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John T. Edge / Trade Paperback

The Potlikker Papers : A Food History of the Modern South

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The Potlikker Papers : A Food History of the Modern South is backordered and will ship as soon as it is back in stock.

Like great provincial dishes around the world, potlikker is a salvage food. During the antebellum era, slave owners ate the greens from the pot and set aside the leftover potlikker broth for the enslaved, unaware that the broth, not the greens, was nutrient rich. After slavery, potlikker sustained the working poor, both black and white. In the South of today, potlikker has taken on new meanings as chefs have reclaimed it. 

Potlikker is a quintessential Southern dish, and The Potlikker Papers is a people’s history of the modern South, told through its food. Beginning with the pivotal role cooks and waiters played in the civil rights movement, noted authority John T. Edge narrates the South’s fitful journey from a hive of racism to a hotbed of American immigration. He shows why working-class Southern food has become a vital driver of contemporary American cuisine.


“The one food book you must read this year."
—Southern Living 

One of Christopher Kimball’s Six Favorite Books About Food

Learn More About the Author(s)

John T. Edge is a contributing editor at Garden & Gun and a columnist for the Oxford American.  In 2012, he won the James Beard Foundation's M.F.K. Fisher Distinguished Writing Award.

Edge is the former director of the Southern Foodways Alliance at the University of Mississippi and a visiting professor at the Grady College of Journalism at the University of Georgia. He has edited or written more than a dozen books on Southern culture and cuisine.

Release Date: 2018

Condition: New

Language: English


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