Thanks to CBS News Sunday Morning, I now want to taste akutaq. Inuit ice cream which uses pike -- that's the fish -- as an ingredient. Anybody ever had it?
Every spring, before their annual whale-hunting feast, groups of Native Alaskan women gather to vigorously stir bowls of caribou fat and seal oil into a special treat.
They are making akutuq. From the Inupiaq for “to stir,” it’s made by mixing fat and oil—and sometimes a bit of water or fresh snow—into a texture similar to whipped frosting. Although some people now turn to their electric mixers, the traditional method is by hand.
Meat-based varieties, which use dried fish or ground caribou, often taste salty and gamey, while berry-based versions (salmonberries and blueberries are favorites) have a sweet, yet briny flavor from the seal oil.
Akutuq is an undeniably Alaskan dish, with variations dictated by local flora and fauna. If you’re in the North, you might get hints of caribou, bear, and musk-ox fat. If you live on the coast, you’ll taste saltwater fish; if you live inland, you’ll find bits of freshwater varieties.
And if you sample akutuq from the Southwest, you’ll probably encounter candlefish mixed with oil and fresh snow—a delicious but ephemeral take that lasts only minutes before collapsing…….