The inspiration for author and entrepreneur Hawa Hassan’s new cookbook, “Setting a Place for Us: Recipes and Stories of Displacement, Resilience, and Community,” explores how food and identity serve as an important link among people displaced by conflict throughout the globe. 

“Having been born in Somalia during a time of war, and then later moving to a refugee camp in Kenya before resettling to the U.S., I have a deep understanding of what it means to leave so much behind and then create a new beginning,” shares Hassan about her life journey so far.

Why Food and Identity Will Always Be Linked

Born in Somalia in 1986, Hassan left the continent of Africa in 1993, spending about three years of her life in displacement. It wasn’t until after spending 15 years on her own in the United States that she reconnected with her family in 2008, who by then had moved to Norway. 

“I have an intimate understanding of having to use food to explore identity, having to use food to find ways to stay connected to your people,” she shares.

The author of the James Beard Award-winning cookbook “In Bibi’s Kitchen,” confides she always knew writing a second cookbook was needed to fully tell the story of how food and identity serve as a thread connecting the seasons of her life.  

“I was adamant that I wasn’t going to do just one book,” she explains. “I had a desire, before I started writing [the cookbook] ‘In Bibi’s Kitchen,’ that I wanted to preserve the stories of grandmothers. But I also wanted to feature Africa in a more intimate light that it had never been seen before. I wanted to talk about our food in a way that made it accessible and not some far-away land.”

Sharing Stories of Displacement and Food and Identity Through Recipes

The result is her new cookbook that highlights food and identity among eight countries whose people were displaced by war—among them Afghanistan, Democratic Republic of Congo, Iraq and Liberia—and how conflict and instability shaped their food stories. 

“There was a lot of historical and cultural significance despite their struggles,” observes the author. “These nations hold deep, historical, cultural and geopolitical importance. And that comes alive in the essays about each country.”

“Setting a Place for Us” is unique in the way the book’s chapters unfold for readers. Organized by country, Hassan opens with an essay on the culture and how conflict and displacement influenced food and identity. 

She then reveals the creativity of each community with one-on-one interviews that home in on generational recipes and cooking techniques. 

Hassan explains, “My intention was to use these recipes to bring home cooks to the table…[and follow] the evolution of recipes.  It’s much more about an invitation to make these foods while learning about these countries and people.”

By Jocelyn Amador

Continue reading over at Cuisine Noir.

From great and amazing wine to travel with a purpose, Cuisine Noir Magazine delivers what readers are looking for which is more than where to find the next great meal. And most importantly, it is a culinary publication that complements readers’ lifestyles and desire for a diverse epicurean experience. As the country's first digital magazine that connects the African diaspora through food, drink and travel, Cuisine Noir's history of highlighting the accomplishments of Black chefs dates back to 1998 with its founder Richard Pannell. It later made its debut online in October of 2007 and again in September 2009 with a new look under the ownership of V. Sheree Williams. Over the last ten years, Cuisine Noir has gained global recognition for pioneering life and industry-changing conversations that have been nonexistent in mainstream food media outlets for more than 40 years. In 2016, it received one of its biggest honors by being included in the Smithsonian Channel video on the fourth floor of the National Museum of African American History and Culture Museum (NMAAHC) about the contributions of African Americans to American cuisine.

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