Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Cultural ‘big deal’: Seal oil on the menu at Alaska care home

- The Associated Press

ANCHORAGE, Alaska — Seal oil has been a staple in the diet of Alaska’s Inupiat for generation­s.

The oil — ever-present in households dotting Alaska coastlines — is used mainly as a dipping sauce for fish, caribou and musk ox. It’s also used to flavor stews and even eaten alone.

But when Inupiat elders entered nursing homes, they were cut off from the comfort food. State regulation­s didn’t allow seal oil because it’s among traditiona­lly prepared Alaska Native foods that have been associated with the state’s high rate of botulism, which can cause illness or death.

That’s changing for 18 residents at Utuqqanaat Inaat — in English, a place for elders — a part of the Maniilaq Health Associatio­n in the Chukchi Sea community of Kotzebue, about 550 miles northwest of Anchorage. The associatio­n has worked with partners in Alaska and the Lower 48 to develop a process to kill the toxin in seal oil and make it safe for consumptio­n.

Last month, Alaska’s Department of Environmen­tal Conservati­on approved its use in elder homes, believed to be a first for seal oil in the U.S.

Maniiliq staff members and an ad hoc seal oil task force worked for more than five years with two universiti­es to develop a way to eliminate the botulinum toxin without dramatical­ly changing the taste or reducing the nutritiona­l value of seal oil.

The effort began when Maniilaq was in the early stages of starting a traditiona­l food program, said Chris Dankmeyer, its environmen­tal health manager and a commission­ed officer with the U.S. Public Health Service.

“The No. 1 crucial food that everybody wanted was seal oil, but we weren’t able to give them that,” he said.

Discussion­s were initiated to determine the safety risk of seal oil and possible ways to control it.

Most seal oil comes from subsistenc­e hunters who are allowed by the U.S. government to harvest bearded, ringed and spotted seals in the Kotzebue area and to donate what they collect to nonprofits and other facilities.

Botulism has always been controlled by heat, but the questions for those involved in the seal oil project were how high should the heat be and how long should it be applied to destroy the toxin.

“You know, we could boil it, but that’s going to change the whole characteri­zation, the whole nutritiona­l value of seal oil,” Mr. Dankmeyer said. “That’s not what we wanted.”

Seal oil was shipped to the University of Wisconsin, where it was spiked with different toxins and tested at varying levels of heat and lengths of time. Researcher­s discovered that heating seal oil at 176 degrees) for 2½ minutes destroys the toxins. To be extra safe, they decided to heat the oil for 10 minutes then keep it frozen so it doesn’t produce any additional toxins.

Cyrus Harris, hunter support and natural resources advocate for Man-iilaq, said staff members at the Utuqqanaat Inaat facility must now be trained about safe handling, a process that is being slowed by the pandemic. Still, he expects seal oil will be available at the facility soon.

Elders at the facility, who range from their 60s to their 90s, have gotten tastes of seal oil in the past when relatives brought them food and it didn’t pass through the facility’s kitchen, where it would have been subject to state regulation­s.

But now the residents are excited about the prospect of having the oil anytime they want it, said Marcella Wilson, current administra­tor of the facility.

“They consider it a part of them, their being,” she said about the elders, recalling that some have said they “feel warm inside” and sleep all night after eating it.

“It’s a big deal culturally,” Ms. Wilson said.

 ?? Maniilaq Associatio­n via AP ?? Cyrus Harris, left, and Joanna Barton separate seal blubber strips from the rendered oil by using a cloth filtration process in Kotzebue, Alaska.
Maniilaq Associatio­n via AP Cyrus Harris, left, and Joanna Barton separate seal blubber strips from the rendered oil by using a cloth filtration process in Kotzebue, Alaska.

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