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Taos and Skwah First Nation chef and entrepreneur Caprio “CJ” Bernal opened an expansion of their original coffee bar on Taos Pueblo. Dawn Butterfly Café is the new full-service cafe that grew from their starting concept in 2022. The name and energy that drives the project honors Bernal’s late sister.
Camas, a wild purple flower with an onion-like bulb, has been an important plant for Native people, mainly in the northwest. This is the time of year for harvesting and cooking them. Some culture keepers are reconnecting with traditional teachings and recipes handed down across generations, but environmental and land use changes are setting up more access barriers. The Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde is one tribe working to protect this significant plant through a series of projects.
The Cultivating Culture reporting team created imagined an Indigenous version of the USDA’s food pyramid with plants and subsistence animals important to Native diets. It serves as a hub for an Indigenous food reporting project on how food and language fuels tribal sovereignty.
The Menu is a regular feature on Indigenous food news and stories hosted by producer Andi Murphy.
GUESTS
Carpio “CJ” Bernal (Taos Pueblo and Skwah First Nation), owner and chef of Dawn Butterfly Café
Jordan Mercier (Grand Ronde), cultural education coordinator at the Chachalu Museum and Cultural Center
Shaun Griswold (Laguna, Jemez, and Zuni Pueblo), correspondent at High Country News and Native News Online
Break 1 Music: Horseback Riding Song (song) The Tewa Indian Women’s Choir (artist) The Tewa Indian Women’s Social Choir: Fun and Social Songs From San Juan Pueblo (album)
Break 2 Music: Cauyaqa Nauwa [Where’s My Drum] (song) Pamyua (artist) Drums Of The North: Traditional Yup’ik Songs (album)

Loved this interview regarding the staff of the Dawn Butterfly Café and the Grand Ronde. I appreciate knowing native builders contributed to the completion of the new coffee shop.
This appreciative Michigan WASP listens to the show almost every day on Interlochen Public Radio at 1 pm and CMU Public Radio at 10 pm. Thanks to Shawn Spruce and his talented, brilliant audio and editing staff at Native America Calling, as well as the daily contributors who speak their native language, and introduce their tribal names and help to educate English-only listerners to the hundred of indigenous languages.