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Grill Your Next Catch

Editor’s Note: This story is revised from the Sept/Oct 1988 issue of South Dakota Magazine. To order a copy or to subscribe, call 800-456-5117.

Fish will never replace steaks and burgers on South Dakota barbecue grills, but when we talked to him in 1988, Sioux Falls restauranteur Dave Thompson suggested that more people charbroil the fish they catch in our rivers and lakes.

Thompson learned about barbecuing fresh fish on trips he made to the coasts. He said that considering South Dakota’s growing reputation for fishing, it’s time more people tried grilling their catch.

Fish need to be firm and solid to be charbroiled. “Most of the fish we charbroil are swordfish, tuna and red snapper — fish that have a more steaky-like firmness to them. The softer fish… just fall to pieces,” he said. Salmon and walleye, favorite Dakota gamefish, are also just right for the outdoor grill. He said many people don’t like to barbecue oily fish like catfish because the meat can become mushy.

Although he had never tried to charbroil carp, the barbecuing process can help eliminate the “fishy” taste. “You get the charcoal marks on it (fish) and you fry the seasonings in real well. A lot of the fishy flavor comes from where the skin is; get the skin off the fish, that will help.”

Thompson said some fish are just fishy. “It depends on the time of the year it’s caught and size of the fish. Big walleyes aren’t as good as 1 1/2-3 pound walleyes. You get up to the big 7-8 pounders and they are not near as good eating as small fish.”

For the calorie conscious, Thompson said fish is low in calories, depending on what you add. Butter, sauce and other treats will tip the calorie scale. He said teriyaki sauce and lemon pepper butters seem to be the perfect partner for fish.

To begin grilling, grease the grill and fish with oil, to prevent sticking. On an open grill, fish should be cooked on each side. To determine the time, measure the fish at the thickest part (behind the head) and allow 10 grilling minutes for each inch. Cooking time will also depend on how hot the coals are and the distance between the coals and fish. Spread chive butter, teriyaki sauce or lemon pepper butter on each side while grilling. To accompany the freshwater cuisine, Thompson suggested an icy draft beer, wine spritzers or white wine of any kind.

Thompson said fish should be prepared and cooked the same day or the following. “If you keep fresh fish at all, you need to keep it between two ice bags to keep the temperature down so bacteria can’t grow.”

Whether you call it barbecuing, grilling or charcoaling, the searing coals will spice up the taste of fish. “You get that smoky flavor, the same way a steak picks it up from the charcoal or the wood that you’re using to give it a woodsy-outdoor type of flavor, rather than just a broiled piece of fish that might be kind of flavorless.”

Stuffing the fish with herbs and flavorings such as basil sprigs and sliced lemons will also perk up the flavor. Intensify the smoky flavor by putting various aromatics, such as mesquite, hickory or cherry wood chips on the hot coals.

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Bridging the Seasons


As someone that enjoys every aspect of food, I read a lot of blogs on the subject. There are gardening blogs that help me determine what I want to grow and the best way to do so. There are photography blogs that focus on the beauty of foods, raw, prepared and in states in between. And of course, there are cooking and recipe blogs that share the process of preparing amazing meals, sweet baked goods and every type of delicious delicacies.

However, when the first of September rolls around, I am always disgusted with a large percentage of my chosen form of entertainment, knowledge and enlightenment. The dawn of the ninth month seems to be the official kick-off for all things autumn in the blogging world. It is all pumpkin and apple all the time, and I am never ready for these signs of winter. I want to hold on to summer as long as possible. Embrace it. Savor it. Memorize it to carry me through the bone-chilling cold days of snow that I know will inevitably come.

I won’t willfully ignore the fact that many of our gardens are only just now producing hearty tomatoes, peppers, and zucchini. Fall does not officially begin until September 22, and the carefully cultivated vegetables don’t just die because the calendar changed a page. There will be plenty of time for apples and pumpkins.

Because I spent Sunday tromping around in a cool, drizzly (turning to pouring every time I ventured outside) rain, and this morning was overcast, windy and very fall-like, I will give in a little to heartier comfort foods. They still must pull from the produce that is rolling in from the garden, though. The last of this season’s sweet corn is harvested and it deserves to be celebrated. Peppers are at their peak, and if you are lucky enough to have the rich flavors of a poblano, why wouldn’t you use it? Make a Poblano and Corn Crab Chowder, bake a pan of corn muffins, and slice a plate of just-picked tomatoes and herbs on the side. Serve a meal that bridges between the dwindling days of summer and the coming days of fall.


Poblano and Corn Crab Chowder

Adapted from Cooking Light

1 medium poblano chile
1 tablespoon butter
1 cup onion, finely chopped
1/2 teaspoon kosher salt
1/2 teaspoon sugar
1/4 teaspoon chipotle chile powder
2 cups fresh sweet corn, cut from the cob
1 cup half and half, divided
1/2 pound small red potatoes, diced
2 cups water
2 tablespoons flour
1 cup whole milk
1 pound lump crab meat

Preheat broiler. Place pepper on a foil-lined baking sheet to roast. Broil 8 minutes on each side, or until blackened. Immediately, place pepper in a zip-top bag and seal. Let stand 10 minutes. Peel and chop the pepper.

Melt the butter in a large Dutch oven or soup pot. Add onion and next 3 ingredients. SautÈ until the onion is tender, stirring occasionally. Add corn, stir to combine, and cook briefly…still maintaining the crispness of the corn. Remove 1/4 cup of the corn mixture and combine with 1/4 cup half-and-half in a blender; process until smooth. Add potato to soup pot and sautÈ briefly. Stir in the water and bring to a boil. Cook until the potato is tender.

Combine the remaining 1/4 cup half and half and flour in a small bowl, stirring until smooth. Add flour mixture to soup pot. Cook 1 minute, stirring constantly. Return corn puree to the pan. Stir in the roasted poblano, milk, and crab; bring to a simmer. Cook until heated through, stirring frequently. Serves 4.


Fran Hill has been blogging about food at On My Plate since October of 2006. She, her husband and their two dogs ranch near Colome.

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Don’t Tell Roger



I don’t believe in hiding vegetables. I may sometimes puree, process and pulverize something grown in the soil for the sake of a better recipe, but it will never be done sneakily. If I am going to the trouble to get the food processor out to thoroughly thrash an onion, I will most likely be telling you about it as I whine about washing the darn thing. However, I am making an exception today. I will completely condone not telling my fellow South Dakota Magazine columnist, Roger Holtzmann, about the zucchini in my meatballs.

Mr. Holtzmann has a strong disdain for zucchini, or as he calls it,”ghastly white sludge.” He fears being forced to eat a baked good containing the added moistness and nutrition of zucchini and even goes as far as promoting legislation to criminalize sneaking the vegetable into chocolate cake.

I, obviously, don’t agree with him. I bake cakes, cookies, muffins, breads, and pies with shreds of zucchini. I sautÈ slices and ribbons and serve them alongside my grilled chicken and steaks. I slow cook purees with warm spices to make “fruit” butters. I haven’t met a zucchini that I didn’t like, and I have now taken it past the baked goods and side dishes on to a meatball delight.

Usually, my go-to meatballs have the added nutritional bonus of spinach. We love them with a plate of pasta and topped with my chunky homemade sauce. This summer, I have replaced the spinach with a zucchini recipe that we enjoy just as much. I am sure that Roger will want me drawn and quartered for what he will deem to be a travesty against mankind.

As with the spinach, zucchini adds additional moisture to the lean beef and makes a more tender meatball. Garlic, basil, and parsley flavor the mixture, along with onion. The veggie-loaded meatballs are the perfect summer pairing for mouthwatering garden sauce and a pile of spaghetti. You probably just don’t want to tell Roger.


Zucchini Meatballs

Adapted from Buck ‘n Run Ranch Blog

1 pound ground round
1/2 cup onion, chopped
2 cloves garlic, minced
1 egg, lightly beaten
3 tablespoons heavy cream
1/2 cup panko bread crumbs
1/4 teaspoon kosher salt
1/2 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
1-2 tablespoons fresh parsley, chopped
1 tablespoon fresh basil, minced
1/2 cup grated zucchini, liquid squeezed out and discarded
1/4 cup grated Parmigiano Reggiano cheese

Preheat oven to 375F. Combine all ingredients in a large bowl. Do not over mix, or the meatballs with be too dense. Divide the meat mixture into 12 portions and roll into meatballs, about golf ball size. Arrange the meatballs on a sheet pan sprayed with cooking spray. Bake for 20-25 minutes. Meanwhile, heat your favorite pasta sauce in a large pot and start water boiling for pasta. Finish the meatballs by simmering in the pasta sauce while the pasta cooks. Serve with additional Parmesan cheese, if desired. Serves 4.

Fran Hill has been blogging about food at On My Plate since October of 2006. She, her husband and their two dogs ranch near Colome.


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Tines of Thanks

The pitchfork is sometimes used as a symbol of hard work, or perhaps as an indicator of an angry mob. At Jay & LeAnne Cutts’ farm near Mission Hill, it’s a sign of friendship. For the past 5 years, the Yankton County couple and their sons Frank, Robbie and George have hosted a pitchfork fondue party to show appreciation for friends, neighbors and acquaintances.”I invite people that have touched me or my family in some way, people I want to share with and say ‘Thank you for being my friend,'” LeAnne says.

The Cutts family provides the meat — this year, a case of pork loin and aged prime sirloin — and other fixings. Mission Hill residents Scott Olson and Keith Williams bring the setup, the fondueing know-how, and the clean pitchforks.”They’ve got it down to a science,” LeAnne says.

Williams also prepares”skinny potatoes,” shredded hash browns cooked in a Dutch oven with heavy whipping cream, cheese and two pounds of bacon. Raw vegetables, fruit and Dutch oven desserts fill out the menu.

Guests gather their lawn chairs around the fondue crew to watch them work. After the meal is served, there’s live music and dancing, outdoor films for the kids, and plenty of good conversation.

It’s hard for South Dakotans to come empty-handed, but Olson, Williams and the Cutts family provide everything needed for a pleasant summer evening.”People always say, ‘What can I bring? What can I bring?'” LeAnne says.”I tell them just to come and have a good time.”



Pitchfork Fondue Tips

  • Use a big pot. At the Cutts’ party, they use an old cast iron scalding pot, a relic of hog butchering days, which holds about 25 gallons of oil.”If you were using a smaller pot, it’d be tough to keep the temperature up where it needs to be,” says Jay.
  • Heat the oil to 325-350 degrees.
  • Cooking time varies by the size of the meat chunks.”The trick is to know when to pull the meat out,” says Jay.”It is so hot that it keeps cooking as you take it off the fork,” He recommends going by color.”The pork turns to a light tender brown and the beef is probably gray. You don’t want any brown to the beef.”
  • Season the meat with a bit of seasoned salt — no steak sauce or other condiments are needed.

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Summer Bucket List

With the start of schools in most communities less than a month away, it seems that summer is winding down. This sets me into a full-fledged panic. Summer just can’t be over yet. So many glorious things are sadly left undone. While I don’t officially make a summer bucket list, I do keep a mental tab of activities and projects that I want to be a part of my warm weather experiences.

I haven’t been camping. I haven’t made a dent in the towering stack of books I wanted to lounge in the sun and read. I haven’t seen a movie at the drive-in. I haven’t picked wildflowers. I haven’t gotten sticky marshmallow all over my hands with a fire roasted s’more. I haven’t been to the zoo or an outdoor concert, tasted a sno-cone, or learned to identify the stars and planets while stargazing. There haven’t been nearly enough cookouts, and I haven’t been on a picnic.

I need to get my butt in gear. Picnicking could be the place for my food-loving heart to start, and a pressed sandwich would be the perfect star of the menu for a meal on the grass. Loaded with layers of veggies, bean spread, meats, herbs and sharp Parmesan cheese, this sandwich mimics an antipasti platter pressed inside a French loaf. The best part is that unlike a PB&J or plain old bologna sandwich, this hoagie is best when smashed. Toss the tightly wrapped sub into the bottom of the picnic basket and let the flavors mingle as they crush together…and get out there and knock off some summer bucket list items before summer kicks the bucket.


Pressed Sandwich

Adapted from Martha Stewart

Kosher salt
Freshly ground black pepper
1 medium zucchini, thinly sliced lengthwise
1 red bell pepper
1 loaf French bread, sliced in half lengthwise
1 can (15.5 ounces) cannellini beans, rinsed and drained
1 clove garlic, chopped
1 tablespoon fresh lemon juice
1 tablespoon olive oil
1/2 pound thinly sliced deli ham, or salami, or prosciutto, or a mixture of your choice
1/2 cup fresh parsley leaves
1 cup marinated artichoke hearts, drained and sliced
1/2 cup Parmesan, shaved
1/2 cup pepperoncini, drained and halved

Sprinkle a double layer of paper towels with salt and arrange zucchini on top. Salt the zucchini and roll up the towels like a newspaper. Let sit 10 minutes to draw out excess liquid. (Veggies are good, but nobody likes a soggy sandwich.)

Preheat oven to 500 degrees. Rub the pepper with olive oil and place on a sheet pan and roast for about 20-30 minutes, until the skin is completely wrinkled and the pepper is charred, turning twice during roasting. Remove from the oven and immediately place pepper in a zip-topped plastic bag and seal. Set aside for 10 minutes, or until pepper is cool enough to handle. Remove the stem from the pepper and cut into quarters. Remove the peel and seeds and discard. Slice the flesh into strips.

Pull about 2 cups of bread from inside the French loaf halves. (Set aside for another use. Dry for bread crumbs?) In a food processor, combine beans, garlic, lemon juice and olive oil. Puree until smooth. Season with salt and pepper. Spread inside of both bread halves with an even layer of bean puree to completely cover the surface. (This is the barrier that helps prevent soggy bread.)

To assemble the sandwich, arrange zucchini on bottom half of the bread. Top with meats, parsley, roasted pepper, artichokes, parmesan and pepperoncini. Sandwich with top half of the bread and wrap super tightly in plastic. Place on a baking sheet in refrigerator. Place another baking sheet on top and weight with several heavy cans to press. Let sit for 3 hours (or up to overnight). To serve, unwrap and cut into wedges with a serrated knife. Serves 6-8.

Fran Hill has been blogging about food at On My Plate since October of 2006. She, her husband and their two dogs ranch near Colome.


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Don’t Give Dad the Gift of Food Poisoning


Neckties, golf balls, new shirts, gift baskets of candy, electronics, books, gadgets for the grill, accessories for the car, hammocks for the backyard, and a myriad of other items suited to personal hobbies make great Father’s Day gifts. Time spent together fishing, hiking, golfing or lounging on the deck while grilling steaks, burgers or simply hot dogs are also appropriate and appreciated ways to tell Dad how much you care. However, it should be noted that food poisoning is not a great gift for the leader of the pack.

Many of us will be hosting cookouts this weekend in honor of our fathers, fathers-in-law, husbands, uncles, brothers and all males in our lives in general. While the get-togethers will be laid back and good natured, keeping an eye on food safety is important. The weather is finally being kind to us and leaning toward summer with rising temperatures. The warm sun feels so wonderful, but isn’t a friend to the mayonnaise-based salads that often dominate picnic spreads.

Remembering just a few, simple, common sense steps can avoid the gift of food poisoning. Keep your finicky foods chilled until serving and then present on ice, if possible. Shallow storage tubs (the under-the-bed type) and kiddie pools filled with ice can hold the bowls of potato and macaroni salad on buffets and protect them from danger. Also, don’t tempt bacteria by leaving food out in the heat for extended periods of time.

Another way to avoid the mayo predicament is to prepare a salad without it. A Black Bean Salad featuring chili peppers, avocado, scallions, and cilantro is livened up with a citrus dressing that not only is delicious, but is less welcoming to tummy-troubling bacteria than creamy mayo. Paired with a spicy, grilled Chile-Rubbed Pork Loin this Father’s Day menu would never be the gift that keeps on giving with queasiness. Add some chips and salsa, possibly even a tossed green salad, and celebrate dad with healthy ease this Father’s Day.


Chile-Rubbed Pork Loin and Black Bean Salad

Adapted from Real Simple Magazine

Pork Loin:

1 teaspoon Ancho chile powder
1 teaspoon paprika
1/2 teaspoon cumin
1/4 teaspoon coriander
Kosher salt
1 tablespoon olive oil
2 pounds boneless pork loin

Black Bean Salad:

2 15.5-ounce cans black beans, rinsed and drained
1 avocado, cut into large dice
1/2 cup fresh cilantro leaves
2 scallions, thinly sliced
1 red chili pepper, chopped
3 tablespoons olive oil
2 tablespoons fresh lime juice, plus wedges for serving


Prepare the grill for indirect heat. With a charcoal grill, place coals in two piles on either side of the grill with open space in center; for gas grills with multiple burners, turn on one or more burners, but leave one off. Combine chile powder, paprika, cumin, coriander, and 1 teaspoon of salt. Rub the pork loin with about a tablespoon of olive oil and then the spice mixture to coat thoroughly. When grill is heated to approximately 350-375F, place pork directly on area above the heat. Rotate to sear on each side, then move the loin to grill space away from the heat to roast. Continue to turn frequently to ensure even cooking until internal temperature registers 145F, about 45 minutes to an hour. Remove from grill, tent with foil, and allow to rest for 5 minutes before slicing.

Meanwhile, toss together beans, avocado, cilantro, scallions, chili pepper, lime juice, remaining 3 tablespoons of olive oil and 1/2 teaspoon salt. Let stand while the pork roasts. (This salad is more flavorful at room temperature.) Serve with lime wedges. Serves 4-6.

Fran Hill has been blogging about food at On My Plate since October of 2006. She, her husband and their two dogs ranch near Colome.



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The Advantages of the Prairie Pantry

A friend is building a new home and when discussion turned to the kitchen, she mentioned that the architect was influencing her to include pull-out shelving instead of a pantry. Apparently, pantries are a thing of the past in new construction. What?? I couldn’t live without my pantry. Where do you store large, ugly but totally functional and necessary containers of flour and sugar? Where do you put all of the jars of salsa that you canned from the garden tomatoes? Where do you stash the crockpot, griddle, food processor or ice cream maker that you only use once in a while, but really don’t want to be without? Where would you hide the guilty pleasure of Double-Stuff Oreos? Please don’t tell me that a couple of panels of pull-out shelving can handle all of this. It couldn’t. Not in my kitchen.

Admittedly, I can be a bit of a food hoarder. I stock up when things I know we will use are on sale. I impulsively buy things that I have no idea what to do with…or if I will even like…because they seem cool or interesting. I once had over a dozen cans of chickpeas because every time I visited the grocery store, I didn’t remember that I had already made the purchase. My pantry has been influenced by living in a town without a grocery store and fear of running out. Both my husband and I recall winters of our childhoods with blizzards that left us stranded, but thanks to the preparedness of our mothers, we were never without food. We inherited that gene. The prairie pantry bulges.

Garlic Spaghetti with Beans and Arugula starts out as a pantry meal. Dry pasta and protein-packed canned beans are always basics that I keep on hand. Garlic and red pepper flakes spice things up, and soon a quick trip to the garden could yield the arugula and tomatoes to freshen the final dish. Round the meal out with a loaf of crusty bread, extra cheese to grate on each serving, and maybe those Oreos from the pantry for dessert.


Garlic Spaghetti with Beans and Arugula

Adapted from Cooking Light

8 ounces dry spaghetti
Kosher salt
3 tablespoons olive oil
2-3 cloves garlic, minced
1/2 teaspoon crushed red pepper flakes
2 cups cherry tomatoes, halved
1 (16-ounce) can cannellini beans, rinsed and drained
2 cups arugula
2 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
1/2 cup Parmesan cheese, grated

Cook pasta according to package directions in salted water. Drain, but reserve 1/4 cup of pasta water. Set pasta aside and keep warm.

While the pasta cooks, heat oil in a large skillet over medium heat. Add the garlic and red pepper flakes. Cook until garlic is tender and fragrant. Add beans and tomatoes. Season with salt. Cook until heated through. Add the pasta; cook stirring frequently. Add reserved pasta water and arugula, tossing to combine. Remove from heat. Stir in lemon juice and cheese. Serves 6.

Fran Hill has been blogging about food at On My Plate since October of 2006. She, her husband and their two dogs ranch near Colome.



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Put an Egg on It

The incredible, edible egg is a staple in my diet. Breakfast, lunch or dinner, this adaptable protein fills me up and fuels me for whatever life may have in store. Boiled, scrambled, baked, poached, in omelets, or simply fried it can pair with anything from toast to salad, hot or cold, day in and day out. Eggs are a lifeline.

I love a scrambled egg with toast and fruit for breakfast or beside a salad for a quick solo lunch or light dinner, and of course, we can’t forget sandwiched on a biscuit with bacon and cheese as a favorite guilty pleasure. A nice sprinkling of coarse salt brings the beaten eggs to life, and I am a purist that believes a grating of cheese isn’t always necessary with good scrambled eggs. However, I won’t ever turn down Heavenly Scrambled Eggs with cream cheese and chives.

Boiled eggs are a versatile wonder all their own. Avocado and Egg Salad, Tarragon and Caper Deviled Eggs, sliced or diced on a green salad, or the simple pleasure of a still-warm boiled egg with a slightly gelled yolk dipped in salt and pepper and eaten in hand all please me immensely.

Although, if I had to choose, I think that poached, fried over-easy, or sunny-side-up are my perfect eggs. Nothing can compare to the joy of a golden, runny yolk. A breakfast plate with toast, pancakes, bacon or sausage to swirl through the tasty yellow rivers is an exceptional bright spot in any morning. At lunch, Warm Spinach and Sausage Salad makes my day. Leftover chili is almost always layered over corn chips and served with shredded cheese and a fried egg on top. Put an egg on a burger with cheese and bacon, and I will order it any time I see it on the menu. I love a runny yolk and believe it has no boundaries.

Hash seems to be another perfect pairing for fried or poached eggs with their flowing yolks. From corned beef hash to more modern vegetable stir-fries, the ingenuous mash-up of hash is made for eggs. I grew up with perfectly fried, thinly sliced potatoes as a standard side dish for almost any meal; adding spinach updates this comfort food for me. Anchovies, garlic, and red pepper flakes are the consummate seasonings to highlight the earthiness of the vegetables, and this hearty meal is most beautifully complete when you put an egg on it.


Potato and Spinach Hash with Fried Eggs

Adapted from Rachael Ray

3 tablespoons olive oil
8 flat anchovy fillets
4 baby Yukon gold potatoes, very thinly sliced
4 cloves of garlic, finely chopped
1/4 teaspoon crushed red pepper flakes
3-4 cups baby spinach
Freshly ground nutmeg
2 tablespoons butter
4 large eggs
Salt and pepper

In a large cast-iron skillet, heat the olive oil over medium heat. Add the anchovies, stir and cook until melted. Add the potatoes and garlic, spreading evenly over the pan and sprinkle with the red pepper flakes. Cook, turning, until the potatoes are golden. Fold in the spinach, season with nutmeg and cook over low heat, turning a few times, until the spinach is wilted.

Meanwhile, in a large, non-stick pan, melt butter over medium heat. Crack in 4 eggs and season with salt and pepper. Cook until the edges are starting to crisp and whites are firming. Cover pan with lid for a minute or so for steam to firm white over yolk, if desired.

To serve, plate a portion of the potatoes and spinach hash and top with a fried egg. Season with black pepper, as desired. Serves 4.

Fran Hill has been blogging about food at On My Plate since October of 2006. She, her husband and their two dogs ranch near Colome.


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Buffalo: The Salmon of the Prairie

Dr. Kevin Weiland claims grass-fed bison contains more Omega-3 fatty acids, vitamin E and other nutrients than grain-fed meat.

Kevin Weiland was just 16 when he saw the consequences of an unhealthy diet. He was helping his father with the family-run ambulance service in Madison when they were called to a nearby farm. In his book, The Dakota Diet: Health Secrets of the Great Plains, he recalls finding the farmer,”sitting in an enclosed combine with his fist clenched tightly to his chest as he struggled to breathe. His skin was pale and clammy, and his eyes had a blank stare of death. He was in his mid-fifties and extremely overweight and it took several of us to get him on a stretcher and into the back of the ambulance.” An autopsy showed he had died of a heart attack and suffered from diabetes and high blood pressure.

Weiland went on to become an internal medical physician. While he treats many health problems at the Rapid City Medical Center, including diabetes and heart disease, a large part of his practice centers on preventative medicine. Weiland developed the Dakota Diet to encourage people to eat healthy foods and prevent disease. His book includes a food plan, sample menus and, of course, the requisite chapter on exercise. (You didn’t think you’d get away with loafing on the couch, did you?)

The foods Weiland recommends are based on many of the Mediterranean Diet’s guidelines: plenty of fruits and vegetables, healthy fats, small portions of nuts and fish on a regular basis. What makes his diet unique is the many food choices produced on the Dakota plains — including grass-fed buffalo.

“Buffalo is the salmon of the prairie,” Weiland says.”It has fewer calories than grain-fed meat, and contains more Omega-3 fatty acids, vitamin E and other nutrients. A buffalo steak may have 100 fewer calories than a steak from a grain-fed steer. You could lose up to 10 pounds a year just by switching your main source of meat to grass-fed buffalo.”

Can ranchers produce an equally healthy food by grass feeding their cattle?”Yes, absolutely,” Weiland says.”Meat from grass-fed cattle is a great source of protein, a nutrient dense food. All the nutrients get depleted in a feedlot.”

Plains Indians thrived for centuries on a buffalo-centered diet similar to Weiland’s. After being confined on reservations and forced to subsist on commodities like white flour, sugar and lard, the Indians developed the while man’s diseases of obesity, diabetes and heart disease.

With Weiland’s help, Beau LeBeau, an obese and diabetic Lakota man from Pine Ridge, began the Dakota Diet in February of 2007. South Dakota filmmakers Sam Hurst and Larry Pourier recorded his first 200 days on the diet for a documentary, Good Meat: How the Lakota got Fat and Beau LeBeau Changed His Life.

Buffalo is more than food for LeBeau. He told the Rapid City Journal, “The buffalo is considered sacred by our tribe, of course, but before this, I didn’t bring it into my daily life. Now I do. There’s always been a spiritual connection for me, but now there’s even a better connection to it.”

LeBeau went from 333 pounds to 269 pounds after 100 days on Weiland’s diet and exercise plan, and he had significant improvement in the sleep apnea that awakened him as many as 33 times an hour. Blood studies for diabetes and liver function also improved.

Weiland sees the impact of his diet with other patients as well.”We’re getting people off medications for treatment of their diabetes, some of which cause heart disease,” he says.”With nutrient-dense low-calorie foods, their insulin resistance gets better and their blood sugars improve.”

Weiland’s campaign to improve South Dakotans’ health through better diet and exercise still has a long way to go. He offers the following statistics: in 1987 less than 10 percent of South Dakotans were considered obese. By 1995 the numbers reached 14 percent, and in 2001 they jumped again to 15-19 percent. In 2011, a sobering 28 percent of South Dakotans were considered obese.

We need to think about nutrition as a way of life,” Weiland says.”Don’t just diet — live it.”

A number of South Dakota ranchers are now raising grass-fed bison, including Sioux Falls talk show host Rick Knobe. He and his son, Brian, have raised grass-fed buffalo at their Lazy RRse Buffalo Ranch since 2000. Lazy RRse buffalo receive no hormones and they graze natural prairie grasses.

Knobe has interviewed Weiland on his radio show, and found him to be extremely knowledgeable.”A lot of docs say, ‘Don’t eat red meat, don’t eat red meat.’ But Weiland says it’s OK if you do it this way.” Knobe believes the long-term benefits of grass feeding could eventually change the livestock industry.”So many people feed grain now, it’s going to take a long, long time to change that,” he says. In the short term, it’s more likely that small farmers and buffalo ranchers will continue the grass-fed trend.

“If you take a slice of buffalo meat and compare the grain-fed to the grass-fed,” Knobe says,”Grass fed is clearly leaner.” Because the grass-fed lacks marbling, it has a tendency to cook rapidly so he offers this advice to customers:”Just remember, cook it low (as in temperature) and slow.”


Bison Kebabs

From The Dakota Diet by Dr. Kevin Weiland

1 lb. buffalo sirloin
2 medium zucchini or yellow squash
1 large red bell pepper
1 large onion, quartered
8 mushrooms
8 cherry tomatoes

Marinade

1/2 cup low-sodium soy sauce
1/2 cup canola oil
1 cup dry white wine
2 cloves garlic, minced

Mix the marinade. Cut the sirloin into 1 1/2 inch cubes and marinate in the refrigerator for 12-24 hours. Cut squash and bell pepper into 1/2 inch pieces. Skewer the meat and vegetables as desired and grill over medium-hot coals for 8-10 minutes, brushing with marinade occasionally. Serves 4.

Editor’s Note: This story is revised from the January/February 2008 issue of South Dakota Magazine. To order a copy or to subscribe, call 800-456-5117.


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Spring Chickens

It is the time of year when chicken coops at the area farm supply stores taunt me. Cute, wooden-framed, wired cages that would fit perfectly in the back corner of our yard beg for clucking chicks to fill them. I dream of fresh eggs and gloss over the”harvest” portion of having a roasted chicken in my oven that I personally raised. Then, reality hits. Not only would my hunting-bred dachshunds have a field day with captive fowl (they already terrorize the squirrels and rabbits), but the fact is, I.Am.Lazy. Very lazy.

Chickens aren’t cute balls of fluff that can stand in the palm of your hand for an Easter photo op and then magically turn to glorious egg-laying creatures. They are livestock. Livestock, even a backyard chicken coop, is work. A lot of work. Chickens require feed, and water, and cleaning the coop, and much more tending than my lazy self would be willing to handle day after day after never-ending day.

As a friend from The Outdoor Campus says,”Animals have a place in the world: wild animals should stay wild, farm animals belong on a farm, and pets are for home.” Their offices are often overrun with calls from the well-meaning who have purchased a cute duck or chick for Easter and are overwhelmed when the fowl grows into the livestock it was bred to be. A bit later in the season, the wildlife experts will chime again and again, “If you care, leave it there” when calls turn to”rescues” of what seem to be abandoned wild critters. We, the public, are kind people — we just aren’t always that smart when it comes to animals.

For many of us, reality is that the poultry best suited for us has been raised by someone else and is already butchered, ready to prepare in our kitchens. Even better might be a rotisserie chicken with skin basted and browned to perfection and tender, juicy breasts and thighs. That suits even the laziest among us.

Walk away from the baby chicks and architecturally beautiful chicken coops. Shred that rotisserie chicken (or your own grilled or roasted chicken); toss with some flavorful, Tex-Mex seasonings; stir together some beans and salsa; add a little cheese; and wrap up in a tortilla for a delicious burrito. Toast that plump tortilla wrap in a hot skillet and serve with corn chips and additional salsa on the side. Easy, delicious, and puts the chicken right where it was meant to be: In.My.Tummy.


Chicken and Black Bean Burritos

Adapted from Cooking Light

1/4 cup water
Juice of one lime
1/2 teaspoon Ancho chile powder
1/4 teaspoon cumin
1/4 teaspoon black pepper
1/8 teaspoon red pepper
2 cups shredded chicken (rotisserie, grilled, or roasted)
1/4 cup green onions, sliced
1 cup canned black beans, rinsed and drained
1/2 cup salsa (refrigerated, canned, or fresh homemade)
4 8-inch flour tortillas
1/2 cup Monterey Jack cheese, shredded
1/2 cup cheddar cheese, shredded
Cooking spray

Bring first six ingredients to a boil in a small saucepan. Stir in shredded chicken and green onions. Combine beans and salsa. Spoon 1/4 cup bean mixture and 1/2 cup chicken mixture down the center of each tortilla; sprinkle with cheese. Roll up. Heat a large skillet; coat with cooking spray. Add 2 burritos. Place cast-iron or other heavy skillet on top of burritos, and cook for 3 minutes on each side. Remove from pan and repeat for remaining 2 burritos. (Serves 4.)

Fran Hill has been blogging about food at On My Plate since October of 2006. She, her husband and their three dogs ranch near Colome.