Thank you, sweet potatoes

At my Thanksgiving table, if asked what I am thankful for, I would add the sweet potato to my blessings. During Hurricane Sandy, the simple sweet potato became my survival food.  We had no heat, electric or hot water. But, surprisingly, the gas stove worked! We also had running cold water. We were very lucky.What edible item survived the blackout in my Tribeca kitchen?  Sweet potatoes!  I tried to get everything done during daylight hours. And was surprised how fast the daylight leaves us. In the beginning, I did cook a little bit using flashlights and candlelight. Eventually, we managed our way down dark stairwells and went out foraging for food and power for our phones and computers.

simple, lovely sweet potatoes

My husband and I eat sweet potatoes almost daily since we swore off all ‘white’ foods, especially white potatoes. We mostly eat them simply baked or microwaved. But we also enjoy sweet potatoes in soup, stewed with chicken, as an appetizer, main course, side dish, as pie or muffins. I cook sweet potato home fries and serve with eggs for breakfast. Sometimes I cube pieces and toss in with fried apples and serve this combo with eggs and sausage. For a lunch side-dish or snack, I oven-fry them with a quick spray of olive oil, keep skins on and season with a dash of savory spices. I know that there is a difference between yams and sweet potatoes. But I don’t think it really matters except maybe with soups and stews.

Sweet potatoes are tasty, versatile and very healthy. I am amazed by the variety of flavor, color and texture. I prefer the deep orange variety. For dinner, sometimes I will bake an extra one to use for breakfast. I believe sweet potato home fries taste better if using a baked or steamed one as opposed to a raw potato.

Whether I am mashing sweet potatoes for a casserole or slicing for candied yams, I prepare them with whatever I have on hand: apples with cider; peaches, orange zest with the  juice, pumpkin pie spices, cinnamon, nutmeg, topped with bananas or nuts. Since they are naturally sweet, you may adjust the amount of sugar and sweeteners in most recipes.  Here are some of my favorites.

Being a baker’s daughter, I must start with a pie recipe. Notice, I left out the pie crust recipe. Serious pie-people, like my Mississippi-born dad made his own pie crust. It is a high art form that I have yet to master. So, if you are still learning, I suggest that you use frozen pie crust and follow the instructions. There are excellent brands out there. You can substitute half & half milk with evaporated milk or other milks. Here you go. Easy as pie!

Sweet potato pie

Sweet Potato Pie

3 large sweet potatoes

2 large eggs

1 tsp. vanilla extract

1 tsp. cinnamon

1 tsp. nutmeg

1 c. sugar

1/2 c.  half & half milk

pie crust

Directions: Boil potatoes with skin on until tender. Remove skin and discard. Mash through a ricer. In a bowl, hand-mix eggs, milk, spices, sugar until smooth, add mashed sweet potato. Mix again until smooth. Pour mixture into pie crust. Bake at 350 degrees, about 25 minutes or until golden brown.

Fried Apples with Sweet Potatoes for Two A quick meal with only a few ingredients. Another plus to being a baker’s daughter– all the leftover pie ingredients get re-purposed for other meals. Peaches can be substituted for the apples in this recipe.

1 lg apple, sliced with skins

1/2 lg sweet potato, cooked, cubed

1 tbsp. butter

drizzle of honey or small single packet of raw sugar

1/4 tsp. cinnamon

1/8 nutmeg

Directions: Melt butter in a heavy skillet over medium heat, add apples sweet potatoes, spices. Saute five – ten minutes until apples are tender. Drizzle with honey or few sprinkles of raw sugar. Serve as a side dish with breakfast or dinner.

Quick Sweet Potato Home fries for Two

1 large sweet potato, skins removed, cubed

1 tbsp. olive oil

1 scallion or 1/4 small onion

1 slice green bell pepper

1/2 med. tomato

dash of unsalted herb seasoning

Directions: Spray sweet potato with olive oil spray, microwave for 2 minutes, cool 1 minute, cube into bite-sized pieces. The potato is partially cooked in microwave. Slice, chop onion, scallion, tomato, pepper. Saute all ingredients in skillet in olive oil until onion, pepper, tomato mixture is translucent and potatoes are fully cooked. Sprinkle with herbs,  approx. 5 minutes. Can be serve for breakfast or dinner.

 

sweet potato carrot soup

Curried Sweet Potato Carrot Soup for Two I grew up eating Caribbean food because of my mother’s heritage. This simple, quick, flavorful soup was a staple in our home and is terrific for Meatless Mondays. We sometimes substitute the carrots with an apple.

Blender

1 lg sweet potato, cooked, skin removed, cubed

2 large carrots, peeled, cooked, sliced

1 tbsp. vegetable oil (not olive!)

1 clove of garlic, chopped

1 sm. onion, sliced, chopped

1/2 red bell pepper, de-seeded, chopped

1 tbsp. curry paste, Madras or Caribbean type

1 tsp. grated ginger

4 cups vegetable or chicken stock (1 container)

garnish with red pepper, plain yogurt or sour creme, or herbs

Directions: In soup pot, saute onions, garlic, pepper in oil. Set up blender. Puree all ingredients by first pouring stock into blender, add rest of ingredients in batches. Check for smooth consistency. Add more stock if soup is too thick. Add back into soup pot and keep warm. Garnish with plain yogurt, parsley, or chives.

More Sweet Potato Recipes. Enjoy!

Navajo Code Talkers

Living legends, Navajo Code Talkers were honored guests at New York city’s 2012 Veterans Day Parade.

Navajo Codes Talkers were the stars of the Veteran’s Day in New York City! In a sea of military blue, the humble Navajo Code Talkers stood out in red at Gracie Mansion. New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg once again hosted the annual Veterans Day Breakfast on Sunday, this time with gratitude to veterans and the military for rescuing our dear city during Storm Sandy.

Navajo Code Talker with daughter at Gracie Mansion at Mayor Bloomberg’s Veterans Day Breakfast 2012.

The event featured other luminaries including US Secretary of Defense Ashton B. Carter and wife Stephanie and three mayors—Ed Koch, this year’s parade grand marshal, David Dinkins and Bloomberg. Many Gold Star Wives—widows who lost spouses who died while on active duty, were among special honored guests.

The Navajo Code Talkers were young Navajo men who transmitted secret communications on the battlefields of WW ll. “At a time when America’s best known cryptographers were falling short, these modest sheepherders and farmers were able to fashion the most ingenious and successful codes in military history. They drew upon their proud warrior tradition to brave the dense jungles of Guadalcanal and the exposed beachheads of Iwo Jima,” according to their website.

Christine Quinn, candidate for NYC mayor, posed with Navajo Code Talkers at Mayor Bloomberg’s Veterans Day Breakfast at Gracie Mansion, 2012.

The Navajo Code Talkers’ trip from Flagstaff, Arizona to NYC’s Veterans Day 2012 ceremonies was made possible by the War Museum. The living legends attended a full weekend of appearances including the Marines Corps Ball and the breakfast with Mayor Bloomberg, They were also featured on a parade float and honored at other local ceremonies.

Although the holiday was officially marked on Monday, November 12, 2012, a full weekend of ceremonies were held throughout New York City and outer boroughs, despite the region’s struggle with recovery from tragic Hurricane Sandy.

Rep. Charles Rangel, former mayors David Dinkins and Ed Koch ride together at 2012 NYC Veterans Day Parade. Mayor Koch was Grand Marshal.

Where Theater Intersects Art

Door poster at pop-up gallery-Art-in-FLUX/Harlem

We normally connect art with music, especially jazz, in Harlem galleries. But new show Art Speaks! featured in a pop-up gallery, pairs visual art with theater.

President Obama Wet Paint by artist Andre Woolery: “the wet paint that Obama has painted will not dry for many years as it is still soaking into the canvas of American’s mind.”

Blacken the Bubble, a theatrical “affirmative action comedy” examines post-racial America. The play follows a Black guy who refuses to “blacken the bubble” on his employment application at a firm that hired him to fix their bad diversity numbers. Presented by Art-in-FLUX Harlem, New York’s hottest movement for pop-up art galleries, the play’s cast and participating artists will be featured in a community talk-back event Art and Identity: Obligation or Choice, Saturday, October 13, 3-5pm, 118th Street, & 7th Avenue (Adam Clayton Powell Blvd.)

“We are thrilled to create positive use of vacant retail spaces that stimulate Harlem’s vibrant emerging artist like Leonardo Benzant,” said Stella, Art-in-Flux/Harlem founder.

The most recent theatrical production that featured art, that I can remember, was Stick Fly. However, the African-American masterpieces on the walls in Stick Fly were not in dialogue with the players. The art work served a purpose for setting a certain bourgeois tone.

In Art Speaks! however, there is a deliberate dialogue between the art and the theater piece. You might say that each art work is talking to the play and visa versa.

Inspired by playwright Eric Lockley’s farce about race, class, gender and sexuality, each artist featured in this show tells their own mixed-media narrative about identity. The gallery artists all live or work in Harlem. All the art on display is for sale and a portion is donated to Harlem children’s programs. A mounted video screen shows excerpts from the theatrical production.

“The community response since the show opened last week has been wonderful. We believe that most were thrilled by the amazing ways theater and art can intersect and by the diverse artists assembled by our curator Daniel Pizarro,”’ said Leanne Stella, Art in Flux/Harlem founder/director. “We are thrilled to create positive use of vacant retail spaces that stimulate Harlem’s vibrant emerging art scene, commerce and community.”

Idou Ndoye poses in front of his series called “Facial Scarifications.” His art work is ‘speaking’ to the theater production “Blacken the Bubble” on the topic of ‘identity.’

Senegalese artist Idou Ndoye’s Facial Scarifications deals with African scarifications meant to decorate, beautify or convey complex messages. Such marking can also identify one’s specific tribe, ethnic group or societal rank, he explained.

Dominican artist Leonardo Benzant described his Kalunga Inbetween World Series – Sunset, Twilight and Tierraan allusion to the Middle Passage with its straight line/rod bound by colorful beads and fabric. Each of his mixed-media pieces reflected a quiet and rhythmic Afro-centric sensibility.

“Action:1964” by Jill Knox speaks to the play on ‘identity’ as it relates to “racial struggles and how it’s a fight to count and a fight to be counted.”

The other notable art work on display included: Margaret Rose Vendryes’ African Diva Project; Jill Knox ‘s Black at Heart and Action: 1964; Ivan Forde’s De I section, improvisational spatial collages; Beatrice Lebreton’s Still I Rise, inspired by Maya Angelou’s poem; and Andre Woolery’s President Obama Wet Paint.  The exhibit will be on display through October 21. Blacken the Bubble will be presented October 16-21 at the Harlem School of the Arts (HSA) Theater.

Sowei RuPaul is part of Vendryes’ “African Diva Project,” each one wearing a mask.

Slavery book launch

A new slavery book is set to launch in New York. And I was thrilled to be asked to help. Gather at the Table: The Healing Journey of a Daughter of Slavery and a Son of the Slave Trade (Beacon Press) was written by dear colleagues Sharon Morgan and Tom DeWolf. The book chronicles a shared journey toward race reconciliation. The authors are traveling on a year-long national book tour that began at Eastern Mennonite University, birthplace of www.Comingtothetable.org (CTTT).

Gather at the Table will have a NYC launch event, Saturday, October 20, 3pm at the Quaker Meeting House.

Their tour initiates and promotes conversations about race, slavery, social justice, and healing from the generational trauma of slavery at business, educational, religious and a variety of community venues.

As co-leader of CTTT-NYC with Julie Finch, I was thrilled to partner with the local Quakers to host Morgan and DeWolf at 3PM, Saturday, October 20, 2012 at the Quaker Meeting House, 15 Rutherford Place, New York City.

The authors will share excerpts from their book, introduce a model of healing and engage the audience in storytelling exercises. The event is free to the public and media is invited to cover.

In Gather at the Table, DeWolf and Morgan speak candidly about racism and the unhealed wounds of slavery. “The legacy of slavery,” they write, “is a combination of historical, cultural, and structural trauma that continues to touch everyone in American society today.”

“Schools, neighborhoods and churches are as segregated as ever; health disparities between black and white people remain significant and African Americans are overrepresented in prisons and underrepresented in colleges. Racism is more subtle now that in the past, but it still exists. Healing will happen and change will occur, when people start listening to one another and looking truthfully at their ancestral experiences.”

The importance of the book’s message, given the present climate of political and social discord, could not be more timely.

Endorsements: Nobel Peace Laureate, 2011, Leymah Gbowee hails Gather at the Table as “an honest exploration into the deep social wounds left by racism, violence and injustice.” John Paul Lederach, Professor of International Peacebuilding at Notre Dame calls it, “An extraordinary story of an honest, meaningful conversation across the racial divide.”

About the Authors: Thomas Norman DeWolf, author of Inheriting the Trade, is featured in the Emmy-nominated documentary
film Traces of the Trade, which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival and on the acclaimed PBS series POV. DeWolf speaks regularly about healing from the legacy of slavery and racism at conferences and colleges throughout the United States.
Sharon Morgan is a marketing communications consultant and a nationally recognized pioneer in multicultural marketing. An avid genealogist, she is the webmaster for OurBlackAncestry.com, a founder of the National Black Public Relations Society and a consultant to the Afro-American Historical and Genealogical Society.

For more information about the book: http:// www.gatheratthetable.net. Send a message if you would like to book the authors as speakers at a New York City area venue.

Slavery Book Launch

We are pleased to manage the NYC book launch of Gather at the Table: The Healing Journey of a Daughter of Slavery and a Son of the Slave Trade. The book, by my dear colleagues Sharon Morgan and Tom DeWolf,  chronicles a shared journey toward race reconciliation.

Gather at the Table will have a NYC launch event, Saturday, October 20, 3pm at the Quaker Meeting House.

Gather at the Table: The Healing Journey of a Daughter of Slavery and a Son of the Slave Trade, the new book from Beacon Press, chronicles the shared journey toward racial reconciliation by authors Thomas Norman DeWolf and Sharon Leslie Morgan. Their national tour promotes conversations about race, social justice, and healing from the generational trauma of slavery at colleges, universities and other venues.

The Northeast Chapter of Coming to the Table (http://comingtothetable.org) and Narrative Network, ( https://www.narrativenetwork.net), will host Morgan and DeWolf at 3PM, Saturday, October 20, 2012 at the Quaker Meeting House, 15 Rutherford Place, New York City.

They will share excerpts from their book, introduce a model of healing and engage the audience in storytelling exercises. The event is free to the public and media is invited to cover.

In Gather at the Table, DeWolf and Morgan speak candidly about racism and the unhealed wounds of slavery. “The legacy of slavery,” they write, “is a combination of historical, cultural, and structural trauma that continues to touch everyone in American society today.”

“Schools, neighborhoods and churches are as segregated as ever; health disparities between black and white people remain significant and African Americans are overrepresented in prisons and underrepresented in colleges. Racism is more subtle now that in the past, but it still exists. Healing will happen and change will occur, when people start listening to one another and looking truthfully at their ancestral experiences.”

The importance of the book’s message, given the present climate of political and social discord, could not be more timely.

Nobel Peace Laureate, 2011, Leymah Gbowee hails Gather at the Table as “an honest exploration into the deep social wounds left by racism, violence and injustice.” John Paul Lederach, Professor of International Peacebuilding at Notre Dame calls it, “An extraordinary story of an honest, meaningful conversation across the racial divide.”

For more information about the book, a media kit and a complete list of scheduled appearances: http:// www.gatheratthetable.net

About the Authors:

Thomas Norman DeWolf, author of Inheriting the Trade, is featured in the Emmy-nominated documentary
film Traces of the Trade, which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival and on the acclaimed PBS series POV. DeWolf speaks regularly about healing from the legacy of slavery and racism at conferences and colleges throughout the United States.
Sharon Morgan is a marketing communications consultant and a nationally recognized pioneer in multicultural marketing. An avid genealogist, she is the webmaster for OurBlackAncestry.com, a founder of the National Black Public Relations Society and a consultant to the Afro-American Historical and Genealogical Society.