Tennessee State Museum explores rich, diverse history of Tennessee food

Pictured (top row, l to r): Sandor Katz’s Fermentation Kitchen, Ridgewood BBQ (East Tennessee), Varallo’s Neon Sign, (bottom row, l to r): Four-Way Soul Food Restaurant (West Tennessee), Beaten biscuit table and beater, table: 1850-1860, beater: early 20th century, and Two Peruvian Chefs at Casa Azafran (Middle Tennessee).

The Tennessee State Museum will explore the rich and diverse history of Tennessee’s food through a new exhibition, ‘Let’s Eat! Origins and Evolutions of Tennessee Food,’ set to open on August 9 at the Museum’s Bicentennial Capitol Mall State Park location in Nashville and run through February 2, 2020.

“Whether barbecued, fried, roasted, pickled, or chilled, the food of Tennessee, and the southern United States, is a meeting of Southeastern Indian, West European, and West African cultural groups,” says Rob DeHart, the exhibition’s curator. “Many cooks, who were primarily women, took the proteins, vegetables, and cooking traditions of each group, then experimented, taste-tested, and created delicious meals. The evolution of Tennessee food continues as foreign-born recent arrivals inspire new flavors.”

The exhibition will be presented through eight sections that trace the state’s food from its Southeastern Indian origins to contemporary food festival celebrations. All are complemented by artifacts from the museum’s collection, digital storytelling, graphics, and location photography.

‘The Three Sisters’ begins with the story of how Southeastern Indians cultivated crops during the Woodland Cultural Period, planting together beans, corn and squash, referred to as the ‘three sisters.’ This section also highlights the role of strawberries and corn in Native American traditions, tells the story of the state’s Strawberry Festivals and highlights South Pittsburg, Tennessee, site of Lodge Cast Iron’s headquarters and the National Cornbread Festival. ‘The Buckle of the Barbecue Belt’ looks at West European influences on Tennessee Food (the introduction of cattle, pigs and chickens to North America) with visits to Ridgewood Barbecue, Memphis in May and the Kosher BBQ Fest.

In ‘A Love for Spices,’ West African influences on the state are explored, along with the foods prepared by enslaved persons at the Hermitage. Visitors will be introduced to Prince’s Hot Chicken Shack in Nashville and the Four-Way Soul Food Restaurant in Memphis.

“Through picnics and barbecues, Tennesseans have come together at the table, but it is also where they have been divided,” said DeHart. “For generations, the injustice of slavery and later Jim Crow laws that limited employment opportunities forced some African American women and men to do the cooking in the homes of middle- and upper-class Whites. This is how much of Tennessee cuisine developed.”

‘Making Do’ looks at some of the dishes that emerged when Tennesseans had to feed their families from limited resources in their kitchens. Their stories live on in many foods we eat today. Visitors will learn about Florence Mathai and beaten biscuits, festivals that celebrate the wild pungent ramp, ‘slugburgers’ from Pat’s Café in Selmer and renowned fermenter, Sandor Katz. In ‘Cooking for Others,’ the exhibition introduces visitors to significant Tennessee cooks Melinda Russell and Rufus Estes and boarding house operator Mary Bobo.

Illustrative of the ‘evolutions’ aspect of the show’s subtitle, the influence of immigrants figures heavily in the exhibition. In the ‘Immigration and Tennessee Food’ section, the Museum takes visitors to several significant locations in Tennessee, including the Swiss Colony of Gruetli, the Hola Hora Latina Festival in Knoxville, the Global Café in Memphis, Varallo’s Chili and the Conexión Américas Communal Kitchen in Nashville.

Of course, there are plenty of farms and restaurants preserving iconic methods of food production statewide, and ‘Preserving Tennessee Food Traditions’ introduces visitors to several, including Muddy Pond Sorghum, Helen’s Barbecue, Benton’s Smoky Mountain Country Hams, Boyette’s Dining Room, Vegan Soy Dairy and Book Publishing at The Farm and Cruze Farms Buttermilk.

Museum visitors will wrap up their adventure to the exhibition with a survey of food festivals throughout the state.

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