'The Welcome Table': Recipes from Maya Angelou (2024)

Author and poet Maya Angelou talks about her latest work, a book of recipes and recollections she's put together that combine her love of cooking and good food with her deeper love of the people she shares her table with.

'The Welcome Table': Recipes from Maya Angelou (1)

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Hallelujah! the Welcome Table

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ED GORDON, host:

Poet, writer, performer, teacher and director, Maya Angelou, is in her 70s. But she by no means is slowing down. No matter what medium she's working in, her mastery is in capturing the good and the bad in all she creates. Her most recent work, "Hallelujah! The Welcome Table: A Lifetime of Memories with Recipes," has recently been released in paperback. She says the book of collected recipes is important because cooking can be yet another way to talk to people.

Dr. MAYA ANGELOU (Poet, Writer, Performer, Teacher, Director; "Hallelujah! The Welcome Table"): Food served is always more than just food served. That is to say, it is more than just fuel for the body. Depending upon who has prepared the food and who has served it and with what spirit, it can uplift the--and around the world, in every culture, food is used to flirt, to be coy, a raise in the employment or to search for employment. It can bring warring factions together. Food can be used to apologize. So I use it with my respect for the ingredients and I love that it is--there's a science in cooking. I love knowing what heat under certain circ*mstances will do to certain foods. And then I love preparing it carefully and presenting it beautifully and sharing it generously with my table mates.

You know, people are talking, aba dabba, dabba, dabba, and then they swallow something and there's--then someone says, `Mm, mm, mmm,' and I know I've put--I mixed the groceries the right way.

GORDON: Yeah. That's when you know you done good, right?

Dr. ANGELOU: I done good.

GORDON: Let me ask you this, Doctor. One of the things that we wanted to talk to you about is you have been such a great guide to all of us about understanding the humanity in this world. When you look around today, what are we missing? It seems as though, whether it be our leadership or sometimes just on the day to day that--we are missing just the commonsense humanity. Man's inhumanity to man seems to be stepping up a bit more than I think any of us would like to see.

Dr. ANGELOU: Well, I think something really rather dangerous has happened. I think that there's been an attempt to terrify Americans. And I don't mean just by the terror--the acts of terrorists. But I mean--which is in itself is ridiculous and horrid. But there's been an attempt to make Americans scary. Now one thing about Americans, whether you like us or not, whether you agree or not, black, white, Asian, Spanish speaking, Native American, there is this--three words say that this is an American, and it is: Yes, I can. They--yes, I can. I can be the biggest jerk in the world. Yes, I can. And yes, I can, I can be the kindest person you ever dreamed of. Yes, I can. I can do many things. Yes, I can.

Well, this introduction of fear takes that away from the America. I mean, it reduces her and his confidence and something is replaced by that which is pessimism. And to see--young people are pessimistic, are cynical, is really tragic because it means they have gone from believing nothing to knowing nothing. And vice versa. We do have a chance to lay down the burden of ignorance and ig--burden of racism and sexism. We have a chance right now to say I will not pay passage to these ideas. I will not carry these anymore. They don't make sense and they devastate my country.

GORDON: And to some degree we will have to, as we historically look back--if we don't utilize this moment--say shame on us, wouldn't we?

Dr. ANGELOU: Yes. Yes, it'll be shame on us. That somehow some of our leaders seem to themselves have given up, and not asked for the best thing, the top thing. Ask us to sacrifice. Ask us to dare to try to develop courage. Ask us to protect each other.

I know that there's something amiss, but that's why those who really think the good thought and think the thought not just for themselves and their families and their friends, but for their neighborhoods, their community, the city, entire country. It is time for these people to stand up and be counted and just say, `I'm on the side of the guys who want our country to be better. I'm on that side.'

GORDON: Let me just ask you this. I was reflecting over the last week, and in particular when we unfortunately lost one of the greats in our community, C. Delores Tucker, And I think about, you know, the loss of Ossie Davis this year and so many others. When we look back at these giants for us, people who really went beyond the idea of besting themselves for a career and really brought so many other elements. You personify that, too, Doctor. I'm curious what lessons you would tell us in terms of going beyond just your career and the betterment of yourself and making sure that we see the bigger picture?

Dr. ANGELOU: Mr. Gordon, I'm now 77 and one of the things I think is I'm embarrassed that I didn't do better. When I look at young men and women, black ones and white ones and Asian women, Spanish speaking--I listen to gay ones and the straight ones, and I think, my God, I'm leaving these children. This world full of blood thirst, blood lust, hate, bitterness, cruelty and greed. Couldn't I have done better somewhere? I wish I'd known better so I could have done better. There are young men and women who may be listening to you now, Mr. Gordon, to us, who will be the leaders in the next 15, 20, 30 years. And they need to know that it's all for them and that this is their world. It's not their brother's or their sister's. It's not their mama's or their papa's or their boyfriend's or their girlfriend's. This is their world and they have the responsibility and the privilege of doing something wonderful, and that is developing themselves. Because they have already been paid for. They have to develop themselves so that they can pay for someone who has yet to come. They have to do it. I wish it wasn't going to be so hard, but it will be. But you have those lives that went before you to study from.

GORDON: Dr. Maya Angelou, thank you so much for the pearls of wisdom. And as I said early on, it is always a pleasure to talk to you.

Dr. ANGELOU: Thank you very much, Ed Gordon. I just wish I was there to see you, and I'd get a hug and I know it.

GORDON: Indeed. One--I'll send one through the microphone. Thanks again.

Dr. ANGELOU: Thank you. Stay well.

GORDON: Thanks for joining us. That's our program today. To listen to the show, visit npr.org. NEWS & NOTES was created by NPR News and the African-American Public Radio Consortium.

I'm Ed Gordon. This is NEWS & NOTES.

Copyright © 2005 NPR. All rights reserved. Visit our website terms of use and permissions pages at www.npr.org for further information.

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'The Welcome Table': Recipes from Maya Angelou (2024)

FAQs

What two cookbooks did Maya Angelou write? ›

I have knowledge of and great respect for ingredients, and understand how they react.” She wrote two solid cookbooks, Hallelujah! The Welcome Table (2004) and Great Food, All Day Long (2010). Dr. Angelou was born Marguerite “Rita” Johnson in St.

What is the summary of the Hallelujah welcome table? ›

"Hallelujah! The Welcome Table" by Maya Angelou is a collection of heartfelt and evocative essays and recipes that chronicle the author's life through the lens of food and the shared moments around the table.

What are 3 books Maya Angelou wrote? ›

Literature
  • I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings (1969). ...
  • Gather Together in My Name (1974). ...
  • Singin' and Swingin' and Gettin' Merry Like Christmas (1976). ...
  • The Heart of a Woman (1981). ...
  • All God's Children Need Traveling Shoes (1986). ...
  • A Song Flung Up to Heaven (2002).

How many cookbooks did Maya Angelou write? ›

Angelou's written legacy spans genre and decades, from Pulitzer Prize-nominated poetry to seven autobiographies. She was also a passionate cook, authoring two cookbooks for Random House: Hallelujah!

What does The Welcome Table symbolize? ›

The Welcome Table is a story of both fear and faith as well as exclusion and the feeling of belonging. The author has used the exhausted black women of age as a symbol for the many years the black populations have suffered from injustice and social inequality that were part of nearly all societal spheres.

Why is Hallelujah sung at funerals? ›

Hallelujah

It is a popular choice for funerals because of the poetic lyrics and soft melody. Many families choose to include with their funeral music as it fits with the atmosphere of a service and saying a goodbye to a loved one as they cross over into the afterlife.

Who wrote welcome table? ›

Alice Walker who wrote “The Welcome Table” had issues of race and gender that was the center of her literary work and her social activism. She participated in civil rights demonstrations. (Clugston 2010). This short story has a theme of life and death.

What is the first book Maya Angelou wrote? ›

In 1969, Angelou published I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings, an autobiography of her early life. Her tale of personal strength amid childhood trauma and racism resonated with readers and was nominated for the National Book Award.

What were Maya Angelou's 2 important events? ›

Maya Angelou Timeline
YearEvent
1993Maya Angelou performs at the inauguration of President Bill Clinton.
1998Maya Angelou is inducted into the National Women's Hall of Fame.
2000Maya Angelou is awarded the National Medal of Arts by President Bill Clinton.
35 more rows

What was Maya Angelou's first book called? ›

Maya Angelou's first autobiographical work, I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings (1969), gained critical acclaim and a National Book Award nomination. Her best known poem is perhaps On the Pulse of Morning, which she composed and delivered for the inauguration of U.S. Pres. Bill Clinton in 1993.

What is Maya Angelou's book called? ›

"I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings" is a 1969 autobiography about the early years of Dr.

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