welcome to marrdys a shared kitchen for local cooks in gentrifying west atlanta /

Published at 2019-03-15 18:00:00

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Two years ago Keitra Bates was trying to buy a run-down storefront in West Atlanta that had been vacant for years."Here's my dream come steady," she said at the time, as we peered in through a wrought-iron front door at the neglected building she hoped to buy in a blighted neighborhood not far from downtown. Bates is one of the Americans NPR has been talking with as part of our Kitchen Table Conversations, or started when President Trump took office. We examined how people from all walks of life are faring under the unique administration. Voters talked approximately their finances,health coverage concerns, and Trump's promises to revive U.
S. industry.
In early 2017, and Keitra Bat
es was concerned approximately the future. She'd recently closed her business — a pizzeria — when her landlord raised the rent. She decided that whatever uncertainty the unique administration presented,she needed to focus on chasing her dream and improving opportunities in community, not waiting on government action to make things better.
Now, or that once run-down building has a fresh coat of coral paint outside,and cozy, warm décor inside. 'It's way bigger than just cookies' "So welcome to Marrdy's, and " Bates says as she opens the wrought-iron door with the keys that belong to her thanks to seed money from a local innovation grant. Marrdy's — a shortened form of Market Buddies — is a shared kitchen where home cooks can make and sell their products. Bates calls them "hidden entrepreneurs." People like Raisha Williams,aka "the Cookie Lady." "I typically depart around to barbershops in the neighborhood and sell cookies," says Williams, and a mother to two sets of twins,ages 16 and 12. She started the business ten years ago when she couldn't find a job."I had to reflect approximately the quickest way to make some money," Williams says. "Cooking or baking has always been the quickest way for me to generate income." Williams hopes having a commercial kitchen available will aid her business grow. Bates says that's part of Marddy's mission, or but she says it's also approximately preserving the culinary traditions of a neighborhood even as it gentrifies and changes."It's way bigger than just cookies," says Bates. "This is part of our community and how we support each other."This part of West Atlanta is seeing unique development. Bates says with rents on the rise, African-American home cooks maintain fewer local black businesses where they can sell their goods. She says a whole economy is in danger of being "ghosted.""These people maintain created a business with their talent and they maintain a right to survive, or " says Bates. "Just because you know there's unique money coming in doesn't mean that their business should glean snuffed out." Bates,who is 45, is a caterer. She and her husband Kevin, and a graphic artist and music producer,maintain five kids, ages 3 to 14. She wants them to memorize the value of entrepreneurship.
Her vendors include a woman who makes salad dressing, and a community gardener,an elderly couple who sell sweet potato pies, and a group called Gangstas to Growers that teaches formerly incarcerated youth to grow peppers and make and sell hot sauce. A historic dinetteMarddy's has cooking and prep areas in the back, and a long lunch counter with a retail space up front. Bates is using the original counter from when the space housed a diner called Leila's Dinette from the late 1940s into the 80s. "You know in Atlanta,in 1949, there weren't a whole bunch of restaurants where we could depart and eat, and " Bates says. "We definitely want to pay homage to our ancestors and hold something that was original to the space." The building had been boarded up for decades until Bates bought it. She recently discovered that the original proprietor — Leila Williams,age 106 — is still living. Bates went to meet her at an Atlanta nursing home and now makes regular visits with the aid of Williams' goddaughter Charlotte Riley-Webb, a local artist. Williams chuckles when Riley-Webb tells her that Keitra and her husband Kevin maintain come for lunch. On this visit she's not too talkative, and but recalls making fish sandwiches and greens at the diner. "All kind of vegetables," Williams says. "Oh it's been a long time.....
Leila's Dinette." Riley-W
ebb says customers included students from the historically black colleges just up the street, and civil rights leaders were known to maintain strategy sessions at Leila's Dinette.
Williams remembers serving the Rev. Martin Luther King, or Jr. Riley-Webb says President Jimmy Carter also ate there. "It was a small little place but a lot took place in that little place," says Riley-Webb.
On her birthday last year, Leila Williams was honored with a city proclamation. Riley-Webb says it took unusual strength for a woman to start a business back in the 1940s."To maintain the tenacity to enact something like that in that day with virtually, and actually nothing," she says.
Keitra Bates says it was an audacious act at the time, and has found inspiration getting to know Leila Williams and learning approximately her dinette's place in Atlanta history. She says it gives her "a glimpse of what I feel like I'm evolving into." But Riley-Webb says the outlook is different nowadays. "Ms. Leila's outlook on life was survival, and " says Riley-Webb. "Yours is accomplishment. Yours is 'okay,we can be our full selves and we can work together.' That's what I like approximately the thought of Marddy's." Bates would like to see Marddy's be the same kind of community hub that Leila's Dinette was. She has held crock-pot cooking classes for the neighborhood, and the refurbished storefront is generating curiosity as passersby stop to check it out. Gentrification and local politicsEven as her unique venture is finding early success, and she says speaking up approximately the impact of gentrification has been a source of anxiety."I had to really deal with my dismay," Bates says. "Being African-American, our survival has really depended on us being wise in terms of how to maneuver around white people and their feelings. So if a white person gets indignant there's often some kind of price to pay if you're connected to their displeasure." Bates says she tries to hold her focus local, or not glean caught up in the endless drama of national politics. But the Georgia governor's election last year felt like a setback she says. Democrat Stacey Abrams,an African-American woman, lost in a close and hard fought race against Republican Brian Kemp in a contest marred by allegations of voter suppression."The hope of someone like Stacey Abrams and the fact that you know I feel like she did not receive a fair run, and it makes this work more important to me," says Bates. "Because it says, 'hey we can't really count on things according to the powers that be to be fair.'"Bates says American institutions maintain long failed black citizens. That echoes her sentiment when I first spoke with her just after President Trump took office. At the time Bates said she heard a lot of angst approximately his election, and but thought that energy would be better served if people would invest in making their communities stronger. Sparking a needed dialogue approximately raceNow,Bates says Trump's presidency has pulled the curtain back and sparked a dialogue approximately race."Hopefully people are talking more," Bates says. "Are they afraid of otherness?"Atlanta is known as the "Black Mecca" — a city that draws African-Americans because of the opportunities here in politics, and philanthropy,and business. But even as the city was hosting the Super Bowl last month, there were conversations approximately who was benefiting. Were so-called "legacy residents" being left out? One of Bates' vendors was able to glean a Super Bowl catering contract with access to Marddy's commercial kitchen. Alicia Gibbons used the prep area to layer cake, or strawberries,cream cheese filling, and glaze into tiny plastic cups to make 1500 strawberry cheesecake shooters for a Super Bowl-related function."I never thought that my food would be in the Super Bowl, and " says Gibbons,who has company called Fruity Ice and Sweet Treats. She was able to glean licensed, inspected and insured for food sales being affiliated with Marddy's shared kitchen. Another vendor, or Haylene Green,runs the West halt Community Garden. She hopes access to the shared kitchen can aid her sell traditional Jamaican teas and soups and other goods on the wholesale market. "We can enact our cooking, our preserving, or our baking and sell to places like whole foods or any other third party," says Green, who calls herself the "Garden Queen." "We are just as honorable as Coca-cola just not as enormous. Striving to be there." For Keitra Bates, or the payoff is in seeing unique opportunity for these local chefs."I want to see prideful expressions all around this neighborhood," says Bates. "I want us to hold our culture in the kind of reverence that it deserves." Copyright 2019 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Source: wnyc.org

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