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    Hog and Hominy: Soul Food From Africa to America

    Page 29
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      Index

      Abernathy, Ralph David

      Abyssinian Baptist Church (Harlem)

      African Hebrew Israelites of Jerusalem

      African Heritage Cookbook, The (Mendes)

      “African Negritude—Black American Soul” (Jeanpierre)

      Africa Today

      Agassiz, Elizabeth

      Agassiz, Louis

      agie el dulce (chili con carne)

      agricultural experiment stations

      Akan people

      Alabama State College

      Ali, Muhammad

      Allen, William

      American Dietitian Association

      Amerindians

      Amy Ruth’s (Harlem)

      Angelou, Maya

      Angola

      Arawak people

      arbis

      Archibald-Good, Victoria

      Arkansas

      Armstrong, Louis

      La Arriba (Tarrytown)

      artisans

      ashes, for cooking

      Asian food

      Atlanta, Georgia

      Atlanta Journal

      Atlanta University

      Atlanta University Center (AUC)

      Atlantic foodways

      Atlantic slave trade; slave provisions on ships

      Ball, Charles

      bananas

      Banks, Nettie C.

      Baraka, Amiri

      Barbados

      barbecue

      Bar Harbor (Ossining)

      Barksdale, Marcellas C. D.

      Barnett, Ella

      Barrio, Renaldo

      Barry’s Grill (Greensboro)

      bars; Caribbean influence

      bartering

      Bath, Broom, and Bible

      Batista y Zaldívar, Fulgencio

      beans; bean pie; black-eyed peas (cowpeas); Dab-a-Dab; gongo beans (pigeon peas)

      Belton, Frank

      Ben Ammi, Rabbi

      Ben’s Chili Bowl (District of Columbia)

      Bi
    afra region (Nigeria)

      Birdland

      Birth of a Nation, The

      black arts movement

      Black Collegian

      black-eyed peas (cowpeas)

      Black Family Dinner Quilt Cookbook, The

      black nationalism

      Black Panther Party

      Black Panther Party for Self-Defense

      black power movement

      Blassingame, John W.

      Bloomberg, Michael

      bodegas

      Bodegas (Tarrytown)

      Body and Soul program (National Cancer Institute)

      boll weevil

      bonavist

      Bond, Julian

      Bon Goo Barbecue (Harlem)

      bonne-bouche

      Boswell, Christopher

      Bowman, Liz

      Bowser, Pearl

      boxers

      box lunches

      brabacots

      Bradshaw, Rudolph

      Braithwaite, Kwame

      Brazil

      breads; cassava “bammy,”; corn bread; cornmeal; crackling bread; hoecakes; Kangues; made with corn and sweet potatoes; ponap; pone bread; spoon bread; technology for baking; West African cookery; yam foo foo; ‘yam foo foo

      breakfast

      Bremer, Fredrika

      brilliant generation

      British foodways

      Brooks, Wendell

      Brown, H. Rap

      Brown, James

      Brown, William Wells

      Brown v. Board of Education

      Bryant’s Place (Memphis)

      Building Houses out of Chicken Legs: Black Women, Food, and Power (Williams-Forson)

      bunkhouses

      Burgess, Mary Keyes

      Burkett, Henry “the Black King,”

      Byrd, William

      café pico

      calabash

      California, northern

      Callahan, Ed

      canned food

      canning

      Canot, Theodore

      Capone, Al

      Cardwell, Barbara Ann

      Caribbean; African foodways in; African-influenced cuisines; Arawak people; slave rations

      Caribbean immigrants: interethnic relationships with African Americans; migration, first wave; migration, 1930s and 1940s; migration, 1950s and 1960s; shared characteristics of second wave immigrants; youth culture and influence on African Americans

      El Caribe (Harlem)

      Carmichael, Stokely (Kwame Ture)

     


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