The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

From remote tropical islands to your kitchen

Cuisine brings island culture home, wherever your home may be.

- By C.W. Cameron

In her first cookbook, “Coconuts & Collards: Recipes from Puerto Rico to the Deep South,” food historian Von Diaz focused on recipes she learned growing up in metro Atlanta and on summer visits to her family’s home in Puerto Rico. The recipes in her new book, “Islas: A Celebratio­n of Tropical Cooking — 125 Recipes from the Indian, Atlantic, and Pacific Ocean Islands” (Chronicle, $35), cover much more ground.

“When I traveled to other islands, I felt at home. These islands have different migration patterns, different storm systems and different ocean landscapes. They are environmen­tally vulnerable and have been very isolated places for most of their history so they have developed very hyperlocal cultures,” Diaz said in a telephone interview from her office in Durham, North Carolina. “So how was it I felt so at home in cultures so different than my own? I was curious about how people on the islands are similar, and why we are similar.”

A journalist and oral historian by training, she approached much of the food by telling stories of individual­s living on the islands she’s featured.

“Something I’ve noticed over the years in covering cuisines that are perhaps misunderst­ood or less often explored, is that many of us are proud of our food . ... That pride is a pride of identity and of nation and there’s a reason why people in the diaspora will continue to prepare the traditiona­l dishes of their homeland,” she said. “That’s how they maintain the connection with their culture of origin.”

Much of the book was written during the pandemic and

traveling to all the islands didn’t feel safe. For the places Diaz couldn’t visit, she relied on local storytelle­rs and photograph­ers to give her a window into the life of the people there.

Each story and recipe was chosen to give the reader a point of entry or connection with a place they may never visit or that they may not even have known existed.

“One might assume that in a place where people struggle with access to ingredient­s and often struggle financiall­y, they might be inclined to make plain food. But these are dishes that are so flavorful, layered and textured. I believe that’s because deliciousn­ess is also a form of resilience,” Diaz said. “Making food that’s delicious brings joy. When you live in really challengin­g places, your ability to experience joy is also necessary for survival.”

 ?? COURTESY OF CYBELLE CODISH ??
COURTESY OF CYBELLE CODISH

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