🍜 Check out our Noodle bookshelf, and save 25% on ckbk Premium Membership 🍜
Published 2004
When Harland was six years old, his father died. To make ends meet, his mother worked in a tomato-canning plant, leaving the boy to fend for his siblings. Every night Harland cooked and fed them—nurturing, legend has it, his talent as a truly good cook. “The one thing I always could do was cook,” he would say years later. The rest of Sanders’s early life was spent doing a variety of jobs: farmhand, streetcar conductor, private in the military in Cuba, railroad fireman. Always he dreamed of making it big. He settled with his wife in Kentucky, seizing on business opportunities as a lawyer, an insurance salesman, and a ferry operator, alternating between going up in the world and slipping down. By 1930 Sanders was operating a service station on Highway 25 in Corbin, Kentucky. Noting the lack of anywhere decent to eat, he started cooking traditional Southern fare—including fried chicken—for passersby out of a small room in his filling station. Despite the Depression, the Sanders Café did well, even attracting the praise of Duncan Hines in Adventures in Good Eating (1939), a book designed to inform Americans where they could eat well on the road.
Unlimited, ad-free access to hundreds of the world’s best cookbooks
Over 150,000 recipes with thousands more added every month
Recommended by leading chefs and food writers
Powerful search filters to match your tastes
Create collections and add reviews or private notes to any recipe
Swipe to browse each cookbook from cover-to-cover
Manage your subscription via the My Membership page
Advertisement
Advertisement