Frederick Douglass Opie

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Frederick Douglass Opie



Average rating: 3.76 · 322 ratings · 51 reviews · 8 distinct worksSimilar authors
Bite by Bite: American Hist...

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3.55 avg rating — 111 ratings — published 2024 — 4 editions
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Hog and Hominy: Soul Food f...

3.67 avg rating — 100 ratings — published 2008 — 7 editions
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Zora Neale Hurston on Flori...

4.22 avg rating — 82 ratings — published 2015 — 5 editions
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Southern Food and Civil Rig...

3.54 avg rating — 26 ratings3 editions
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Black Labor Migration in Ca...

3.50 avg rating — 2 ratings — published 2009 — 3 editions
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Upsetting the Apple Cart: B...

really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 1 rating — published 2014 — 6 editions
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Zora Neale Hurston on Flori...

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Frederick Douglass Opie: Ho...

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“Similarly, Harlem restaurant owner and cook Obie Green, who, like James Brown, was a native of Augusta, Georgia, insisted that soul is cooking with love. “And I cook with soul and feeling.” Bob Jeffries, also a southerner, argued that soul food was down-home food “cooked with care and love—with soul.”57 South Carolina–born culinary writer and cook Verta Mae Grosvenor also makes the argument that the right feelings are essential to making soul food, “and you can’t it get [them] from no recipe book (mine included).” She insists that a good cookbook does not make a good cook. “How a book gon tell you how to cook.” It’s what you “put in the cooking and I don’t mean spices either.” Jeffries also agreed that soul food was made without recipes; it was made with inexpensive ingredients that “any fool would know how to cook” if they grew up eating it.58”
Frederick Douglass Opie, Hog and Hominy: Soul Food from Africa to America

“Because our recipes were seldom written down, we had to rely on momma’s and grandma’s experience and what we could learn by watching as they went about their chores in the kitchen,” writes one author of a soul food cookbook. “The advantage of learning at grandmother’s elbow is discovering things which are not found in any book.” You learn how to season and cook food by being there when momma does it. Then one day somebody finally turns to you and tells you to make something and you do it. “For this reason the soul food cook usually knows instinctively how much salt to add, when the grease in the pan is hot enough, and how long before it’s time to open the oven.”53”
Frederick Douglass Opie, Hog and Hominy: Soul Food from Africa to America



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