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Category: 12. Other cultural expressions
PURV002. Purvis, Kathleen. A Lumbee
feast starts Southern. Charlotte Observer Tuesday, 11 June
2002.
Publication type: Newspaper article
This article provides background information for the
Charlotte Observer's ReadCarolinas book club's summer selection,
Nowhere Else on Earth (item HUMP001).
It explains that Lumbee food is Southern food with some unique twists
and variations. In the late 19th century--the setting for Nowhere
Else on Earth--historian Maud Thomas (Away Down Home, 1982)
noted that the Lumbee cultivated food crops such as peas, beans, corn,
sweet potatoes, and rice. They would also have eaten pork from hogs
and used honey, beeswax, and brandy and cider made from fruit trees.
The article describes the barbecue and lunch buffet
at Fuller's Old-Fashioned Barbecue on Roberts Avenue, outside Lumberton.
The restaurant serves--in addition to barbecue--chicken and pastry,
collards, fried fatback, liver pudding, okra, turnip greens, rutabagas,
and cornbread.
Twelve-layer cake, another Robeson County tradition,
is served at An-Mae's luncheonette across from the courthouse as well
as at Fuller's.
Additional Subjects: Lumbee food | Fuller's Old-Fashioned
Barbecue
This annotation was written on: July 9, 2002; edited on
August 3, 2002.
Home Page URL: lumbeebibliography.net
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