
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Kamau Bell has a long and impressive resume, including hosting seven seasons of the CNN docuseries United Shades of America, winning a Peabody Award for We Need to Talk About Cosby, and winning the third season of Celebrity Jeopardy, and he’s about to take off on his “Who’s With Me” standup tour.
Kamau wore a T-shirt on TV that read, “Not All Macaroni and Cheeses are Created Equal,” a political message and “insider Black conversation” that he explains to host Rachel Belle. We’ll also learn the true history of mac & cheese in America, a narrative that took 200 years to uncover, with James Beard Award-winning food historian Michael W. Twitty and Gayle Jessup White, a descendant of both Thomas Jefferson and James Hemmings, the enslaved head chef of Jefferson’s Monticello kitchen.
Kamau tells host Rachel Belle about his experience traveling to Kenya with Anthony Bourdain, where his unadventurous eating tendencies were seriously challenged, and of course he shares his last meal.
Watch Rachel’s Cascade PBS TV show The Nosh with Rachel Belle! Season 2 out now!
Sign up for Rachel’s new (free!) Cascade PBS newsletter for more food musings!
Follow along on Instagram!
Order Rachel’s cookbook Open Sesame.
Support Cascade PBS: https://secure.cascadepublicmedia.org/page/133995/donate/1/
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
By Rachel Belle4.8
716716 ratings
Kamau Bell has a long and impressive resume, including hosting seven seasons of the CNN docuseries United Shades of America, winning a Peabody Award for We Need to Talk About Cosby, and winning the third season of Celebrity Jeopardy, and he’s about to take off on his “Who’s With Me” standup tour.
Kamau wore a T-shirt on TV that read, “Not All Macaroni and Cheeses are Created Equal,” a political message and “insider Black conversation” that he explains to host Rachel Belle. We’ll also learn the true history of mac & cheese in America, a narrative that took 200 years to uncover, with James Beard Award-winning food historian Michael W. Twitty and Gayle Jessup White, a descendant of both Thomas Jefferson and James Hemmings, the enslaved head chef of Jefferson’s Monticello kitchen.
Kamau tells host Rachel Belle about his experience traveling to Kenya with Anthony Bourdain, where his unadventurous eating tendencies were seriously challenged, and of course he shares his last meal.
Watch Rachel’s Cascade PBS TV show The Nosh with Rachel Belle! Season 2 out now!
Sign up for Rachel’s new (free!) Cascade PBS newsletter for more food musings!
Follow along on Instagram!
Order Rachel’s cookbook Open Sesame.
Support Cascade PBS: https://secure.cascadepublicmedia.org/page/133995/donate/1/
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

2,537 Listeners

2,109 Listeners

3,068 Listeners

3,947 Listeners

1,117 Listeners

1,443 Listeners

374 Listeners

575 Listeners

38 Listeners

533 Listeners

344 Listeners

2,999 Listeners

41 Listeners

206 Listeners

1,570 Listeners

307 Listeners

138 Listeners

572 Listeners

4,860 Listeners

969 Listeners

2,317 Listeners

442 Listeners

50 Listeners

223 Listeners