The Metro: Preserving the oldest known published cookbook written by a Black woman
Lauren Myers, Tia Graham, The Metro March 5, 2025Juli McLoone, curator at the Special Collections Research Center at U-M, joined the show to discuss the process behind preserving and digitizing this extremely rare cookbook.

"A Domestic Cook Book: Containing a Careful Selection of Useful Receipts for the Kitchen," by Malinda Russell is the first known cookbook published by a Black woman.
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“A Domestic Cook Book: For the Kitchen,” published by Malinda Russell in 1866 Michigan, is the oldest known published cookbook written by a Black woman.
The book contains 260 recipes and household tips drawing from Russell’s 20 years of experience cooking in Southern kitchens, her boarding house, and her pastry shop, according to the University of Michigan Press.
Juli McLoone is a curator in the Special Collections Research Center at U-M. One of her focus areas is the evolution of cuisine in various regions and cultures, and she helped to preserve and digitize “A Domestic Cook Book.”
McLoone joined The Metro on Tuesday to discuss the preservation process and the unique history behind this extremely rare cookbook.
Use the media player above to hear the full conversation.
More stories from The Metro on Tuesday, March 4, 2025.
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Tia Graham is a reporter and Weekend Edition Host for 101.9 WDET. She graduated from Michigan State University where she had the unique privilege of covering former President Barack Obama and his trip to Lansing in 2014.
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