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African Cookery: A Black Heritage

Annette Merson

African Cookery: A Black Heritage Annette Merson List Price: $9.95
By: Winston-Derek Publishers
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African-American Heritage Cookbook Junior Chef's Kit

Vanessa Parham

African-American Heritage Cookbook Junior Chef's Kit Vanessa Parham Amazon Price: $34.95
List Price: $34.95
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By: Sandcastle Publishing

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The Blue Grass Cook Book

Minnie C. Fox

The Blue Grass Cook Book Minnie C. Fox Amazon Price: $29.95
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By: University Press of Kentucky
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Editorial Review:

In 1904, Kentucky socialite Minnie C. Fox published The Blue Grass Cook Book with over three hundred recipes to celebrate the cuisine of the Bluegrass State. In the book, Fox gives the first known credit for southern hospitality to African American cooks. In Fox’s time, the culinary history of black women in the South was usually characterized by demoralizing portraits of servants toiling in "big house" kitchens. In contrast, The Blue Grass Cook Book, with its photographs of African American cooks at work and a passionate introduction by Fox’s brother, respected Kentucky novelist John Fox Jr., offers insight into the complex bond between well-to-do mistresses and their cooks at the turn of the century.

A new introduction by Toni Tipton-Martin adds historical context to this neglected classic and offers a nuanced portrait of a unique and now-vanished culinary culture.

Our Family Table: Recipes & Food Memories from African-American Life Models

Thelma Williams

Our Family Table: Recipes & Food Memories from African-American Life Models Thelma Williams List Price: $14.95
By: Tradery House
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De Virginia Hambook

De Virginia Hambook List Price: $2.00
By: Dietz Press
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Cooking the Gullah Way, Morning, Noon, and Night

Sallie Ann Robinson, Jessica B. Harris

Cooking the Gullah Way, Morning, Noon, and Night Sallie Ann Robinson, Jessica B. Harris Amazon Price: $22.50
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By: The University of North Carolina Press
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 1 Average rating: 5.0 of 5

Sallie Ann Robinson's Food for the Mind, Body, and Soul 5 out of 5 stars.
0 of 0 people found this review helpful.


Celebrity Chef Sallie Ann Robinson, a native of the famous Sea Island known as Daufuskie Island located just down the Savannah River between the coasts of South Carolina and Georgia, has made guest appearances on numerous cooking shows and been profiled in such publications as the 2005 Old Farmer's Almanac, Southern Living, and National Geographic. In COOKING THE GULLAH WAY, MORNING, NOON, AND NIGHT, her book of highly appealing regional recipes and personal memoir, Robinson goes beyond writing about her native Gullah culture to honoring, sharing, and preserving its customs and dialect with the kind of affectionate familiarity, and certainty of knowledge, that only a fifth-generation daughter of the island could possess.

There are many levels on which to appreciate Cooking the Gullah Way. Lovers of exceptionally good food might justifiably desire to simply roam through its pages, pick out favorite recipes, and feast on their findings. Yet the recipes themselves often provide more than satisfying pleasures for the palate simply by virtue of names that reflect Robinson's coastal heritage sensibilities. Imagine, for example, a filling breakfast of the author's "Gullah Bacon Corn Muffin" with a side dish of "Sassy Strawberry Preserves"; a lunch featuring "Sallie's Seafood Spaghetti" with "Yondah Black-Eyed Pea Soup"; or a dinner of "Grilled Fresh Vegetables," "Local Sea Island Country Boil," and "Country Candied Yams with Raisins" all washed gently down by your choice of "Soothing Sassafras Tea," "Ol' Country Lemonade with Orange," or a homemade wine such as "`Fuskie Backyard Pear Wine." Such mouth-watering teasers defeat all attempts at resistance.

However: a major special feature in Cooking the Gullah Way is Robinson's chapter on "Gullah Folk Beliefs and Home Remedies." As the author writes, "Those times living on Daufuskie without a television or radio to inform us about the weather made us wiser as we learned nature's ways."

Chapter sections on "Living with Nature" and "Sea Island Folk Beliefs" offer notes of real interest for students of southern culture and history. Moreover, in these days of economically challenged households, the section on "'Fuskie Old-Fashioned Home Remedies" offers possible alternatives and/or supplements to medicines for the treatments of a variety of ills. Everything from asthma and earaches to high blood pressure and toothaches is covered with a note of caution to first, "learn about any remedy and be aware of the good and bad sides of it."

If the winning recipes and folk remedies make Cooking the Gullah Way a homemaker's dream companion book, the down-to-earth wisdom and observations shared through the interwoven stories make it a delectable choice for the general reader as well. We smile with appreciation as Robinson's "Pop" explains that in the morning when he calls out, "Off and on it!" to his still sleeping family, the phrase means for every able body to "Get off ya backside and on ya feet." And we nod with humored enlightenment when he points out that, "A heap may see, but only a few knows"--meaning that seeing is not necessarily synonymous with understanding. With that in mind, what we need most to understand about Cooking the Gullah Way, Morning, Noon, and Night, is that this book delivers as much delicious nurturing for the soul as it does nourishment for the body.


by Author-Poet Aberjhani
author of The American Poet Who Went Home Again
and Encyclopedia of the Harlem Renaissance (Facts on File Library of American History)

Editorial Review:

Sallie Ann Robinson was born and reared on Daufuskie Island, one of the South Carolina Sea Islands well known for their West African-influenced Gullah culture. With this cookbook, Robinson highlights some of her favorite memories and delicious recipes from life on Daufuskie, where the islanders traditionally ate what they grew in the soil, caught in the river, and hunted in the woods. Includes 75 recipes and 25 folk remedies.

The Kwanzaa Celebration: Festive Recipes and Homemade Gifts from an African-American Kitchen

Angela Shelf Medearis

The Kwanzaa Celebration: Festive Recipes and Homemade Gifts from an African-American Kitchen Angela Shelf Medearis List Price: $17.95
By: Dutton Adult
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 1 Average rating: 3.0 of 5

Details, Details 3 out of 5 stars.
4 of 7 people found this review helpful.

People looking for ideas on what to serve and gifts to give for Kwanzaa will find good suggestions in this book. The book also includes a helpful pronounciation guide for Kwanzaa terms. But I was disappointed to find two critical errors: 1) the author instructs that the green candles are placed to the left of the black candle in the Kwanza Kinara (candle holder) when it is the red candles that go to the left -- as illustrated on the book's cover. 2) The author advises that Kwanzaa feast, or Karamu, is held on the 6th day of the holiday, when it is held on the seventh and last. Everything about Kwanzaa relates to seven -- seven principles, seven symbols, seven days. DUH! Unfortunately, those key errors dampened by enthusiasm for the rest of the book.

Editorial Review:

Emphasizing foods that traveled with Africans to America, such as yams, sesame seeds, collard greens, and hot peppers, a collection of recipes for the Kwanzaa celebration includes information about the ceremony and inspirational text.

Of the People: An African American Cooking Experience

Of the People: An African American Cooking Experience Amazon Price: $21.95
List Price: $21.95
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By: Favorite Recipes Press (FRP)
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 1 Average rating: 5.0 of 5

A welcome and diverse bounty of easy-to-prepare recipes 5 out of 5 stars.
1 of 1 people found this review helpful.

The collaborative effort of the Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History and FRP Books, Of The People: An African American Cooking Experience is a unique compilation of recipes stemming from traditional African-American cuisines. The recipes are arranged in sections dedicated to: Africa: The African Memory; Caribbean and South America: The Diaspora; Africans in America: Survival of the Spirit; African Americans: An Imperfect Union; and "The Future: The Struggle for Low-Fat Empowerment. From Chinchin (Sweet Dough Balls); to Kelewele (Spicy Fried Plantain); Curried Chicken Rasta-Style; and Gumbo File; to Fried Pies; Crab Cakes; Baking Powder Dumplings; and Baked Ham with Piquant Orange Sauce, Of The People offers a welcome and diverse bounty of easy-to-prepare recipes that would enhance any dining occasion from the celebratory to the ordinary.

Of the People: An African American Cooking Experience

Of the People: An African American Cooking Experience Amazon Price: $21.95
List Price: $21.95
In stock soon. Order now to get in line. First come, first served.
By: Favorite Recipes Press (FRP)
Amazon Marketplace: 4 new & used starting at $21.95

Buy at Amazon.com

Browse similar items by category:
Subjects -> Cooking, Food & Wine -> Regional & International -> U.S. Regional -> African American
Subjects -> Home & Garden -> General
Subjects -> Home & Garden -> General AAS

Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 1 Average rating: 5.0 of 5

A welcome and diverse bounty of easy-to-prepare recipes 5 out of 5 stars.
1 of 1 people found this review helpful.

The collaborative effort of the Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History and FRP Books, Of The People: An African American Cooking Experience is a unique compilation of recipes stemming from traditional African-American cuisines. The recipes are arranged in sections dedicated to: Africa: The African Memory; Caribbean and South America: The Diaspora; Africans in America: Survival of the Spirit; African Americans: An Imperfect Union; and "The Future: The Struggle for Low-Fat Empowerment. From Chinchin (Sweet Dough Balls); to Kelewele (Spicy Fried Plantain); Curried Chicken Rasta-Style; and Gumbo File; to Fried Pies; Crab Cakes; Baking Powder Dumplings; and Baked Ham with Piquant Orange Sauce, Of The People offers a welcome and diverse bounty of easy-to-prepare recipes that would enhance any dining occasion from the celebratory to the ordinary.

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