Jubilee! A Celebration of African American Cooking Dinner Seriesįrom 6:30-9 p.m. Susan Puckett is a cookbook author and former food editor of The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. She turns to her collection of some 400 black cookbooks, some dating back centuries, reflecting not only the ingenuity of impoverished field hands, but that of “the working class, the middle class, and the elite.” Her own culinary heritage defies the “Southern” and “soul” labels, having grown up in a Los Angeles neighborhood known as the “Black Beverly Hills” where her mom made healthy meals from a vast urban garden and Mexican fare was as commonplace as biscuits. In this beautiful follow-up to her 2015 James Beard Award-winning masterpiece, “The Jemima Code,” Tipton-Martin continues her lifelong quest to tell a deeply nuanced story of African American food that pushes beyond caricatures and stereotypes. She starts with the requisite sauteed onions, tomatoes and complex spices for a traditional South African curry, tosses in diced green apples for a surprising layer of sweetness, and finishes with a splash of lime juice and rum as suggested in Dunstan Harris’ “Island Cooking: Recipes From the Caribbean.” That context prompted me to give it a try, and the friends I served it to can verify that the results lived up to the expectations.
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