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Rediscovering African-American Roots And Cuisine

He made waves going after Paula Deen for using the n-word. Now, black culinary historian Michael Twitty is talking slavery and Southern food.

For many, southern food is celebrated as a kind of comfort food. Cornbread and beans and happiness. Black-eyed peas and soul. For African-American cook and cultural historian Michael Twitty, it’s a comfort and a discomfort. He cooks and celebrates it with eyes and taste buds wide open to all the history there. The history of his own slave ancestors and white ancestors and his full understanding of how this food came to be. This hour On Point: Michael Twitty on the full story in southern food. — Tom Ashbrook

Guest

Michael Twitty, author of, “The Cooking Gene: A Journey Through African-American Culinary History in the Old South.” Creator of Afroculinaria, a blog devoted to African-American historic foodways and their legacy. ( @KosherSoul)

From Tom’s Reading List

National Geographic: Who Owns Southern Food? — “It is well documented that one of the significant jobs of the house slaves was to prepare the meals for the master, his family and his guests. Many of the recipes that have been passed down for generations in both black and white families and are the backbone of Southern cooking were born out of slavery. It is not the content of the recipes that is missing, but the context.”

New York Times: Hearty Helpings From Three Culinary Histories — “Twitty is a culinary historian who cooks traditional antebellum meals and dresses the part: ‘They call this a costume but it is my transformative historical drag; I wear a dusting of pot rust, red clay and the ghost smells of meals past.’ After he researches his own genetic makeup, he feels he has come into his own as an ‘obsessive cook with compulsive genealogist tendencies who can point to a map of Africa, Europe, North America, and with it, the South, and guide you on trade winds to tidal creeks leading to ports, leading to roads and to plantations and more roads and more plantations to cities.’ His account of that journey tends to be a little breathless. ‘It’s exhausting,’ he writes, ‘but necessary.'”

Garden & Gun: Michael Twitty: The Antebellum Chef — “A teacher, writer, cook, culinary historian, historical interpreter, at thirty-six, Michael Twitty is a man of many parts. The more you learn about him, the more his complications seem to sprout complications. Yet he embodies them all with a certain protean gravity. ‘I am large, I contain multitudes,’ Walt Whitman once wrote. Could the bard have anticipated Twitty? This big, healthy, good-looking, robust, heavy-footed, pirate-bearded brown bear of a man. Gifted with gab, he is a natural communicator who is not afraid to use all his voices.”

Read An Excerpt From “The Cooking Gene”

Array

Try Out Michael Twitty’s Recipes

Sorghum Brined Chicken Roasted in Cabbage Leaves

Ingredients

  • 1/2 cup kosher salt
  • 1/2 cup sorghum molasses
  • 3 cups chicken or vegetable stock; I prefer homemade of your choice
  • 5 cups cold water
  • 5 pound roasting chicken, whole
  • Kitchen Pepper
  • 1/2 cup unsalted butter, softened; or lard or canola oil
  • One large cabbage


Instructions

  1. Preheat oven to 350.
  2. Dissolve salt and sorghum molasses, into the stock. Allow liquid to

cool. Add cold water.

  • Remove giblets. Wash and thoroughly clean chicken, and submerge
  • in brine in a large bowl for 2 to 4 hours. Remove and rinse.

  • Mix 2 tablespoons of Kitchen Pepper with the butter, lard, or canola oil. Rub the chicken with the mix under and on the outside of its skin, being certain to cover the entire bird.
  • Put cabbage leaves at the bottom of the Dutch oven. Cover the chicken in the washed cabbage leaves and tie into a loose bundle, layering as many leaves as it takes to cover the bird. Add a little water or chicken stock to the pot, cover tightly, and put into the oven. Roast for 70 to 90 minutes. When the wings pull away from the twine and the juices run clear, the chicken should be done.
  • Cowhorn Okra Soup

    Ingredients

    • 2 to 3 tbsp bacon drippings, lard, or vegetable or canola oil
    • 2 medium yellow onions, sliced or chopped
    • 3 tbsp flour
    • 2 tbsp finely chopped herbs of your choice (bits of parsley, rosemary, basil, etc.)
    • 1/2 tsp Kitchen Pepper
    • Salt to taste
    • 2 1/2 quarts ham, beef, chicken, or vegetable broth
    • 1/2 cup cooked crumbled bacon
    • 3 1/2 cups Roma tomatoes, chopped, or 28 oz. can, chopped, with juice
    • 1/2 tsp crushed red pepper flakes
    • 2 pounds okra, sliced into thin pieces
    • 1 cup cooked Southern blue crab meat (optional)
    • 2 cups cooked rice


    Instructions

    1. Heat the bacon drippings, lard, or oil in a Dutch oven until hot but not smoking.
    2. Dust the onions in the flour, add them to the pot with the heated oil, and sauté until translucent.
    3. Add the fresh herbs and Kitchen Pepper and salt and cook for 1 minute.
    4. Add broth and crumbled bacon and tomatoes.
    5. Cook for 1 hour on medium-low heat. This will create the stock for the soup.
    6. Add the rest of the ingredients except for the rice, and cook for 30 minutes more. Ladle each serving over cooked rice in bowls.

    Watch Michael Twitty’s TED Talk On ‘Culinary Justice’

    [Youtube]

    Copyright 2020 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

    (Michael W. Twitty via Facebook)
    /
    (Michael W. Twitty via Facebook)

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