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Lauren

An aspiring chef whose secret ingredients are always garlic, butter, and the learned skills of bygone eras.

It all began one day digging in our archives...

 

Visitors come into the Museum to see our collection on display, but sharing stories from the many grey boxes in our archives isn’t always easy. After all, not every visitor is interested in poring through old documents. Last summer while prepping for Museum at the Market, we stumbled upon Etta Blakely’s cookbook. This 40 page handwritten collection of recipes sparked something within us and captured our imagination. That moment of discovery grew into something bigger – this blog, Our Vintage Table. Through this blog we will share food-related stories that live in our archives and bring them into your homes…and onto your table. 

 

So, why recipe books? 

 

Recipes have the lovely ability to invoke memories. We can have nostalgia for a specific ingredient. A smell can remind us of a happy moment. We all have homemade recipes that transport us. For Lauren, it's her Baba’s borscht. Food is an essential component in bringing people together and creating memories with one another.

 

By sharing recipes with you, we can transform written text into tangible sensory experiences. Together, we will taste, see, smell, hear, and touch the lives of others by exploring the food they made. In this way, recipe books can offer us something regular museum artifacts cannot. Through this blog, we can make a personal connection to the people of Strathcona County’s past. 

 

So come, and gather round Our Vintage Table.

Blast From The Past

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We acknowledge the traditional lands and territories of the Indigenous Peoples who have lived on these lands and taken care of them since time immemorial. We respectfully acknowledge that we are on Treaty 6 territory, lands which are known as Amiskwaciy, Cree for “The Beaver Hills”. This region has been important for the Néhiyawak, Niitsitapi, Tsuut’ina, Anishinaabe, Nakota Sioux, and later the Métis. Many other tribes, including the Inuit, traveled and harvested on these lands. We acknowledge their collective stewardship. We are all Treaty People living together on these lands and we remain responsible to one another, the land, its resources, and to Treaty 6. We make this acknowledgement as an act of reconciliation.

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       Wednesday....................10am-4pm

Thursday............................1pm-8pm

       Friday..............................10am-4pm

       Saturday.........................10am-4pm

Sunday - Tuesday.................Closed

 

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