The Economist - UK (2022-03-19)

(Antfer) #1

78 Culture The Economist March 19th 2022


Worldina dish

Makers and shapers


T


he most visually strikingthings on
display  at  “African/American:  Making
the Nation’s Table”, an exhibition at the Af­
rica  Centre  in  Harlem,  are  a  quilt  and  a
kitchen. The quilt (pictured) is made up of
406  squares,  each  depicting  an  African­
American  contribution  or  contributor  to
American  cuisine.  It  invites  study:  work­
ing out who is who, and what each cookie
or tankard represents. The test kitchen for
Ebonymagazine, rescued from demolition
in  Chicago,  is  a  paragon  of  psychedelic
chic,  with  multicoloured  whorls  covering
the walls, cabinets and even the dishwash­
er, along with pea­green countertops and a
dark orange refrigerator.
But the most revealing artefacts may be
the most prosaic: an ice­cream scoop and a
photograph of a man standing in front of a
truck.  Alfred  Cralle  invented  the  scoop
with  a  built­in  scraper,  turning  what  had
been a laborious task usually requiring two
hands and at least two implements (frozen
ice­cream is hard and slippery) into a sim­
ple one. And Frederick McKinley Jones in­
vented the first portable refrigerated unit,
allowing  perishable  food  to  be  shipped
more  widely.  These  two  objects,  now  so
commonplace  as  to  be  unremarkable,
changed how and what the world eats.
They  embody  the  exhibition’s  stated
premise. In the words of Jessica Harris, an
author,  culinary  historian  and  the  show’s
lead  curator:  “African­American  food  is
American food.” Americans, along with the
rest  of  the  world,  can  eat  strawberries  in
February  and  Cape  Cod  oysters  far  from
Massachusetts  because  of  Jones’s  inven­

tion. Ice­cream enthusiasts  everywhere
can enjoy their dessert with ease, and less
risk of covering themselves in frozen goo,
thanks to Cralle’s.
Cralle’s invention also signifies the ex­
hibition’s  tacit  idea:  that  African­Ameri­
cans  have  never  received  the  credit  they
deserve  for  their  influence  on  American
cuisine.  Cralle  patented  his  invention  but
never  profited  from  it.  Nearest  Green,  an
enslaved distiller born around 1820, is not
nearly as well known as the white man he
taught to make and filter whisky—a fellow
named Jack Daniel. In coastal Georgia and
South  Carolina  enslaved  West  Africans
turned  immense  malarial  swamps  into
productive  rice  fields  but  never  enjoyed
the  riches  that  their  labour  produced.
Thomas  Jefferson  is  renowned  as  a  gour­
met and oenophile, but his enslaved cook,
James Hemings, made the food (including
a  “macaroni  pie”)  that  won  the  Founding
Father culinary fame.
This is a valuable corrective. The feeling
visitors  are  left  with  at  the  end  is  admira­
tion at the ingenuity of the brewers, chefs,
distillers,  farmers,  restaurateurs,  writers
and  others  who  persevered  through  un­
imaginable  hardship  and  who  showed  far
more  faith  in  their  country  than  their
country  showed  in  them.  And  the  taste
they’re  left  with  is  sweet:  everyone  who
comes  gets  a  cellophane­wrapped  pair  of
benne cookies as they leave (benneis a Ban­
tu word for sesame). The dessert has roots
in Africa, but is also—initssoftness, com­
forting  delicacy  and nifty  packaging—
thoroughly American.n

N EW YORK
A new exhibition highlights African-American contributions
to the American table

Britishfiction

A smuggler’s tale


I


n 18th-century england, free trade
meanta high­stakesgambleagainstthe
lawsandforcesofthestate.Well­armed
andmerciless,gangsofsmugglerscowed,
orrecruited,seafaringcommunitiesalong
thesoutherncoasts.These“freetraders”
outwittedexcisecollectorstolandandsell
untaxedcargoesofwine,spirits,teaorlux­
uryfabricsbroughtsecretlyfromFrance
andtheLowCountries.Theirdeeds,often
sanitised,passedintofolklore,thenceinto
theswashbucklinggenreofVictorianfic­
tionthatAlexPreston’snewnovelenjoy­
ablyrevives.
Untilitsfinalacts,hisingeniousand
entertaining yarn unfolds in the 1740s
aroundWinchelseainSussex—nowa pic­
turesquevillage,thena decayedport,hon­
eycombed beneath with contraband­
friendlycaves.MrPrestonbowstohisliter­
aryancestors,suchasJ. MeadeFalknerand
Robert Louis Stevenson, but pulls the
smugglers’taleuptodate.GoodyBrown,
hisintrepidifconscience­strickenprotag­
onist, yearns for a “full and uncon­
strained”life,freeoftheshacklesofher
sex.Throughgalloping,cross­dressingad­
venturesshedoesjusticetoan“innerself”
that,gender­wise,feels“neitheronething
noranother”.
Whenherfatherismurderedbyhisfel­
low brigandsafter asuspected betrayal,
GoodyandherbrotherFrancisopttojoin
anevenmoreformidablelocalpower,the
HawkhurstGang—drawnfromhistory,as

Winchelsea. By Alex Preston. Canongate
Books; 352 pages; £14.99

Them that ask no questions isn’t told a lie
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