
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


When Lena Richard cooked her first chicken on television, she beat Julia Child to the screen by over a decade. At a time when most African American women cooks worked behind swinging kitchen doors, Richard claimed her place as a culinary authority, broadcasting in the living rooms of New Orleans’s elite white families. She was an entrepreneur, educator, author, and an icon – and her legacy lives on in her recipes. Today: her improbable rise to prominence, and her famous gumbo.
By Smithsonian Institution4.6
21582,158 ratings
When Lena Richard cooked her first chicken on television, she beat Julia Child to the screen by over a decade. At a time when most African American women cooks worked behind swinging kitchen doors, Richard claimed her place as a culinary authority, broadcasting in the living rooms of New Orleans’s elite white families. She was an entrepreneur, educator, author, and an icon – and her legacy lives on in her recipes. Today: her improbable rise to prominence, and her famous gumbo.

90,841 Listeners

43,991 Listeners

26,248 Listeners

1,487 Listeners

6,890 Listeners

1,287 Listeners

3,650 Listeners

4,198 Listeners

2,688 Listeners

2,120 Listeners

16,352 Listeners

5,145 Listeners

691 Listeners

2,312 Listeners

1,743 Listeners