Fran Osseo-Asare

Fran Osseo-Asare

Founder of BETUMI, the African Culinary Network

https://www.betumi.com
Fran Osseo-Asare, MSW, PhD, is an internationally recognized authority on African food and culture, a sociologist, blogger, founder in 1997 of BETUMI, the African Culinary Network, culinary professional, and author of numerous books. She has written for the Oxford University Press, Greenwood Press, Gastronomica, Food, Culture,and Society, Sojourners, and b.spirit! plus taught, consulted, and lectured widely (e.g., Rodale’s test kitchens, Epicure Row (the Miami Book Fair), the Culinary Historians of New York, the Textile Museum in Washington, D.C., the BBC, in Abuja, Nigeria, and for the Pennsylvania Council of the Arts. She represented African cuisine as a TED Fellow in Arusha, Tanzania in 2009. Called the “godmother of African food writing”, Fran Osseo-Asare has made information about African food and culture accessible to Americans for over 3 decades. Her latest book, The Ghana Cookbook, with Barbara Baëta, received a 2016 1st place Gourmand World Cookbook award.

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Fran's favorite cookbooks

African Cooking

African Cooking

One of 27 in the Time-Life series, and not initially planned for the series until van der Post declined to write the book on Russia and suggested he write one on “Africa”. The first book I discovered that treated Africa as having “cuisines,” even though it was heavily weighted towards colonial Africa. The West African section particularly inspired me and gave me the first clue to Barbara Baëta’s influence.

Cooking the African Way

Cooking the African Way

Part of Lerner’s Easy Ethnic Menu series. Covers East and West Africa. Easy enough for children to use, it was one of the first “child-friendly” but accurate and accessible cookbooks I found.