Making a living in ASEAN
Objectives
Review of future forms: will and be going to Future continuous and future perfect (Just) in case: simple past / past perfect / future with will or be going toReading
Many African Americans are visiting Ghana
because of its historic links to the slave trade across the Atlantic Ocean
hundreds of years ago. A professional cook who goes by the name Chef Sage –
which is not her real name – waits for the U.S. visitors in Ghana’s capital. At her cafe in Accra, she cooks food
influenced by her time in the United States, the Caribbean islands and Ghana.
The smell of spices floats in the air while her loyal customers sit at tables
outside. “I had that Southern influence, my grandmother with cornbread …the
whole soul food works, and then also being in the Caribbean, having that
Caribbean influence as well. I don’t know if a lot of people (living) in
Africa know that the foods in the Caribbean are so similar,” She said that
she is seeing more African American customers who are in Ghana for "Year
of Return" activities. They are visiting to mark 400 years since the
start of the transatlantic slave trade. The visitors sit with regular customers as
Chef Sage and her family serves plant-based meals. Chef Sage was born in
Brooklyn, New York, moved to Saint Croix in the U.S. Virgin Islands as a
child and moved to Ghana in 2005. Some “African Americans…do consider this
our homeland and we are happy to be here but that food, you are still looking
for what you are accustomed too. So I think I attract African Americans
because I still have those flavors,” Sage said. Chef Sage does private cooking in Accra in
addition to her café. The food changes weekly and can include anything from
sweet potato pie to tacos to salads - all made with local products. Customers
like Grisel Industrioso say the food is about good tastes and community. “You
have people from Jamaica, different Caribbean islands…you have people from
California and from the East like myself but there is something that brings
us together as one people. We can all relate to this food,” Industrioso said. The ties between food in Ghana and the
United States are something that Essie Bartels also explores. She is a
businesswoman with a real interest in food. She sells spices and sauces that
show the similarities in foods from around the world. “Being able to see
where all these hotspots of flavors are and bringing them together, that is
what I am trying to do with Essie Spice and that is what I hope the Year of
Return will do,” she said. She added, we want “people to see how connected
even food is around the world.” Bartels and Chef Sage say the Year of Return
is a good time to understand the relationship between shared African history
and food. Retrieved February 4, 2020 from https://learningenglish.voanews.com/a/from-the-us-to-ghana-a-taste-of-home-in-the-homeland/5090652.html |