Friday, 1 May 2026

Think of Adam and Eve like an imaginary number

The Cassington Scholar is traditionally given to  a free thinker. It's his function to challenge the faith of the Scholars. Naturally he'd say that. But think of Adam and Eve like an imaginary number, like the square root of minus one: you can never see any concrete proof it exists , but if you include it in your equations, you can calculate all manner of things that couldn't be imagined without it.

P. Pullman, Northern Lights (1995), 372-3

Wednesday, 25 March 2026

Each man must choose between corn and vengeance

Those fields were the special joy of Mark Ukacierra. They bore witness to the power of the Kanun. Whole clans allowed their fields to go uncultivated and themselves to suffer hunger so that the blood might be redeemed, and contrarily there were families who did just the opposite, putting off the redemption of blood from season to season and from year to year, to gather enough corn to be able to cloister themselves for a long time. You a free to choose between keeping your dignity as a man and losing it, the Kanun said. Each man must choose between corn and vengeance. Some, to their shame, chose corn, others, on the contrary, vengeance.

I. Kadare, Broken April (1982), 147

Tuesday, 24 March 2026

If cotton was the king of the antebellum South, rice was her queen

If cotton was the king of the antebellum South, rice was her queen for the three centuries of her engagement with slavery. With the revamp of Carolina Golden rice and other heirloom varieties and hybrids thereof, the narrative of rice in the South has been centred in the rebirth of one of its most important cash crops as a boutique ingredient.

M.W. Twitty, The cooking gene (2017), 241

Monday, 23 March 2026

You don't just make a gumbo, you build one

Now you can get everything you want, but back them a gumbo meant something - it told you what time it was.

You don't just make a gumbo, you build one. I don't just throw everything in the pot at once after the roux - it's the stock I make and the order I put the crab or shrimp or chicken in. You know a good gumbo because it has layers. You can taste each level the chef has put into it. The rice is important too; each grain has to be separate.

Chef Henderson in Mobile, quoted in M.W. Twitty, The cooking gene (2017), 196

Sunday, 22 March 2026

With African American genealogy, it's more about social justice, regaining a heritage denied

This is not a hobby. Look, for many white Americans, genealogy is a hobby, it gets them out of the house, gives them something to enjoy researching. With African American genealogy, it's more about social justice, regaining a heritage denied. Every African American living today is stolen African history embodied.

M.W. Twitty, The cooking gene (2017), 85

Saturday, 21 March 2026

It was a labor camp system for exiled prisoners of war and victims of kidnapping

The American plantation wasn't the quaint village community that you saw depicted in your history textbook. It was a labor camp system for exiled prisoners of war and victims of kidnapping.

M.W. Twitty, The cooking gene (2017), 5

He follows this up with a hammer of a metaphor about his grandmother who left Alabama at the earliest opportunity she could: 'Once she left Alabama, she never went back to Alabama. The heart of Dixie was her Poland' (Ibid. 56) 

Wednesday, 11 March 2026

Fruit that is bred primarily for sweetness at the expense of complexity of flavour

Gala is the apple that always seemed to me to encapsulate the unfortunate shift in recent decades towards fruit that is bred primarily for sweetness at the expense of complexity of flavour. Of course it is an apple that is extremely successful due to its attractive appearance and colour, and as it is grown all over the world in both hemispheres it can be in the supermarkets all year round. So it has become the dominant variety.

R. Blanc, The lost orchard (2019), loc 1,530