The Cooking Gene

Before reading the book The Cooking Gene by Michael Twitty, I already knew some dangers African Americans had from the early development of the use of slavery, laws, and segregation. With my feeling of slavery, I have feared life as a slave because as a young black male that was never experienced working on a plantation picking cotton and being watched over with wipes and guns. As time was going moving forward the idea of slavery was disappearing by-laws but still had invisible underlinings like the early time of segregation of white and color. The effects of segregation black or people with colored skin hardly had any support from the government cause a lot of anger and struggles. All this information I knew is from outside views from text and films.

But for Michael Twitty and his book, it is different for him because he was learning stories from life as a person of color in the south, and his rage as a young boy learning these facts change his views of the world. With this in his mind, he already knew his life will be more difficult to live and move forward because the fact of racism is hidden to get in his way with every turn he takes. So, he will not be blindsided when he can’t get a job because his name does not match his skin like mine. One day I was trying to get a job to save so money to get my life started as a young adult. The job I tried to apply for was a cashier or cook at a local Popeye’s Chicken with their 2-step application process I easily pass the first step was online paperwork. The second step was to come in the store for an in-person interview but failed due to my last Savare which is French, but my skin was black. The worst part was the manager was white and he even had a member of staff who was Black in the back cooking.

Week Nine

5/25/2021

AMAZING!! Today we finally finished all of the weeding. Every single bed is completely cleared of weeds! What an accomplishment, and it almost took ten weeks. I was really happy to help Alegra in the Herb garden plucking all those weeds and all the community garden folk who volunteered their time as well. I am so proud of the work we did, hopefully, it will encourage others to continue the garden management now that the hard part is over.

5/27/2021

Today we started a little slow. It was Ali’s birthday, so we all drank tea and chatted for a while on the beautiful gray and rainy day. Then Alegra and I cleaned up the rest of the piles in the herb garden and spent the rest of the time in the community gardens working with Caleb, Ashley, and Ali harvesting and cleaning lettuce, radishes, and turnips. Some students from PoF have started constructing a new arbor and trimming the hedge, which is so amazing and makes me hopeful for the future of the herb garden.

Road trip

Whenever this pandemic is over and want to do a road trip and you don’t know where to start, I would like to tell you about a great show on the food network channel is Diners Drive-Ins and Dives. This great show I love to watch with my family it takes us on a trip when we are able to trip across our nation and tells us some great spot to eat whenever visit a city or town in each state. Please check it even can make a new road trip you can explore.

Week Eight

5/18/2021

Today we weeded! The lemon balm is almost gone from the front left corner bed which will allow all the other plants much more room to breathe. We also planted mugwort!

5/20/2021

More weeding today with Steve helping hands with us today and managed to tackle 3 beds at once. We are looking right on schedule to be done by the end of the quarter.

Want to challenge yourself?

Check out the show called Chopped it can challenge yourself with food. This show is about 4 chefs who gets 4 main ingredients for each round they have to make it the star of their dish. the three rounds are Appetizer, main dish, and dessert the worst dish will be chopped in each round.

Week Seven

5/10/2021

Today I had a great honor to do a tasting sponsored by Evergreen alumni Emily Wilder with oysters and chocolate. the oyster we try was seeded on the evergreen beach. the experience was great to interact with peers and connect with food within this pandemic. I never thought that shellfish and chocolate can work well together.

5/11/2021

Marshmallow bed going to have a new neighbor soon without the unwanted guest of buttercup we pulled up so many weeds and we are now in the progress to add more herbs in the garden.

5/13/2021

To started out within the morning in the herb garden and managed to weed the whole center bed in only a couple of hours. It felt good to clear the center bed, which made the whole garden feel so much nicer. It was great to have the help of amazing students and faculty, it feels good to work as a team.

The hyssop babies in the ground now with more outside help from the garden we were able to replace the catnip in the garden and now we have to keep an eye on our new furry friend. It felt good to finally plant some things instead of just weeding too! Hopefully, that project will be carried on by PoF and maybe Sarah’s program in the fall. I would love to have some viable product to give to the SPSCC’s Brewing and Distilling program and create some connections.

Week Six

5/4/2021

It was not much but I and Alegra did clean the pathways with all the weeds we pulled up from the past few weeks. But we still squeezed a bit more weeding before we finished the day in the herb garden. I have to say we did a lot of progress.

5/6/2021

Today we got another helping hand in the herb garden and that amazing person’s name is Yola and she helps us with the lemon balm with their woody roots. Alegra and I started hitting the marshmallow bed.

Week Five

4/27/2021

Sadly, I couldn’t meet with Alegra today but with a little help from Steve I was able to identify peppermint and how they are very sturdy plants and how they are like strawberries when spreading around but instead they spread underground with a thick and sturdy woody root. Without doing too much damage to the peppermint bed if there was any other herb can be salvageable in the bed I left as it was then without doing anything today, I gave a helping hand to Caleb and the community garden.

4/29/2021

Sadly I couldn’t help with the peppermint garden today due to going home for an important family matter

Week Four: Sunshine & Spicy Pork

4/22/2021

Day Four. More we weed more it becomes apparent that what is still alive is completely swallowed up by buttercup and what needs to be replaced or need to be left out.

4/24/2021 (To learn the history of cooking through text and the way they adapted in the past.)

Spicy Pork and Potatoes

Marinated pork in Cayenne pepper, Paprika, salt, pepper, light brown sugar, minced fresh jalapeno, liquid smoke, and Worcestershire sauce. With pan-fried potatoes seasoned with cayenne pepper, salt, pepper, and fresh thyme.

Week Three: Fermentation

4/13/2021

Day two. With the Calendula bed, we are getting close to finishing weeding but the follow-up after weeding the bed needs to prep the bed within a couple of weeks and manage to get some calendula seeds. Speaking with Algrea that we are to level the ground, then leave it for a week so that what is going to germinate does, then take a torch to what is there, cover it with plastic, and when seeding calendula, do our best not to disturb too much of the soil deeper in the bed where other weeds are lying ready to take over again.

4/15/2021

Day Three. Today we finally finished weeding the calendula bed! The plan now is to move ahead with the rest of the garden weeding, as well as prep the calendula bed and reseed.

Caleb Poppe this week introduced us to Fermented Plant Juice, a nutrient-rich recipe devised by a Korean farmer, Han-Kyu Cho. The idea is that by fermenting plant matter and leeching out the sugars, lactic acids, and other nutrients into solution, we can reintroduce that which was removed from the soil. By using plants known for their early and vigorous growth, gathered from around your own field margins, we are creating a solution made by our local micro-biota, especially suited to our soils.

4/17/2021 (To learn the history of cooking through text and the way they adapted in the past.)

Today lunch chicken, asparagus, and potatoes.
left chicken is my twist, right chicken kitchen Pepper

Chicken was prepared two ways with Kitchen Pepper from The Cooking Gene

1 tsp coarsely ground pepper

1 tsp ground white pepper

1 tsp red pepper flakes

1 tsp ground mace

1 tsp ground Ceylon cinnamon

1 tsp ground nutmeg

1 tsp ground allspice

1 tsp ground ginger


But one I slightly adding me of seasonings was adding Cayenne pepper and Paprika. As adding a little more taste, the chicken was cut into cubes and marinated with seasons, Red wine vinegar, and soy sauce for about 30-45 minutes. While chicken marinating boiled red skin potatoes until soft and tossed in olive oil and seasoned with cayenne pepper, sea salt, and pepper. Spread on a baking sheet them flatted and baked at 375 for about 25 minutes

Week Two: Into the Garden

4/6/2021

Today was the first day visiting both the Community and herb garden to plan and examining the current state of both gardens. At first sight of the herb garden, we will have some work to because of overflowed with Buttercup and Dandelions but we are looking through the beds. During the walk-thru with Algrea and she has a strong feeling there is some salvable herbs, while weeding we need to carefully go around the woody perennials without disturbing too much.

4/8/2021

Day one of the great adventure of weeding. The current plan is to clear out the easier beds first and the ones with more long-standing woody perennials were easier to remove buttercup and dandelions without disturbing too much. When I was able to take a glance at the herb gardens map it was out of date with herbs that may or may not be there.