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Praisesong for the Kitchen Ghosts: Stories and Recipes from Five Generations of Black Country Cooks

Win a free print copy of this book!

18 days and 03:16:36

25 copies available
U.S. only
Rate this book
A lyrical culinary journey that explores the hidden legacy of Black Appalachians, through powerful storytelling alongside nearly forty comforting recipes, from the former poet laureate of Kentucky.

People are always surprised that Black people reside in the hills of Appalachia. Those not surprised that we were there, are surprised that we stayed.

Years ago, when O. Henry Prize-winning writer Crystal Wilkinson was baking a jam cake, she felt her late grandmother’s presence. She soon realized that she was not the only cook in her kitchen; there were her ancestors, too, stirring, measuring, and braising alongside her. These are her kitchen ghosts, five generations of Black women who settled in Appalachia and made a life, a legacy, and a cuisine.

An expert cook, Wilkinson shares nearly forty family recipes rooted deep in the past, full of flavor—delicious favorites including Corn Pudding, Chicken and Dumplings, Granny Christine’s Jam Cake, and Praisesong Biscuits , brought to vivid life through stunning photography. Together, Praisesong for the Kitchen Ghosts honors the mothers who came before, the land that provided for generations of her family, and the untold heritage of Black Appalachia.

As the keeper of her family’s stories and treasured dishes, Wilkinson shares her inheritance in Praisesong for the Kitchen Ghosts. She found their stories in her apron pockets, floating inside the steam of hot mustard greens and tucked into the sweet scent of clove and cinnamon in her kitchen. Part memoir, part cookbook, Praisesong for the Kitchen Ghosts weaves those stories together with recipes, family photos, and a lyrical imagination to present a culinary portrait of a family that has lived and worked the earth of the mountains for over a century.

256 pages, Hardcover

First published January 23, 2024

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About the author

Crystal Wilkinson

17 books320 followers
Crystal Wilkinson, a recent fellowship recipient of the Academy of American Poets, is the award-winning author of Praisesong for the Kitchen Ghosts, a culinary memoir, Perfect Black, a collection of poems, and three works of fiction—The Birds of Opulence , Water Street and Blackberries, Blackberries. She is the recipient of an NAACP Image Award for Outstanding Poetry, an O. Henry Prize, a USA Artists Fellowship, and an Ernest J. Gaines Prize for Literary Excellence. She has received recognition from the Yaddo Foundation, Hedgebrook, The Vermont Studio Center for the Arts, The Hermitage Foundation and others. Her short stories, poems and essays have appeared in numerous journals and anthologies including most recently in The Atlantic, The Kenyon Review, STORY, Agni Literary Journal, Emergence, Oxford American and Southern Cultures. She was Poet Laureate of Kentucky from 2021 to 2023. She currently teaches creative writing at the University of Kentucky where she is a Bush-Holbrook Endowed Professor.

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5 stars
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 48 reviews
Profile Image for Ivonne Rovira.
2,035 reviews211 followers
October 5, 2023
The title pretty much says it all: Praisesong for the Kitchen Ghosts: Stories and Recipes from Five Generations of Black Country Cooks. Cookbook author and former Kentucky poet laureate Crystal Wilkinson has compiled recipes and stories from her ancestors, who lived in Indian Creek in Eastern Kentucky. Wilkinson’s family goes back in that area to 1808, when the slave-owning white Wilkinsons brought an enslaved 13-year-old girl with them from Virginia. That girl, Aggy, grew up to marry white Tarlton Wilkinson and became a freedwoman and bore him 10 children. She is also — among others — the inspiration for this cookbook.

Wilkinson weaves in some interesting family history, but — as with all cookbooks — the centerpiece are the recipes culled from her ancestors and extended family. The Appalachian cookery includes the expected, of course, such as Hot Milk Cake, chicken and dumplings, Chess Pie, Pine Lick Mutton Leg and Gravy, Pimento Cheese with a Kick, Classic Benedictine, corn pudding, blackberry jam, Grandma’s Blackberry Cobbler, skillet cornbread — unsweetened, as they like it in Kentucky. But Wilkinson throws in some surprises, as well: greens without bacon or ham, Sautéed Fiddleheads, fried plantains, Creamy Tomato Soup, Chicken Salad with Curry, Wild Berry Lemonade, The Dark Crystal Latte.

In the interest of full disclosure, I received this book from NetGalley, Clarkson Potter Publishers and Ten Speed Press in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Becka.
664 reviews41 followers
October 24, 2023
Praisesong for the Kitchen Ghosts left me speechless. It is truly a love story told to honor the food, family, and culture that shaped author Crystal Wilkinson’s life. The book is full of stunning photographs, of both dishes created from the book’s recipes as well as the author’s family photos to accompany stories of generations of her Appalachian Kentucky family. In reading this book, not only did I learn about the history of black Appalachians, I also was greatly convinced of the importance of passing kitchen knowledge on from one generation to another, as much of what this book describes is becoming a lost art. I cannot think of a better way for Wilkinson to honor her ancestors than through lovingly crafting this book. I will definitely be purchasing a physical copy.

Thanks go to NetGalley and the publisher for the opportunity to read an advance copy of this book. All opinions are my own.
Profile Image for Anna Wooliver Phillips.
167 reviews8 followers
February 17, 2024
My daddy taught me to make cornbread by watching him. I don’t ever measure and I can show you better than tell you the recipe for it. I miss him and my grandmothers so.
This book is gorgeous but also full of grief. My family were river boat pilots and coal miners and farmers. You better believe I grew up on soup beans and cornbread 🤤
Profile Image for T.
959 reviews8 followers
February 5, 2024
I’m going to need a solid 3-5 business days to fully process everything this wonderful, transcendent, evocative, haunting, uplifting, soulful, beautiful book put me through.

5+ stars. This is a masterpiece.
Profile Image for JoyReaderGirl1.
658 reviews10 followers
October 15, 2023
One of the most fascinating and educational cookbooks that I have had the pleasure of reading in years is a true gem in terms of old-fashioned, simple, but well-executed recipes, as well as a treasure-trove of historical information about Appalachian peoples of color. Documented with family genealogy, poignant anecdotes, and lovely photographs, former Kentucky Poet Laureate and O. Henry Prize-winning writer, Crystal Wilkinson’s, “Praisesong for the Kitchen Ghosts: Stories and Recipes from Five Generations of Black Country Cooks,” is a gastronomic feast for the eyes and stomach.

From fluffy scratch biscuits; to sizzling cast iron skillet cornbread; decadent Indian corn pudding; sinfully rich and buttery chess pie; and authentic burnt-sugar caramel icing (just like my great granny used to make)—these are just a smattering of the homey goodness readers will find in “Kitchen Ghosts.” There are also a few more recipes for exotic local mountain dishes—like sautéed Fiddlehead Ferns—that will make your special meal absolutely gourmet.

I’ve always considered Cookbooks great treasures of any society because they get to the heart and soul of the local culture almost better than other forms of anthropological research because eating is a primal necessity, and what people eat and how it’s prepared reflects not only on the availability of resources, but also the ancestral traditions of those combining ingredients to make a tasty meal for those they love. Crystal Wilkinson’s, “Praisesong for the Kitchen Ghosts: Stories and Recipes from Five Generations of Black Country Cooks,” is just such a culinary masterpiece.

JoyReaderGirl1 graciously thanks NetGalley, Author Crystal Wilkinson, and Publisher Clarkson Potter/Ten Speed Press for this advanced reader’s copy (ARC) for review.

December 13, 2023
I don’t even know where to begin. This was a powerful one. I received this as an ARC and I am counting the days till I can buy it for myself. I am from the western North Carolina part of the Appalachian Mountains. This area is so rich in history and culture but it is often missed out on a legacy that is almost hidden and that is the Black Appalachians. I was so in love with the book. The story telling paired with all the wonderful recipes are absolutely amazing. I love the history of the book, all the old pictures, which are a passion of mine. I loved reading how she grew up and how food became important. I come from the same family history of generations of cooks as the women in our family did whatever they could to make magnificent meals from limited sources. They made everything count and our families were blessed for it. I really loved learning about the history of her Appalachian roots and how they shaped her into who she is. The chicken and dumplings is an all time favorite of mine growing up, along with soup beans, pulled pork and my favorite angel food cake. The recipes were so well written and easy to understand. I loved this book and I keep going back to read it again. I will be buying this as a gift for my daddy whose love of our Appalachian history continues with me. You will love the food, the history and the love in this book. Enjoy.
I highly recommend this to any history buff, any down home cook or any of my Appalachian neighbors to enjoy
Profile Image for Lori.
1,473 reviews
September 13, 2023
I received a copy of "Praisesong for the Kitchen Ghosts, by Crystal Wilkinson. This is a unique book. The author shares her generations of family recipes. Her family comes from the Appalachian south. She shares fond memories of her family get togethers. with this she shares the recipes that have been served for over 150 years. Some of them going back to relatives who were slaves. She has chapters focusing on holidays and church gatherings and the recipes and delicious dishes that were served. in her book are shared recipes for pork, wonderful desserts, Breakfast recipes, blackberry recipes. and so many other wonderful recipes that her family enjoyed over the years. Wow. all I know is I wish I could sit at that table and sample some of these delicious meals. I enjoyed reading this book. only thing is I had to read it on my phone, guess I am old gal who has never read a book on my phone. First time for everything I guess. I would give this book a 4.5.
Profile Image for Carrie.
613 reviews9 followers
February 17, 2024
In Praisesong for the Kitchen Ghosts, former Kentucky poet laureate Crystal Wilkinson reflects on family, Black Appalachia, and rural life through food, interweaving storytelling with family recipes and gorgeous photographs of her family and the food they love.

We cook. We share our food. We heal.
I know that women in my family have been kitchen ghosts for centuries. Peeping over the shoulders of our daughters and granddaughters and sons and grandsons.
Saying:
Just a little bit more.
Turn your fire down.
Not too much salt.
Please have some we have plenty.

And I imagine myself many years from now, standing in my great-grandchildren's kitchens, nodding my head as they cook, whispering in their ears, "That's right. Keep it up. We will always have plenty."


This book is just so lovely. It is a celebration of so much: of family, of heritage, of Black women, of the abundance of rural life, of food as soul-feeding and connection-sustaining. Wilkinson folds the common ingredients of food and cooking into stories about the experiences of generations of women in her family, including her own: grieving her grandmother and mother, raising her children as a single mother, and missing her family during the isolation of a global pandemic. Each element of this book-- the writing, the photos, the stories, the recipes-- is truly beautiful. This book was a joy to read.

Part memoir, part cookbook, Praisesong transcends any one label to make for a sumptuous reading experience that is worthy of savoring. I highly recommend it to anyone who likes memoirs, cookbooks, personal histories, Appalachia, or beautiful storytelling.
Profile Image for Melissa.
1,292 reviews65 followers
August 17, 2023
*This book was received as an Advanced Reviewer's Copy from NetGalley.

Let's start with the title on this book. Was there ever a more well-crafted, evocative title? I certainly don't think so. It's what drew me in. Going deeper into the meaning of it, and the framework of the book, you get a combo cookbook, combo memoir, combo history/sociological lesson; and it's really just a well-done mix of topics. I also appreciated the photography and family memories shared as well.

The author, Wilkinson, uses family history, whether through oral storytelling, written down recipes, or others, to tell of the cooks that came before her. Her family crafted foodways in Appalachia and kept traditions strong, caring for their families and trying to show that love with food. I know the first thing you think of when you think Appalachia is not black families, and that is why this book so deeply resonates (and is touched upon by the author as well). The area is rich in history, but it's not just the mountain men you see in popular media. Families eked out a living and learned to use the availability of goods around them.

I can't say I've made any recipes from this book yet, which I normally try to do before writing a review, but that's no fault of the authors. I just haven't had the time/energy. But there are plenty in here that I would like to try. And honestly, just reading about them was enough. I was hit with memories when I came across the popcorn balls recipe. It brought me back to my grandfather, preparing tons of them for a fundraiser for his social club every year, storing them in trash bags in an unused staircase in the house, the air smelling like candy. I recently just hit the anniversary of his death and this first year has been tough; he's one of my kitchen ghosts and the author's messages resonated with me as a result.

We all have our ghosts, but a kitchen ghost is not a bad thing to have.

Review by M. Reynard 2023
Profile Image for Theresa.
7,769 reviews124 followers
January 14, 2024
Praisesong for the Kitchen Ghosts: Stories and Recipes from Five Generations of Black Country Cooks (Hardcover)
by Crystal Wilkinson
Note worthy book for personal history, recipes, and black history in the mountains of Kentucky.
The history shows the difficulty of black land owners in the Appalachian region. The family survived slavery, Jim crow laws, and the great depression. The family problems affect her entire life, from being raised by her grand mother, to the poverty and financial struggles. She is inspiring that she does not blame the family history for their struggles but social inequity and prejudices.
The recipes are introduced not only in the historical concepts but a modern recipes. As you read the story you want to try the recipes for the wonderous descriptions tingle your appetite.
Profile Image for Holly Browning.
172 reviews3 followers
December 28, 2023
This book was just lovely. I identified so much with the author's strong pull towards her ancestors, and how the very cells in her being are echoes of the strong women in time. I have ancestors in Casey Co, KY and have heard some of the stories of her African American ancestors. How very exciting to insight into the lives of women who put their heart and soul in nourishing the bodies with food. Awesome recipes! Highly recommend! #praisesongforthekitchenghosts #crystalwilkinson #netgalley #goodreads
Profile Image for Poppy Marlowe.
523 reviews21 followers
August 20, 2023
Synopsis (from Amazon)
******************************************************

I was declined the ability to review this book but as all librarians KNOW people (including other librarians!), I was able to borrow it and am reviewing it nonetheless.

A lyrical culinary journey that explores the hidden legacy of Black Appalachians, through powerful storytelling alongside nearly forty comforting recipes, from the former poet laureate of Kentucky.

People are always surprised that Black people reside in the hills of Appalachia. Those not surprised that we were there, are surprised that we stayed.

Years ago, when O. Henry Prize-winning writer Crystal Wilkinson was baking a jam cake, she felt her late grandmother’s presence. She soon realized that she was not the only cook in her kitchen; there were her ancestors, too, stirring, measuring, and braising alongside her. These are her kitchen ghosts, five generations of Black women who settled in Appalachia and made a life, a legacy, and a cuisine.

An expert cook, Wilkinson shares nearly forty family recipes rooted deep in the past, full of flavour—delicious favourites including Corn Pudding, Chicken and Dumplings, Granny Christine’s Jam Cake, and Praisesong Biscuits, brought to vivid life through stunning photography. Together, Praisesong for the Kitchen Ghosts honours the mothers who came before, the land that provided for generations of her family, and the untold heritage of Black Appalachia.

As the keeper of her family’s stories and treasured dishes, Wilkinson shares her inheritance in Praisesong for the Kitchen Ghosts. She found their stories in her apron pockets, floating inside the steam of hot mustard greens and tucked into the sweet scent of clove and cinnamon in her kitchen. Part memoir, part cookbook, Praisesong for the Kitchen Ghosts weaves those stories together with recipes, family photos, and a lyrical imagination to present a culinary portrait of a family that has lived and worked the earth of the mountains for over a century.

Now this is my kind of cookbook – simple, honest food with lots of leftovers and lots of biscuits!!! (Truth be told, I am having a biscuit tattoo added to my arm later this month when I could get an appointment with a new but excellent artist!) I cannot imagine baking or cooking in a dress like worn by the woman on the cover – I hate a hot kitchen. But then again, there were times when one had no choice but to cook in an outfit like that due to the propriety of time time. (I look a the photos of my great aunts who did not marry as their job was to care for my great grandfather and wonder how they cooked, cleaned and did the laundry in such finery and layers of clothing with deodorant decades away!)

But these recipes are worth having to cook in the heat – I can see wearing this book out cooking over and over from it: it was so appealing that I pre-ordered a personal copy of it for myself.

A great gift idea as well! #shortbutsweetreviews
Profile Image for Debra Gaynor.
400 reviews3 followers
August 12, 2023
Praisesong for the Kitchen Ghost
Stories and Recipes From Five Generations of Black Country Cooks
Crystal Wilkinson

Author Crystal Wilkinson grew up on her grandparent’s farm in the hills of Appalachia in Indian Hill, KY. Her grandfather raised. She was born in 1962 in Hamilton, Ohio. Her grandfather was a tobacco farmer; he also raised corn and made homemade sorghum molasses. Her grandmother was a domestic worker for the local schoolteachers.
Crystal shares the history of her family through the recipes in this book. “…food is never just about the present---every dish, every slice, every crumb and kernel also tethers us to the past.” “The recipes in this book were influenced by the matriarchs of the Wilkinson family. Many of the recipes date back to the 1700s.”
The first recipe she shares with readers is Granny Christine’s Jam Cake. Among the recipes in this book the reader will find: Hot Milk Cake, Chicken and Dumplings, Meatless Greens, Sauteed Fiddleheads, Dressed Eggs, Pine Lick Mutton Leg and Gravy, Basket Meeting Green Beans and New Potatoes, Pimento Cheese With A Kick, Classic Benedictine (Cucumber Spread), Wild Berry Lemonade, Gingerbread and Sauce, Sweet Sorghum Cookies, Hearty Vegetable Soup With Hamburger, Indian Creek Chili, Chicken And Noodles, Ron’s Pulled Pork, and Easy Old -Fashioned Popcorn Balls.
I have tried several of the recipes and they are delicious. My husband loves Chicken and Dumplings but I have never been able to get it quite right until I used the recipe in Praisesong For the Kitchen Ghost. While I enjoyed the recipes very much it is the history and stories of author Crystal Wilkinson’s family that truly touched my heart.
Thank you Netgalley for a review copy of this book. My review is my unbiased opinion.
382 reviews13 followers
August 20, 2023
Good recipes are most fun if they are shared, and even better if they are heirloom recipes from families. Praisesong for the Kitchen Ghosts: Stories and Recipes from Five Generations of Black Country Cooks . Crystal Wilkinson (who is a cook and an award winning poet), not only shares recipes from generations of her family who settled in Appalachia, but tells wonderful stories of the ancestors who prepared them. The stories are well-written, historical, and fascinating. Wilkinson has a gift and brings out the personalities of those who developed the recipes, making it seem like we are making recipes from beloved friends and relatives. According to Wilkinson, she feels her ancestors’ presence when she is making the recipes; readers should be so lucky.

The recipes represent southern cooking at the highest (and most delicious) level. The recipes are written in the traditional manner with the ingredients listed, followed by step-by-step instructions. This makes it easy for both beginning and advanced cooks to enjoy preparing and presenting the recipes to those they love to feed.

One of the best parts of this book is that there are beautiful photographs, not only of the people in the stories, but also of the mouthwatering recipes.

This is a book that most readers will want to curl up in a corner and read cover to cover. It is historical, and includes recipes that most of us will want to make. Readers will also fall in love with Wilkinson’s family and wish they were a part of it. Five well-earned stars!

Special thanks to NetGalley for supplying a review copy of this book.
Profile Image for Cat.
868 reviews157 followers
February 15, 2024
I love the generic combinations of this book, which is at once a personal and familial memoir, a cookbook, and a speculative history. Its echoes of the family album or scrapbook remind me of Nikky Finney's Love Child's Hotbed of Occasional Poetry: Poems & Artifacts, which is appropriate, since Wilkinson and Finney are friends and used to work together at the MFA program at University of Kentucky. By understanding intergenerational Black women's legacies through gardening, foraging, and cooking, Wilkinson at once pays homage to the ingenuity and expertise that went into survival both in and beyond enslavement, and she also nods to the labor and exhaustion that have been Black women's lot, never sacrificing the one to the other in her loving yet exacting appraisal. Wilkinson writes of loss--her mother's death, the family farm sold off, pandemic isolation--and uses the figure of ghosts to think through how grief and creativity, death and sustenance are connected. It's a beautiful book with an ecological as well as a Black feminist sensibility. I was very moved by the echoes between the recipes found there (pots of beans, skillet cornbread) and the recipes that graced my white Alabaman sharecropper grandmother's table, though my family's roots are in the red clay of Alabama instead of the mountains of Kentucky.
Profile Image for Ellen.
249 reviews6 followers
August 18, 2023
My mother was the very model of a modern mid-century housewife, cooking for her family using the latest in convenience foods: condensed soups, processed cheese, and boxes of dry casserole helpers. But Thanksgiving and Christmas were two occasions when she went traditional with roasted turkey, real mashed potatoes, the works. When I turned the page and saw Crystal Wilkinson’s recipe for Vegetable Soup with Hamburger, it took me right back to our home on Sussex Drive, my mother standing in front of the stove, “veggie-burger soup” on the stove and cornbread in the oven. It was our Christmas Eve meal. I thought, as a white suburbanite, I would be reading Wilkinson’s words in the abstract, but it turns out I have my own kitchen ghosts.

Crystal Wilkinson is a former Kentucky poet laureate and O Henry award winner and her writing is beautiful and evocative. She starts a few generations in the past, sharing stories of family gatherings, church meetings, survival (while enslaved and during the depression), gardening, and other traditions that led to family recipes. I loved looking at the beautiful photos as much as I enjoyed the poetic writing. I may not make any of the recipes but that’s not the point. Reading this beautiful book, we learn a great deal about a black Appalachian culture that might otherwise be forgotten.

Many thanks to Clarkson Potter/Ten Speed Press and NetGalley for the opportunity to read this ARC in exchange for my honest opinion.
17 reviews2 followers
December 31, 2023
Thank you so much to this author, the publisher and netgalley for allowing me the opportunity to read this book.
This is so much more than a cookbook, this is a history lesson, a novel, a cookbook, and an emotional journey all wrapped in one! I fell in love with it! The history aspect isn't huge in your face it's there because you need to understand the true reality that was and still is this author, her families and so many others personal history impacted by the realities of history of their times, it sets the tone for why things were and are at the time. The novel and story is beautiful, heart wrenching and real it's not glossed over because this was her family, no it's raw, real and there and it makes you think of your family and generations past. The recipes were incredible, there was a huge variety of recipes that varied all across the board for anything you want to make and it's not very often where a cookbook has a huge variety of recipes I would love to actually make and there are so many in this book! I cried a couple of times with the memories this author helped invoke (not a bad way just kitchen ghost memories) and that is the mark of a great book. Everyone needs to read this book, this is so much more than a cookbook it is love and a hug in a book! Thank you so much to this incredible author for the opportunity to read this incredible book I really appreciate it!
Profile Image for Bookworm.
2,040 reviews76 followers
January 25, 2024
I was intrigued by the book and thought it would be an interesting read. Food of course its own place in Black history, so I was very curious to see what the author had to say. Five generations? There has to be lots of interesting stories and tales to tell.

The text weaves between WIlkinson's memoir and recipes of the various foods she has eaten and what they mean and who made this particular dish. The dishes get a breakdown (and recipes), plus the context of which Wilkinson ate it (and who made it for her and why, etc.). So you get a tale of her family and how she came to be plus the foods that nourished her and her family along the way.

Overall, I thought this was pretty dull. Although there is a lot of history here, I just did not find the author's writing style one that kept me going. I was not interested in either her family's history or the dishes. Perhaps it was me, maybe it was just not the right fit, but I was surprised by the many positive reviews.

Certainly it is definitely a fit for other people. If you have a story similar to Wilkinson's or know people who do, this would be interesting. If you are looking for a cookbook, this is definitely not it, although if you have a specific interest in the history or region this could be an interesting read.

Borrowed from the library and that was best for me.
Profile Image for carrietracy.
1,409 reviews20 followers
February 3, 2024
This was a beautiful book. Wilkinson takes you back through history and her own life to talk about the love and foodways in her past. Her history lies in Appalachia, and she has traced her ancestry at least as far as the 1700s, an incredible feat given the lack of documentation surrounding enslaved peoples.

Despite recounting some true horrors of slavery, the tone of this book is gentle. What really comes through is the expression of love through food. There are recipes included with each chapter and they absolutely make me hungry. I want to try many of them.

The other interesting thing about this book is that it covers the early period of the Covid-19 pandemic and how the lockdown affected family gatherings and your ability to express love in multitude of ways, including the inability to gather and eat.

I loved this beautiful glimpse into the past, getting to know Wilkinson's family through both her anecdotes and her imagination and learning so many of the traditions that her family held close over the years. I envy her those treasured recipes she has and my heart hears hers when she speaks of not knowing some because they were only ever just made.

If you enjoy books about food history, if you enjoy books about family, if you like your cookbooks with stories, this is a great book to try. Would pair beautifully with any of Michael Twitty's books.
Profile Image for Debra Gaynor.
400 reviews3 followers
August 12, 2023
Praisesong for the Kitchen Ghost
Stories and Recipes From Five Generations of Black Country Cooks
Crystal Wilkinson

Author Crystal Wilkinson grew up on her grandparent’s farm in the hills of Appalachia in Indian Hill, KY. Her grandfather raised. She was born in 1962 in Hamilton, Ohio. Her grandfather was a tobacco farmer; he also raised corn and made homemade sorghum molasses. Her grandmother was a domestic worker for the local schoolteachers.
Crystal shares the history of her family through the recipes in this book. “…food is never just about the present---every dish, every slice, every crumb and kernel also tethers us to the past.” “The recipes in this book were influenced by the matriarchs of the Wilkinson family. Many of the recipes date back to the 1700s.”
The first recipe she shares with readers is Granny Christine’s Jam Cake. Among the recipes in this book the reader will find: Hot Milk Cake, Chicken and Dumplings, Meatless Greens, Sauteed Fiddleheads, Dressed Eggs, Pine Lick Mutton Leg and Gravy, Basket Meeting Green Beans and New Potatoes, Pimento Cheese With A Kick, Classic Benedictine (Cucumber Spread), Wild Berry Lemonade, Gingerbread and Sauce, Sweet Sorghum Cookies, Hearty Vegetable Soup With Hamburger, Indian Creek Chili, Chicken And Noodles, Ron’s Pulled Pork, and Easy Old -Fashioned Popcorn Balls.
I have tried several of the recipes and they are delicious. My husband loves Chicken and Dumplings but I have never been able to get it quite right until I used the recipe in Praisesong For the Kitchen Ghost. While I enjoyed the recipes very much it is the history and stories of author Crystal Wilkinson’s family that truly touched my heart.
Profile Image for The Book in my Carryon.
136 reviews10 followers
November 22, 2023
A great food memoir makes you feel like you're part of the family, like you've sat at the table and listened to their stories, maybe throwing in a few of your own. And Crustal Wilkinson definitely pulls that off with her fabulously rich and flavorful, Praisesong for the Kitchen Ghosts, which gently reaches across time and distance and circumstances to share the memories of her family's kitchen ghosts. And, I love that phrase, btw. Like, Ms Wilkinson, I often feel the guiding presence of matriarchs when I'm cooking for the ones I love.

The narrative is conversational and wide-ranging, moving effortlessly from personal reflection to social history to family stories and back - and is done flawlessly. and then there are the recipes, woven into and yet, at the heart, of each section. Simple food that's rich with Appalachian history and meaning and, thanks to the narrative, all-important context.

Beautifully written and well-researched, Praisesong for the Kitchen Ghosts hit all the right notes for me - as a memoir, as a recipe book, and as a commentary of family and history and the depth of roots. I'll be recommending this book to friends and family members.

Thanks to NetGalley for bringing Praisesong for the Kitchen Ghosts and Chrystal Wilkinson to my attention.
Profile Image for Candy.
385 reviews11 followers
September 12, 2023
Thank you to the publisher and NetGalley for an advance copy of this book in return for an honest review.

What a magnificent title for this culinary journey through the Appalachian hills of Kentucky! Wilkinson is a natural storyteller, and reminisces about her family’s history while sharing the recipes passed down from one generation to the next. Her recollections are vivid, and it was easy to picture women stringing green beans, using their dresses pouched between their knees. This is truly a cookbook written with love and it will touch your heart from the first page, which features a photo of her great-grandparents. Wilkson writes that she wishes her ancestors could step out of the photo, telling her their thoughts on the life they made for their descendants, what their eyes have seen, and where their old shoes have walked. Wilkinson shows how we use food for healing, love and care, as well as how it tethers us to the past. There are beautiful photos of each recipe, but I especially loved the pages with her kitchen ghosts’ aged, tattered and stained recipe cards.

https://candysplanet.wordpress.com/
1,155 reviews1 follower
February 17, 2024
I found Wilkinson's memoir/cookbook at the local library. Gorgeous cover and pictures of the family recipes she praises and remembers. It's a testimony to the strength and cleverness of black women who, as slaves or free women, had to learn to cook what was available to them.
As five generations of grandmothers hovered in her kitchen, Wilkinson interweaves their stories with hers. I liked the thought of cooking and feeding generations with food that others would find questionable. And doing so with generosity and love.
I knew a bit about black families in the hollers of NC, but not eastern Kentucky. Didn't know that Wilkinson's family farmed a huge tract of land, raised animals, held praisesong celebrations that brought people from near and far, and that now that land is probably in the hands of white militia. Go figure.
I think of Aggy who was married to a white man and bore 10 children. I think of all the family lines with so much fecundity. I think of hard lives and the hard won ability to deal with what's in front of you. I hear the ghosts without recipes bringing food to life.
A beautiful book on many levels.
11 reviews2 followers
February 4, 2024
Crystal Wilkinson’s book, Praisesong for the Kitchen Ghosts: Stories and Recipes from Five Generation of Black Country Cooks, stands alone. It is beautifully written, solemn, and magical. Clarkson Potter provided me with a free copy of the book; the opinions are my own. I don’t think I have ever wept while reading a cookbook before but then this is not only a cookbook; it is part memoir, part wisdom-sharing, and a reminder of our history. The recipes are elegant and spare with photographs that complement them. I have not had a chance to make any of the recipes, but I have sticky-tabbed the ones I am going to make as soon as I finish reading the book. My first one will be “Grandmother’s Blackberry Cobbler” the one with the pastry crust. This will be followed in short order by the “Gingerbread and Sauce” for which I purchased sorghum molasses, and the “Wilkinson family classic ‘Corn Pudding’” which might just become a family classic for me too. Please do buy this amazing work by a Poet who knows how to combine words and flavors, seamlessly.
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989 reviews
January 24, 2024
I have read this cookbook more than I have cooked/baked its recipes. This is Crystal Wilkinson's memoir, an account of her family history as descendants of Black Appalachians. That Wilkinson was the poet laureate of Kentucky from 2021 to 2023 is a gift to us: her storytelling is poetic and beautiful. The anecdotes are sometimes heartbreaking, often triumphant. I especially appreciated the family photographs that made the history even more personal.
I have tried only one recipe so far - Pimento Cheese with a Kick, which was a big hit at a recent watch party for a football game. This is a Southern specialty with a spicy twist. I definitely want to make the Chess Pie, another Southern favorite.
I highly recommend this book to anyone who enjoys history, not just culinary history but a celebration of tradition, family, and legacy.
Clarkson Potter provided me with a free copy of this book; the opinions are my own.
236 reviews1 follower
February 18, 2024
3.75

Part memoir, part cookbook, part reemergence into the headspace of ancestors. This book documents Crystal Wilkinson's love and nostalgia for her Appalachian family's cooking while exploring her family history. Wilkinson does a great job of bringing the reader into the reality of many Black Appalachians. She examines her family's relationship with certain foods and uncovers why they ate certain foods or why younger generations may not be as as enthusiastic about chitlins.

I really love Wilkinson's idea of a kitchen ghost, finding traces of memories and the past in recipes muscle memory, and ingredients. She examines the duality of cooking for women in her family: cooking as an employee or slave in earlier days versus returning home and providing for their own families.
I have never read a memoir that was formatted this way and I found it pretty intriguing. I would recommend it for food lovers and I will definitely be trying out some of the recipes.
Profile Image for Tracy Johnson.
97 reviews
February 21, 2024
I was lucky enough to win this in a Goodreads giveaway and I have to say, I really enjoyed this book! I expected a cookbook, and while there are recipes, this is more of a memoir. But it's a lovely memoir, that follows the importance of different dietary staples in an Appalachian diet. Things like the local greens, foraging, but also growing sorghum. Wilkinson talks about her grandparents raising her, Black Appalachians that lived in the mountains. She also talks a bit about her 3-times great grandparents started out enslaved but not in the same way as the enslaved on Deep South plantations. All of these women have passed down their knowledge of food and most importantly, survival, to her. It's a really well written book, the author has a way of keeping the reader engaged. Also, all of these recipes look delicious! I'm especially excited to try the recipe of green beans and new potatoes!
Profile Image for Jodi.
1,791 reviews1 follower
November 17, 2023
This is more of a heirloom book full of stories, history accented by recipes that warm your heart. The book is from the heart honoring ancestors and their stories as well as the story of the family. The book provides a small look into the past for this family and all those before of us. Done wonderfully like you are hearing the stories of the family while enjoying a meal and being provided someone's history of the past and their steps towards the future. Like you are looking through a family album with a recipe book. Inspires me to write down the recipes and the stories of my past for future generations to understand where they come from so they know where they are going..

Thank you to the author for sharing the story and recipes, Netgalley and the publisher.
Profile Image for bee.
133 reviews3 followers
January 30, 2024
I LOVED this book. As a food historian, this is the type of work I am consistently hoping to find. The way Wilkinson weaves together familial history and recipes while also providing a broader historical perspective is executed flawlessly. This book was so deeply personal, but instead of making the text unrelatable, it actually made it feel more familiar to me. I loved feeling like I was meeting the family members Wilkinson writes about, and feeling like I could walk into my kitchen and find them there, waiting to cook with me. Also, as someone who grew up in and around Appalachia, I loved getting to see some of the recipes and how they were inspired by the region. Overall, this book is an automatic buy for me, and I can't wait to try out the recipes within.
Profile Image for Alicia.
6,588 reviews137 followers
February 17, 2024
A moving tribute to Wilkinson's family history as a Black Appalachian, she creates a cookbook and tells the family story. There are plenty of pictures which enhances the story-- making it truly about the people whose hands farmed, took care of the animals, canned, and cooked. And then the recipes with their photos add the next touch. And then she layers the family story.

I wanted to be moved a little more about her incorporation of the "kitchen ghosts". She uses the term as a way to connect to her ancestors when she herself is in the kitchen or remembering specific times or food. However why she writes it and what she writes about is special, valuable, and connects food, people, time, place-- HISTORY.

It's beautiful for that reason.
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