Nak'azdli student becomes her own boss selling bannock as pandemic cuts into part-time work - Action News
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British Columbia

Nak'azdli student becomes her own boss selling bannock as pandemic cuts into part-time work

Nak'azdli Whut'en member Eliza Coutts started her online bannock vending service in early January. She says making and selling bannock has helped her connect to her culture.

Eliza Coutts, 15, is selling homemade bannock on social media platforms

Nak'azdli Whut'en member Eliza Coutts, 15, started her own business in early January selling homemade bannock online. (Jenifer Norwell/CBC)

For young Nak'azdli Whut'en member Eliza Coutts, bannockisn'tjustdelicious, it'salso something that helps her connect to her culture.

In early January, Coutts, 15, started her online venture Youth Bannock while living in Kamloops, B.C., selling the Indigenous delicacies on Facebook Marketplace and other social media platforms.

Now in Vancouver, the Grade 10 student, who startedmaking bannock when she was youngremembers how good it felt to sell the treat to Indigenous elders and young people at a powwow.

"It was just delicious. It was so fluffy and gorgeous," Coutts told CBC's Jenifer Norwell. "I was so happy and it was so good."

dough frying in a pan
Coutts says making and selling bannock has helped her connect with her culture. (Jenifer Norwell/CBC)

According to the last Canadian census in 2016, the unemployment rate for non-Indigenous youth aged 15 to 24 was 15 per cent, but 23 per cent for Indigenous youth.

Coutts is still a student and works part time at local restaurants after school, but she says it has been challenging during the COVID-19 pandemic to find part-time work, so she decided to become her own boss.

And besides, she loves making and selling bannock.

"Honestly, for me, it just doesn't make me feel good not doing something that I like," she said. "It's also hard to be in touch with your culture and be connected and help spread that when you're doing your job part time."

Her sister Bernadette Coutts, 16, thinks it's a great idea.

"It's a great thing because not only can she make an income for herself, but she can make and spread love and everything for the entire community," she said. "Not many people know anything about the [Indigenous] culture, so it's just good that she's getting everything out there."

Bernadette Coutts, left, says it's rewarding to see her sister happily running her own business. (Jenifer Norwell/CBC)

Their mother Farah Palmer saysEliza is a talented girl and wasn't surprised when she indicated an interest in starting her own business.

"When she gets something in her head that that she wants to do, she just passionately puts herself into it," Palmer said.

Coutts says making bannock is also a good distraction from the pandemic still raging outside her kitchen.

"It just makes me feel good inside, because I know I'm doing something right, and it's only a [few] ingredients for such a beautiful thing to eat."

LISTEN| Eliza Coutts explains to CBC's Jenifer Norwell why she started a bannock business

With files from Jenifer Norwell and Daybreak Kamloops