

Now listening! Podcast episode link: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-splendid-table-conversations-recipes-f.... The conversation with Crystal begins at about 25min in.
Now listening! Podcast episode link: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-splendid-table-conversations-recipes-f.... The conversation with Crystal begins at about 25min in.
I can‘t even begin to say how much I loved this book. The author provides recipes along with stories of her family in each chapter. She goes deep into the lives of her ancestors, never shying away from the brutal reality of enslavement and the lingering effects it still has on communities today. She describes beautifully, the way she cooks while her matriarchs observe and speak to her, guiding her through the recipes, never leaving her side. ⬇️
This book is about my foremothers, my kitchen ghosts, about the ways in which the foodways of the hills were passed primarily down through the women in my family, to me, and how I will pass them to my generations. The concept of the kitchen ghosts came to me years ago when I realized that my ancestors are always with me and that the women are most present while I‘m chopping or stirring or standing at the stove. The art of cooking and engaging ⬇️
In praise(song) of @Christine for giving me such a wealth of titles to choose from!
Pictured above are the books I‘m most eager to read. I knew when I saw Sigh, Gone & God of the Woods on your list that we had similar taste (both of which I‘ve read & was instantly enamored with).
Praisesong‘s a little outside of my comfort zone. I don‘t cook. But it looks fascinating and maybe it‘ll help me stretch (in & out of the kitchen).
#AuldLangSpine
It‘s not often I find a cookbook that is as much a story as a collection of recipes. Crystal Wilkinson writes a lovely, flowing memoir of her family as seen through the food they grew and consumed. Blending elements of a family scrapbook (snapshots of Wilkinson‘s people likely taken with an old Kodak or Polaroid camera) are interspersed with fancier photos of the current finished recipes. Full review at https://itsallaboutthebook.org