Edna Lewis (1916-2006) wrote some of America's most resonant,
lyrical, and significant cookbooks, including the now classic
The Taste of Country Cooking. Lewis cooked and wrote as a
means to explore her memories of childhood on a farm in Freetown,
Virginia, a community first founded by black families freed from
slavery. With such observations as "we would gather wild honey from
the hollow of oak trees to go with the hot biscuits and pick wild
strawberries to go with the heavy cream," she commemorated the
seasonal richness of southern food. After living many years in New
York City, where she became a chef and a political activist, she
returned to the South and continued to write. Her reputation as a
trailblazer in the revival of regional cooking and as a progenitor
of the farm-to-table movement continues to grow. In this first-ever
critical appreciation of Lewis's work, food-world stars gather to
reveal their own encounters with Edna Lewis. Together they
penetrate the mythology around Lewis and illuminate her legacy for
a new generation.
The essayists are Annemarie Ahearn, Mashama Bailey, Scott Alves
Barton, Patricia E. Clark, Nathalie Dupree, John T. Edge, Megan
Elias, John T. Hill (who provides iconic photographs of Lewis),
Vivian Howard, Lily Kelting, Francis Lam, Jane Lear, Deborah
Madison, Kim Severson, Ruth Lewis Smith, Toni Tipton-Martin,
Michael W. Twitty, Alice Waters, Kevin West, Susan Rebecca White,
Caroline Randall Williams, and Joe Yonan. Editor Sara B. Franklin
provides an illuminating introduction to Lewis, and the volume
closes graciously with afterwords by Lewis's sister, Ruth Lewis
Smith, and niece, Nina Williams-Mbengue.