For food history and presidential history buffs alike, both entertaining and illuminating."--Kirkus Reviews
An intriguing glimpse into the inner workings of the White House kitchen and the chefs who have made its wonderful cuisine possible."--Library Journal
Miller opens a door into a fascinating world that few ever think about: the White House kitchens. There, he brings to light a realm shaped by an often-ignored group of African Americans who have nurtured the first families so they could lead a nation."--Booklist
Focuses on material culture, cultural issues, political dynamics, and labor relations, contributing to the study of the development of the culinary professions in the US."--Huffington Post
The time is ripe to explore [this] history, much of it previously untold." --Michael Floreak, Boston Globe
Famous recipes and amusing anecdotes aplenty. . . . A parallel history of the nation's leaders told through the lens of their domestic employees, whose stories are laced with the often difficult themes of race, social change, and career ambitions that helped define -- and feed -- America itself." --Craig LaBan, Philadelphia Inquirer
Sings the praises of more than one hundred fifty black men and women who cooked for leaders of the free world, beginning in the days of George and Martha."--Family Circle
Dissects the social and political considerations that saw African-American contributions to the White House minimized."--Mailonline.com