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Search resuls for: "Stephen Satterfield"


2 mentions found


In 1994, he became the first Black chef to win the James Beard Foundation's Best Chef Award. The famed chef touched on his ideology during a 1994 interview shared on YouTube by the African American Chefs Hall of Fame. Patrick's remarks weren't a knock against Black American cuisine. Instead, it was an unapologetic declaration that Black chefs can't — and won't — be pigeonholed. Black chefs at that time were fighting stereotypes that they could only excel at making soul food.
Persons: Patrick Clark's, James Beard Foundation's, Patrick, , Patrick Clark, collard, weren't, Netflix Patrick, Preston, reminisced, Stephen Satterfield, Melvin, Idella Clark, Patrick's, Michel Guerard, Michel Guérard, Guérard, Gregory Hines, Ron Galella, Keith McNally, Odeon's, Bill Clinton, Brooks Kraft, Hilary Clinton, Hay, Patrick cinched, James Beard, Danielle Reed Rivera, WaPo Organizations: Service, YouTube, African American Chefs Hall of Fame, Adams, Black, Netflix, African American Chefs Hall, Fame's, New York City Technical College —, Great Britain's Bournemouth Technical College, New York Times, Time, American Chefs Hall, Fame, Odeon, Cafe, Metro, White, Getty, White House, Washington Post, James, Columbia, Presbyterian Medical Center Locations: Hay, Washington , DC, New York City, Europe, Brooklyn , New York, New York, Great, Braganza, London, France, AFP, Britain, Cafe Luxembourg, Beverly Hills, Washington, East Coast, DC
When Georgianne Thomas, 80, an author and adjunct professor of humanities at Clark Atlanta University, pushes aside the yellow bracelet adorning her wrist to reveal a burn mark, the table of people she’s dining with are stunned. “It did something to me, but it didn’t stop me,” Dr. Thomas says, as Stephen Satterfield, 38, the writer and founder of Whetstone Media, wipes tears from his eyes across the table from her. The conversation is part of the second season of Netflix’s “High on the Hog,” a docuseries exploring African American influence on cooking and cuisine in the United States. Over a meal at Paschal’s, a longtime soul food restaurant in Atlanta, Dr. Thomas, Charles Black and Marilyn Pryce Scott, all in their 80s, talk to a visibly moved Mr. Satterfield about joining a protest led by the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. demanding service at the segregated Rich’s Department Store.
Persons: Georgianne Thomas, ” Dr, Thomas, Stephen Satterfield, Charles Black, Marilyn Pryce Scott, Satterfield, Martin Luther King Jr Organizations: Clark Atlanta University, Ku Klux, Spelman College, Whetstone Media, Rich’s Locations: Atlanta, United States
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