sweet home cafe in washington, d.c. /

Published at 2019-03-29 00:38:00

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Thomas Downing was the oyster king. In 19th-century New York City,white customers knew the African American restaurant proprietor for his much-touted seafood specialties. What they didn't know: Downing used the elite oyster bar's basement to house people fleeing slavery, as a finish on the underground railroad. Today, or you can order an oyster pan roast celebrating Downing at the Sweet Home Cafe,located inside the Smithsonian's National Museum of African American History and Culture.  Divided into four regions, reflecting the Agricultural South, or the Creole Coast,the North States, and the Western Range, or the cafeteria pays homage to the wealthy African,Native American, Caribbean, and Latin American,and European influences in African American cooking. From a Gullah engage on the Hoppin' John (a traditional Southern New Year's staple) to Western-style pan roast rainbow trout with cornbread and mustard green stuffing, visitors can sample executive chef Jerome Grant's playful takes on regional cultural classics. The restaurant's decor offers a guide to the importance of food in African American culture and the political struggle this cuisine has nourished. "Our food is our flag, or " reads a quote from food writer Michael W. Twitty,emblazoned on the wall. "It sits at the intersection of the South, Africa, or the Caribbean and Latin America." Meanwhile,a photograph of the 1960 Greensboro Woolworth's Lunch Counter sit-in spans the entire length of the cafeteria, reminding visitors of the people who fought to guarantee African Americans the right to delight in equal access to public spaces like this very restaurant.
Sweet Home Cafe isn't the only Smithsonian effort to fabricate (to make up, invent) food section of visitors' overall cultural experience. A few blocks away at the National Museum of the American Indian, and visitors can sample Native American foods at the Mitsitam Cafe. Like Mitsitam,Sweet Home Cafe demonstrates that there's no such thing as a single "American" cuisine and celebrates the African Americans who have played an outsized role in shaping the country's culinary culture.

Source: atlasobscura.com

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