óhudìnch’i húlin dzenú Drin Tsal zhìt shòh ohłìi • Gu.àlshé hà s’àtí yagìyí i jiyís wùk’ê Kuhini kuts’ih nahts’í’ Denetie Chué’ • Drin Tsul zhìt shò ähląy
Jesus kòhdlïni dzenès kut’eh • Dzeen shìit choh shìit soonayh ahłii
Jesse Winter/Yukon News
Patrick Singh takes in a sundog reflected through ice fog on the Yukon River.
23Published by YUKON NEWS December 2013
23
Happy HolidaysOn behalf of all of us, best wishes to you and your family this holiday season and in the new year.
We hope that you find yourself in the company of family or friends this holiday season, wherever they may be.
....and enjoy all that is wonderful this Christmas. Best wishes for a happy,
healthy New Year to one and all.Published by
black Press GrouP ltd.
Celebrate
24 Published by YUKON NEWS December 2013
24
Don’t let the holidays curb you fromhaving a healthy lifestyle. Here are some helpful tips…J OLLY – It’s a merry time of the year. Celebrate the joys of the holiday season and create family memories and traditions that inspire health.
I MMUNE BOOST – Keep yourself healthy! Include foods with vitamin C, zinc and probiotics. Wash your hands often, get plenty of sleep and be food safe when preparing food.
N UTRITION – Avoid skipping meals in preparation for holiday meals, this can set you up for overeating later. Take time to nourish your body with small balanced meals/snacks throughout the day.
G IFTS – Give gifts that inspire a healthy lifestyle! Buy locally made gifts as often as you can or create personal homemade gifts.
L EISURE – Research shows families that play together, stay together. Get outside and be active with your family. Take the family skating, or hit the local trails for a snowshoe or cross country ski.
E XERCISE – Is a great way to relieve holiday stress. It can also help to balance those extra calories we may consume. Aim for 22 minutes of moderate to vigorous exercise every day!
B AKING – Holiday baking for many of us is a tie to fond family memories. Research shows that more variety of foods = eating more. Pick a couple of your favorites to bake and savour each morsel.
E NERGY – Spend a few minutes each day to yourself to recharge your batteries. Find a quiet place to stretch in the morning or get outside for a walk.
L IQUIDS – Stay hydrated with lots of water! Be mindful of calorie-containing beverages. Try adding carbonated water to your juice or spice up your water with sliced cucumbers, mint or lemons.
L END A HELPING HAND –The holidays are a time for giving so let’s give back to those who are less fortunate.
S TRESS – The holidays can take a toll on our mental health and well being. Stay organized, prioritize what is important to you and keep your goals realistic.
25Published by YUKON NEWS December 2013
25
Get an active start to your New Year! Can you commit to being active for 22 minutes each day for 22 consecutive days? RPAY encourages you to take the challenge and make daily exercise a part of your lifestyle.
Register f• or FREE at www.rpaychallenge.orgInput your daily 22 minutes or more of exercise each day for 22 days and track your progress.•Choice any exercise you like to do. Exercise at moderate-to-vigorous intensity for healthy benefits.•Missed a day of exercise? You can make it up anytime throughout the challenge. •Participants who complete the challenge can WIN some great prizes.•
Registration starts December 20 www.rpaychallenge.org
Need some motivation to get moving more? Contact RPAY at: Phone: 867.668.3010 or 1.888.961.WALK (9255)
or visit us at: www.rpayschools.org or www.rpaywinteractive.org Follow us on Twitter @RPAY1 or Facebook at facebook.com/gorpay
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RPAY PROGRAM…
RPAY’s 22 for 22 Activity Challenge
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This virtual walking program allows you to walk the historic Overland and Silver Trail. Track your daily progress in kilometers or steps and walk as an individual or as a group.
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26 Published by YUKON NEWS December 2013
26
Merry Christmas and all the best for 2014!Warm regards, Ryan & Dan
Ryan Leef, MP (yukon)[email protected] www.ryanleef.ca
HonouRabLe DanieL Lang, SenatoR (yukon)[email protected]
By Emily Dayboll
The end of the semester at Yukon College is often busy and stressful,
with students facing final exams and assignments. With the arrival of De-cember comes residents’ anticipation for the holiday break.
Many students travel back home for the break. However, there are still several students who stay and cele-brate the holidays in residence. Yukon College is one of the few institutions in Canada that does not require their residents to vacate during the holidays.
Staff recognize that residence is for many students their home, as is the case for 22-year-old Morgan Hendrie, a third year renewable resources student who has lived in residence for two years. When asked where his home is, he replied, “here at the college.”
Morgan spent the last holiday season with his family in the North-west Territories. His family opens all of their gifts on Christmas Eve and the days that follow are filled with parties, family dinners and community dances.
This year Morgan has decided to stay in residence and he is looking for-ward to seeing what it will be like. “I’m looking at it like an adventure,” he said.
Like most students, Morgan is look-ing forward to being on a break and having nothing to do. Over the break Morgan hopes to visit friends and rela-tives around Whitehorse, learn how to snowboard, visit the gym, and go skating.
He is also looking forward to the holiday dinner that will be taking place in residence, and to fill up on turkey.
This dinner is organized by resi-
dence staff and prepared by the stu-dents that are staying for the holidays. The college provides all the ingredients and food for a dinner with all the fix-ings, including a dessert. The students have always enjoyed the feeling of family when they come together to prepare and then enjoy the feast.
For 21-year-old Chunmyung Kang, an international student from Japan who goes by “Chiaki,” staying in resi-dence over the holidays is both a new and exciting experience.
This will be the first time that she will be away from her family. Chiaki has been a student at Yukon College for three months and is currently complet-ing upgrading courses.
She can’t wait to “be lazy” this holiday season because it has been so busy recently with assignments and
Yukon College offers a home away from home for the holidays
27Published by YUKON NEWS December 2013
27
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finals, she said. Chiaki hopes to catch up on her sleep, read a few books, and recharge with some much-needed “me time.”
She loves Yukon Col-lege, but misses the warmer weather of her home city, Sakai in Osaka, Japan.
During the winter holi-days the atmosphere of her home city is “everything Christmas.” There are a lot of sales near the end of Decem-ber in Sakai, and everyone looks forward to the holiday shopping.
Originally, Chiaki thought that her holiday away from home would be boring and lonely.
However, she is now excited about the traditional Canadian holiday dinner. Also, she has recently been invited to spend New Year’s Day in Haines Junction with two other college residents.
She is greatly looking forward to
experiencing more Canadian traditions and sharing a few of her own. One tradition that she is planning on shar-ing with the other residents over the
break is rice cakes after New Year’s. In Japan, rice cakes are enjoyed each
day after New Year’s, with one being consumed on the first day, two con-
sumed on the second day, and so on. She enjoys rice cakes with red beans, or soya sauce and sugar, and said the se-cret to a delicious rice cake is to toast it.
About 15 students plan to stay in residence over the break. The resident community is filled with holiday cheer dur-ing the month of December. Each residence is decorated and several events take place that celebrate the season and bring students together.
Staff also deliver stockings to the residents’ doors the night of Christmas Eve. For the past five years, the residence manager, Andrea Clark, has organized this special delivery. The stock-ings are filled with wrapped gifts of goodies, useful items for students and fun trinkets.
Students are always sur-prised and thrilled to wake up
and open the presents on Christmas Day!
Emily Dayboll is a residence mentor at Yukon College.
Ian Stewart/Yukon News
International student Chiaki Kang, centre, decorates the Yukon College residence with her fellow students.
28 Published by YUKON NEWS December 2013
28
We Know You Love It Here And We Love Welcoming You!
Come Play In Our Backyard... Winter Is Waiting!
Haines Visitor Center800-458-3579
www.HainesInfo.net
By Ashley Joannou
They’re big shoes to fill.When Johan Groenewegen prepares for
his latest foray into character, he knows the importance of the role he plays.
If imitation is the sincerest form of flattery, Santa Claus is a superstar.
Groenewegen is one of seven Rent-a-Santas and nearly two dozen mock Mrs. Clauses who are part of the Yukon Hospital Foundation’s annual fundraiser.
After all, at this time of year the real Big Guy could certainly use a little help.
The Santas attend everything from office Christmas events, children’s parties and major community gatherings.
The program itself has been in the territory for more that 30 years. The Yukon branch of the Canadian Cancer Society originally ran it.
Putting on the big red suit
Ian Stewart/Yukon News
Santa Claus hands out presents at a Christmas party in Whitehorse. Mr. Claus said he'd be very busy with parties to attend throughout December.
29Published by YUKON NEWS December 2013
29
Juan Beverly Hills, Joico, Moroccanoil Holiday Packs are a great last-minute gift idea! Give the gift of beautiful hair!Joico Litres on sale all year long for only $20!
Phone 668-6422 to book your appointment • Hours: Monday – Friday 9 am-7:30 pm • Saturday 9 am-5 pm • 309 Wood Street
Happy Holidays from the Kutters Girls!
After the society closed its doors locally, the Yukon Hospital Foun-dation took over for the first time this year.
“Basically, we look for people who really love what they’re doing, who can get into the spirit of what this is all about,” said organizer Marsha Cameron.
Santa’s visits are paid for by do-nation and the money still goes to help people with cancer.
It’s now sent to the Yukoner Cancer Care Fund, a charity cre-ated by Geraldine Van Bibber after the cancer society’s office closed.
Groenewegen has been putting on the red suit for the last four years.
“I got sort of hooked into it at a party,” he said with a laugh. “Some-one looked at me and said, ‘Oh, you look like a good Santa.”
For anyone looking to chan-nel their inner Claus next year, Groenewegen warns you have to be prepared to answer all sorts of questions from visitors.
“They throw you curve balls and you always have to be on your toes to come up with answers.
“That could mean everything from ‘why are you so skinny?’ to ‘where are your reindeer?’”
“If it’s too warm I don’t like to run my reindeer outside, or if it’s really bad weather I might park them at the outside of the city so they don’t get in accidents,” Groe-newegen said.
His relatively svelte size comes from a healthy life, even in the North Pole, Santa tells the kids.
“I’ve talked to the North Pole doctors and they advised me that diabetes is a very serious issue so ‘you better watch it, Santa.’ That’s what I put out there,” Groenewe-gen said.
“I encourage the parents when they are around to get away from all the candy and the garbage, so to speak, and get them outdoor presents so they can get away from the TV and the video games.”
Like any good relationship, even
a Rent-a-Santa knows it is impor-tant to acknowledge his better half.
“Mrs. Santa is a very important part. She is the backbone to Santa performing well,” Groenewegen said.
“She picks up all the little threads I drop. Either I can’t hear a child’s name, because I’m half deaf on one side and they are not speaking clearly, or maybe I am scrambling for a question.”
At 6’4”, Groenewegen has to be prepared, especially when the young ones want a hug from Santa.
“A lot of the little guys will come hug me, and I’m a pretty tall Santa,” he said. They will basically come to my kneecaps so I will have to bend down a little so they can get to beard level.
But the hugs – from kids young and old – make it all worthwhile, he said.
“I get the fun of a little acting on my side, but mostly the fun of seeing the kids enjoying the thrill of Santa.”
30 Published by YUKON NEWS December 2013
30
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31
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Joyeux Noël et Bonne Année
Ian Stewart/Yukon News
The Christmas tree in front of the White Pass building on Front and Main streets in Whitehorse.
32 Published by YUKON NEWS December 2013
32
The Staff and Merchants of Chilkoot Mall would like to give their heartfelt
thanks for your patronage.
33Published by YUKON NEWS December 2013
Soak raisins over-night in brandy
and drain cherries overnight.
Mix all ingredi-ents together. Line pans with paper and grease. Pour mixture into 2 pans.
Bake at 250F for 2.5 to 3 hours. Do not wrap for 2 days. Let the air get at them. Soak in brandy (optional).
Recipe provided by Whitehorse’s Dawn Holt.
Christmas fruit cake
2 cups butter2 cups fruit juice1 teaspoon cloves2 teaspoons nutmeg2 teaspoons cinnamon4 cups brown sugar5 cups flour4 teaspoons baking powder
4 lbs raisins (dark and light)4 jars maraschino cherries1 package mixed fruit2 cups dates2 cups nuts2 teaspoons baking soda8 eggs
33
Happy Holidays!
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FROM
SEASON’SGREETINGS
Closed Christmas Day & New Year’s Day
34 Published by YUKON NEWS December 2013
By Michele Genest
Two factors influenced the mak-ing of this dish: the discovery of
a whole goose in the freezer, and the knowledge we were going to spend Christmas in a remote cabin, travel-ling on Christmas Day.
Christmas dinner needed to be something that would cook on top of a wood stove, and it had to be both delicious and ceremonial. I’m happy to say the cassoulet succeeded on all three counts.
The long, slow preparation at home on Christmas Eve day satis-fied the need for ritual so strong at this time of year. Six different kinds of meat, including confit of goose, a cooking liquid made with all the dif-ferent meat juices fortified with white wine, and buttery-soft lima beans combined to create a rich, subtle and deeply satisfying version of that homey old favourite, pork and beans.
Yes, cassoulet is a farm-house, peasanty kind of feast, exactly right for a four-day retreat in a cabin on the edge of the Tatshenshini-Alsek Park. This one changed with every re-heating. Different flavours dominated each time; lamb, goose, fennel and orange caribou sausage, Dall sheep. In the candle-lit dusk of the cabin we couldn’t see the different morsels of meat, and had a great time identify-ing them by flavour alone. We had a jar of homemade Quebecois tomato and apple ketchup as a condiment; its cool piquance was a perfect counter-point to the cassoulet’s warm and earthy flavours.
Note to travellers: We hauled our supplies in on snowshoes, pulling pulks (toboggans) behind us. We simply taped the casserole lid shut and wedged it between boxes on the pulk and it survived the hilly, jolty journey from truck to cabin no problem.
The Christmas cassoulet
Ian Stewart/Yukon News
Michele Genest prepares spices for the meat in her Whitehorse kitchen.
34
THE WILDERNESS CITY
Happy Holidays!
The City of Whitehorse wishes our residents a safe and healthy holiday season, and all the best in the New Year.
Season’s Greetings from Mayor and Council
www.whitehorse.ca
35Published by YUKON NEWS December 2013
Northern cassoulet
Cassoulet is a great adaptor; it will take any combination of meats and become your own
creation. Curnonsky reminds us that “true cassou-let” contains only beans and local sausage: freed from the need to be authentic, we can do anything we want. I assembled a northern-western medley that included homemade caribou sausage, side pork from Mission, B.C., a goose from Hutterite farmers in Peace River country in Alberta, wild Yukon Dall sheep, spring lamb from Saltspring Island, and pork rind from our farm-gate pig raised on the Alaska Highway.
In the final stage, the key to success is the brown crust that forms as the cassoulet cooks, which you must push down into the middle of the casserole several times. With our woodstove on the first night in the cabin we were heating a cold cabin and cook-ing dinner at the same time; the heat was uneven, and the crust tended to form at the sides rather than in the middle. Not that it mattered. But cassoulet cooked on a stove-top over even heat, or in the oven, will form a crust in the orthodox way.
There are several stages to this dish. Count on three to four hours of preparation before cassoulet is assembled and ready for its final cooking.
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Rinse the soaked beans and place in a pot with water to cover. Cook pork rind or blanched, salt pork rind in simmering water for 30 minutes. Drain, cool and cut into pieces about ½-inch (1.25-cm) square. Add to pot with beans, the piece of side pork or blanched bacon, and the bouquet garni, bring to the boil, turn down the heat to low and simmer for 1 hour and 30 minutes, or until beans are nearly cooked. Remove from heat and drain, reserving liquid. Remove the side pork and reserve. Cover the beans and reserve. (The bits of pork rind will stay in amongst the beans.)
While the beans are cooking, mar-inate the lamb and mutton:
Place the meat in a shallow dish, whisk together marinade ingredients, pour over the meat, turn meat to coat thoroughly, cover and leave to sit at room temperature, turning every so often.
To brown the meats and assemble the cassoulet:
Melt the fat in a large, oven-proof casserole over medium-high heat and
2 lbs (900 gr) dried baby lima beans, soaked 8 hours or overnight (navy or Great Northern are the trad-itional beans, but these work beauti-fully)
4 oz (115gr) pork rind (substitute salted pork rind, blanched for 10 min-utes to reduce saltiness)
1 lb (454 gr) side pork (basically, unsmoked bacon. If you can’t find side pork, substitute 1 lb of unsliced bacon, blanched for 5 minutes to tone down the smoky flavour)
A bouquet garni: 3 bay leaves, 3 cloves, 1 tsp (5 mL) thyme, wrapped in cheesecloth and tied with string
2 lamb shanks, or about 1 lb (454 gr)¾ lb (340gr) Dall sheep rib steak
or round roast (substitute moose or venison)
Marinade ingredients:1 cup (250 mL) white wine¼ cup (60 mL) olive oil1 shallot, chopped3 cloves garlic, minced
1 Tbsp (15 mL) rosemaryOlive oil, butter or melted duck or
goose fat for frying1 lb (454gr) fennel and orange
caribou sausage (or substitute chorizo or Italian sausage)
1 leg and thigh and 2 wings of preserved goose, or substitute 2 lbs (900 gr) pork tenderloin, spread with Dijon mustard and 1 tsp (5 mL) thyme and roasted for 1 hour 30 minutes in a 325F (160C) oven—you can roast the tenderloin while the beans cook
2 medium onions, chopped2 Tbsp (30 mL) tomato paste6 cloves garlic1 Tbsp (15 mL) sage1 tsp (5 mL) thyme2 cups (480 mL) strong beef stock1 cup (250 mL) white wine3 bay leaves2 cups (480 mL) breadcrumbs4 Tbsp (60 mL) melted goose fat or butter
INGREDIENTS
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brown all the meat in stages. Begin with the sausages, left whole (later you’ll slice them). Remove the lamb and mutton from the marinade and pat dry before browning on all sides.
Brown the goose pieces briefly, leaving the skin on. As each piece of meat is browned, remove and reserve.
Preheat the oven to 300F (150C). Reduce heat to medium-low and brown the onions in the same fat, add-ing more if necessary.
When the onions are soft and slightly caramelized (about 10 min-utes) add the garlic, tomato paste, sage and thyme, and sauté for 2 more minutes before adding wine, beef stock and returning the sausage, lamb and mutton to the pot. If the liquid doesn’t quite cover the meat, add enough reserved bean cooking liquid to cover. Add bay leaves, cover and cook for 1 hour and 30 minutes. Add the goose for the final 30 minutes.
When done, remove the meat and let cool. Drain the cooking liquid into a bowl. De-bone the lamb and the goose and separate the meat into
serving-sized pieces. Cut the mutton into six or eight pieces. Slice the saus-ages into ½-in (1-cm) chunks. Slice the side pork width-wise into pieces about ¼-in (½-cm) thick. If you substituted pork tenderloin for the goose, slice it into ½-in (1.25-cm) thick pieces. You’re ready now for the final assem-bly.
Line the bottom of the casserole with a layer of beans, followed by the side pork, beans, lamb and sheep, beans, goose, beans, sausage and beans. Don’t worry if the layers of beans are scant in the middle, but do make sure the final layer is plentiful. Combine the bean and meat cook-ing liquids and pour over the beans until the liquid is just visible at the rim—don’t cover the beans, liquid will bubble up during the cooking. Keep extra liquid in reserve. Tuck three bay leaves into the casserole. Cover with breadcrumbs and drizzle with goose fat or butter.
Cook the cassoulet, uncovered, in a pre-heated 375F (190C) oven, or on top of the stove over medium low heat
for about 1 hour. When the first crust forms, after 20 minutes or so, push it back down into the casserole with the back of a spoon. Turn the oven down to 350F (175C) at this point. Push the crust in 2 or 3 times. The crust may take longer to form if you’re cooking on top of the stove, count on 1 hour 30 minutes total cooking time. Serve with crusty bread and a hearty red wine.
Makes 8 to 12 servings—2 people for 4 days
This recipe is an excerpt from Michele Genest’s celebrated cookbook, The
Boreal Gourmet, published by Harbour Publishing. Genest lives in Whitehorse
and is passionate about using northern ingredients in her cooking.
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