From Bannock to Broadcast TV – Grandma Sherry Serves Culture on APTN
It’s something she had done hundreds of times. In her home kitchen, with her niece on a summer day in 2024, Grandma Sherry made a batch of her now-famous bannock.
Her niece took a video of the process and posted it to TikTok. At this point, Grandma Sherry (as she prefers to be called) already had some traction on social media – amassing over ten thousand followers from her cooking videos. This amount social-media-success was already shocking to Grandma Sherry. But one bannock video took her to a whole new level.
“I went into town after I posted it and someone stopped me and asked if I was Grandma Sherry. They told me I had gone viral. I had no idea,” said Sherry.
“Thousands of people watched me make bannock. I realized then that food was something we’re all connected to. People all over the world connected to my bannock because they had similar recipes in their own culture.”
That bannock video, since posting it on August 25, 2024, now has 1.3 million views. And Sherry’s TikTok account has now has over 238,000 followers.
The blow-up didn’t stop there. The popularity of her TikTok videos caught the attention of producers from APTN. Sherry, from Sioux Valley in Manitoba, and a member of Cote First Nation, now has her own cooking show on APTN, Grandma Sherry’s Kitchen, presented in her native Dakota language.
“It’s quite beautiful that the Creator has entrusted me with this. It’s a responsibility,” said Sherry.
“I feel at peace, and grounded, and feel the love. And more than that, I feel the presence of my ancestors encouraging me. I don’t feel alone.”

Much of what Sherry does is motivated by her past and her ancestors, she said. She grew up in a modest, one-bedroom log cabin, raised by her grandparents, Demas and Betsy Dowan. In a small house with seven children, the family spoke Dakota and the children slept on the floor, covered in coats or blankets.
“I never recall being uncomfortable. It was a wonderful, beautiful time.”
Sherry’s native tongue faded as she grew up. She set out to become a school teacher, but her path took her into social work, where she had a long career as a mental health and addictions worker, serving mostly First Nations communities in issues like grief, loss, and trauma.
“I absolutely loved it. I loved the people. My grandmother taught me to always do everything with love and kindness, and she believed love could cure anything,” said Sherry.
Sherry was forced to leave her career when she was diagnosed with cancer. As she was coming out of chemotherapy, one of her granddaughters started taking videos of Grandma Sherry in the kitchen as she cooked.
“She said ‘when you leave us, the other grandchildren can play them and we can listen to you’. I thought that’s wonderful that you want my story to go on.”
The videos were uploaded to TikTok, and Sherry quickly gained 5,000 followers – not knowing if that was a significant amount, she said.



