What do they eat at a potlatch?
I didn’t know, but I found this! (See website) Food at a potlatch must be abundant. Ideally the guests should not be able to finish what is served but should take the surplus home. “Traditional” foods are served, though what is traditional has been modified over time as introduced foods have become standard in the community. Salmon, dried for winter use, has been the prized and usually abundant principal food. Other dishes include berries, seaweed, and meat of mountain goats, elk, moose, bears, seals, small mammals, and halibut, all smoked or dried. Traditionally eulachon, a smelt abundant in early spring, were caught in large quantities and processed into a rich oil used as a sauce at every meal. Potlatches were noteworthy for the lavish outpouring of eulachon “grease,” to the point of ladling gallons into hearth fires until the flames roared to the roof. A description of Tsimshian feasts notes, “The foods that were most valued were those that were scarce, available only seasonally, r