logo
Not just rice and peas: lifting the lid on the radical roots of Caribbean cuisine

Not just rice and peas: lifting the lid on the radical roots of Caribbean cuisine

The Guardian5 days ago

Hello and welcome to The Long Wave. This week, I dived into Caribe, a remarkable Caribbean cookbook that is simultaneously history, memoir and visual masterpiece. I spoke to the author, Keshia Sakarah, about how she came to write such a special book.
Caribe is not only a recipe book of Caribbean dishes, it is also a homage to family as well as an account of history and migration. That history is both short and long: it charts Sakarah's Caribbean community in her home city of Leicester, England, and of each individual country in which the recipes originated. And there is another layer of history: that of the dishes and ingredients – how they came about and how far they travelled on the tides of colonialism and immigration.
This was the most edifying part for me, as it revealed the expanse of cuisine around the world and its commonalities. For instance, I had no idea that kibbeh, a meatball rolled in bulgur – that I only understood as a niche Levantine dish – exists in the Dominican Republic as kipes or quipes. It was brought to the Caribbean by immigrants from the Middle East in the late 19th century. Who knew? Sakarah did. She discovered that fact during a multiyear research odyssey across the islands.
Sakarah's love for cooking, and the culture behind it, comes from early exposure. She is an only child of Barbudan and Montserratian descent and spent much of her childhood with her retired grandparents, who were 'enjoying life, cooking and eating. I would go to the allotment and the market with them. That planted that seed.' The result was a fascination with Caribbean food that flourished in adulthood, when Sakarah decided to be a chef and an archiver of Caribbean cuisine. On her travels, she found her passion mirrored by those she engaged with. 'I would just have conversations with people about food,' she says. 'People wanted to tell stories and were excited that I was interested.' The process of on-the-ground research was 'covert and natural' because locals sensed her curiosity wasn't 'extractive'.
Crops, colonisers and resistance
'The linking of the history was quite surprising to a lot of people,' Sakarah says, 'because they had never considered it. Especially in our community, we have no idea why we eat what we eat.' In one particularly enlightening section of the book, Sakarah details how sweet potatoes, cassavas and maize were unfamiliar to Spanish colonisers in the Dominican Republic in the late 1400s.
When they established their first settlement, these colonisers relied on the farming capabilities of the Indigenous Taíno people, who were skilled in crop generation. In an act of resistance, the Taíno refused to plant the crops, leading to the starvation of the Spanish. However, they returned in subsequent settlements better prepared. The Spanish brought crops and livestock familiar to them in a mass movement of species known as the Columbian exchange, which Sakarah says 'changed the face of flora and fauna across the globe'. Caribe is full of such eye-opening vignettes on how the region's food carries a historical legacy.
Two things struck me as I read the book: I had never seen a single written recipe growing up, and I had not a single idea about where the food I grew up eating came from. Even the recipes handed down to me are not quantifiable by measurements – they are a pinch of this and a dash of that. Everything is assimilated but never recorded. Sakarah wanted to make that record because 'when an elder passes, they go with all their knowledge, so it's important to archive things for the purposes of preservation'.
She wanted the work to feel like an intimate passing on of information, using language, imagery and references that were not that of the outsider looking in. The pictures that accompany the recipes were almost painfully resonant, ones of Black hands casually drawn in a pinching action after scooping up a morsel. One recipe for dal shows an implement that I had only ever seen in Sudan, a wooden rod with a bifurcated bottom, spun in the pot to loosen the grain.
Sign up to The Long Wave
Nesrine Malik and Jason Okundaye deliver your weekly dose of Black life and culture from around the world
after newsletter promotion
A culinary reminder of home
I say to Sakarah that the longer I am removed from home, the more food plays a complex rooting role in my life, where I hold on to random meals or ingredients from childhood: fava beans, okra, salty goat's cheese. Food plays a similar role for her, in ways that she didn't even realise. Because she grew up with her first-generation grandparents, Sakarah says she feels more Caribbean than British, which shows up in very confusing ways. Researching the book has enabled her 'to come to terms with that, because I see the layers in it, and also the beauty of the diaspora'.
One of the main motivations of this book, which represents the various islands in separate chapters, was to show the shared yet diverse expanse of Caribbean food that is often wrongly collapsed as only 'Jamaican'. Nor was Sakarah interested in presenting regional dishes as a victim of imperialism, but rather a product of overlapping histories. By doing so, she removed shame and did not attempt to assert identity through cuisine. Sakarah has pulled off a remarkable feat – the book is quietly radical in its presentation of food as something that is not political, but a product of politics. It is simply what everyone eats. 'Food isn't always celebratory and fun and joyful,' she says. Nor is it always an act of cultural resistance: 'It just is.'
Caribe by Keshia Sakarah is published by Penguin Books. To support the Guardian, order your copy at guardianbookshop.com. Delivery charges may apply.
To receive the complete version of The Long Wave in your inbox every Wednesday, please subscribe here.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

‘When I read my sister's stories I think, that's not what it was like!': Esther Freud on the perils of writing about family
‘When I read my sister's stories I think, that's not what it was like!': Esther Freud on the perils of writing about family

The Guardian

time17 hours ago

  • The Guardian

‘When I read my sister's stories I think, that's not what it was like!': Esther Freud on the perils of writing about family

I'm four and I'm pretending to be dead. I've been lying here behind the sofa, and I'm hoping I'll be missed, but more than that I'm hoping it will make a story. The story of the games I like to play, and how I profess to remember my past lives. It is 1967, a few months before we set off for Morocco – my mother, my sister Bella and I – travelling overland by van, taking the ferry from Algeciras to Tangier, breaking down on the road to Marrakech. From then on everything becomes a story. The camel festival we visit, the path into the hills so steep that Bella and I are packed into saddlebags while the donkeys' hooves skitter and slip. I can't remember later whether it is a camel that is sacrificed when we reach the top, or a chicken. But either way I keep the description of the chicken to myself, running in circles, blood spouting from its headless neck. For all the decades since, I've been the family chronicler, as much in my novels as in our lives. I've kept the few possessions from those years in Morocco. The kaftans we bought in the souk when we arrived, the corduroy patch that I unpicked from a pair of too small trousers, embroidered with a flower by a boyfriend of my mother. 'Are you my Daddy?' I'd asked him, as I'd asked others, not because I thought he was, but because I'd read about another little girl asking the same question in a book. I can still see the look of consternation on the boyfriends' faces, hear my mother's embarrassed laugh. I had a treasure box in which I kept a choker, coins with Arabic stars, lengths of braid, and when, aged six, we returned to England and I started school, I saw the minutes set aside each day for 'news' as an opportunity to expound. To tell my classmates how I saw a mirage in the desert, found amethyst in a seam of rock as we hitchhiked through the Atlas mountains, became lost on the beach at Agadir, until I was nicknamed 'In Morocco …' and I learned to stay quiet. But the stories remained, coalescing, condensing, until in my mid-20s, on a break from the acting career I'd chosen for myself, I began to write them down. At first they were nothing more than anecdotes, but slowly, painstakingly, I forced myself inside them until I found the voice of the child I'd been, the scent of the alleyways, the heat of the baked earth, the fear and exhilaration, the freedom of our lives. 'Hideous kinky,' my sister and I would murmur to each other when events became too strange or too confusing, and so, when it was finished, Hideous Kinky was what I named my first novel. As an actor I'd immersed myself in Stanislavsky, consoling myself that spells of heartbreak could be repurposed 'for my art'. As a writer, I found that everything and anything was useful, and as I mined my life, digging deeper, unearthing half-forgotten truths, I wondered about the splinter of ice that Graham Greene so famously alluded to, and whether it really does lurk in every writer's heart. Is having a writer in the family the death of the family? I wrote my first novel in innocent naivety. The second was finished in a burst of exhilaration before the first was published, but for my third – nerves shattered, my mother reeling (who wants their five-year-old to remember every experiment in parenting and write it down?) – I turned to history. Berlin during the first world war had never been my subject, but I had the seeds of a story about my German Jewish grandmother gleaned from my father, Lucian Freud, during long hours of sitting for a painting, and much as I struggled, pre-internet, with the research, at least (if I ever managed to finish it) there was no one left alive to be furious or upset. Four exhausting years later I published Summer at Gaglow, and almost immediately, as a reward, I plunged back into my own life, to rake over the experience of living in a step-family, as I myself had done from the age of eight to 14. That's when I discovered I'd become a different writer. I'd gained the confidence to invent, when often it had seemed no invention was needed – what, in actuality, could be more surprising than the truth? I had taught myself the art of camouflage, and by doing so had created a level of protection for everyone involved. In the books that followed I was free. That's not to say I didn't sometimes agonise, but I'd learned to pick and choose, research, obscure, allow my characters to spread their wings and fly. So it is with trepidation that I have returned to the central relationships at the heart of my first novel. My Sister and Other Lovers draws on the themes that shaped my writing – family, loyalty, division – the completion of which has coincided with the new storytelling career of my fashion designer sister, Bella, who has been publishing a weekly column on Instagram, Sunday Stories. How strange, over this last year, to read my sister's interpretation of events. Free from the wiles of fiction, her voice rings out, clear and clean, and I am tempted to respond, as she must have been doing for years: 'That's not what it was like!' The Polish poet Czesław Miłosz is quoted as saying: 'When a writer is born into a family, that family is finished.' So what happens when there are two writers in the family – I won't even mention here my literary half-siblings – and is it fact, or fiction, that comes closer to the truth? Screenwriter and memoirist Nora Ephron once declared that all writers are cannibals, and her own mother, a writer herself, is known to have insisted that 'everything is copy' – something Ephron proved with Heartburn, a blisteringly funny and painful account of the breakdown of her marriage. But even she must have wrangled with the dilemma: What exactly is allowed? What remains off limits? There's no doubt I've been eyed by friends who've read my stories. 'Gosh,' they've gulped. 'You do have a good memory.' Then, of course, there are those friends with whom I've lost touch. Sign up to Bookmarks Discover new books and learn more about your favourite authors with our expert reviews, interviews and news stories. Literary delights delivered direct to you after newsletter promotion For the last 15 years I've been running a creative writing group, and the experience has taught me that what makes it difficult for people to commit to the novels they long to write is the burning question: What will my mother say? It doesn't matter whether this mother is alive or dead. Secrets, and the shame of them, have a way of stopping people in their tracks. However hard I encourage them to write – to edit, abandon, disguise the work later – fear acts like a bindweed. No wonder writers need that splinter of glass. Julian Barnes has said that while working on his first novel he had to pretend his entire family was dead. But what has surprised me more is the mistrust of anything considered to be true. If a piece of work is semi-autobiographical my students often tend to give it less value. That's brilliant, I might respond, only to be met with a dismissive shrug: it's virtually all true. This is a phrase I've been tempted to ban from the class. What matters, I try to impress upon them, is that the story is alive. And which story, once repeated, is ever actually all true? Is this because for years so many novels by women were branded as 'domestic', categorised as aga sagas, chick lit, while the angry young men of the 1950s and60s created kitchen sink drama unimpeded? More recently there's been a wave of Autofiction which has risen above this prejudice, by Maggie Nelson, Annie Ernaux, and the 'living autobiographies' of Deborah Levy. Which brings me back to my sister's Sunday Stories and whether it is fact or fiction that gets closer to the truth. Could I have told my own stories as memoir? Would I have had the courage? For me fiction is the frame I need to tell the stories I've been turning over all my life, the writing of which has freed and saved me. As I dig I can feel the splinter of glass pressing so hard it threatens to draw blood, but even as I worry for those I love, who inadvertently I may have hurt, I tell myself: it's fiction. And I remind myself of my father's liberating words after reading an early novel in which a character (just possibly) based on him appears. 'For a moment I did think it was me, then I realised: I don't wear a watch.'

Tammy Hembrow shows Matt Zukowski what he's missing as she flaunts her incredible figure on holiday with her kids in New Zealand after split
Tammy Hembrow shows Matt Zukowski what he's missing as she flaunts her incredible figure on holiday with her kids in New Zealand after split

Daily Mail​

time20 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Tammy Hembrow shows Matt Zukowski what he's missing as she flaunts her incredible figure on holiday with her kids in New Zealand after split

Tammy Hembrow is showing Matt Zukowski what he's missing after their headline-making split. The fitness influencer, 31, took to Instagram on Sunday to share a clip of herself scantily clad as she enjoyed a relaxing vacation in New Zealand with her three kids Wolf, nine, daughter Saskia, seven, and toddler Posy, three. In the video, Tammy bared all as she donned a skimpy purple and yellow striped bikini while posing for a mirror selfie in the bathroom. The busty blonde narrowly avoided a wardrobe malfunction as she poured out of her bra-shaped top, revealing her toned abs and arms as she worked her angles. She wore her hair slicked back in a messy bun for the Instagram story, accessorising with a simple pair of gold hoop earrings and showing off her signature tattoos. From A-list scandals and red carpet mishaps to exclusive pictures and viral moments, subscribe to the DailyMail's new showbiz newsletter to stay in the loop. The fitness influencer took to Instagram on Sunday to share a clip of herself scantily clad as she enjoyed a relaxing vacation in New Zealand with her three kids Tammy has been actively documenting her trip to New Zealand after news broke of her split from husband Matt. The pair are headed for divorce after just seven months of marriage, and the social media star jetted off to the South Island to rest and recuperate in the wake of the announcement. Despite her heartache, Tammy has very much been in doting mother mode as she enjoys the idyllic getaway with her children. On Saturday, she posted a series of images and clips showing her and her three children living it up in Queenstown. The family foursome were getting into the festive spirit early, celebrating a whimsical Christmas in July. Tammy, rugged up in a fleecy jumper, with her midriff exposed, posed happily with her brood in front of a wintry scene dotted with festive candy canes and large, illuminated Christmas presents. Another photo showed the influencer posing in front of the same scene, hugging her three children tight. There was also time for some sweet shopping too, with another shot showing her youngsters staring in wonderment through a local Queenstown candy shop window. It wouldn't be a winter escape without some skiing, and Tammy also shared a short clip of her flaunting her style on the slopes. 'Christmas in July because who doesn't love a lil winter Christmas magic?' Tammy captioned the sweet snaps. 'When I tell you my soul NEEDED thissss. Forever my favourite holiday. 'A reminder of warmth, family, the magic of slowing down & the joy that lives in the littlest moments. The cosiest first night in NZ w my babies!!' Tammy announced her shock split from Matt a week ago in an emotional video. The Love Island Australia star also revealed the couple's separation in a sombre Instagram Story, telling fans the decision was not taken lightly. 'It's with a heavy heart I share that Tammy and I have decided to separate,' Matt began. 'Both of us have struggled with making this decision; however we need to do what is right for ourselves and her three children. 'This wasn't a decision we took lightly. Our time together will always be cherished and never forgotten,' he added, before thanking fans for their support. Despite their short-lived marriage, both parties have asked for privacy as they adjust to life post-breakup.

Plumber to sail round world to mark 60th birthday
Plumber to sail round world to mark 60th birthday

BBC News

timea day ago

  • BBC News

Plumber to sail round world to mark 60th birthday

Bob Brown had long held a desire to take part in what is described as the world's toughest endurance it was not until deciding how to mark his 60th birthday in March that he decided to take the plunge and join Brown, from Leicester, had initially planned a trip to Australia to watch the British and Irish Lions rugby tour but said he could not justify the cost on a "lads' trip away".Instead, the plumber has signed up to be a crew member in the Clipper Round the World Yacht Race, a 40,000 nautical miles (74,080km) challenge which starts in Portsmouth at the end of August. The 10 participating crews in the race will make six ocean crossings and call into 14 ports across the globe as part of the 11-month Brown, who is originally from Northern Ireland, said he had planned to watch the Lions after going on tour 20 years added: "I looked at the cost and I suppose if you chuck everything in, it would be about £20,000, and I thought 'can I justify spending £20,000 on what was a rugby tour? A lads' trip away'. "I've followed the Clipper Round the World Yacht Race from afar for quite a long time and my inbox was getting bombarded with information from Clipper and I thought 'that would be something to tell the grandkids about'." The race, crewed mainly by non-professional sailors, was founded 30 years ago by Sir Robin complete four weeks of training ahead of the race, in which each paying crew will be accompanied by a fully-qualified skipper and first being selected, Mr Brown, who considered himself a novice sailor before joining up, said he thought he had "one chance" to take part in the challenge. He added: "It has always been an itch, an adventure I wanted to do. And now things have aligned with family and work. "I am of a certain age where I may not be able to do it in a few years, so now was the ideal opportunity."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store