Raised in Appalachia, native daughter Ashleigh Shanti, a queer Black woman and acclaimed chef, knows Southern Black cooking means more than we\'ve come to believe.
Ashleigh\'s culinary journey culminates in Our South , where each dish speaks deeply to its origins, revealing the true story of Black Food in the region and the many pleasures of the South you can savor at home, wherever that may be..
She rekindled her connection to the cuisine of her roots before opening her own restaurant, Good Hot Fish, named for a phrase her ancestors would shout to draw in customers.
After spending a gap year in Nairobi and graduating from culinary school, Ashleigh entered the restaurant world, bartending, catering, teaching, and staging.
In high school, she pored over Food and travel magazines and marveled at how her mother never failed to put a hot meal on the table, whether instant grits or slowly cooked celebration dishes.
Long before competing on Top Chef and earning a coveted James Beard Award Rising Star Chef nomination for her cooking at Asheville, North Carolina\'s Benne on Eagle, Ashleigh shelled boiled peanuts and coveted the jars of pickles in her great-aunt Hattie Mae\'s larder.
The book culminates in Homeland, with foods that share what it\'s like to cook--and live--as a Black Southern chef now.
Lowlands nods to the diversity of Food cultures that meet in the region, where Ashleigh grew up eating noodle dishes like Virginia yock alongside Southern classics like Brunswick stew.
Seasonal produce shines in the Midlands, where bountiful stone fruits enrich dishes from shortcakes to salads.
A swing over to the coastal Lowcountry fills your plate with smoky grilled oysters and benne seed-topped crab toasts.
In Our South , Ashleigh takes you Through the five regions closest to her heart, beginning with a glimpse of mountain life in the Backcountry Through recipes like Fish Camp Hush Puppies and quail spiked with Black pepper.
The key to understanding how Black influence has defined foodways and cultures in the South is to explore its microregions, each with its own distinct flora and fauna, dialects, traditions, and dishes.
While hot buttered cast-iron-pan cornbread and crunchy, juicy, lard-fried chicken have their roles to play, they are far from the entire story.
Raised in Appalachia, native daughter Ashleigh Shanti, a queer Black woman and acclaimed chef, knows Southern Black cooking means more than we\'ve come to believe