3 Indian Fry Bread Recipes (Bannock) - The Prepared Page (2024)

3 Indian Fry Bread Recipes (Bannock) - The Prepared Page (1)

Photos: Calmingwind and KeyIngrediant

Bannock is the one of the preferred survival foods of the first mountain men settling the wild west. Not only did it provide them with the carbs needed for the tenuous trek of the day ahead but it was quick and easy to make in most cases over an open fire.

It is also commonly known as Indian fry bread and each tribe had it’s own unique recipe and method of cooking it. Depending on what you have left in your stores you can make one or another of these native recipes to carry you through.

Find below my personal favorites

3 Indian Fry Bread Recipes (Bannock) - The Prepared Page (2)

Ojibwe zaasakokwaan (Native American fried bread)

Ingredients

1+½ cups flour
2 tsp. sugar
½ tsp. salt
3 tsp. baking powder (or 1 tsp. baking soda and 2 tsp. cream of tartar)
1 egg
½ cup warm milk
½ cup flour for kneading

Enough cooking oil to be ½ in. deep in whatever sized skillet you are using to fry the bread.

Directions
Heat your electric skillet to 400 and fill with vegetable oil 1/2″ deep. A deep fryer might also be used.

Mix dry ingredients together well in a medium sized bowl. Beat egg separately and add to dry ingredients. Heat milk for 45 sec to a minute in the microwave and add slowly to the mixture.

Begin kneading in the bowl and once it seems a little more uniform, turn it out onto your “flour’d” kneading surface and knead for a minute or two.

Role the dough out until it is (ideally) 1/2 an inch thick.

Once the dough is a uniform thickness, cut it into 2″ wide strips. A pizza cutter would be perfect for this.

Next cut a slice through the middle of each piece of dough. Leaving the ends intact.

You are then ready to fry your bread! Place them in the oil carefully, and let them brown for a minute or two before turning and doing the same to the other side.

Remove from the oil and let drain on a paper towel laden platter.

3 Indian Fry Bread Recipes (Bannock) - The Prepared Page (3)

Calming Wind’s bannock (Muskogee Creek Native American sour fry bread)

Ingredients

½ teaspoon baking powder
¼teaspoon salt
¼ cup sugar
2 cups white flour self-rising
½ teaspoon vanilla
1 16oz. sour cream

water – as needed to make dough

Powdered sugar or jam for topping
Directions
Mix together all dry ingredients.
Add sour cream to the dry ingredients.
Add enough water to make a dough.
Let rise about 1/2 hr.
Pull off pieces of dough.
Roll in flour, make a ball and then flatten.
Fry in oil until golden

3 Indian Fry Bread Recipes (Bannock) - The Prepared Page (4)

Native American Sweet Fry Bread

This traditional fry bread can be made into either a sweet or savory dish, depending on what you put on it. Serve it with chili, or top with powdered sugar and jam.

Ingredients
2¼ teaspoons yeast
⅛ cup sugar
¼ teaspoon salt
½ cup warm water
¾ teaspoons salt
¼ cup sugar
½ cup butter, softened
1 cups warm water
4 cups flour (set aside ½ cup)
Directions
Mix ingredients 1-4 in a large bowl; then let “sponge” for 15 minutes or so until foamy.

Mix remaining dry ingredients in another bowl, and alternate adding dry stuff and water to the first mixture, allowing mixer to work ingredients before adding more.

WARNING: You may need the extra 1/2 cup of flour–the dough should NOT be sticky when finished.

Knead the dough, working in the remaining flour as you knead.

Grease a large glass or plastic bowl; shape dough into a large ball, place in bowl–turning to grease all sides; cover loosely with plastic

and place in a warm place; let rise until doubled.

Heat about a half-inch of oil in a large frying pan (375°F to 400°F).

While the oil heats, remove dough from bowl and divide into 4 balls. Each ball will make one dozen (12) balls (so a total of 48 balls).

Flatten each small ball into a thin disk (about 4 inches), make a little hole in the center of each. Keep a uniform shape, but these don’t have to look “perfect.”.

Carefully drop into hot oil; fry until bottom is golden brown, flip with a spatula in one hand and a fork in the other to prevent oil from splashing out.

Each Recipe has its own unique flavor and you might find that you enjoy one with savory dishes and another with sweet, try them all and find your favorite! Enjoy!

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3 Indian Fry Bread Recipes (Bannock) - The Prepared Page (2024)

FAQs

What are the three ways that bannock can be prepared or cooked? ›

Bannock can be baked in a pan or on a stone (camping), shallow pan-fried, or deep-fried. You can enjoy it with stews or just jam and butter.

What is the difference between bannock and frybread? ›

Today's Native American "fried bread" is like bannock but cooked in a skillet. However, for the purist, a bannock is not this "frybread" confection that pleases the pow-wow crowds, but rather the simple bread baked over an open fire.

What is traditional bannock? ›

Bannock is usually unleavened, oval-shaped and flat. The version that we know today came from Scotland. In its most rudimentary form, it is made of flour, water, and fat or lard. Milk, salt, and sugar are often added, depending on the recipe.

How did Native Americans make frybread? ›

According to Navajo tradition, frybread was created in 1864 using the flour, sugar, salt and lard that was given to them by the United States government when the Navajo, who were living in Arizona, were forced to make the 300-mile journey known as the "Long Walk" and relocate to Bosque Redondo, New Mexico, onto land ...

What are the 3 basic methods of mixing bread dough? ›

There are three mixing methods used for yeast doughs: the straight dough method, the modified straight dough method, and the sponge method.

What are the 3 mixing methods for a yeast bread? ›

There are three different methods for mixing the ingredients for yeast breads: The Straight Dough Method, The Modified Straight Dough Method, and The Sponge Method. The straight dough method is the easiest of all of the bread mixing methods.

Is bannock Indigenous or Scottish? ›

Bannock is a type of fry bread, which originates from Scotland but was eventually adopted by the Indigenous peoples of Canada, particularly the Métis of western Canada. Bannock stems from the Gaelic word bannach, which means “morsel,” a short and sweet but accurate description.

What does bannock mean in english? ›

Definitions of bannock. a flat bread made of oat or barley flour; common in New England and Scotland. type of: flatbread. any of various breads made from usually unleavened dough.

What is a fun fact about bannock? ›

In Scotland, before the 19th century, bannocks were cooked on a bannock stane (Scots for stone), a large, flat, rounded piece of sandstone, placed directly onto a fire, used as a cooking surface. Most modern bannocks are made with baking powder or baking soda as a leavening agent, giving them a light and airy texture.

What does bannock taste like? ›

Classic bannock has a smoky, almost nutty flavour blended with a buttery taste, while dessert bannock can have flavours resembling a donut or shortbread.

What ethnicity is bannock? ›

The Bannock tribe (Northern Paiute: Pannakwatɨ) were originally Northern Paiute but are more culturally affiliated with the Northern Shoshone. They are in the Great Basin classification of Indigenous People. Their traditional lands include northern Nevada, southeastern Oregon, southern Idaho, and western Wyoming.

Where is bannock most popular? ›

Bannock (British and Irish food), a kind of bread, cooked on a stone or griddle served mainly in Scotland but consumed throughout the British Isles.

What is the dark history of fry bread? ›

Fry bread is considered Indian country's “soul food,” because — just like barbecue ribs, which were borne during the evil enslavement and persecution of Africans in the U.S. — fry bread never had its place in Indian country until white, government officials forced Navajos and other nations and tribes into prison camps ...

What is Navajo fry bread made of? ›

Fry bread is a flatbread that's fried in oil, shortening or lard. Several tribes have their own variation on fry bread, but most Navajo-inspired fry breads are made with flour, water and salt and don't contain any yeast, using baking powder as the leavening agent.

Why is my fry bread hard? ›

Don't over-knead—Be careful not to knead the dough too much because the bread will be hard and tough.

What are the three cooking methods for preparing quick bread? ›

Quick breads are prepared by the blending-, creaming-, or biscuit-method which determines the final texture and crumb of the finished product.

What are the different methods of preparing bread dough? ›

Other methods of bread making include:
  1. Activated Dough Development (ADD)
  2. Straight Dough Method.
  3. Delayed Salt Method.
  4. Sponge and Dough Process (S&D)
  5. Ferment Dough Process.

What are 3 examples of baked goods produced from soft wheat? ›

It is usually made from soft wheat for pastry making, but can be used for cookies, cakes, crackers and similarly baked products.

What did the bannock people eat? ›

The rest of the year the Bannock lived in dome-shaped houses covered with grass. In the summer they fished for salmon, and in the spring they gathered seeds and roots. The root of the camas plant was an important food for the tribe.

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