鈥楽etting a place at the table鈥: The black chefs unearthing history
From Seattle to Charleston black chefs are exploring the deep, but often underappreciated, effects of black cuisine on a whitewashed culture.
From Seattle to Charleston black chefs are exploring the deep, but often underappreciated, effects of black cuisine on a whitewashed culture.
Deep in the hills of central Georgia, past a church built by freedmen, lies an overgrown farm with a vulture roosting in the smokehouse.
Sweetgum grows through the grill of a 鈥70s muscle car. Blackberry brambles hide the chicken coop.
Under the gaze of a portrait of Martin Luther King Jr., Mike and Shyretha Sheats are sanding the floors of the small farmhouse, shoring up the roof and the sills. They are preparing to transition from a big-city restaurant career in Atlanta to a rural stage for Southern slow cooking, from barn-hung hams to collards with the bitterness cooked out of them.
The Plate Sale will be a testament to what is known by family lore as the 鈥渉ome house,鈥 where the men made the sausages and the women adjusted the seasonings.
Mr. Sheats is one of a growing number of black chefs grasping this moment to unearth 400 years of history redolent in dishes like oyster porridge and catfish in shrimp gravy.
From Seattle to Charleston, South Carolina, from Houston to Athens, Georgia, black food entrepreneurs are exploring the deep, but often underappreciated, effects of black cuisine and agricultural prowess on a whitewashed culture. This exploration takes places against a continuing backdrop of national unease over skin color, heritage, and legitimacy.
鈥淭here鈥檚 this stereotype that black culture is a culture created on the fly, and that it鈥檚 not rooted, and I think that鈥檚 a very safe belief,鈥 says the chef Michael Twitty, author of 鈥淭he Cooking Gene.鈥 鈥淭hat enables people who are outside of our world or community to be ignorant, because they don鈥檛 have to learn the history, the tradition, the stories and folklore, or wrestle with the same emotional material that we do.鈥
Southern food, with its farm-to-table ethos, 鈥渋s the foundation of American cuisine,鈥 says veteran chef Joe Randall, founder of the African American Chefs Hall of Fame in Savannah, Georgia. 鈥淵ou can get great gumbo in Seattle because the gumbo trail went from New Orleans to the West Coast.鈥听
Fried chicken is part of that tradition, sure, but so is Mr. Sheats鈥 recent dish of aged pork, greens, and sauce africaine. Benjamin 鈥淏.J.鈥 Dennis, a progenitor of the Gullah-Geechee food traditions on the southern Sea Islands, makes delicate shrimp and grits that bust stereotypes about grease and lard. Chef Mashama Bailey in Savannah has on her menu 鈥測ard bird鈥 and also 鈥渢hrills,鈥 the small frozen Kool-Aid cups known to generations of black Savannahians.
鈥淔or years,鈥 says Mr. Randall, 鈥淕erman chefs, Italian chefs, French, Irish, Swiss chefs, they were never questioned when they talked about their roots. African Americans were the only ones ever asked to deny their heritage in order to legitimize themselves as chefs. In order to get any kind of recognition, we had to cook European. Sometimes it鈥檚 been as if they were invisible. But right now, some young folks are being recognized and that鈥檚 a very positive thing.鈥
Up to this point, Mr. Sheats has slung grub on behalf of a pantheon of famous white chefs who have mined the South for inspiration, including Southern food maestro Sean Brock and the avant-garde Ryan Smith.
He says those chefs have given him invaluable experience, knowledge, and support. But the opportunity to take over the farm on Dora Bush Hill Road, stepping out from under their shadow, became the most important moment of his career.
鈥淚 realized that now is my time to step up,鈥 says Mr. Sheats, who grew up not far away.
Mr. Sheats鈥 project 鈥 which he shares with Shyretha, its beverage director 鈥 is a pop-up called The Plate Sale. The name is an ode to the Southern tradition of buying a 鈥減late,鈥 of say, meat and three vegetables, from a home cook. It is also a way to tell, in his own voice, the stories of African Americans鈥 unique contribution to how the United States eats.听
Though a self-admitted shy guy, Mr. Sheats is an artist who gets his point across primarily through dishes like the ones he created recently for a pop-up supper at Muss & Turner鈥檚 in Smyrna. The menu: cucumber cooler with homemade ginger beer (non-alcoholic), squash tart with ramps and trout roe, Tybee shrimp with basil and cayenne oil.听
鈥淭he Plate Sale comes from just ambitions, trying to put out the best food,鈥 says Mr. Sheats. 鈥淏ut it鈥檚 not all about selling plates, or selling food. It鈥檚 a constant reminder of where I came from and a constant reminder to keep pushing to get where I want to go.鈥
None of this is how Mr. Sheats pictured his life. Growing up, he says he was a constant at his aunt鈥檚 hems during the cooking of Sunday supper. But he went to college to be a 鈥渂usiness dude鈥 and dropped out. After a few other stalled plans, another aunt slipped a brochure for the cooking school Le Cordon Bleu into his mail stack. A stint in Charleston under Mr. Brock brought home to him the importance of 鈥渞eal food and real ingredients.鈥 He鈥檚 gotten this far, he says, 鈥渂y doing right by people and not burning any bridges.鈥
鈥淢ike Sheats and his family are all as important and as foundational to Athens as an idea and Athens as a place, as are the names of the grand white families whose names are branded on the buildings on the university campus,鈥 says听Ole Miss historian John T. Edge. 鈥淎nd now by way of what Mike is doing and other food entrepreneurs in Athens are doing, we get to see those two worlds in conversation with each other. That is an important reckoning, and the city is ready for it.鈥
鈥楢 history lessons that was never told鈥
To see U.S. history through its foodways is to journey through swamps of sweet honey and acid vinegar, marinated in hard truths.
Until now, much of the story of Southern food has been told by white chefs, which for some has raised questions about cultural appropriation by an industry already rife with sexism and exploitation.
White-owned barbecue shacks came to embody segregation 鈥 and the legal fight against it 鈥 with the Supreme Court ordering Ollie鈥檚 Barbecue in Birmingham, Alabama, to serve black customers in the 1960s. The history of black cooks spans from French-trained black chefs in Colonial America to Leah Chase, the late New Orleans doyenne whose joint Dooky Chase鈥檚 hosted prominent black Americans from听King to former President Barack Obama.
They also include cooks like Georgia Gilmore, who provided the spaces for activists in Montgomery, Alabama, and Zephyr Wright, who was Lyndon Johnson鈥檚 chef. Ms. Wright was a college-educated chef who after being turned away from a gas station bathroom sparked Johnson to lay the groundwork for civil rights legislation: 鈥淚s that the country you want?鈥 Johnson would roar after telling the story. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 not the country I want.鈥
Despite the influence of black cooks on the national menu, disparities remain in the restaurant industry. While black Americans are slightly overrepresented听in professional kitchens 鈥 16% of restaurant employees are black, while African Americans make up 13% of the U.S. population 鈥 only 7% of kitchen managers, including chefs, are black, according to a recent report by the Multicultural Foodservice & Hospitality Alliance.
Food historians say the effort to reclaim American food offers a spotlight on the real problem facing black entrepreneurs: a dearth of resources, capital, and opportunity.
Black Americans are widely recognized as the progenitors of wood-smoked barbecue, yet there are only听a handful of black pitmasters听at the World Championship Barbecue Cooking Contest in Memphis, Tennessee. Part of that, participants have said, is because fewer black chefs can afford the steep participation costs.听
Nigeria-born Tunde Wey of New Orleans charges white customers more at his pop-ups, to illustrate how white supremacy is rooted in wealth inequality.
鈥淲e cook ancestral lineage, and for me a lot of times it鈥檚 not only upholding tradition but relearning, reteaching, and rediscovering things 鈥 old crops, old grains, and traditional rices,鈥 says Mr. Dennis. 鈥淚t鈥檚 like a history lesson that never was told.鈥
It鈥檚 one of a number of efforts to elevate the history and importance of African American foodways.
On June 19, the James Beard Foundation held a dinner to elevate what black chefs bring to the national supper table. The menu included Delta tamales, grilled red hot links with mustard barbecue sauce, and pickled onions with cowboy candy (candied jalape帽os).
Last year, the Los Angeles City Council and embRACE LA sponsored 100 Dinners & Dialogue About Race around the city. Houston鈥檚 Indigo restaurant offers a 鈥渞evised reflection of what it is like eating through the 鈥榠sms鈥 of America as a copper-colored person.鈥
The Grey restaurant in Savannah won Eater鈥檚 Restaurant of the Year in 2017. The next year its chef, Ms. Bailey, won the Beard Award for Best Chef: Southeast, the second consecutive black woman to win the title. 鈥淭hings changed [for my career] when I realized that my history mattered, my story mattered," Ms. Bailey told the event in Chicago on May 7.听
In his book, 鈥淭he Potlikker Papers,鈥 about the role of food in the emergence of a modern South, Mr. Edge highlights the rise of Ms. Bailey in a restaurant in a converted Greyhound bus station 鈥渨here her grandmother would not have been allowed to claim a seat.鈥澨
鈥淭hese stories and these people have long been the bedrock of what we think of as Southern food and culture and yet for the longest time when white Southerners would pay tribute to those cooks they would use their first name, not their last 鈥 they would denigrate with faint praise,鈥 says Mr. Edge.听鈥淣ow what has happened is that a new generation of chefs does not require white voices to amplify their message. That鈥檚 progress.鈥澨
鈥楽etting a place at the table鈥
Tom Colicchio has a unique view from the past. As a judge of the 鈥淭op Chef鈥 franchise on Bravo, Mr. Colicchio notes that the show has in its last few seasons focused more on backstories elevating a diverse cast of chefs. The show has also inadvertently poked tensions around race in the kitchen. Last season, some fans grumbled after a remarkable black chef exploring his West African roots was eliminated by judges in favor of two white female chefs from the South.
鈥淧art of this is that in the last couple of years there has been a lot of talk in our industry and the film industry about letting other voices have their day,鈥 says Mr. Colicchio, chef-owner of Craft in Manhattan鈥檚 Gramercy-Flatiron neighborhood. 鈥淚t鈥檚 about not just opening the door but setting a place at the table and letting them shine.鈥
Mr. Twitty, the author, stages historical dinners in antebellum garb. 鈥淲hen we talk about the American South and race relations, white people need to relate to the black people who have been here for 400 years, who their blood is in,鈥 he says.
鈥淵es, it鈥檚 a provocative subject. But kitchens were where grandmothers were raped and their children became mulatto people. White Southerners and black Southerners are related, not just through sexual abuse, but through generations of mixing,鈥 he continues. 鈥淏ut we鈥檙e not on the same page economically or politically with our white Southern cousins. Even when they are liberal and progressive, the chance they have more resources to deal with than we do is highly likely. And when it comes to politics, there are these folks around the corner 鈥 your blood relatives 鈥 who vote against your interests and then say, 鈥楳ay I eat with you?鈥欌
Not far away from the Sheats鈥 farm lies Athens, the college town that was once home to T.R.R. Cobb, a Confederate officer and lawyer who helped codify white supremacy into law.
Like many U.S. cities, it is in the midst of a restaurant revival. But behind street festivals like the Hot Corner Celebration and Soul Food Festival lies a difficult and deadly history.
In 1964, as Ms. Sheats鈥 family smoked sausages and hams out in Carlton, a greasy-spoon in Athens named the Open House became a Ku Klux Klan headquarters, from which members orchestrated intimidation and violence to buttress the university town against new civil rights laws 鈥 including the murder of a black Army reservist named Lemuel Penn. Called a 鈥渉angout for rabid Klansmen鈥 by the FBI, the Open House showed how intertwined food and association became in the epic struggle to ensure the civil rights of black Americans. In his book, Mr. Edge remembers eating at the Open House as a student in the 1980s, noting that he thought the restaurant had been 鈥渨ashed clean of past taints. Like so many whites, I chose to avert my gaze from that ugly history, until it was impossible to look away.鈥
More recently, in 2015, 105 bodies of black Athenians 鈥 likely 19th-century slaves 鈥 were found during an expansion of the University of Georgia鈥檚 Baldwin Hall. A growing number of universities have publicly apologized for their use of slave and coerced labor. But while university President Jere Morehead last November unveiled an elaborate memorial for the deceased, protesters 鈥 including descendants of enslaved Athenians 鈥 bristled at the lack of an apology or a debate about reparations.
That episode jarred Mr. Sheats. At moments, he admits, 鈥淚 wonder if I even want to be part of that community.鈥 It鈥檚 even more complicated by the fact that some African Americans question his decision to delve into the past. 鈥淭o a lot of black people, going back to the farm evokes slavery,鈥 he says.
The Sheats鈥 planned brick-and-mortar restaurant 鈥 to be supplied by the farm 鈥 will incorporate the history of their families, overlaid with the unfinished arc of the civil rights movement, all with the feel of a country juke joint.
鈥淧eople don鈥檛 always get what we鈥檙e trying to do, but that鈥檚 OK, too,鈥 says Ms. Sheats, holding the couple鈥檚 toddler daughter. 鈥淭he food will always be good and the vibe will be hopping.鈥