We have a confession. With all of our pork talk, we are simultaneously reading and testing recipes from a vegan cookbook. Gasp! We’re not afraid to go beyond the pig, the cow, the chicken and get back our herbivorous roots. And we could not have asked for a better guide than Bryant Terry and his masterful cookbook Vegan Soul Kitchen, which holds 150 creative, and oh-so-healthy interpretations of African and Caribbean cuisine. Not only can you find mouthwatering recipes for double mustard greens, roasted yam soup and sweet cornmeal-coconut butter drop biscuits, Terry has orchestrated the entire experience for each recipe, with suggested books, poems, films and tunes.
Bryant Terry is an Oakland based eco-chef and food justice activist, meaning he has “used cooking as a tool to illuminate the intersections between poverty, structural racism, and food insecurity,” as stated by his website. Projects like the Southern Organic Project, Black and Green Food Justice Fund, and his collaboration with Oakland’s People’s Grocery to form People’s Grub Parties, position Terry as a positive, powerful voice of change. He shows just how important it is to erase boundaries in the culinary world by connecting real, fresh organic food to real people. He thanks his grandparents back in Memphis for inspiring his appreciation and passion for cooking, farming, and community health. If being a vegan is this good, we have got some serious decisions to make!
No comments:
Post a Comment