Walter Whitewater was born in Pinon, Arizona, and is from the Diné (Navajo) Nation. He grew up traditionally and began cooking professionally in 1992 in Santa Fe, New Mexico at Cafe Escalera under executive chef David Tannis. Chef Tannis was taught to cook by the legendary Alice Waters of Chez Panisse in Berkeley, California. Walter Whitewater also teaches private Native American cooking classes and has been a guest chef at restaurants and Native American-owned Resorts and Casinos nationally. He is a chef at Red Mesa Cuisine, LLC, a Native American Catering company in Santa Fe, specializing in Native American Cuisine dishes from ancestral foods with a modern twist.
During Chef Whitewater’s professional cooking experiences, he has remained active in many of his traditional ways at his home in Pinon, returning each year for ceremonial obligations. Presently, Whitewater teaches cooking classes at the Santa Fe School of Cooking on Native American Foods of the Southwest with chef Lois Ellen Frank, Ph.D. (Kiowa). Their cooking classes feature recipes from the James Beard Award-winning cookbook, “Foods of the Southwest Indian Nations,” Ten Speed Press.
Chef Whitewater has appeared on numerous Food Network cooking shows featuring foods of the Southwest, including Bobby Flay’s Southwest Cuisine and The Secret Life of Southwest. In March 2009, Chef Whitewater was awarded the James Lewis Award by the BCA in New York to honor Cultural Awareness in the kitchen. Chef Whitewater was the first Native American chef ever to receive this award in the culinary and hospitality industry.
One of Chef Whitewater’s most recent projects has been to teach Healthy Native American cooking classes with PCRM in Window Rock, Arizona, to educate on foods that help combat Type II Diabetes. He has taught with Dr. Chef Lois Ellen Frank in the Jemez Pueblo Community, all of the Eight Northern Pueblos of New Mexico, the Quechan Tribe, and at the Indian Pueblo Cultural Center (IPCC) and the Institute of American Indian Arts (IAIA) as part of the Center for Lifelong Education (CLE) Program and Community outreach. He worked with Chef Frank at the Aii, American Indian Institute with the University of Oklahoma Conference on Native Health and Wellness. Many of the recipes and foods Whitewater teaches about are based on the ancestral Native American diet.
He has traveled with Chef Lois Ellen Frank, Ph.D. as part of the U.S. State Department and Consulate General’s Culinary Diplomacy Program to Ukraine (2013), the United Kingdom (2015), and Russia (2016), where the two chefs promote indigenous foods of the Americas through food. He has also traveled to Guam (2012) with the Guam Humanities Council to work with the Chamorro People of Guam in reclaiming their traditional diet and foods.
Chef Whitewater cooked at the James Beard House in New York City in June 2011 in conjunction with the Fort Restaurant in Denver, Colorado, for the release of their new Cookbook, “Shinnin’ Times at the Fort,” by Holly Arnold Kinney, for which he helped prepare all of the food. He was the first Native American Chef to cook at the James Beard House.
Whitewater has just started the reintroduction of the Navajo-Churro Sheep into his family’s sheep flock and continues to promote healthy Native American foods for Native People. He is very active in his Native community and continues to cook and promote Native American Cuisine.