When Owamni opened in 2021, chef Sean Sherman and his nonprofit NATIFS (North American Traditional Indigenous Food Systems) were “shooting high for what’s possible for what we do with modern Indigenous foods,” he said. They didn’t just hit the high mark, they shot for the stars and won a James Beard Award for Best New Restaurant in America.
So when it came time to open a new concept, the celebrity chef decided to come back down to earth, harnessing smoke and fire to showcase traditional barbecue techniques and ingredients at the forthcoming ŠHOTÁ Indigenous BBQ.
“We wanted to do something a little bit different, a little bit fun,” Sherman said.
NATIFS has acquired the historic Seward Co-Op Creamery building at 2601 E. Franklin Av. in Minneapolis, and will open NATIFS Wóyute Thipi (which means “food building”). The multiuse building will become home to NATIFS’ headquarters, house a commissary kitchen to supply Minnesota schools and hospitals with Indigenous foods, offer a co-working space, and become the site of the 80-seat counter-service restaurant.
“It’ll be a lot of things people are kind of familiar with: Native baked beans, dirty wild rice, sweet potatoes and all the smoked games meats and birds and fish,” Sherman said. “It just really fits into what we do, showing there are other concepts out there that we can continue to do in our style, keeping things healthy, prioritizing purchasing from Indigenous producers and opening up more jobs.”
While the offerings are more streamlined and at a lower price point than Owamni’s tasting menus, dining at ŠHOTÁ will provide a fuller experience than NATIFS’ other outlet, the counter-service and grab-and-go Indigenous Food Lab at Midtown Global Market, which is staying at its present location.
ŠHOTÁ will have a beer and wine list that promotes BIPOC producers, and many dishes will come family style. It will give the Seward neighborhood a new spot for brunch. “We want it to be a comfortable place for people to come in big groups or even by yourself,” Sherman said.
ŠHOTÁ is the Dakota word for smoke or clouds, the same as the -sota in Minnesota. “It fit in perfectly for the barbecue thing,” Sherman said.