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Wapato Stuffed Pepper Soup
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Cooking Time
35 minutes
Serving Size
10 cups
Kettle Size
4 quarts
Ingredients
Rice, green and red bell peppers, herbs and spices,
beef base, dehydrated celery and carrots, crushed
red pepper.
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Great Ideas for Dressing Up your Wapato Stuffed Pepper Soup
| Add |
Stewed tomatoes In place of grated
cheese
Try your favorite sausage in place of ground beef |
| Serve |
in a bread bowl for a great presentation |
| Vegetarian |
Remove beef base packet and substitute vegetable broth |
Tid Bits of History - Wapato (Wah’-puh-toh)
The town of Wapato lies in the South Central part of Washington
State on the Yakima Indian Reservation. The name Wapato is
a Native American word for a plant commonly dug for its starchy
roots, something like a potato. In the early 1900s when it
became legal to gain clear titles to Native American lands,
Alex McCredy bought 80 acres and platted the town site. White
farmers began to buy and lease reservation lands, and with
the aid of Japanese laborers they turned the sagebrush desert
into productive lush farms. The Japanese were brought in by
Northwest Development Company and they tended the first apple
orchard on the Yakima Reservation. This became possible with
the help of government irrigation projects.
In the early 1920s Filipinos began immigrating to the Yakima
Valley. They came with special immigration status as citizens
of an American Territory and had high hopes of pursuing higher
education. They began to work together in co-ops for mutual
social and economic benefit buying land when they were able.
During the great depression, some people became resentful
of outsider laborers, which they viewed as job competitors.
It is recorded that a gang of hooligans drove from house to
house dragging Filipino farmers from their beds and beating
them. Some were forced into freight trains bound for Seattle.
With their determination to stay they remain in the community
today.
One third of Wapato’s current population is now Latino.
This shift began during WWII when Yakima Valley farmers were
in great need of workers. Most of the American young men were
in the armed services, many wage earners had gone to defense
plants on the coast, and the Japanese American farmers had
been sent to relocation centers. The federal government set
up the Bracero Program, which allowed Mexican laborers to
enter the United States on a temporary basis for the harvest
season.
Today, Wapato is a small community with diverse ethnic heritage.
In the fall, people come from all over the state to purchase
fruits and vegetables during the harvest season. The area
also grows many types of peppers, mint, hay, and hops.

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