Hallelujah! The Welcome Table, Maya Angelou
Hallelujah! The Welcome Table, Maya Angelou
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Hallelujah! The Welcome Table
A Lifetime of Memories with Recipes

Author: Maya Angelou

Narrator: Maya Angelou

Unabridged: 3 hr 18 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 09/21/2004


Synopsis

Throughout Maya Angelou’s life, from her childhood in Stamps, Arkansas, to her world travels as a bestselling writer, good food has played a central role. Preparing and enjoying homemade meals provides a sense of purpose and calm, accomplishment and connection. Now in Hallelujah! The Welcome Table, Angelou shares memories pithy and poignant—and the recipes that helped to make them both indelible and irreplaceable.

Angelou tells us about the time she was expelled from school for being afraid to speak—and her mother baked a delicious maple cake to brighten her spirits. She gives us her recipe for short ribs along with a story about a job she had as a cook at a Creole restaurant (never mind that she didn’t know how to cook and had no idea what Creole food might entail). There was the time in London when she attended a wretched dinner party full of wretched people; but all wasn’t lost—she did experience her initial taste of a savory onion tart. She recounts her very first night in her new home in Sonoma, California, when she invited M. F. K. Fisher over for cassoulet, and the evening Deca Mitford roasted a chicken when she was beyond tipsy—and created Chicken Drunkard Style. And then there was the hearty brunch Angelou made for a homesick Southerner, a meal that earned her both a job offer and a prophetic compliment: “If you can write half as good as you can cook, you are going to be famous.”

Maya Angelou is renowned in her wide and generous circle of friends as a marvelous chef. Her kitchen is a social center. From fried meat pies, chicken livers, and beef Wellington to caramel cake, bread pudding, and chocolate éclairs, the one hundred-plus recipes included here are all tried and true, and come from Angelou’s heart and her home. Hallelujah! The Welcome Table is a stunning collaboration between the two things Angelou loves best: writing and cooking.

About The Author

Maya Angelou was raised in Stamps, Arkansas. In addition to her bestselling autobiographies, including I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings and The Heart of a Woman, she wrote numerous volumes of poetry, among them Phenomenal Woman, And Still I Rise, On the Pulse of Morning, and Mother. Maya Angelou died in 2014.


Reviews

A Big Surprise What a shock! This was a cookbook. I should be put in timeout for not reading the book jacket. I am not a person who reads cookbooks. I love eating and enjoy cooking once in awhile. The best part of this book is the little stories that prefaced every receipe set. In typical Maya fashio......more

Goodreads review by Betsy

A great audio book to enjoy while in your kitchen cooking. Themes: the way food connects us across cultures, oceans and economies and brings greater understanding. Appreciation of flavors that take time and patience, just as in relationships. Conversation and listening as art when invited to a table......more

Goodreads review by Ann

Sweet stories and yummy sounding recipes.......more

Goodreads review by Devin

a story of a life told through food is good. a story of maya angelou's life told through food is superb. i have never read a cookbook-non-fiction essay style format like this, but i'm in love with it now. the essays provide so much historical and racial context for the era, followed by the recipes t......more


Quotes

"With the same sweet, strong voice she uses in her award-winning poetry and best-selling books, Maya Angelou now turns to a favorite and long enduring passion--food...In HALLELUJAH! she kneads together wonderfully re-created recollections from throughout her life with the foods that made them memorable. We taste the crackling cornbread warm from her grandmother's oven, feel her pride as she roasts a turkey and makes cornbread stuffing for a group of scholars in an Italian villa and laugh when she recounts a tale of pot roast and Brillo pads." -Chicago Daily Herald