New York Times writer calls out Black people for lovin Red Lobster and she ain't lyin'! it all stems from the definition of "soul food" and a mild argument is if we go by patronage then Red Lobster would have to be it and I'd actually have to agree. There's a Red Lobster 3 blocks away from my home and it's allways rammed with Black faces. as a proud Nova Scotian I'd NEVER go ther (barring my old as shit grandparents didn't force me or somethin') but it is a popular spot.
1300Filmore in San Fran has a lock down on the upscale soul food fusion that eludes Harlem restaurant. Ironically, chef David Lawrence is actually Jamaican.
I LOVE fried anything so the thoughts of a fried peach pie that takes 3 days to make at A Taste of Memphis, a new resto in Boise Idaho, makes my mouth water. 3 days though? Really?
October shall hence be known as Alabama Food Products Month.
I'd say "yum-o" but I HATE Rachael Ray. It does sound good though ;-)
Soul Food recipes from the dirty dirty? Loves it! Here's a young entrepenour writing and self publishing a soul food cookbook. Cool beans! I really dig that you can download it for a cheaper price and print it off yourself. If you're anythig like me you like a spineless cookbook anyway and an environmentally efficient option is seriously cool.
I don't quite know how I feel about B. Smith (the Black Martha Stewart) endorsing a General Mills soul food endeavour. One part of me says "high-five sista!" and the other says, "damn you sold out sista". But then everyone derves a little soul and the fact remains that Black folks need to be eating a much healthier version of our cuisine so if this helps then so be it. Betty Crocker's sweet potato pie smoothies sound gross though! Check out their website Servin up soul.
Aiken, South Carolina, has a new soul food resto called the Soul Food Shack.
While I can agree that Bill O'Reilly's comments last week about how civilized Black people were at Sylvia's resto were ignorant, I'm still sure it was also racist. Ignorance + racism are a deadly combination and rarely are they separate from each other. On this basis Ben Greeman's latest article is naive and IMO wrong. Funnily enough he sites Juan Williams as one of the Black commentators who is defending O'Reilly, failing to note that he is also the other voice on the infamous audio proclaimin "oh please--" to O'Reilly's shit. Poor Ben actually thinks O'reilly can be belived when he claims to be on a new no-smear campaign when he himself is the biggest smear bandit.
Sweet Georgia Brown's gets a management makeover in Detroit. Nice to see some resto's are staying put and changig up the formula instead of packin' it all in like others...
...Like Diddy's Justin's closing. He claims it will reopen bigger and better but good business ususally means securing bigger and beter space to facilitate a seamless move instead of closing and starting from scratch.

Saveur Magazine dedicates their latest issue entirely to Chicago and includes the low down on soul food.
In
There are arguments to be made that jerk is related to soul food and that the cuisine does in fact incorporate aspects of Caribbean culture. I disagree. Soul food and Caribbean food are similar variations on different themes. Slaves brought over to the Americas brought with them their unique methods of preparing food. In the Caribbean and parts of South America, they put an African spin on Spanish cuisine (which in itself was derived in part from Arab cooking), adding a dash of Native islander knowledge of local plants (spices included) and animals. The exact same thing occurred in North America with cuisine that was modified primarily from English and Scotch-Irish cooking. With that in mind, England had not yet become the curry capital of Europe and hence curry is not a traditional aspect of soul food nor are mangoes.
Sigh.
But then my neck swings back to the annoying if not disappointing point that on the 



Ribs
I grilled my ribs first until cooked through, then transferred them to a heatproof dish, covered them with sauce and cooked on low 250 °C for 1-1/5 to 2 hours.
1 whole roasted garlic:



