<description>Abderrahim Ouarghidi was born and raised in Morocco, but until the day he and his wife Bronwen Powell found them during fieldwork, he had never seen collard greens there.</description>

Eat This Podcast

Jeremy Cherfas

Collards: A Moroccan Mystery

MAY 4, 202624 MIN
Eat This Podcast

Collards: A Moroccan Mystery

MAY 4, 202624 MIN

Description

Collard greens are a kind of cabbage that grows as loose leaves rather than forming a tight head. They’re eaten widely in parts of Europe and in East Africa, but perhaps most strongly associated with the food of Black people in the southern United States. There are many mysteries surrounding collards, like how and why did they become so popular in the US South. To that can be added the recent discovery of collards in oasis gardens in Morocco, where again they are associated with enslaved people trafficked from West Africa. Bronwen Powell and Abderrahim Ouarghidi have done their best to unravel the mystery of collards in Morocco and how that may shine light on their place in Southern foodways. Notes Collard Greens (Brassica oleracea var. viridis) in the Moroccan Oasis by Bronwen Powell and Abderrahim Ouarghidi is published in Economic Botany. Fortunately, they also wrote about their work in The Conversation, which is where I first saw it. If you want to see how they prepare collards in Morocco, Bronwen made a video. While reading around the topic, I came across this lovely piece about food and belonging: Snow Falling on Collards. Here is the transcript. Banner photo of the Draa valley by Richard Allaway. Cover photo of collards by Jeff Wright.    Huffduff it