Interview: Mark Warner, “Eating in the Side Room”

I fully admit to being most titillated by weird tales of spite houses and diarrhea from green corn, but in between those cheap thrills I do attempt to do some actual learning.

Recently at the Eddie and Sylvia Brown African American Collection at the Pratt Library I came across a book called “Eating in the Side Room” by archeologist and anthropologist Mark Warner.

The story of how the house lived in by the Maynard and Burgess families came to be excavated and ultimately preserved by the city of Annapolis is inextricably linked to the ongoing relationship between black and white communities in present-day Annapolis. It is a story that starts with some nails and really old graffiti and continues to this day with debates about whose pasts deserve to be preserved.” – (Mark Warner, ‘Eating in the Side Room’)

Not too far off State Circle in Annapolis, several generations of two African American families made their home on Duke of Gloucester Street alongside a few of the other most affluent black citizens of the town. Working as waiters, washerwomen, and cooks at the nearby Naval Academy, these families built lives and navigated their way through a culture of oppression and second-class citizenship.

They also, like all people, left behind clues about how they lived and what they ate, bit by bit as garbage was discarded into a privy and scattered about the yard.

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Archaeology in Annapolis

John Maynard was born free around 1800. In the 1830s with his newly-minted freedom papers in hand, he worked to purchase his own wife and her daughter from slavery. In 1847 for just slightly less than the cost of their freedom, he purchased two lots in Annapolis. The property he built became their home and the home of their decendents, plus a network of in-laws, relatives and boarders from the 1850s to the 1980s.

What was left behind provided insight into the lives of some of the less famous citizens of one of Maryland’s most historic cities.

This book was most interesting to me in that it revealed some archeological methods, and illuminated the ways in which archaeology and food history intersect. The science of archeology became apparent once I got to “epiphyseal fusion” and a chart summarizing “faunal data.”

The past, revealed by trash discarded into a privy a century ago, luckily for excavators, did not contain an “identifiable quantity of human waste.”

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Maynard Burgess House “before renovations” Halpern Architects

Excavated bones reveal the types and cuts of meat consumed by the families & the ways in which the meat was obtained – commercial butchering versus wild-caught or home-butchered. For example, the presence of chicken heads in comparison to other body parts may reveal that chickens were raised and not store-bought. From the bone of a turkey, it is apparent that the bird had a bacterial infection and was nursed back to health rather than summarily slaughtered. Remnants of shot indicate hunting.

Fishing and raising chickens ultimately provided black families with added social and economic benefit. Foods that African Americans were able to procure or grow on their own… helped family members form bonds with their neighbors, assist relatives and friends.. [and] shielded them, to some extent, from the challenges they faced when confronting white society.
– (Mark Warner, ‘Eating in the Side Room’)

In bottles found on the site, archeologists noted a preference for national brands, as opposed to bottles labeled by local merchants.

In purchasing national brands that were sealed by the manufacturer, the Maynards and other blacks in the region were shielding themselves from local white merchants misrepresenting the medicines they were dispensing or the age of the milk they were selling or the strength of the alcohol
– (Mark Warner, ‘Eating in the Side Room’)

Shopping for food in a society where they weren’t afforded the same respect and trust that white neighbors enjoyed exposed them not only to potential humiliation but to fraud.

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Antique bottles, Etsy sale

In in “Eating in the Side Room,” much is made of the Maynard/Burgess families’ apparent preference for pork. During eras where the white middle class was aspiring to eat more beef, families like the Maynards may have continued to enjoy pork along with the tradition and social ties of that food.

The book also references some local oral history interviews. Black Annapolis resident Margaret Green recalls raising chickens and rabbits, growing kale and carrots, canning tomatoes and baking black walnut cookies. While these individual stories can never fully speak to every experience, they have been influenced by and then folded back in the greater narrative of Maryland food culture over time.

Anyway, this entry isn’t just a book report.. it also happens to be an interview. I reached out to Mark S. Warner in what proved to be an interesting interview that disproved many of my misconceptions…

1) What led you to working in Archaeology in Annapolis? You live in Idaho but now are forever connected with these Annapolis families…

My relationship with Archaeology in Annapolis predates my time in Idaho.  I actually was living in Washington DC when I decided to go to school to see how serious I was about anthropology.  University of Maryland accepted me and it was pure serendipity a faculty member there, Mark Leone had already built the Archaeology in Annapolis project.  I just happened to be there when there was a concerted effort to begin to understand the histories of African American Annapolitans through archaeology.

2) Is it possible to give a quick overview for a layman on archaeology methods used at a site like this, for history of that era? A lot of people may not be aware that work of this nature is still being done, or that there is anything to uncover.

In many ways an archaeological excavation is quite similar regardless of whether you are working on a site that is 100 years old or 10,000 years old.  We are trying to recover past histories through the things that people leave behind, either intentionally or unintentionally.  Talking about historical archaeology in particular, a quick definition is that is it is the archaeology of the recent past.  As for why you would excavate a place where people lived so recently I would make two points.  First, the trash anybody leaves behind tells a story about people’s lives that is almost certainly one that would not be recorded in their diary or anywhere else.  What someone ate, for instance is a routine part of daily life – but because it is so routine it is often forgotten.  My second point is this.  In the case of the Maynard and Burgess families, there are almost no records of their lives, other than their names in the census and some notes in newspapers, their lives are almost forgotten, but what we happened to find through archaeology tells us a great deal about how they lived 150 years ago.

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Maynard Burgess House, Maryland Historical Trust

 

3) It seems that a lot of the material studied relies on methods used for trash disposal at that time. Can you comment on that? Are we losing links to the path by the way we live and dispose of our garbage and human waste?

Nope, humans have always been pretty messy.  However, how we get rid of our trash has changed.  In many (but not all) locales folks have their trash hauled off to a landfill.  Those things are going to be of incredible interest to archaeologists thousands of years from now – and even if you look at the work of the late Bill Rathje you will see that they are already attracting some attention from archaeologists.  As an FYI Rathje made a long career of studying contemporary trash, first by conducting surveys of the trash contemporary households were throwing out and somewhat more recently by literally excavation small portions of landfills.  His book “Rubbish” is an interesting look at contemporary trash and what it tells us about our behaviors.

4) Why a book? Is this material for a course? If so, what other types of materials are used for teaching about this (further reading for us ‘independent scholars..’)

Well, part of it is a convention for what us teaching types are supposed to do.  That being said do know that this book was very slow in coming out, several years ago some of the findings from the project were part of a display at the Banneker-Douglass Museum in Annapolis.

It’s also important to recognize that there are different things for different audiences, yeah this book is kind of an academic book, but hopefully some of what I was able to talk about can be shared with different audiences as time goes on .

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5) You mentioned surveying old cookbooks as part of your research – can you name a few that were particularly notable or illuminating?

Actually I’d like to mention a person.  Barbara Jackson-Nash.  She was the Director of the Banneker-Douglass Museum when we were working on the Maynard Burgess house. She also collected cookbooks and she was the one who kind of led me to realize that indirectly cookbooks can also tell you things about the people who wrote them.

6) Is there anything about the ideas you put forth in the book that might be seen as controversial or will be under particular dispute?

You never know.  The thing is I don’t necessarily think it’s controversial but I would certainly hope some of what I have in there is at least thought-provoking.  In some ways I’m looking at the relationship between food and identity.   Think about everyday life today, you aren’t necessarily thinking explicitly about making a statement about how you represent yourself by your food choices, but studying them can be revealing and in some circumstances food can be a very, very important symbol of community, of family, of whatever.

7) Have you experienced any particular frustrations or barriers in studying the history and lives of ‘everyday’ people? In Annapolis of course, there were many ‘notable’ citizens whose pasts might receive the lions share of funding, attention, etc..

Actually it’s just the opposite.  One of the things I love about historical archaeology is it’s power to recover fragments of people’s lives that are lost. To me it’s a more unique narrative to talk about the Maynards and Burgesses than it is to talk about yet another prominent community figure in the nineteenth century.   I would also say that while there certainly is a ways to go it is gratifying to see progress on some fronts.  It’s taken 25 years but it looks like the Maynard Burgess house is actually going to be renovated.

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Plaque on the Maynard-Burgess House

Shad Roe Ravioli

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The Southern Heritage Cookbook Library “Breakfast and Brunch” edition contains a menu for a “Maryland Spring Breakfast For Two.” The menu includes asparagus, fresh strawberries, cornmeal muffins and the pièce de résistance: ‘Shad Roe with Bacon.’ And this is how shad roe is best served. Simply and traditionally. Cook bacon; sautée onion; cook roe with onion; add lemon.

“Shad Roe and Bacon” has been advertised on Maryland Spring menus for over a hundred years now.  So far, I’ve most enjoyed this preparation atop a bagel with cream cheese, served as you would cured salmon.

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This hasn’t stopped me from experimenting. I’ve made John Ridgely’s Shad Roe Croquettes for this site. I’ve made shad roe bánh mì.

This year I made shad roe ravioli.

I think that for me, the appeal of shad roe is its relative obscurity- at least here in Baltimore. While it doesn’t come cheap, and is certainly ascending the ranks to *hot ingredient* status, I still get to delight in the thrill of introducing this delicacy to friends. First I entice them with alluring photos of the raw roe sacs. “Maryland’s Polarizing Delicacy,” I call it, referring to the handful of writers who have pronounced it revolting.

Baltimore has long had some dubious culinary leanings… while on York Road the other night, I spotted a restaurant banner announcing the annoying shad roe.
I do not eat it. It’s worse than tripe, muskrat or kidney stew. Rhubarb is a delicious spring treat by comparison. And why is it, no matter what dining establishment I pick this time of year, that the person next to me is tucking in, with glee, on the vein-filled stuff, smothered with a pile of bacon?
” – Jacques Kelly, Baltimore Sun, April 01, 2011

In 2004, Sun writer Rob Kasper theorized that a taste for shad roe separated Marylanders from.. everyone else*.

One way to tell the native Marylanders from the “come-heres” is to put plates of shad roe in front of them and see who dives in and who shies away.” – Shad roe: “For Marylanders, it’s delicious,” for others, it’s just fishy, Baltimore Sun March 17, 2004

How on earth could I resist that?

In the late 1800’s and early 1900’s, the Baltimore Sun used to list the prices of goods available at Lexington Market. Prices for shad roe accompanied weekly announcements about spring arrivals like strawberries and soft-shell crabs, alongside the usual dairy, meats, and vegetables imported from southern states.

Shad Roe’s arrival is also fortuitously timed with Lent, which surely increased its popularity and sense of fleeting blessings.

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Much to my humbling, the idea of putting shad roe into ravioli is apparently not an original one. Shad roe stuffed in ravioli is mentioned by none other than James Beard in “Beard on Pasta.” It is also the butt of a joke in the book “American Psycho.”

I first topped my ravioli with beurre blanc with vermouth, capers and shallots. I found that altogether too overbearing and ended up toning it down. When I served the ravioli with a simple melted butter-garlic sauce (ok… a tiny amount of vermouth) then topped it with some parsley, capers and a little Romano.. well it was positively lovely.

This is a dish you’d serve to someone who is not too sure about shad roe. But then, if you’re not all in, why bother? With shad roe’s price and popularity rising, it may be best left to the diehards, served with bacon and toast and a smug sense of Maryland pride.

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Recipe:

I used the “Serious Eats” pasta recipe and ravioli method. Shout-out to the kind Old Goucher neighbor who lent me the pasta roller. My neighborhood rules!

  • 1 pair shad roe sacs
  • ½ to 2 shallots – to taste (garlic would be nice too)
  • about 4 tb olive oil or butter
  • salt to taste
  • pasta dough

On medium heat, sautée a your shallots and onion until translucent. Add shad roe sacs and cover to heat evenly and prevent spattering. Gently move as needed to prevent sticking to pan. Cook for about 5 minutes on each side, until all roe is brown and no pink remains. Sprinkle with salt if desired.

Remove to bowl and mix thoroughly. Set aside to cool while you roll pasta (”How To Make Perfect Ravioli” on Serious Eats)
Fill each ravioli pouch with 1 tsp filling & seal.

To cook, plunge into boiling water for 3 minutes.

My sauce:

  • 2 cloves minced garlic
  • 2 tb salted butter
  • capers, drained but not rinsed
  • pinch minced parsley
  • pinch of grated Romano/Parmesan
  • parsley and lemon for garnish

Sautée garlic in butter, add a splash of vermouth or white wine if desired and continue to cook until brown and nutty. Drizzle over cooked ravioli. Top with remaining ingredients, garnish with lemon and additional parsley.

For more fun with shad, view last year’s photos of the whole lovely process of gutting the shad.

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*Why yes I do know that shad roe is and was consumed all up and down the eastern seaboard, thank you.

Mrs. Zanvyl Krieger’s Shrimp Fried Rice

Nothing could be more emblematic of the spirit of Baltimoreans than the passionate and swift reaction to the fire at the Book Thing earlier this month (March 2, 2016). Word spread like, well… fire, and Book Thing patrons including yours truly felt immediately compelled to share what we can to help restore this institution. Baltimore writer Patricia Schultheis penned a wonderful homage in the Sun, deftly describing the appeal of our beloved musty warehouse full of free books.

When I reached for a quick weeknight meal from my Maryland cookbook collection, I happened to see that book thing stamp on the inside cover of “The Park School Cook Book.” Not surprising really. A significant chunk of my collection has found its way to me through Book Thing.

When I originally found this particular community cookbook -first printed in the 1930s and then expanded several times- I appreciated the mix of modern and quaint recipes. I also took note of names like Wyman, Meyerhoff, Rothschild, and Krieger.

The Kriegers, kriegerfund.org

The Park School was founded in 1912, according to Wikipedia, “by a group of parents, primarily social and educational progressives in Baltimore’s German Jewish community.”

Baltimore residents and Johns Hopkins alumni know the name of Zanvyl Krieger if only for the School of Arts and Sciences that bears his name.

Krieger’s fortune has had a lasting impact on the Baltimore region – The Kennedy-Krieger Institute, American Visionary Arts Museum, Sinai Hospital, the Jewish Community Federation of Baltimore, and the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra are just a few examples of beneficiaries.

This recipe for ‘Shrimp Fried Rice’ was contributed to the Park School Cook Book by Mrs. Zanvyl Krieger. I sadly could find little information about Mrs. (Isabelle) Krieger. Born Isabelle Lowenthal in New York in 1910, she was 36 years old when she married Zanvyl. She passed away in 1989; he survived her by another 11 years. The organization they left behind bears the name “Zanvyl and Isabelle Krieger Fund.”

This recipe was perfectly tasty (as I made it) and notable for two main reasons. The first is the interesting inclusion of both A-1 sauce AND Worcestershire in addition to soy sauce.

The second is the extreme quantity of shrimp!

I made this with 1/3 the shrimp because frankly I’m on a budget, but it was more than plenty. I can’t imagine this dish made with the entire three pounds of shrimp called for. I guess its a bit unnecessary to say “wow, all that shrimp, they must have been rich!”

In the 1970s, Mr. Krieger began to distribute his wealth to charities.

“I
did it because it gives me a great deal of satisfaction to be able to
benefit others,” he said in a 1996 Sun interview. “I think the basis of
life is satisfaction. We all do things to satisfy ourselves. If you have
money, you might as well be able to enjoy it. I enjoy giving.”

To make up for the less shrimp I added an extra egg. I also couldn’t find canned bean sprouts so I used fresh plus some bamboo shoots… which completely changed the flavor. Plus I used a lot more onion. Basically I ignored everything. I have never felt more like more of an enemy to authenticity than when I strayed from the recipe for this Baltimore German-Jewish-American Shrimp Fried Rice. Nonetheless I’ll present the recipe below as it appeared in the book.

“It gave [Zanvyl Krieger] great joy to be able to give,” said a daughter, Betsy L. Krieger of Roland Park. “He always said, `Giving money away was more fun than buying a Rolls-Royce.’” – Sun Obituary, September 2000

But the Krieger family sure didn’t scrimp when it came to shrimp. Okay I’ll shut up now. If you’re feeling inspired to share your own wealth today, the Book Thing donation page is here: http://www.bookthing.org/

Recipe:

  • 3 Lb shrimp, cleaned and peeled
  • 3 Cups cooked rice
  • 1 Tablespoon chopped onion
  • 3 Tablespoon soy sauce
  • dash A-1 sauce
  • dash Worcestershire sauce
  • 2 fried eggs
  • 1 can bean sprouts
  • .5 Teaspoon salt
  • black pepper

Sauté onions lightly in 2 tablespoons butter until translucent. Add shrimp and cook until shrimp is pink, about ten minutes. Add drained bean sprouts, rice and seasonings. Fry two eggs thoroughly and chop and add. Taste and correct seasonings.

Recipe adapted from “The Park School Cook Book”

New Country Lemon Soda

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In typical Maryland fashion, the bone-chilling cold ended one day and the very next day we were greeted with scorching sunshine.

The “scorching sunshine” half of the year tends to leave me yearning for a crisp beverage at the end of my walk home. Ginger ale is a favorite and I’ve been flirting with the idea of home-brewing it for some time. I never expected that this urge would intersect with this blog at any point but here we are.

I found this nice little cookbook “Ellicott City Recipes” at Kelmscott Bookshop not too long ago. The book was put together by a “Pearl J. Rogers” in 1975 to celebrate the bicentennial and raise money for historic preservation.

Founded in 1772 as a mill town, Ellicott City is rich in history, as a walk down its main street – Main Street – attests. The town has survived many dramatic floods of the river its mills relied on, the Patapsco. The Patapsco Valley was once dotted with these mills and the homes and churches of the people who worked in them. Rivers tend to swallow up history, and all that remains of much of the industry is bricks and foundations along the trails in Patapsco Valley State Park.
According to Pearl S. Rogers, “pioneer settlers brought with them many food traditions which reflect their various national origins: German, English, Scotch and others. Their foods mirrored the people themselves – honest, stable, imaginative and delightful. Necessity spawned the unique cuisine, which is still very much a part of the rich way of life in Howard County.”

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I’m not entirely sure of the origins of the recipes in “Ellicott City Recipes,” but the author has renamed many of them for streets and towns in Howard County as she meticulously hand-transcribed the recipes into the cookbook.
The book includes many recipes for wine, one shrub, and the most alcoholic eggnog in my Maryland collection thus far.

The carbonation in this lemon soda comes from yeast, giving it a different character from the large bubbles we’ve come to expect in commercial sodas.

Apparently this method for soda-making figures into a centuries-long quest for carbonated beverages – who knew? In 1767, chemist Joseph Priestley discovered that water could be carbonated by placing it over a fermenting mash. This became the basis of his work culminating in the book “Impregnating Water With Fixed Air” in 1772 – the year Ellicott City was founded, coincidentally.

Carbonated beverages have played many roles from questionable “health tonic” to a convenient excuse to drink alcohol on Sunday, but for the most part today we just consider them refreshing. I would certainly like to believe in the healing powers of ginger ale…

For authenticity’s sake I gathered spring water from a spring in the Patapsco Valley near Henryton.

Happily this recipe called for boiling this water, which has been known to contain bacteria. Nonetheless I did heed the raw egg white involved in the recipe. I suspect this is for a purifying effect although it could also be for the sake of sugars. Since “New Country Lemon Soda” is sweetened after fermenting, the only other sugar for the yeast is in the lemons.

I like my ginger ale a little more ginger-y, but this is “lemon soda” not ginger ale so I can’t complain. It would be perfect in a shandy if you are into that kind of thing. This recipe may just become the basis for my summer of ginger ale.

The kind people at Nepenthe advised me on yeast and steered me towards a champagne or cuvée yeast. Since the original recipe specified a liquid volume of yeast I had to estimate how much to use. Maybe next time I’d try it with one package.

I added some simple syrup after straining out the solids. In theory this creates a feast for yeast (that rhymes). With or without this step it is wise not to bottle this beverage in any container that could shatter.

I made sure to sterilize everything first, but there’s no accounting for that raw egg. I drank some of the soda a good while before letting anyone else taste it, just in case. I survived without incident.

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Recipe:

  • 1 gallon spring water
  • 1 peeled, sliced lemon
  • .5 oz ginger
  • .5 oz cream of tartar
  • pinch grated nutmeg
  • 1 beaten egg whites
  • 2 envelopes yeast
  • sugar to taste
  • mint leaves, chopped and mashed (optional)

Boil together spring water, lemon, ginger, cream of tartar, nutmeg. Cool and add egg white and yeast which has been dissolved into a small amount of warm water. Let this ferment 12 Hrs. Strain and bottle. Sweeten to taste and let sit for a day or two. Serve over chopped and mashed mint leaves and stalks if desired.

Recipe adapted from “Ellicott City Recipes”

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Portuguese Sweet Bread, Sgt. Mercedes Rankin

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When Mercedes V. Rankin shared her recipe for “Portuguese Sweet Bread” in the “Bethel Cookbook”, assembled by the parish of the historic Bethel A.M.E. in 1979, she probably hoped to do her part to raise money for her church.

What she surely did not know is that some random weirdo would bake this bread 36 years later, search her name and uncover stories from her past and other ways she strove to make a difference.

Mercedes Rankin, I learned, was one of the first female police officers put “on the beat” in Baltimore.

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Major Patricia Mullen, Sergeant Mercedes Rankin, Carol Channing, ? 1978, Baltimore City Police History

Born Mercedes Rawlings in 1933, Rankin joined the Baltimore City Police Department in 1960. In 1968 she married fellow police officer Donald O. Rankin.
Mercedes Rankin appears to have been an involved officer, engaging with community groups, working with troubled youth and the elderly, and in 1969 receiving a citation for her work developing a block mothers program to aid children in need.

In 1973, when the BCPD ended the policy of discrimination based on gender, Mercedes became one of the first two officers put on the beat, along with Sergeant Bessie Norris, who was in the Narcotics division.

“They won’t last a day,” said one male member of the force when told of the change. – ‘Sex Distinction Ended in Police Hiring, Duties’, Baltimore Sun, 1973

Although many people seem to have amnesia about this, Baltimore had its share of turmoil in the 1970s. Mercedes Rankin was assigned to patrol a troubled area in the Northwestern District. In 1977, one of the youth she worked with after school was slain before he could testify in a robbery case. “Tony was just a charming little fellow,” she said of the young man.

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Mercedes Rankin Baltimore Sun photo, David Hobby (via ebay)

Rankin seems to have reacted to her promotion humbly and in stride.

“Sergeant Rankin said yesterday she is not frightened by her high-crime-area assignment. “I think I can handle myself. I feel like I’m one of the boys,” she said. “Once more women are assigned, they’ll be accepted.” – ‘Sex Distinction Ended in Police Hiring, Duties’, Baltimore Sun, 1973

One of the most telling insights into the character of Mercedes Rankin is a letter she wrote to the Baltimore Sun in 1965 in apparent response to Rev. Marion Bascom making a quip about police getting “kick-backs”:

“Officers Catania and Osborne… practically gave their lives to save the lives of seven small children. Did they get kick backs?…
Violet Hill Whyte… has done little else but worry about Baltimore’s people and their problems…
If police are receiving kick-backs and Bascom has knowledge of this, why doesn’t he become a better citizen and report it to the proper authorities?
Mr. Bascom should go into the districts and see an officer receive a smile from the people he helps. This is his kick-back, his reward, and that smile is far more precious than any kick-back he could ever receive. Take it from one who knows.”

Note how she champions the accomplishments of others. At least in the press, Rankin didn’t make much of her groundbreaking status, the apparent empathy and outreach that she brought to the position, nor to the fact that she was promoted to sergeant 11 months before her husband Donald.

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At the time when Mercedes Rankin contributed her recipe to the Bethel Cookbook, the pastor would have been John Richard Bryant, who is credited with reviving the church and growing the congregation.
Dating back to 1785, Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church (Bethel A.M.E.) Baltimore is the oldest independent continuously operating African American church in the state of Maryland.

According to Wikipedia: “Portuguese sweet bread is common in both Hawaiian cuisine and New England cuisine as it was brought to those regions by their large Portuguese immigrant populations.” This sweet bread recipe was traditionally baked around the Easter holiday. 

Rankin’s recipe didn’t specify whether the butter should be melted, and the internet seems to go either way. I went with melted butter and this turned out fine. I was worried by how dark the crust became in the oven but after I let it sit and cut it open, it yielded a delicious sweet snack. I enjoyed it with lime curd, and later used it to make excellent french toast.

Mercedes Rankin passed away in September of 2011. According the the Baltimore Police Department website:

“Hundreds of women currently serve on the Baltimore Police Department. Female police officers serve as detectives, sergeants, lieutenants, and members of the command staff in a variety of assignments within the department.  There are NO assignments that a female can’t do or isn’t open to, including police commissioner.”

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Recipe:

  • 2 package yeast
  • .25 Cup lukewarm water
  • 1 Cup sugar
  • 1 Teaspoon salt
  • 6 Cup regular flour
  • 3 eggs, beaten
  • 1 Cup milk
  • 1 stick butter, melted

Start yeast in small bowl in lukewarm water with a pinch of sugar, until mixture begins to bubble and rise. Combine remaining sugar, salt and 4 cups of the flour in a large bowl. Make a well in the middle and drop in the eggs, yeast mixture and milk. Mix with spoon. Add butter and more flour and knead in with hands. Gradually add enough flour until dough can be shaped into a big soft ball and begins to pull away from sides of bowl when mixed. Knead until dough becomes smooth, shiny and rubbery. Cover with damp cloth and allow to rise until doubled in size (about one hour). Punch dough down and allow to “rest” 10 minutes. Shape into two loaves, place on baking sheet(s). Let loaves rise again about 45 minutes. Preheat oven to 350°. Place loaves on top rack of oven. Bake about 45 minutes to one hour – until crusts are golden brown. If desired, brush top of loaves with egg yolk mixed with water after baking for about 30 minutes. Allow to cool before slicing. Makes 2 loaves.

Recipe adapted from Bethel Cookbook, contributed by parishioner Mercedes V. Rankin

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