A sharply crafted and unflinchingly honest memoir about gangs, drugs, cooking, and living life on the line—both on the streets and in the kitchen—from one of the most exciting stars in the food world today “A remarkable memoir.”—Dr. Ibram X. Kendi, National Book Award winner and author of the #1 New York Times bestseller How to Be an Antiracist Chef Keith Corbin has been cooking his entire life. Born on the home turf of the notorious Grape Street Crips in 1980s Watts, Los Angeles, he got his start cooking crack at age thirteen, becoming so skilled that he was flown across the country to cook for drug operations in other cities. After his criminal enterprises caught up with him, though, Corbin spent years in California’s most notorious maximum security prisons—witnessing the resourcefulness of other inmates who made kimchi out of leftover vegetables and tamales from ground-up Fritos. He developed his own culinary palate and ingenuity, creating “spreads” out of the unbearable commissary ingredients and experimenting during his shifts in the prison kitchen. After his release, Corbin got a job managing the kitchen at LocoL, an ambitious fast food restaurant spearheaded by celebrity chefs Roy Choi and Daniel Patterson, designed to bring inexpensive, quality food and good jobs into underserved neighborhoods. But when Corbin was suddenly thrust into the spotlight, he struggled to live up to or accept the simplified “gangbanger redemption” portrayal of him in the media. As he battles private demons while achieving public success, Corbin traces the origins of his vision for “California soul food” and takes readers inside the worlds of gang hierarchy , drug dealing, prison politics, gentrification, and culinary achievement to tell the story of how he became head chef of Alta Adams, one of America’s best restaurants.
... home state of Tennessee at the age of sixteen and headed west . In Kansas City , he met the crew from the Duval Ranch in ... a cowboy contest in Deadwood , South Dakota , earned him the nickname " Deadwood Dick . " In his autobiography ...
J.California Cooper writes with a transparent clarity and such exuberant energy that her characters leaop off the page, bursting with the stories they've got to tell--stories of simple people, stories of families and fate, of love and ...
Is the Universe just a cosmic crap shoot, based on chance and luck, or is there an unseen benevolent order striving to guide us behind the scenes? Matthew Stone, having wandered far from his soul path, is about to find out.
... California soul, California Soul. | cz D7(#9) Emaj7 F7 | (F7) C7 D7(#9) When you hear the beat you wanna pat your feet, Emaj7 F7 C7 D7(29) Ebmaj7 F7 And you've got to move 'cause it's really such a groove. C7 D7(29) Puts a brand new ...
This book chronicles how the California ISO came to be and what happened during its first five years.
The two of us lived alone in the forest for about two months while waiting for Spiridon and his hunters to join us. ... Hunters claim that sable and other predators such as the wolf, wolverine, and fox have an irresistible greed and ...
This work has been selected by scholars as being culturally important, and is part of the knowledge base of civilization as we know it.
This work has been selected by scholars as being culturally important, and is part of the knowledge base of civilization as we know it.
About the Publisher Forgotten Books publishes hundreds of thousands of rare and classic books. Find more at www.forgottenbooks.com This book is a reproduction of an important historical work.
Missy Elliott, whose self-produced work Solange does cite as an influence on her own, provides a different kind of historical link between Peebles and Solange. Elliott loops the opening line of Peebles's “I Can't Stand the Rain” through ...