My America Recipes from a young black chef

Kwame Onwuachi

Book - 2022

"A cookbook celebrating the food of the African diaspora, from Nigeria and Ethiopia to the Bronx, the Caribbean, and the American South, from the James Beard Award-winning author of Notes from a Young Black Chef"--

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Subjects
Genres
Recipes
Cookbooks
Published
New York : Alfred A. Knopf 2022.
Language
English
Main Author
Kwame Onwuachi (author)
Other Authors
Joshua David Stein (author), Clay (Photographer) Williams (photographer)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
Includes index.
Physical Description
xv, 282 pages : color illustrations ; 26 cm
ISBN
9780525659600
  • Introduction
  • Pantry
  • Ginger-Garlic Purée (GGP)
  • House Spice
  • Suya Spice
  • Berbere
  • Curry Powder
  • Roasted Garlic Purée (RGP)
  • Tamarind Glaze
  • Browning
  • Jerk Powder
  • Jerk Paste
  • Jerk BBQ Sauce
  • Remoulade
  • Garlic Aioli
  • Nitter Kibbeh Oil (NKO)
  • Obe Ata Din Din (Red Stew)
  • Louisiana-Style Hot Sauce
  • Calypso Sauce
  • Peppa Sauce
  • Pique
  • Shado Beni Chutney
  • Sofrito
  • Green Seasoning
  • Recaito
  • Mojo Sauce
  • Spice Pickling Liquid
  • Chicken Stock
  • Vegetable Stock
  • Shrimp Stock
  • Louisiana
  • Rice
  • Perfectly Steamed Rice
  • Carolina Gold Rice with Roasted Garlic and Bay Leaf
  • Rice and Peas
  • Yellow Rice
  • Red Beans and Rice
  • Dirty Rice
  • Rice and Eggs
  • Jollof Rice
  • Jambalaya
  • Lowcountry Rice
  • Nigeria
  • Greens and Other Vegetables
  • Jamaican Callaloo
  • Trinidadian Callaloo
  • Collard Greens
  • Stewed Okra and Shrimp
  • Fossolia
  • Tostones
  • Sweet Plantains
  • Baigan Choka
  • Tomato Choka
  • Corn Maque Choux
  • Buttered Grits
  • Braised Cabbage and Carrots
  • Cucumber and Avocado Salad
  • Vegetarian Dulet
  • Trinidad and Tobago
  • Legumes and Tubers
  • Creole Hashbrowns
  • Red Bean Sofrito
  • Stew Peas
  • Braised White Beans
  • Channa (Chickpea Curry)
  • Moi Moi
  • Yekik Alicha
  • Fufu
  • Groundnut Stew
  • Sweet Potato Velouté with Crab Salad
  • Misir Wat
  • Seafood and Shellfish
  • Lobster Remoulade Sliders
  • Curried Crab Run Down
  • Charred Mackerel
  • Crawfish Boil
  • Crawfish Pie
  • Salmon Cakes
  • Fried Catfish
  • Shrimp Étouffée
  • Shrimp Creole
  • Shrimp and Grits
  • Mom Duke's Shrimp
  • Seafood Gumbo
  • Peel-and-Eat Shrimp
  • Salmon with Carrot Escovitch Sauce
  • Fried Snapper with Brown Stew Sauce
  • Marinated Sardines
  • Snapper Escovitch
  • Ackee and Saltfish
  • Calamari Veracruz
  • Buljol (Saltfish Salad)
  • Tuna Kitfo
  • Fisherman's Pie
  • Jamaica
  • Poultry
  • Pollo Asado
  • Chicken in Red Stew
  • Brown Stew Chicken
  • Caribbean Chicken Soup
  • Doro Wat
  • Jerk Chicken
  • Pollo Guisado
  • Curried Chicken
  • Chicken and Waffles
  • Hot Chicken Sandwich
  • Fried Chicken
  • Chicken Yassa
  • Boiled Turkey Necks
  • Meat
  • Jamaican Beef Patty
  • The Burger
  • Awaze Tibs
  • Suya
  • Tripe and Bean
  • Cracklins
  • Baby Back Ribs
  • Mac and Cheese
  • Pork Belly Geerah
  • Smothered Pork Chops
  • Lamb Sambusas with Shiro Wat
  • Lamb Shepherd's Pie
  • Braised Oxtails
  • Curried Goat
  • Egusi Stew with Goat
  • New York
  • Breads, Pastries, and Desserts
  • Coco Bread
  • Dhal Puri Roti
  • M'semen
  • Bake
  • Plantain Bread
  • Puff Puff
  • Chin Chin
  • Currants Roll
  • Golden Rum Cake
  • Zucchini Bread
  • Black Cake
  • Red Velvet Cake
  • Satsuma Chess Pie
  • Banana Pudding
  • Sweet Potato Cinnamon Rolls
  • Soursop Granita
  • Acknowledgments
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

Master chef Onwuachi grew up in the Bronx, a node of cultures and culinary traditions, and he also took advantage of opportunities to travel in both Africa and the U.S., endowing him with a deeper appreciation for America's extreme diversity of foods. Then he embarked on the rigorous discipline of culinary school and its tradition of establishment cuisine. Having mastered those techniques, Onwuachi determined to recreate the cooking of his mother and other relatives from Jamaica and Louisiana. In this sequel to his first book, Notes from a Young Black Chef (2019), Onwuachi lays out an exciting battery of recipes that he enjoys making for himself and for any others who might appreciate them, accompanied by photographs that reveal the brilliant colors of his cooking. He concocts special spice mixtures--ginger-garlic paste for Indian, creole seasoning for Louisianan, and berbere for Ethiopian--that transform, for instance, ordinary rice into signature dishes from Louisiana (jambalaya), Jamaica (peas and rice), Nigeria (jollof rice), and more. Some ingredients, such as Jamaican staples ackee and callaloo, may be easiest to find online.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Chef Onwuachi (Notes from a Young Black Chef) brings his ancestry and formal training at the Culinary Institute of America to bear on the flavors of Nigeria, Louisiana, and the Bronx in this inspiring celebration of soul food recipes. He foreshadows the fiery dishes to come with an opening section of spice blends that includes jerk powder with ground habanero, and a "peppa" sauce that calls for 50 Scotch bonnet peppers per quart. Each recipe lists its country of origin, making for intriguing comparisons. A Nigerian chicken in red stew made with a spicy tomato sauce, for instance, appears next to a Jamaican brown stew chicken sweetened with a heavily caramelized sugar sauce, while the amaranth greens in a Jamaican callaloo contrast with the taro leaves of Trinidadian callaloo that are simmered in unsweetened coconut cream. A seafood chapter focuses on the American South, with such familiar cajun and creole dishes as crawfish pie, shrimp étouffée, and seafood gumbo. Meat lovers, meanwhile, can settle back with smothered pork chops, try their hand at homemade Jamaican beef patties, or indulge in a burger inspired by the Big Mac but upgraded via a blend of brisket, short rib, and chuck, then topped with jerk bacon. One man's unique gastronomic journey proves universally appealing in this hearty collection. (May)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

James Beard Award-winning chef Onwuachi follows up his 2019 memoir Notes from a Young Black Chef with this Black diaspora cookbook featuring a wide array of recipes from North, West, and East Africa; the Caribbean; and the American South. In texts sprinkled among the recipes, Onwuachi discusses these cuisines' particular significance to him and recounts visiting the regions from which his family originated. (Onwuachi was himself raised in the Bronx, Louisiana, and Nigeria.) These sections provide context and bring Onwuachi's recipes to life. The cookbook's comprehensive pantry section discusses spice blends and sauces that appear in many of the recipes; Onwuachi's touchstones are a ginger-garlic puree (which he learned from a friend in India) and what he calls a traditional house spice. Among the recipes (spanning rice; greens and vegetables; legumes and tubers; seafood and shellfish; poultry; meat; and breads, puddings, and desserts), a handful (moi moi from Nigeria; Jamaican beef patty; lamb sambusas with shiro wat from Ethiopia; dhal puri roti from Trinidad and Tobago; m'semen from North Africa) include step-by-step photos that will help home cooks assemble the recipes with confidence. VERDICT A beautifully photographed cookbook that will entice readers.--Lacy S. Wolfe

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Suya Suya is the grandfather of American BBQ. In Nigeria, the spices draw out and fire up the meats, often cooked over an open flame. Here I do the same. But if you don't have a grill, use a well-oiled cast-iron skillet over high heat in a kitchen with open windows. The open windows are very important, unless you find the blare of a smoke alarm harmonious and enjoy fits of sneezing. I find the sweetness of the char plus the heat of the spice totally irresistible. I did when I first smelled it from beyond the walls of my grandfather's compound in Nigeria, or when we went to market when I could sneak a skewer. (Since my grandfather was an obi, or chief, there were many customs and rules around what he and his family could eat.) When I opened my second restaurant, Kith and Kin, I wanted to suya everything. The reaction from the diners, at least initially, was mixed. Many Nigerians scoffed at the idea that suya could be applied to, for instance, brussels sprouts. They were, on the whole, proud that Nigerian cuisine was being given the attention it so much deserved but arrived at the table with some strong opinions. Judging from the empty bowls that came back to the kitchen, I think I won them over. But it was always a battle. In this recipe, I stick to the traditional proteins--steak, chicken, and shrimp. In Nigeria, suya is served with sliced tomatoes and onions, which help mellow the heat. Here that role is played by a tomato-ginger soubise and a traditional onion cream sauce from France, and I keep the tomatoes and onions in the form of pickles, whose burst of acidity rounds out the flavors. For the suya Place the shrimp, steak, and chicken in three separate bowls. Season each with 1 1/2 tablespoons of suya spice and 1/2 teaspoon salt, mixing well to combine. Cover with plastic wrap and refrigerate for at least 1 hour. (You can marinate the shrimp for up to 12 hours, and the steak and chicken for up to 48 hours.) For the tomato-ginger soubise Heat the oven to 400°F. Line a sheet pan with parchment paper. Toss the tomatoes with olive oil and season with salt. Spread evenly over the sheet pan and bake for 15 minutes, until deep red and a little wrinkly. Meanwhile, heat the grapeseed oil in a medium pot over medium heat. When it shimmers, add the GGP and cook until fragrant, 2 to 3 minutes. Add the onions and cook until translucent and soft, 7 to 10 minutes. Add the roasted tomatoes, along with the cream and milk. Bring to a simmer and cook, stirring often, until reduced to about 1 cup--watch carefully, as cream has a tendency to boil over, so reduce the heat as necessary to keep it from sputtering or burning-- about 1 hour. Remove from the heat and let cool slightly, then transfer to a blender and purée until velvety smooth. Season to taste with salt and set aside. You should have 1 cup of soubise. For the pickled tomatoes and onions Bring the spice pickling liquid to a boil in a small pot. Place the onions and tomatoes in a nonreactive bowl and pour the hot liquid over them, stirring to combine well. Let cool to room temperature, about 1 hour, before serving. You should have about 3 cups of pickled tomatoes and onions. To assemble When ready to cook, prepare a grill for high heat. Let it heat for 10 minutes. Grill the shrimp, steak, and chicken, turning occasionally, until deeply browned and cooked through, about 3 minutes for shrimp and steak and 4 to 5 minutes for the chicken. In a small pot, warm the soubise over low heat. Place the grilled items on a platter, dust with extra suya spice, and sprinkle with parsley. Serve with warm soubise, pickled tomatoes and onions, lime wedges for squeezing, and Jollof Rice. Origin: Nigeria Yield: 6 to 8 servings For the suya and to assemble 1 pound large (16-20 size) shrimp, peeled and deveined 1 pound boneless ribeye steak, excess fat trimmed, sliced into 1/4-inch strips 1 pound boneless, skinless chickenthighs, sliced into 1/4-inch strips 4 1/2 tablespoons Suya Spice (page 8), divided, plus more to garnish 1 1/2 teaspoons kosher salt, divided 1/4 cup roughly chopped fresh parsley, to serve Tomato-ginger soubise (below), to serve Pickled tomatoes and onions (below), to serve Limewedges, to serve For the tomato-ginger soubise 1 Roma tomato, roughly chopped 2 teaspoons extra-virgin oliveoil Kosher salt, to taste 2 tablespoons grapeseed oil 3 tablespoons GGP 1 yellow onion, thinly sliced 1 cup heavy cream 1 cup whole milk For the pickled tomatoes and onions 1 cup Spice Pickling Liquid 1 medium red onion, large dice 1 medium ripe tomato, large dice Cooked suya shrimp will keep in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 1 day, chicken and beef suya for up to 4 days. Tomato-ginger soubise will keep in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 3 days. Pickled tomatoes and onions will keep in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 3 days. Suya Spice The first time I came across suya sellers was when I was sent to live with my grandfather, an obi, or chief, in Nigeria. From over the walls of his compound drifted intoxicating smells of spice-touched smoked meat called Suya, meat I later learned was marinated in suya spice, also called yaji spice. But due to tradition, which stated that no one from the house of an obi could eat outside the home, my grandfather forbade us from eating from these mai suya, as the vendors are called. It wasn't until later that I came to fully appreciate the magic this spice mixture, developed by the northern Hausa tribe of Nigeria, works on meat. It is the grandfather of American barbecue. Built around the native ingredients of West Africa--chili pepper, onion, and ground nuts--and layered with the char of an open flame, Nigerian suya is often made with beef or goat. But it turns everything, from duck and chicken to shrimp and even brussels sprouts, into a deeply flavorful, almost irresistible meal. Blitz the grains of paradise in a high-powered blender or spice grinder until finely powdered, then set aside in a medium bowl. Blitz Maggi cubes until finely ground, then add to the bowl with the grains of paradise. Add all the other ingredients to the bowl and whisk well to combine. Origin: Nigeria Yield: 1 pint 2 tablespoons + 1 1/2 teaspoons grains of paradise (or alligator pepper) 5 Maggi Seasoning cubes (vegetable flavor) 6 tablespoons + 1 1/2 teaspoons cayenne 1/2 cup peanut butter powder 2 tablespoons + 1 1/2 teaspoons sweet paprika 2 tablespoons + 1 1/2 teaspoons onion powder 2 tablespoons + 1 1/2 teaspoons garlic powder 2 tablespoons ground ginger Suya spice will keep in an airtight container in a cool dark place for up to 4 months. Spice Pickling Liquid Pickling is an act of food preservation and also, thankfully for us, adds an entire dimension of bright angular flavors. This pickling liquid includes a touch of spice but is largely neutral, allowing the flavors of the pickled vegetables to emerge. I like the balance between the thyme and coriander on the softer herbal side with the habanero and ginger more biting, but play around as you like. Garlic goes well, ditto allspice, cloves, and bay leaf. Here's your chance to go freeform and experiment with what aromatics you use in the pickling liquid and what you pickle. Among my favorite vegetables to pickle are onions, mushrooms, and pig's feet--which aren't a vegetable at all, of course, but are delicious. Place all the ingredients into a medium pot and bring to a boil over high heat. As soon as it comes to a boil, remove it from the heat. Let cool completely, then strain through a fine-mesh sieve and transfer to a clean jar with a tight-fitting lid. Origin: American South Yield: 3 cups 1 3/4 cups white wine vinegar 1/4 cup granulated white sugar 3 tablespoons + 1 teaspoon kosher salt 12 fresh thyme sprigs 4 teaspoons whole coriander seeds 1/2 habanero pepper, stemmed, seeded, and roughly chopped 2 thin slices ginger, about 2-3 inches long 2 cups water Spice pickling liquid will keep in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 6 months. Excerpted from My America: Recipes from a Young Black Chef: a Cookbook by Kwame Onwuachi, Joshua David Stein All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.