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Food: Native American wojapi
Ingredients: mixed berries (cranberries, blueberries, raspberries, cherries, blackberries), honey, salt

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Would you eat this?
I would eat this
I would not eat this
I have eaten this (positive)
I have eaten this (negative)
Food: Native American wojapi
Ingredients: mixed berries (cranberries, blueberries, raspberries, cherries, blackberries), honey, salt
Do you like wojapi?
I love it
I like it
It's okay I guess
I dislike it
I hate it
I've never tried it
I'm allergic/intolerant
I just wanted to let you know that as a native person I’m love your url 🤎 wozapi my beloved… AND maple my beloved
Omg I could go for some wojapi rn honestly, I picked some chokecherries back in august and damn they were good, idk if I ever explained my username ever on here so yeah wožapi is another Lakota orthography of spelling wojapi, it’s pronounced the same. People wanna say woJapi but it’s more of a in between sound like shjaw? Whatever this symbol sounds like ž
Then when finding pictures on google I can ever find the right consistency of it? Like why are people making jams and jellies like we have words for jams and jellies, it wouldn’t be wojapi. Wojapi is like specifically berry/fruit pudding. Arikara is different where huúʾ is pudding and porridge of any kind but there’s a big difference between jam and jelly.
Enjoy all my personal pet peeve of eating other people’s wojapi, especially when there’s no berries like why do you take the berries out? Like please tell me. 💖💖💖🫐🍇🍒🫐🍓🫐
i started watching next level chef for my boi gordon ramseys and stay watching for pyet and her wojapi, i could cry
Wojapi
A no-added-sugar berry jam sauce traditionally made and enjoyed by the Lakota and Dakota nations
Disclaimer:I am not Lakota, Dakota, or a member of any Indigenous American tribal nation, nor do I have Indigenous ancestry as far as I know. I make no claim to this recipe or its origins. I share this with deep respect for the Indigenous communities who created and preserved it. I discovered Wojapi while searching for a natural, diabetic-friendly alternative to the “no sugar added” jams full of chemicals on grocery shelves. When I made this version, it was after my goddaughter’s birthday — we had a bunch of leftover fruit trays, mostly berries, and I didn’t want them to go to waste. My diabetic grandmother ended up loving it, so I thought I’d pass it along.
Ingredients
Berries — a mix of blackberries, strawberries, and plenty of blueberries were used here, but you can use whatever berries you have. For authenticity, go with North American native berries like blackberries, blueberries, strawberries, huckleberries, cranberries, or elderberries. (Do your homework on what grows locally and sustainably!)
Cornstarch water mixture — this helps thicken it.
Water — enough to cover the berries in the pot.
Optional: Honey or maple syrup if you want extra sweetness.
Instructions
Place all your berries in a pot and pour in just enough water to cover them.
Cook on medium-low heat, stirring occasionally and gently smashing the berries as they soften. Continue for 30 minutes to an hour, until the liquid reduces significantly.
Add the cornstarch water mixture and stir in thoroughly.
If you want a smoother consistency, use a hand mixer or blender to puree the sauce at this point. Add honey or maple syrup if desired.
Continue cooking until the sauce thickens to your liking — it should be rich, dark, and jam-like.
Transfer to a container and let cool. Store in the fridge and enjoy as a spread, dessert topping, or sweet sauce substitute.
Chef Lawrence West serves up Indian tacos, wojapi, and other Lakota dishes at the brick-and-mortar incarnation of his popular food truck.