New: Weekend Brunch

WANIYÉTU • WINTER MENU
Winter is here! NEW menu. Plant-WATHÓTHO • Game-THADÓ • To Share-WAKSÍKA THANKA • Sweet-SKÚYA • Sauces-IYÚDTHUN

Indígena by OWAMNI

opening June 2026

In the Guthrie Theater

Exciting things are on the horizon! Owamni has left its original location, and will be opening soon in the Guthrie Theater under a new name, Indígena by Owamni! Indígena will be a larger restaurant with an expanded menu that furthers NĀTIFS‘ mission to showcase Indigenous foods of North America through contemporary, decolonized cuisine. Look for us in our new location inside the Guthrie, opening June 2026, and follow us on Facebook or Instagram.

NEW BOOK! by Sean Sherman

Turtle Island: Foods and Traditions of the Indigenous Peoples of North America

Uncover the stories behind the foods that have linked the natural environments, traditions, and histories of Indigenous peoples across North America for millennia through more than 150 ancestral and modern recipes from three-time James Beard Award-winning Oglala Lakota chef Sean Sherman.

New: Weekend Brunch

WANIYÉTU • WINTER MENU
Winter is here! NEW menu. Plant-WATHÓTHO • Game-THADÓ • To Share-WAKSÍKA THANKA • Sweet-SKÚYA • Sauces-IYÚDTHUN

Decolonized ingredients

Experience the true flavors of North America, featuring foods of Mni Sota Makoce, Land Where the Waters Reflect the Clouds.

We prioritize purchasing from Indigenous food producers locally and nationally. We have removed colonial ingredients such as wheat flour, cane sugar and dairy. We are proud to present a decolonized dining experience.

Winter 2025/2026 menu

Brunch

Lunch + Dinner

Drinks

Wine + Beer

Dessert

The last day for reservations at our current Water Works location is May 1st, from 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. Patio seating will be available if the weather allows.

OWAMNI restaurant

We prioritize purchasing from Indigenous food producers locally and nationally. We have removed colonial ingredients such as wheat flour, cane sugar and dairy. We are proud to present a decolonized dining experience.

Walk-in seating available at our bar on a first come, first served basis

You are on Native Land

OWAMNI by The Sioux Chef Sean Sherman

Gift Cards

available

Gift Cards

available

OUR PHILOSOPHY

AT OWAMNI WE LOOK AT THE WORLD THROUGH A DECOLONIZED LENS
- WHICH TO US, IS SIMPLE.

The Indigenous perspective on the history of America is to acknowledge the centuries of intense violence, forced assimilation, segregation and cultural erasure that has happened to our cultures and communities.

We reject the values that have been upheld by settler colonialism, such as the wanton destruction of environment, including mining, logging, and monoculture agriculture, all of which contribute to the enrichment of a select few while our beautiful Indigenous landscapes and the people who have traditionally lived on them and are continually abused.

The goal of this restaurant is to showcase modern Indigenous foods. This means that we prioritize purchasing from Indigenous producers first, and build our seasonal menus to reflect region, culture, and Indigenous food identities. Our menu reflects the work of our non-profit North American Traditional Indigenous Food Systems (NÃTIFS).

We have cut out colonial ingredients such as beef, pork, chicken, dairy, wheat flower and cane sugar, instead highlighting true agricultural products of North America, such as corns, beans, squash, wild game, birds, fish and Native plants.
This approach offers a different story of American cooking than the Eurocentric one that is traditionally touted - instead celebrating the amazing Indigenous diversity of Turtle Island.

We hope you enjoy and Thank You for supporting our missing and vision!

NATIFS.ORG

Owamni is owned and operated by our non-profit 501c3, North American Traditional Indigenous Food Systems, NATIFS.org. Please visit our website for more information on our work, and find out how you can help us create accessible Indigenous food and education for all.

Pilamayeyelo, Sean Sherman
Founder: NATIFS / Owamni / The Sioux Chef

Owámniyomni

A sacred site of peace and well-being for the Dakota and Anishinaabe people.

Owámniyomni, a Dakota name for “St. Anthony Falls” in Minneapolis, Minnesota, means turbulent water, whirlpool, eddy. To Dakota people the Mississippi River has a few names, one is ȟaȟáwakpá – the river of the falls, a name that reveals the importance of the waterfall, the only natural major waterfall on the Mississippi River.

 

The Sioux Chef’s Indigenous Kitchen

The Sioux Chef’s

Indigenous Kitchen

Here is real food—our indigenous American fruits and vegetables, the wild and foraged ingredients, game and fish. Locally sourced, seasonal, “clean” ingredients and nose-to-tail cooking are nothing new to Sean Sherman, the Oglala Lakota chef and founder of The Sioux Chef. In his breakout book, The Sioux Chef’s Indigenous Kitchen, Sherman shares his approach to creating boldly seasoned foods that are vibrant, healthful, at once elegant and easy.

James Beard Award-winning cookbook—The Sioux Chef’s Indigenous Kitchen

The Sioux Chef’s Indigenous Kitchen

Indigenous Food Lab Market

high-quality Indigenous foods and products

The Indigenous Food Lab Market is a kitchen and retail space that offers high-quality Indigenous foods and products to our community. We work to broaden access to Native-made goods and allow people to experience contemporary Indigenous offerings while empowering entrepreneurs to expand their audience.