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Historian Adrian Miller on Denver’s Underrepresented Legacy of Black Culinary Excellence

Adrian Miller has been in high demand. The James Beard Award-winning food historian, former employee of the Clinton White House and Denver native has been busy being tapped for insight on the current sociopolitical landscape by outlets including the Huffington Post and the BBC, while still putting the finishing touches on his upcoming book on African American barbecue Black Smoke. 

The text — set to be released in Spring 2021 through the University of North Carolina Press — will continue the scholarly investigation into the importance of Black food in American society he’s meticulously chronicled in his first two books, Soul Food: The Surprising Story of an American Cuisine, One Plate at a Time and The President’s Kitchen Cabinet: The Story of the African Americans Who Have Fed Our First Families, From the Washingtons to the ObamasHis deep knowledge of the topic, on both a national and local scale — and a belief in the unifying power of food — has propelled him into a leadership role that he has been using to discuss widespread injustice and encourage honest and open conversation.

“We’ve had some next-level restaurants here,” said Miller. Dating back to the dawn of Colorado statehood, Black chefs have been producing top-tier cuisine. Two of Frederick Douglass’ sons were known to have run a restaurant and saloon on California street, with businessman Barney Ford — who still boasts a stained-glass portrait in the House Chamber of the Colorado State Capitol — having opened The Inter-Ocean Hotel in 1873. In the 1930s – 1950s, Five Points continued as a hotbed of exceptional Black-owned restaurants with spots like Benny Hooper’s and The Rossonian acting both as cultural landmarks and food destinations. Otha Rice — who was credited with bringing Juneteenth to Denver in 1953 — continued the legacy with his iconic Rice’s Tap Room and Oven. “Now the Black food story is global and it’s in Aurora,” said Miller of the multitude of international restaurants from across the African diaspora that have taken root out east.

Read entire article at 303 Magazine