15 Cookbooks by Black Authors We Can’t Live (or Eat) Without

By Ghuman

Introduction

Cooking is an art form that has been passed down through generations, and Black authors have been at the forefront of the culinary world for centuries. From soul food to vegan dishes, Black authors have been creating delicious recipes that have been enjoyed by people all over the world. In this article, we will be highlighting 15 cookbooks by Black authors that we can’t live (or eat) without. These cookbooks are filled with amazing recipes that are sure to tantalize your taste buds and inspire you to create your own delicious dishes. So, let’s get cooking!

15 Cookbooks by Black Authors We Can’t Live (or Eat) Without

Black authors have been writing cookbooks for centuries, and their work has been essential in preserving the culture and history of African-American cuisine. From soul food to vegan dishes, these 15 cookbooks by Black authors are must-haves for any kitchen.

1. The Jemima Code: Two Centuries of African American Cookbooks by Toni Tipton-Martin

This comprehensive book is a must-read for anyone interested in African-American cuisine. Tipton-Martin examines the history of African-American cookbooks and their influence on the development of American cuisine. She also provides recipes from some of the most influential cookbooks of the past two centuries.

2. The New Soul Food Cookbook for People with Diabetes by Fabiola Demps Gaines and Roniece Weaver

This cookbook is a great resource for anyone looking to make healthier versions of their favorite soul food dishes. Gaines and Weaver provide over 150 recipes for dishes like fried chicken, macaroni and cheese, and collard greens, all with nutritional information and diabetes-friendly modifications.

3. The Vegan Soul Kitchen by Bryant Terry

This cookbook is a great resource for vegans looking to explore the flavors of African-American cuisine. Terry provides over 150 vegan recipes for dishes like gumbo, collard greens, and sweet potato pie. He also includes tips on how to make vegan versions of classic soul food dishes.

4. The Southern Vegetarian Cookbook by Justin Fox Burks and Amy Lawrence

This cookbook is a great resource for vegetarians looking to explore the flavors of Southern cuisine. Burks and Lawrence provide over 150 recipes for dishes like black-eyed pea salad, collard greens, and sweet potato casserole. They also include tips on how to make vegetarian versions of classic Southern dishes.

5. The Cooking Gene: A Journey Through African American Culinary History in the Old South by Michael W. Twitty

This book is a must-read for anyone interested in the history of African-American cuisine. Twitty examines the history of African-American cooking and its influence on the development of Southern cuisine. He also provides recipes from some of the most influential cookbooks of the past two centuries.

6. The Soul of a New Cuisine: A Discovery of the Foods and Flavors of Africa by Marcus Samuelsson

This cookbook is a great resource for anyone looking to explore the flavors of African cuisine. Samuelsson provides over 150 recipes for dishes like jollof rice, plantains, and couscous. He also includes tips on how to make traditional African dishes.

7. The Africa Cookbook by Jessica B. Harris

This comprehensive cookbook is a great resource for anyone looking to explore the flavors of African cuisine. Harris provides over 150 recipes for dishes like jollof rice, plantains, and couscous. She also includes tips on how to make traditional African dishes.

8. The Jemima Code: Toni Tipton-Martin’s Cookbook for African American Cuisine by Toni Tipton-Martin

This cookbook is a great resource for anyone looking to explore the flavors of African-American cuisine. Tipton-Martin provides over 150 recipes for dishes like fried chicken, macaroni and cheese, and collard greens. She also includes tips on how to make traditional African-American dishes.

9. The Southern Foodways Alliance Community Cookbook by John T. Edge

This cookbook is a great resource for anyone looking to explore the flavors of Southern cuisine. Edge provides over 150 recipes for dishes like black-eyed pea salad, collard greens, and sweet potato casserole. He also includes tips on how to make traditional Southern dishes.

10. The Taste of Country Cooking by Edna Lewis

This classic cookbook is a must-have for anyone interested in the history of African-American cuisine. Lewis provides over 150 recipes for dishes like fried chicken, macaroni and cheese, and collard greens. She also includes tips on how to make traditional country cooking dishes.

11. The Welcome Table: African-American Heritage Cooking by Jessica B. Harris

This cookbook is a great resource for anyone looking to explore the flavors of African-American cuisine. Harris provides over 150 recipes for dishes like fried chicken, macaroni and cheese, and collard greens. She also includes tips on how to make traditional African-American dishes.

12. The Southern Pantry Cookbook by Jennifer Brulé

This cookbook is a great resource for anyone looking to explore the flavors of Southern cuisine. Brulé provides over 150 recipes for dishes like black-eyed pea salad, collard greens, and sweet potato casserole. She also includes tips on how to make traditional Southern dishes.

13. The New African-American Kitchen by Angela Shelf Medearis

This cookbook is a great resource for anyone looking to explore the flavors of African-American cuisine. Medearis provides over 150 recipes for dishes like fried chicken, macaroni and cheese, and collard greens. She also includes tips on how to make traditional African-American dishes.

14. The Southern Foodie: 100 Places to Eat in the South Before You Die by Chris Chamberlain

This book is a great resource for anyone looking to explore the flavors of Southern cuisine. Chamberlain provides over 100 recipes for dishes like black-eyed pea salad, collard greens, and sweet potato casserole. He also includes tips on where to find the best Southern restaurants.

15. The Field Pea to Foie Gras: Southern Recipes with a French Accent by Jennifer Hill Booker

This cookbook is a great resource for anyone looking to explore the flavors of Southern cuisine with a French twist. Booker provides over 150 recipes for dishes like black-eyed pea salad, collard greens, and sweet potato casserole. She also includes tips on how to make traditional Southern dishes with a French twist.

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Because Black culture, flavors, and culinary traditions are integral to the ornate tapestry that is American history, stocking your personal library with cookbooks by Black authors is essential to having a well-rounded selection of recipes to choose from as you whip things up in the kitchen. But if you’re unsure of where to start or which cookbooks by Black authors represent the best of the best, don’t worry—we’ve got you covered!

Below are 15 cookbooks by Black authors that we think best showcase a diversified spectrum of recipes, cooking advice, and storytelling. Though each cookbook offers a unique anthology of recipes and commentary, they’re all thematically connected by the author’s desire to celebrate Black history by underscoring and elevating the impact of Black culinary excellence on American social consciousness.

So to celebrate Black history not just during February but all year long, check out a few of these cookbooks by Black authors—then be sure to also learn more about the 5 Foods That Fueled the Civil Rights Movement.

Jubilee cookbook
Courtesy of Amazon

For a collection of recipes perfectly embodying a celebration of Black culture, you can’t go wrong with Toni Tipton-Martin’s Jubilee. This James Beard Award-winning book explores two centuries of African American culinary brilliance through a collection of stories and over 100 recipes. Featuring dishes like baked ham glazed with champagne, sweet potato biscuits, and seafood gumbo from enslaved chefs, middle- and upper-class writers, and entrepreneurs, Tipton-Martin’s Jubilee illustrates a beautiful, broad scope of African American food traditions.

Black Food by Bryant Terry book cover
Courtesy of Amazon

As you build out your personal collection of cookbooks by Black authors, be sure to pick up this foundational text. A James Beard nominee and a winner of the Art of Eating prize, Bryant Terry’s Black Food is considered “a deeply heartfelt tribute to Black culinary ingenuity” that “captures the broad and divergent voices of the African Diaspora through the prism of food.” This is because the text is comprised of recipes from an abundance of contributors, as well as poetry, essays, photos, and art woven together, culminating in a tapestry of Black cultural excellence. 

Sweet Potato Soul by Jenné Claiborne cover
Courtesy of Amazon

When you think of Southern cooking—and soul food, in particular—the vegetarian options may seem few and far between, and finding vegan ones may seem like searching for a needle in a haystack. But this no longer has to be the case, thanks to vegan chef and food blogger Jenné Claiborne’s innovative cookbook, Sweet Potato Soul. In this cookbook, you’ll find 100 easy plant-based recipes providing a modern take on classic soul food favorites like sweet potato cinnamon rolls, Georgia watermelon and peach salad, smoky collard greens, fried cauliflower chicken, and more. Additionally, Claiborne explores the historical narratives associated with the quality ingredients that are like the unsung nutritional heroes in classic soul food cooking, like dandelion, black-eyed peas, and okra, providing new perspective on your classic favorite dishes.

My America by Kwame Onwuachi cookbook
Courtesy of Amazon

A Bon Appetit “Best Book of the Year” award-wining cookbook, Nigerian-American chef Kwame Onwachi’s My America features over 125 recipes celebrating signature flavors of the African Diaspora, including baby back ribs, jambalaya, red velvet cake, Nigerian jollof rice, Puerto Rican red bean sofrito, Trinidadian channa, and more. These recipes are fused together in an enthralling account of Onwachi’s travels, highlighting the inherent connections between food and location as well as food and culture.

Everyone's Table by Gregory Gourdet_cover
Courtesy of Amazon

Top Chef finalist and fan favorite Gregory Gourdet’s James Beard Award-winning cookbook Everyone’s Table features 200 decadently flavored dishes via a collection of carefully curated recipes that each capitalize on the nutritional benefits of superfoods. You won’t find any ultra-processed ingredients in this text. Rather, Gourdet’s recipes use only the highest-quality, nutrient-dense items rich in vitamins, minerals, and antioxidants in dishes inspired by his deep love and appreciation for global ingredients and cooking techniques.

RELATED: Your Only Goal This Year Should Be To Eat More Superfoods, Dietitian Says

Soul Food-Everyday and Celebration by Carla Hall book cover
Courtesy of Amazon

Another beloved Top Chef veteran and former co-host of ABC’s The Chew, Carla Hall’s Soul Food: Everyday and Celebration is a collection of recipes representing a return to Hall’s Southern roots, providing a fresh perspective on classic comfort food dishes while illustrating the cultural evolution of soul food across the African Diaspora throughout history. From black-eyed pea salad with hot sauce vinaigrette, coconut cream layer cake, and field peas with country ham, to Caribbean smothered chicken with coconut, lime, and chiles, Ghanaian peanut beef stew with onions and celery, and Hall’s signature Nashville fried chicken, this collection of 145 original mouthwatering recipes are a surefire way to fuel your body and soul while impressing everyone at your table.

The Cooking Gene by Michael W. Twitty cookbook
Courtesy of Amazon

No library of cookbooks by Black authors would be complete without The Cooking Gene. Part memoir, part cookbook, African American-Jewish culinary historian Michael W. Twitty takes readers on a journey through the culinary history of the South through the lens of his own multiracial and multicultural ancestry. As Twitty sharing his family’s personal narrative, Twitty reveals the foods and recipes that he credits with inspiring their survival across nearly three centuries of enslavement and systemic oppression while also highlighting the complex political undercurrent associated with the origins of barbecue, soul food, and Southern cuisine as a whole.

Black Girl Baking book cover
Courtesy of Amazon

As Carla Hall reportedly said in a review of Jerrelle Guy’s Black Girl Baking, this cookbook has “a rhythm and realness to it.” Jerrelle’s book is comprised of nearly 50 baking recipes designed to ignite all five senses via quality ingredients more beneficial to your long-term health like whole flours, less refined sugars, and even some vegan alternatives.

Dooky Chase Cookbook by Leah Chase
Courtesy of Amazon

Written by legendary New Orleans chef and “Queen of Creole cuisine” Leah Chase, the Dooky Chase Cookbook is a collection of the beloved Creole recipes served at the historic Dooky Chase restaurant, including red beans and rice, Creole jambalaya, gumbo, and more.

In BiBi's Kitchen by Hawa Hassan and Julia Turshen_cookbook
Courtesy of Amazon

Another James Beard Award-winning book to make our list, In Bibi’s Kitchen is a collection of 75 recipes and stories shared by “bibis,” aka grandmothers, from South Africa, Mozambique, Madagascar, Comoros, Tanzania, Kenya, Somalia, and Eritrea. The recipes and the culinary techniques shared throughout are generational gems reinforcing the connection between food, family, and history.

The Martha's Vineyard Table by Jessica Harris_cookbook
Courtesy of Amazon

Although today Martha’s Vineyard is considered among the go-to vacation destinations for the social elite, many are seemingly unaware of the island’s rich culinary history, much of which is predicated on Black cuisine and culinary traditions. As one of the few American summertime sanctuaries flocked to by Black families since the 1800s, culinary historian Jessica B. Harris shines a light on the island’s unique, majestic place in the grand scheme of Black history in The Martha’s Vineyard Table with recipes representing an amalgam of New England flavors and Black culinary flair.

Vegan Soul Foodie Brooke Brimm
Courtesy of Amazon

Meat eaters who are unsure of how to best cater to the needs of their vegan or vegetarian friends and family without sacrificing perceived quality taste, textures, and flavors they are accustomed to enjoying simply must pick up a copy of Brooke Brimm’s Vegan Soul Foodie. This unique collection of recipes can make plant-based cooking and eating an accessible and enjoyable experience for you along with anyone else at your table, no matter their dietary preferences.

The Southern Comfort Food Diabetes Cookbook by Maya Feller, MS, RD
Courtesy of Amazon

For those living with diabetes, the prospect of ever enjoying a soul food dish again may seem grim. Thankfully, this cookbook by Maya Feller, MS, RD, CDN, provides a wealth of culinary solutions that makes cooking and eating Southern comfort food a tangible reality for those with pre-diabetes or diabetes. These dietitian-approved recipes take into account any blood sugar-related concerns, while still maintaining the decadent flavors of beloved Southern cuisine.

Son of a Southern Chef-Cook with Soul_Lazarus Lynch
Courtesy of Amazon

A two-time champion on the Food Network’s Chopped and the host of Snapchat’s first-ever cooking show, Lazarus Lynch shares his culinary brilliance with the world yet again—this time in his debut cookbook, Son of a Southern Chef: Cook With Soul. With over 100 recipes representing a fusion of comfort food flavors from both the Caribbean and the American South, these vibrant, flavorful dishes provide a contemporary spin on classic dishes, including recipes for brown butter candy yam mash, goat cheese brülée, shrimp and cheddar grits, and more.

Cooking Solo- The Fun of Cooking for Yourself by Klancy Miller_cookbook
Courtesy of Amazon

Though the majority of cookbooks out there may cater to serving to large groups, Klancy Miller’s Solo Cooking celebrates independence by spotlighting the empowering experience of cooking for one. If looking for a foodie-focused gift idea, this cookbook is a great find for all your single friends and family.