Princess Pamela's Soul Food Cookbook: A Mouth-Watering Treasury of Afro-American Recipes /// Pamela Strobel with an introduction by Matt Lee and Ted Lee

Princess Pamela's Soul Food Cookbook: A Mouth-Watering Treasury of Afro-American Recipes /// Pamela Strobel with an introduction by Matt Lee and Ted Lee

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A new edition gives due to this long-lost classic that helped define soul food.

Princess Pamela ruled a small realm, but her powers ranged far and wide. Her speakeasy-style restaurant in Manhattan was for three decades a hip salon, with regulars from Andy Warhol to Diana Ross. Her iconic Southern dishes influenced chefs nationwide, and her cookbook became a bible for a generation who yearned for the home cooking left behind in the Great Migration. One of the earliest books to coin soul food, this touchstone of African-American cuisine fell out of print more than forty years ago.

Pamela's recipes have the clarity gained from a lifetime of practice--cardinal versions of Fried Chicken and Collard Greens, but also unusual gems like Pork Spoon Bread and Peanut Butter Biscuits--all peppered with sage advice on living and loving. Her book stands out for its joie de vivre and pathos as well as the skill of its techniques and is now available for cooks everywhere to re-create these soul-satisfying dishes at home.

BIOS

Pamela Strobel was born in Spartanburg, South Carolina, and then came to New York to pursue her love of jazz. In 1965, Strobel opened her restaurant in the East Village, serving the soul food of her childhood while singing for guests alongside a band.

Matt Lee and Ted Lee have written three cookbooks, inclu ding The Lee Bros. Charleston Kitchen. They contribute to Bon Appétit, the New York TimesFine Cooking, and Food & Wine.

REVIEWS

"As the culinary world reaches back to our past to understand where it's going, Princess's simple and authentically soulful recipes are more relevant than ever. Her quotes throughout the cookbook are so timeless--it's as if she's whispering pearls of wisdom directly into your ear."  --Carla Hall, co-host of ABC's The Chew, chef of Carla Hall's Southern Kitchen

"'Princess,' the late Pamela Strobel, rose up from her fertile South Carolina beginnings to become a woman of great passion, dreaming beyond the confines of her southern accent. Armed with awesome homespun recipes, imagination, sass, and the ability to attract and entertain people from all walks of life, she found herself in New York City on the Lower East Side serving up her own culinary revolution. Pamela was an experience--a raging phenomenon who had the ability to have her way with you, and then be done with you so satisfyingly you begged for more.--Alexander Smalls, restaurateur and chef, The Cecil and Minton's

"If you lived in New York on big dreams and no money, Princess Pamela's was where you wanted to eat. Quirky and clubby (the Princess didn't let everybody in), her Little Kitchen served cheap cuts--tripe, chitlins', pig tails--and made them taste like food for angels. You felt lucky to be there." --Ruth Reichl, author of My Kitchen Year

Rizzoli International Publications  /   October 12, 2021

1.3" H x 9.0" L x 6.1" W (1.81 lbs) 240 pages