The LOST Recipes of The Black Cook

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  • Опубликовано: 1 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 242

  • @incognito96
    @incognito96 6 дней назад +227

    We know colonel sanders didnt slave over a hot stove, perfecting that recipe, we know it was Big Momma.

    • @crackerjacks6789
      @crackerjacks6789 6 дней назад +31

      She was his cook and he Allegedly paid her a few dollars for her recipe😢,, He made Millions and never gave her family a cent but uses his marketing of white suit to advertise and build a franchise. 😮

    • @riverbilly64
      @riverbilly64 6 дней назад +20

      “Colonel” Sanders used to work at Boone Tavern in Berea, Kentucky. I heard from older Black folks who live in the area that BT had a Black cook whose recipe Sanders lifted. Straight from the mouths of locals. I believe them.

    • @jdf875
      @jdf875 6 дней назад +1

      It’s sad because we are constantly being robbed of our ingenuity in everything that human race benefits from! There is NOT one thing on this green earth that we haven’t contributed to to benefit everyone and everything!

    • @riverbilly64
      @riverbilly64 6 дней назад +4

      Cala looks like hush puppies. I know those are rooted in southern cuisine.

    • @CharlesJohnson-xd6mu
      @CharlesJohnson-xd6mu 2 дня назад +2

      True story

  • @vmitchell8636
    @vmitchell8636 3 дня назад +32

    My father was a cook in the Air Force. In the 60's and 70's. We(family) traveled with him wherever he was assigned, in Europe and South East Asia. My father was an amazing cook and we lived in some amazing places. Thank you for this content.✌🏾

    • @susandonoghue7933
      @susandonoghue7933 2 дня назад +3

      Thank you TO your father for his service and you and ur family

    • @kaliha55
      @kaliha55 5 часов назад +1

      Yes! 💯% our black men fried chicken in Asia during the war. They now have there Korean fried chicken which everyone raves about currently. Let them tell it they created there own fried chicken.

  • @jdf875
    @jdf875 6 дней назад +77

    We are the culture

    • @lcoleman6046
      @lcoleman6046 6 дней назад +6

      Always been.

    • @user-st6nt4ou6f
      @user-st6nt4ou6f 4 дня назад +1

      Indubitably!

    • @Mr.NettaizmysusSirNettaizmysus
      @Mr.NettaizmysusSirNettaizmysus 2 дня назад

      Yet we get no credit are the lowest on the totem pole. Even the ones that have ‘made it’ are mistreated. Almost every Important thing in this world was created by a black person. Including the higher education institutions were built off of the sweat of the black men. Yet they don’t want intelligent black ppl to enroll in ‘their’ schools. Caucasian ppl feel so entitled and I’m so amazed at how many black folks flock to them for personal relationships when most of them are hidden racist. I was recently called the N word by a fat obtuse white man over a parking place. Sad thing is he initiated the interaction but had no clue what he was talking about. I was parked in the 🅿️ spot waiting on my order from Sam’s club, long story short my order was wrong I had to go inside the store to correct situation. I never moved my vehicle from parking spot. After correcting order. I make it back to my car, putting in my items. I noticed a white man in a raggedy pickup 🛻 parked next to me. His face of venom. I drive a Maserati truck, i continue loading my items up he looking crazy, i continue to watch him. His order arrives,he gets his shyt and put it in car. As he pulling out he says’some ppl can’t follow the rules, I was confused at his remarks and yes some ppl don’t,I continued putting my merchandise in car. He said ‘typical N’, he tried to say it quietly bc it was busy, ppl everywhere. I called him a fat ignorant cracker that should mind his f business. I also said he should die off bc he’s full of racism and ignorance. Ppl noticed the exchange and realized he was in the wrong after hearing me tell him u assuming I parked here bc it’s close to the store but there were issues w/my order which is noyb. (I live in Las Vegas I carry 🔫, had he approached me physically I would have defended myself.)He was so angry bc other ppl began to notice him using racial slurs. My remarks were not what he wanted either, he almost hit several cars trying to interact w/me. He wasn’t ready for my quick tongue 👅 telling him to mind his business&return to his trailer park and I’ll happily go back to my gated community where trash and hillbilly trucks are not allowed. I asked him why was he in my area where the wealthy reside 😝. I’m not racist not ignorant but I had to put him in his place. Black ppl accept other ppl effortlessly yet we get spat on, unalived by white ppl for no reason it’s sad and they need to do better.

  • @fabiennejones4660
    @fabiennejones4660 4 дня назад +46

    My grandmother, Martha, “Cooked” our family from Mississippi, via St. Louis, MO, north to Chicago.
    She was a very determined woman, who wanted better….and used her skills as a cook to get it done.
    I’m proud to be her granddaughter and I feel her presence every time I cook a meal. She is with me. ❤️🖤💚

    • @moorpinklillies2152
      @moorpinklillies2152 3 дня назад +2

      ❤ that

    • @moorpinklillies2152
      @moorpinklillies2152 День назад

      @@fabiennejones4660 this is a testimony to all, keep your generations knowledgeable of this woman of God’s great achievement, strong will, perseverance and knowledge. Most of us can attest to some type of greatness of how our families made it by Grace.

  • @TheMidtownPookiee
    @TheMidtownPookiee 6 дней назад +173

    BLACK FOLKS ARE THE BEST COOKS ON THE PLANET 🤷🏿‍♂️

    • @cgvccourtneyomega6166
      @cgvccourtneyomega6166 6 дней назад +11

      indeed. though i love him, gordon ramsay better stand down if I ever meet him

    • @nightswan1234
      @nightswan1234 5 дней назад +3

      Yes, they certainly are; second to none!🔥💪🏿

    • @Violetsoul91
      @Violetsoul91 4 дня назад +6

      True but Puerto Ricans (who are mixed with African blood) cook really good too. We cook criolla which is creole

    • @SkyJamieson
      @SkyJamieson 3 дня назад +2

      Not you tryna leech off our energy 😢😂​@@Violetsoul91

    • @nonino1644
      @nonino1644 2 дня назад +2

      Oh yeah PR throws down. They got the best sofrito. We know.

  • @southernladybrown5092
    @southernladybrown5092 6 дней назад +58

    B1❤❤❤❤ definitely southern staple smoked and barbecued meats paired with rice, collard greens, cabbage, green beans, mashed potatoes, potato salad, coleslaw, corn, and beans etc……Shout Out to OUR Ancestors 👑 4EVER❤❤❤❤❤❤❤NOBODY DOES IT BETTER 💯

    • @TeenaDavis101
      @TeenaDavis101 6 дней назад

      Why does everyone try to Africanize everything Blk Americans do?

    • @Mrs.Stewart719
      @Mrs.Stewart719 День назад +1

      Stop you're making me hungry 😂😂😂

  • @ChillWill2050
    @ChillWill2050 5 дней назад +25

    Much Love Native Black family

  • @wellbbq
    @wellbbq 6 дней назад +55

    Louisiana StandUP!! ShoutOUT Dooky Chase rip Mama LEAH...

  • @samanthanickson6478
    @samanthanickson6478 6 дней назад +36

    This was made with love. Thank you! 🙏🏼 🤗

  • @karensimmons1107
    @karensimmons1107 День назад +5

    My first time on your platform 😊very insightful and informative 👍 one love from Jamaica 🇯🇲 to all chefs from around the world 🌎 and to all my ancestors who did the groundwork for us today ❤

  • @MooMoo-fw3kh
    @MooMoo-fw3kh 6 дней назад +59

    Black cookery came out of necessity and survival. these black cooks ,who were also slaves were forced to cook in the big house for the slave owner's family so you didn't do a good job, you got a beating and so the cuisine of black cooks became history

  • @ParisCouture
    @ParisCouture 6 дней назад +47

    We all knew Thomas Jefferson and George Washington both were eating damn good -- they each had over 200 enslaved black people on their plantations.

    • @Mr.NettaizmysusSirNettaizmysus
      @Mr.NettaizmysusSirNettaizmysus 2 дня назад

      I know I shouldn’t shake my head at that comment. But damn the image of the white men eating soul food &having sex with those same black women against their will is devastating. The white wife knew what was going on but couldn’t open her mouth in distress. Part of why they hate black womenfolk now.

    • @Crystal1107
      @Crystal1107 День назад +1

      😡

  • @kathyw.3146
    @kathyw.3146 День назад +17

    These recipes are not lost. They were stolen. They now try to rename them as southern food.❤

    • @ronceyhines9212
      @ronceyhines9212 День назад +1

      rite

    • @kathleenstoin671
      @kathleenstoin671 День назад

      I grew up in South Carolina. Thanks to Black cooks, white people learned to enjoy that wonderful food, but we all knew where it came from. Most restaurants, which didn't even serve Black customers, had Black cooks working in the kitchen. In those days, most Black people lived in the South, in many cases outnumbering the white population. So technically it is Southern food, and we white Southerners are glad those wonderful Black cooks showed white people how good food could be! I'm happy to say that now Black people are not shut out of restaurants!

    • @kathyw.3146
      @kathyw.3146 День назад

      @kathleenstoin671 , I love that everyone loves Black cooking. But the point I was trying to make is, just like Chinese food or Italian food, no matter how many Chinese or Italian restaurants are in New York, we don't call their cuisine Northern food. No matter how many Mexican restaurants are in California, we don't call their cuisine West Coast food. And that goes for every other ethnic group. So why not just say we enjoy soul food instead of trying to erase the people who created it. And renaming it to simply Southern food as if it's no big deal that many younger people have no idea who created the cuisine. That's all I'm saying. ❤️

    • @kathleenstoin671
      @kathleenstoin671 День назад +1

      ​@kathyw.3146 You make some very good points. I get it. But I guess it depends on where you go. In Charleston, South Carolina, where I am from, there are so many restaurants now that are serving "Southern food," and everyone knows those recipes came from Black culture. But maybe in other parts of the country it isn't so clear. So many people in other parts of the country are very ignorant of Southern culture in general and may not know the difference. So yes, if that's the case, I agree that credit should be loudly given where it's due. Are white people actually trying to steal credit? I don't know. But actual Southerners, but maybe not the transplants, are well aware of our gratefulness for rice, okra, peanuts, collards, and many other foods, and we knew who brought them here and taught us how to enjoy and cook them. The South Carolina Lowcountry used to grow most of the rice for the entire country. Everyone knew who brought it here. The fact that so many white cooks adopted those recipes just shows how good they are! But as I said, Southerners know who gave them to us, and to the entire country.

    • @kathyw.3146
      @kathyw.3146 23 часа назад

      @kathleenstoin671 , Paula Dean is a prime example. I have been noticing this trend for quite a while. Even when people from other countries taste it, the people in the restaurants NEVER say this is Soul food. They simply say it's southern food.

  • @TruthAndLight4995
    @TruthAndLight4995 4 дня назад +13

    Next time you’re in NoLA, stop by “Heard Dat Kitchen”. Chef Jeff can cook!!! ❤

  • @JubeiKibagamiFez
    @JubeiKibagamiFez 6 дней назад +18

    Thank you for your work. Never stop spreading truth.

  • @twinitedkindle5159
    @twinitedkindle5159 2 дня назад +9

    We are and always will be #1 Cook's. That's it that's all. Say Yes Family 💞.

  • @bonitaphinney1529
    @bonitaphinney1529 3 дня назад +9

    Soul food is delicious, if cooked with love. There is a saying in the Black Community, that if that food was good, then it was said " your mama put her foot in it" The majority of Black women had to cook for their families, and they learned from watching whoever was preparing the meals. I love to eat many different foods, but there is nothing like golden brown fried chicken, collard greens, mashed potatoes, homemade biscuits and a prayer at the Sunday meal. Thanks to my mama, and all the mamas who took what they had to make a delicious meal.

    • @MelissaThompson432
      @MelissaThompson432 День назад

      That's an interesting expression, and I don't think I understand it. My mother used to say her food tasted better because she stirred her thumb in it (meaning it had a taste of her hand) but I'm pretty sure that's not where you were going. And neither of us was black, so maybe we just don't have the background....

  • @harlemboy413
    @harlemboy413 5 дней назад +15

    First off rice was first planted in South Carolina hence all the Carolina rice and it was called Carolina Gold which is an african strand of Rice and was recently re discovered by African Americans who still had the seeds and didnt really know what it was.

    • @cathypurnell9331
      @cathypurnell9331 3 дня назад

      I would love to be able to purchase some of that rice. Carolina Gold. 🌸

    • @harlemboy413
      @harlemboy413 3 дня назад

      @cathypurnell9331 um you can just Google Carolina gold rice. It's 1 place that sell the real stuff and you will see it.

    • @kimwhite2682
      @kimwhite2682 День назад

      Facts. Some of my ancestors were brought from West Africa to South Carolina because they were expert rice farmers for thousands of years. 👍🏽

  • @MikePickleball
    @MikePickleball 2 дня назад +3

    Thank you for this , I love to cook , garden , bbq, and smoke and have lost my passion over the years , this has given me another chip in the fire to get back into it thank you again!

  • @Melinda-k2t
    @Melinda-k2t 2 дня назад +3

    Eliza Jackson's potatoes salad . . Was a tradition ever since I can remember. 1958.

  • @kemyattacromer2515
    @kemyattacromer2515 5 дней назад +11

    Food for the soul. SOUL food 🫶

  • @CelesteJenkins-f4c
    @CelesteJenkins-f4c 2 дня назад +1

    Im so blessed to come from a family of great cooks from North Carolina and South Carolina SIHP to all my Ancestors ❤❤❤🎉🎉🎉😊😊😊

  • @riverbilly64
    @riverbilly64 6 дней назад +11

    This was a great video. Thank you.

  • @michelemiller7049
    @michelemiller7049 6 дней назад +10

    Excellent presentation

  • @KYLE1010-wj1og
    @KYLE1010-wj1og 5 дней назад +5

    Great stories…thank you for this. You are a great teacher.

  • @kaliha55
    @kaliha55 5 часов назад +1

    IMPORTANT:Black American Pride
    So proud to see our brothas and Sistas making sure our history in this country is lemented through video, books and word of mouth. It is imperative that our history is recorded and exchanged amongst ourselves. We have been innovators in this country and we have the lengthy historical content to validate these discussions. Unlike others in this country. We built this country. End of story!👊🏾 We are stronger together ❤️ 💪🏾

  • @cgvccourtneyomega6166
    @cgvccourtneyomega6166 6 дней назад +7

    This is a beautifully thought out and delivered dish! Just like good cooking. Not complicated but done well! These are the type of dine and discussion events we hope to offer at The Colored Only Cafe in Athens GA in the warmer weather months as we are an outside venue

  • @jocelyngardner5711
    @jocelyngardner5711 3 дня назад +9

    Not all black Americans came from Africa. America is black indigenous land.
    My families for Louisiana and Texas America 🇺🇸 stamped

    • @orangemoonglows2692
      @orangemoonglows2692 3 дня назад

      if you're black, you are african-descended. your people were not here before whites came. stop this cap. it's ridiculous..

    • @LavitaWilliams-tf6mp
      @LavitaWilliams-tf6mp 2 дня назад

      EXACTLY THAT IS WHAT WHITE AMERICA TOLD EVERYONE.
      MY ANCESTORS ARE FROM PORTUGAL. AN I am black.
      The funniest thing white slavery was way worse than black slavery.
      But I will never ever hear about it at all. But u can purchase books only.
      Black masters, white slaves, WHITE CARGO, the forgotten history of British white slavery and many many more books.
      Don't u find it weird in the 21 century the government in America don't want black history taught at all.
      Me and my family are leaving America because we been planning on leaving since COVID.
      My uncle force all of us to leave America. Because he stated the America government is against the black race in America.
      An that is very dangerous plus he stated our reparations went to the immigrates.
      An that was the ultimate of disrespect. Than the government pass a anti Asian hate crime bill.
      But in the meanwhile black Americans are being murder ever single day by the cops❤.
      Right after the holiday we all are moving to Barcelona SPAIN.
      IT IS BEAUTIFUL OVER THERE CANT WAIT TO LEAVE AMERICA. JUST SHARING

  • @xnx2158
    @xnx2158 4 дня назад +2

    Thank you for sharing this history, love your videos!

  • @ParisVan-Del
    @ParisVan-Del 6 дней назад +5

    Thank you.

  • @ladywithclasscarpenter1143
    @ladywithclasscarpenter1143 5 дней назад +3

    Enjoyed this video thank you for the cooking documentary; Some of the best food was created in Louisiana, my home state.

  • @VauveAnais
    @VauveAnais 2 дня назад +1

    Thank you!

  • @emmettpinkston236
    @emmettpinkston236 5 дней назад +3

    Thanks!

  • @susan_elizabeth
    @susan_elizabeth 2 дня назад +2

    Thank you so much for shining a much-needed light on this vital information from our American past.
    If anyone is interested in more information or recipes from enslaved Americans, I highly recommend this cookbook: Rufus Estes' Good Things to Eat: The First Cookbook by an African-American Chef (Dover Cookbooks).
    Peace and love to all.💜

  • @MelissaThompson432
    @MelissaThompson432 День назад +2

    As a white Southerner, I am duly aware of and deeply grateful for the effects of the legacy of Africa and enslaved people on our traditional foods, and, indeed, our unique culture overall.

  • @thecommunityofpeace6905
    @thecommunityofpeace6905 5 дней назад +2

    This is such an excellent video. THANK YOU SO MUCH

  • @DustySoulLtd
    @DustySoulLtd 6 дней назад +8

    Thomas Hemings was also Jefferson's enslaved son.

  • @Gary-e4h
    @Gary-e4h 4 дня назад +3

    As cooks these people were holy. That food is ridiculously good. It's just sad how it happened. But the shit they made, insane.

  • @kitt7477
    @kitt7477 4 дня назад +2

    Gambariy is a famous rice dish from the Arabian Gulf states, it always contains shrimp & spices.

  • @TrinaSSGT6
    @TrinaSSGT6 6 дней назад +5

    Sally Hemmings, ..James Hemmings 🙏🏾💕

  • @marciarobinson8200
    @marciarobinson8200 4 дня назад +2

    These traditions were so simple even now we still do our meals around our ancestors cooking 🤪💯☝️🌏 from Marcia P Robinson

  • @albertmartin-j9k
    @albertmartin-j9k День назад +2

    Word up 21 21 21 Real Life 💯💯💯

  • @tailor-mademedia1406
    @tailor-mademedia1406 6 дней назад +4

    BTW, it might be helpful to mention "Thomas Hemings" and his relationship between "Thomas Jefferson" and "Sally Hemings". ✊

  • @msmini1585
    @msmini1585 3 дня назад +1

    Enjoyed the video.❤

  • @irenefinch7024
    @irenefinch7024 20 часов назад

    1st Time Listening From Atlanta!

  • @illman8876
    @illman8876 6 дней назад +13

    Red peppers, and the term "barbacoa" are indigenous to the americas. I am not so sure that uplifting the black cook's story, without mentioning his interactions with the native people, is a very good idea. Just my 2c.

    • @RealDealy
      @RealDealy 6 дней назад +11

      But, you failed to mention those indigenous people were "blk", they were just reclassified as African once the system of slavery took over, and yt supremacy became the new game to play
      It was colleges that pushed the theory of African slaves making up the majority of the blk population when they were American Indians who got reclassified as African in order to take their land. Only around 87,000-320,000 African slaves came here from 1619-1860. Mexicans were just who the Spanish got, and did the same to them, but before that we were all different tribes on this one land before it got divided

    • @SILKTEEN46
      @SILKTEEN46 6 дней назад

      Yes, those terms are Indigenous to the so called black people of America. With that being said, we were already cooking/preparing such foods, w/o the aide of Africa.,

    • @illman8876
      @illman8876 5 дней назад

      @@RealDealy no, they were fucking not black, they were a completely distinct group of people, neither white nor black, and you are shitting on their entire life by saying this.
      and fuck those five people who agreed with you.

    • @illman8876
      @illman8876 5 дней назад +1

      @@RealDealy have you even met a native person or been to any of their sovereign land?!

    • @RealDealy
      @RealDealy 5 дней назад

      @@illman8876 Most of FBA have "native american" in our lineage, again, they reclassified all of us in order to take the land
      This is why they call just five tribes civilized, they didn't recognize the other tribes meaning they didn't have to pay them for the land like the five tribes., & those members were able to put yt people on the rolls which allowed the blk members to be pushed out as reclassified as "African"
      Racism is the ultimate con game that has been played especially the story of North America

  • @deedeedixon712
    @deedeedixon712 3 дня назад +1

    My Husband is a wonderful cook....😋😋😋😋😋😋😋
    Yes indeed ! ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤

  • @JarubenJones
    @JarubenJones 6 дней назад +2

    Certain places got good food I order large amounts to go & add spices with onions garlic wet it up & butter put to oven cook some more😅 if I don't have time to start from scratch.❤

  • @Rebecca-le9hn
    @Rebecca-le9hn 2 дня назад +1

    Great history lesson. Here are a few cookbooks from my collection.
    "Spoonnbread and Strawberry Wine"
    "Mandy's Favorite Louisiana Recipes"
    "Bound To The Fire, How Virginia's Enslaved Cooks Helped Invent America's Cuisine"
    "Black Food"
    "The Peppers, Cracklings, and Knots of Wool Cookbook, the global migration of African Cuisine"

  • @theresemalmberg955
    @theresemalmberg955 5 дней назад +6

    I am curious. How did enslaved cooks introduce African elements to the enslavers' table in the "big house"? Wouldn't there have been some resistance to these new foods and techniques? Were these cooks simply told what and how to cook or did they have room for innovation? Then, as today, there are some folks who are open to trying new cuisines and foods and there are people who are not. It seems to me a very risky thing for an enslaved cook to experiment with the menu unless they were very sure that this would be well-received.

    • @MelissaThompson432
      @MelissaThompson432 День назад +2

      My guess? "Owning" people was so exotic at first that everything about their cooks was exotic and it was a matter of some cachet to eat "slave style." Anyone who would "own" someone and force them to work without pay is not a deep thinker to start with. I'm sure they hosted dinner parties themed around "slave style." And then after awhile it wasn't exotic, it was just superior.

  • @nadinekore6308
    @nadinekore6308 3 дня назад +2

    My Grandfather used to be a Rice plant owner in West Africa. The problem...is that it stays bare but the. sevond I come close to it... All the billion cousins come in and want their share!

  • @kevinstubbs2778
    @kevinstubbs2778 4 дня назад +1

    Yes we are

  • @moorpinklillies2152
    @moorpinklillies2152 3 дня назад +3

    Moors taught Europeans to COOK n season their food not eat it raw as well as bathe, clean themselves, make medicines from herbs and not sleep in barns with animals. Research it for yourself it’s there.

  • @kathleenstoin671
    @kathleenstoin671 День назад

    I grew up in the South, and I was always very aware of the origins of "Southern food." I'm grateful to the Black cooks who developed those wonderful recipes that we all enjoyed. When Black people were not even allowed to sit down in restaurants, we all knew there were Black cooks in the kitchen, making the food. Now, I'm very happy that Black people are no longer refused service, because that's the way it should be! I don't think that white people are trying to steal the credit for Southern food, though. In many areas of the South, including my home town, Black people outnumbered the white population, so Southern food and Black food were synonymous, because everyone enjoyed those dishes. And still do. But we have to be understanding of the fact that cultures borrow from one another, and that includes the food culture. That's not stealing credit, in my opinion.

  • @jackienash299
    @jackienash299 2 дня назад +1

    Amen!

  • @bonitaphinney1529
    @bonitaphinney1529 День назад +4

    I am a Black woman who lives in Maryland. Each region in the United Sates has their slang for good food. Please don't undermine , my expression just because your mother didn't use. My mother was a very good cook, and sometimes the expression, " Putting your foot in it", implied it was delicious.

  • @7CarChronicles
    @7CarChronicles 12 часов назад

    bbq from my knowlege is a word from the americas...the caribbean specifically...the indigenous caribbeans..the taino, arawak, etc.

  • @allybrosia3725
    @allybrosia3725 5 дней назад +1

    We NEVER get credit for a whole delicious cuisine we invented out of scraps! Represents who we are. Everything we touch becomes a delicacy and a luxury. The goal is to keep you believing otherwise! They call it “Southern cooking” to take Foundational Black Americans out of it.

  • @colinchampollion4420
    @colinchampollion4420 4 дня назад +2

    BARBECUE ~ COMES FROM Mexico ~ "Barbacoa" then traveled through Texas then to "La Louisianne"😮! !

  • @sherleengibson8847
    @sherleengibson8847 4 дня назад +1

    I've noticed that the Black cooks gave some of the cooking secrets BUT they didn't give everything,they didn't give that MAIN INGREDIENT 😅.

  • @tobiasisrael3758
    @tobiasisrael3758 День назад

    These recipes ain't lost ... they are in every famous southern white cooks cookbook.

  • @EastSider48215
    @EastSider48215 День назад

    A part of this story that is too frequently overlooked is James Hemings actual relationship to Jefferson: James was Jefferson’s enslaved brother-in-law.
    James and Sally Hemings were half-siblings of Jefferson’s wife, Martha Wayles. Martha Wayles’s father was also James and Sally’s father, and when he died, His daughter Martha inherited her own sisters and brothers as slaves, and brought them with her when she married Jefferson.
    The Hemings family is a bold, classic example of the depth of depravity the American institution of chattel slavery: people enslaved and abused their own kin: children, siblings, grandchildren - all of that meant nothing compared to the color of their skin. And that is why 150 years after the legal end of literal enslavement, we Americans are still needing to acknowledge and atone for that founding sin of our nation: its legacy is still ever-present today.

  • @RealDealy
    @RealDealy 6 дней назад +7

    What I don't understand is if some of these techniques came from Africa as we are told from the so called usa slavery story, why don't they have as much of the good seasoned foods that we have here, and they were on their land for thousands of years? We have more, and we were here as a new group for over 400 years under ENSLAVEMENT! Why no fried fish or chicken with seasoned flour cause that is the basics, yet we were the only people to use that technique in the whole world
    I would think being they have so many seasons, they would have thousands of foods, yet I don't see many foods that aren't much different from each other unlike India who have so many high seasoned foods, which makes sense cause they were doing it for thousands of years. I think this "African slave" story has to be restudied now that we can study each other more with social media, & we know Blk people were here before slavery, just reclassified as African once the system of enslavement took over in order to take the land
    Remember, only 87,000-320,00 slaves came from West Africa during 1619-1860, yet by 1860 there were over 3,000,000 slaves in population, not including freedmen and other Native tribal members

    • @cgvccourtneyomega6166
      @cgvccourtneyomega6166 6 дней назад +4

      this is a great question for consideration and conversation at The Colored Only Cafe in Athens GA

    • @deedee_Cute-n-Cherokee
      @deedee_Cute-n-Cherokee 6 дней назад +3

      Correct.

    • @mussiedebrezion8198
      @mussiedebrezion8198 6 дней назад +2

      Bbq were made in Africa way before in americas, from west to east africa

    • @RealDealy
      @RealDealy 6 дней назад

      @@mussiedebrezion8198 It was done in the Americas, as well. Some indigenous still do it the old way by putting the pig in the ground
      The problem is no one does any actual on the ground research to see who did what cause all we hear is if blk people did it, it came from Africa which is nonsense cause we don't see them doing it now, and they are on the same land they were always on
      All it's gonna do is make people just start ignoring claims of being of African origin, if they don't see any facts or similarities. I know this cause I'm doing it now, and notice others are doing it

    • @RealDealy
      @RealDealy 6 дней назад

      @@mussiedebrezion8198 gotta prove it, not just say it

  • @BellaDrips
    @BellaDrips 23 часа назад

    I see the Brit peeping Thommasen military is still stuck in history mode.

  • @enjoyingnourishments6812
    @enjoyingnourishments6812 4 дня назад +3

    What were the recipes

  • @Patrick-uu5xg
    @Patrick-uu5xg 6 дней назад +8

    My dad brought me to a restaurant in Milwaukee where the entire staff and all the consumers where black. We where the only white people there an I was sooo scared. I was about 12 years old. Very nice people and the best corned beef sandwich I ever had to this day. That was 45 years ago. Great memory. Great video. Thanks.

    • @luketheduke626
      @luketheduke626 6 дней назад

      What restaurant in Milwaukee is it? I love me a corned beef sandwich!!

    • @queenash2702
      @queenash2702 6 дней назад

      Why were you scared? Take no offense but blacks were segregated from EVERYWHERE! They feared to even make eye contact with a white person! To this day I can't go into a country all white staffed restaurant without having PTSD. It's a good feeling to see white people wanting to enjoy cooking by black people. Sounds like that corned beef made you forget about your surroundings lol which is awesome.

    • @MrsAudacious
      @MrsAudacious 5 дней назад +6

      Why were you so scared ? 🤔

    • @denise3885
      @denise3885 5 дней назад +4

      And nobody tried to eat you? 😂

    • @tallendracarson9295
      @tallendracarson9295 5 дней назад

      Patrick, I live in Milwaukee. Just wondering about which restaurant that could have been? There were very few back then. Now, there are so many soul food places here

  • @maryedwards8551
    @maryedwards8551 5 дней назад +4

    None of our cooking is lost black people I am fro the old school

  • @BradyJoelGibson
    @BradyJoelGibson 15 часов назад +1

    Desegregation was the worst thing economically speaking for black Americans

  • @susan_elizabeth
    @susan_elizabeth 2 дня назад

    Oh, you mentioned Rufus Estes at 8:50. Sorry about that, Boss. 💜

  • @KimberlyReese-vi2or
    @KimberlyReese-vi2or 4 дня назад

    I love food

  • @lenastanley7406
    @lenastanley7406 20 часов назад

    YES SALVES BLACK PEOPLE STILL COOKING THE BEST FOOD JESUS GIVENING THEM THANK OUR MOMS

  • @marierose9144
    @marierose9144 День назад

    As much as they've tried to eradicate our people with their wicked acts during slavery (still to this day) the tribe of Judah still thrives. Praise Yah 🙏🏽❤

  • @Michelle32533
    @Michelle32533 19 часов назад

    The Colonel took her recipe. And soon after he passed, KFC chicken never tasted the same.

  • @alphabright9138
    @alphabright9138 7 часов назад

    wasn't he one of the massages children he sent off to France to learn cuisine>?

  • @DFL_iBAIP
    @DFL_iBAIP 21 час назад

    He was free he didn't have to come back unless his family was threatened.

  • @nyamahdunbar3821
    @nyamahdunbar3821 2 дня назад

    Was James Hemings Sally Hemings' brother or father?

  • @Uncleed251
    @Uncleed251 5 дней назад +3

    Not many dishes that doesn't have its roots in Africa or inspired by dishes from Africa in American cooking too many dishes to count has been contributed to none Black even though it was Black people who originated them or greatly improved them from what they once were.

  • @MissK536
    @MissK536 4 дня назад +1

    I'm just glad I wasn't born in those days! So sad!

  • @brynezre
    @brynezre 2 дня назад

    ❣️❣️❣️❣️❣️❣️

  • @TheElochai
    @TheElochai День назад

    Who's now craving soul food?

  • @shirleydaniels9310
    @shirleydaniels9310 20 часов назад

    not Africans they were black Americans tamericans we were already here

  • @Larecm
    @Larecm 4 дня назад

    I have to disagree with some of your presentation. Mr. Jeff Hemings who was also the brother of Sally Hemings who we know was a slave mistress and birthed children of Thomas Jefferson, went with Jefferson, who was already his personal chef, to France where he learned French culinary skills and brought them back with Jefferson.

    • @shany3287
      @shany3287 2 дня назад +2

      Sally Hemmings brother that became a chef in France was James Hemmings, not Jefferson.

  • @azborderlands
    @azborderlands 6 дней назад +4

    Barbecue came from pre Colombian style grilling in the Taino region. I’m certain it’s tastier now in the US 🇺🇸

    • @mussiedebrezion8198
      @mussiedebrezion8198 6 дней назад +2

      Nubians had did it earlier

    • @Trp510
      @Trp510 5 дней назад

      Black people in Africa were grilling thousands and thousands of years before the Colombian people even existed on earth!!! The Colombian subgroup of the human race is about 20,000 years old while the modern Africans and Black people of the world are 200,000 years old !! do you really think we just started grilling after we came across some Colombians? How can that even be remotely true when Africans were the first people to use fire and cooked meat on fire before anyone else on the entire planet. Matter of fact when they first used fire, I don’t even think there was any other race of people on the planet except for Africans.😂😂😂😂 try again….update … black africans have been using fire anywhere from 1.6 million years ago to about 2 million years ago. And at that time, there was no other group of people on the planet except for Black people….. and I know that might be hard for you to believe, but there was a time when there was only Black people on the entire planet, they had the whole thing to themselves

  • @leahlockettharris4579
    @leahlockettharris4579 День назад

    It would have been an accurate story if it started off that enslaved James Hemings, the son of Thomas Jefferson and the enslaved half sister of his deceased wife Sally Hemmings, because it doesn’t this account is only a half truth. His FATHER sent him to France to be trained in culinary arts.

  • @bjsimon8755
    @bjsimon8755 6 дней назад +32

    We do mot owe AFRICA.. for our black American cuisine or history

    • @samanthanickson6478
      @samanthanickson6478 6 дней назад +1

      But you do owe the American primary school system for your horrific use of punctuation, grammar and sentence structure.

    • @ParisVan-Del
      @ParisVan-Del 6 дней назад +10

      Explain your response.

    • @BriC7
      @BriC7 6 дней назад +9

      YES. WE. DO! We owe the continent of Cush (NOT a country) for EVERTHING!

    • @FBA_God_Emperor_Doom
      @FBA_God_Emperor_Doom 6 дней назад +1

      Exactly!

    • @debbiemarquis3231
      @debbiemarquis3231 6 дней назад +4

      Weird..are you alright..because you clearly don't get the connection..

  • @missladyanonymity
    @missladyanonymity 2 дня назад

    Who benefits from this channel? What do the creators "look like?" I hope "others" aren't exploiting the Black experience and hardship.

  • @traceyobrien8410
    @traceyobrien8410 2 дня назад

    What about Nancy Green, a black woman who was reported to have been the inspiration for the character commonly known as Aunt Jemima? She ought to be recognized as well for her entrepeneurial spirit, but sadly she has been erased.

  • @rodericamos127
    @rodericamos127 День назад

    Indigenous American NOT AFRICANS and America Is the old world

  • @DonZo-rw2hd
    @DonZo-rw2hd 2 дня назад

    Americans didn't bring anything from Africa. Wild rice grows in the Mid West. Yall need to learn African history and teach your fellow Africans..We have our own History please stop tethering!

  • @Bagawould
    @Bagawould 2 дня назад

    Not "lost" just stolen

  • @NoraPartee
    @NoraPartee 2 дня назад

    Indigenous American Culture still copied and stolen today....???

  • @Patienceofthesaints
    @Patienceofthesaints 6 дней назад

    This narrator’s voice sounds like Turnip Vegan!!!

  • @alandiaz7965
    @alandiaz7965 3 дня назад

    Peppers came from America not Africa I belive

    • @TootsieRoll991
      @TootsieRoll991 День назад

      Why believe when you can research and base your opinion on facts?

  • @deelee5244
    @deelee5244 5 дней назад +5

    Everything started with African especially cooking