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Malinda Russell

Malinda Russell
Born ca. 1812
Washington County, Tennessee
Died after 1866
Nationality American
Occupation cook, pastry chef
Years active 1840-1866
Known for writing the first cookbook penned by an African American woman in the U.S.
Notable work Domestic Cook Book: Containing a Careful Selection of Useful Receipts for the Kitchen (1866)

Malinda Russell (ca. 1812-?) was a free black woman from Tennessee who earned her living as a cook and published the first known cookbook by a black woman in the United States. The book is historically significant, as it shows that black Southern cooking was not solely the domain of poverty cooking, but provides evidence of a sophisticated cosmopolitan skill with complex dishes.

Malinda Russell was born around 1812 in Washington County, Tennessee, and raised in Greene County. Little is known of her childhood, other than that her mother, Karon, died when Russell was a child. Karon was one of the first group of slaves freed by a man from Virginia named Mr. Noddie. Russell attained a high level of education for the period. In the 1830s, when Russell was around 19 years old, she traveled to Virginia with a certificate vouching for her character, written by a Doctor More. Her plan was to go from Lynchburg, Virginia, to Liberia. By the time she arrived, she was penniless, having been robbed by a fellow traveler, and took employment working for a Lynchville family as a nurse and traveling companion. A slave woman, Fanny Steward, who had been freed by her Virginia master, taught Russell how to cook, using The Virginia House-wife written by Mary Randolph.

Russell became a cook, predominantly of baked goods. She married Anderson Vaughn while still in Virginia and had an invalid son with him. Vaughn died after four years and Russell began working as a laundress to support herself and their child. At some point, she returned to Tennessee and operated a boarding house on Chuckey Mountain near Cold Spring for three years. She then ran a successful pastry shop for around six years. When her Tennessee home was raided by traveling gangs of whites in 1864, she fled with her son to Paw Paw, Michigan, where she published the first known cookbook by a black woman, Domestic Cook Book: Containing a Careful Selection of Useful Receipts for the Kitchen, as a means to provide income for her and her son and earn money to return to Greeneville, Tennessee. Within months of her publication, the town of Paw Paw was destroyed by fire and further trace of Russell is unknown.


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