About

Screenshot_2016-02-25-13-22-44-1Afroculinaria is a food blog authored by Michael W. Twitty, (Twitter: @Koshersoul /Instagram:@thecookinggene/Michael W. Twitty on Facebook), a food writer, independent scholar, culinary historian , and historical interpreter personally charged with preparing, preserving and promoting African American foodways and its parent traditions in Africa and her Diaspora and its legacy in the food culture of the American South.  Michael is a Judaic studies teacher from the Washington D.C. Metropolitan area and his interests include food culture, food history, Jewish cultural issues, African American history and cultu ral politics. Afroculinaria will highlight and address food’s critical role in the development and definition of African American civilization and the politics of consumption and cultural ownership that surround it.

 

Antebellum Me, by Johnathan M. Lewis
Photo by Johnathan M. Lewis

Michael’s work is a braid of two distinct brands:  the Antebellum Chef and Kosher/Soul. Antebellum Chef represents the vast number of unknown Black cooks across the Americas that were essential in the creation of the creole cuisines of Atlantic world.  The reconstruction and revival of traditional African American foodways means seed keeping, growing heirlooms and heritage crops, raising heritage breeds and sustainably gathering and maintaining wild flora and fauna that our ancestors relied upon.  The responsible exploration of the Southern food heritage demands that the cooks of colonial, federal era and antebellum kitchens and enslaved people’s cabins be honored for their unique role in giving the Southland her mother cuisine.  It is important that we not only honor the Ancestors but provide a lifeline to contemporary communities and people of color looking for a better life in the new economy, a way out of the health and chronic illness crisis, and a way to reduce the vast food deserts that plague many of our communities.  To honor the food past and provide for the food future is what Michael calls, “culinary justice.”  

Outside of Roberta's and the Heritage Radio Network Studios: Photo By Nicole Taylor
Photo By Nicole Taylor

Kosher/Soul is the brand that deals with what Michael has termed “identity cooking.”  Identity cooking isn’t about fusion; rather its how we construct complex identities and then express them through how we eat.  Very few people in the modern West eat one cuisine or live within one culinary construct.  Being Kosher/Soul is about melding the histories, tastes, flavors, and Diasporic wisdom of being Black and being Jewish.  Both cultures express many of their cultural and spiritual values through the plate and Kosher/Soul is about that ongoing journey.  

The Cooking Gene  is Michael’s personal mission to document the connection between food history and family history from Africa to America, from slavery to freedom.  Begun in 2011, the project successfully garnered funding and significant media attention in 2012 to initiate a journey known as The Southern Discomfort Tour.  The project and tour continue as Michael visits sites of cultural memory, does presentations on his journey, and visits places critical to his family history while conducting genealogical and genetic research to discover his roots and food heritage.  Michael believes that Terroir is in Your Genes. Food is also extremely culturally connected and inherently economic and political.  It is a proving ground for racial reconciliation and healing and dialogue.  The Cooking Gene seeks to connect the whole of the Southern food family–with cousins near and far–by drawing all of us into the story of how we got here and where we are going.

Looking for my Great-Grandfather's Land Deed, with Genealogist Lon Outen, Camden, SC
Photo by JWD

85 comments on “About

  1. Pingback: 7 mouthwatering dishes that show the African origins of Southern soul food. – Viral Buzz Mews

  2. Pingback: 7 mouthwatering dishes that present the African origins of Southern soul meals. | MMM

  3. Pingback: 7 mouthwatering dishes that show the African origins of Southern soul food. – Viral Bandit

  4. Pingback: 7 mouthwatering dishes that show the African origins of Southern soul food. | My One and Only You

  5. Pingback: 7 mouthwatering dishes that show the African origins of Southern soul food. – Virally Viral

  6. Pingback: 7 mouthwatering dishes that show the African origins of Southern soul food. | Crazy Virals

  7. Pingback: 7 mouthwatering dishes that show the African origins of Southern soul food. – My Blog

  8. Pingback: 7 mouthwatering dishes that show the African origins of Southern soul food. | Health & Fashion Info

  9. Pingback: 7 mouthwatering dishes that show the African origins of Southern soul food. | Bullshit Guru

  10. Pingback: 7 mouthwatering dishes that show the African origins of Southern soul food. – Mostviral

  11. Pingback: 7 mouthwatering dishes that show the African origins of Southern soul food. | Bullet Metro

  12. Pingback: 7 community heroes who are creating positive change in the American South – WORLD NEWS NOW

  13. Pingback: 7 community heroes who are creating positive change in the American South - newtech 21

  14. Pingback: List of Black Farmers 2015 | RawThoughts

  15. Alishia Pearson

    Hello my name is Alishia Pearson I live in Tucson Arizona I love everything about African American history. My best friend and I would love to find out how we can become food historian.and would love to find some of your recipes. Thank you for your time.

    Like

  16. Pingback: ‘Barbecue’ vs. ‘Cookout’: What Race Has to Do With It

  17. Pingback: ‘Barbecue’ vs. ‘Cookout’: What Race Has to Do With It | Yahabari..Afro American Aggregated News Wire !

  18. Mawa Sy

    Hello Michael, I was the first 100 seat restaurant owner in Georgetown Washington DC. Unluckily Mayor Marion Barry started some work in front of my restaurant and I was forced to close because of a lack of customers. I leave now in Alaska and would like to talk to you about lots of things I did not have time to develop while I was in my restaurant CHEZ Seynabou 1201 34th &M st Georgetown

    Like

  19. Hi Michael,
    How you are great and congrats on being a TED fellow.
    I am jaka rey.souther born
    I work as a quality assurance tech at my current job.
    However, I am looking to develop my passion in the food into a business.
    Michael do you need assistant or volunteers? Let me know.
    Sincerely
    Jaka

    Like

  20. Pingback: Weekend Reading 8/19/16 | Sightline Institute

  21. Pingback: Soulful Nourishment: Getting A Whiff of Julie Dash’s New Project – Folklore & Literacy

  22. Pingback: NYTimes Food Conference | Michael Ruhlman

  23. Pingback: Black Renaissance in the Age of Obama | @iamkingcarla

  24. Pingback: The Creativity of Southern Cooking | Mountainview Digest

  25. Pingback: How this African-American Jew uses cooking to fuse his two identities | The Chronicles

  26. Pingback: African-American Jew uses cooking to fuse his two identities - Jspace News

  27. Pingback: tahini and halva floss brownies | thedessertmafia

  28. Pingback: Black History Month: Influential Chefs, Foodies, Historians and Advocates - #feedingcommunity

  29. Pingback: Blog #2: The Influence of African Culture on America – TSIMSafs201

  30. Pingback: The stories that matter – High Level 5

  31. Pingback: For Garlic Powder, A Working Seasoning Finally Gets Its Turn In The Spice Limelight - Daily Echoed

  32. Pingback: Why Michael Twitty's Meyer Lemon Rice With Candied Garlic Is Genius | Recipe Supremacy

  33. Pingback: Louisiana Calas and Rice: A Savor the South Cookbook - Tara's Multicultural Table

Leave a comment