I've just gotten a copy of Cooking Up a Storm by Marcelle Bienvenu and Judy Walker. I haven't cooked from it yet, but the story is so inspiring it makes me cry.
After Katrina, readers of the Times-Picayune New Orleans newspaper used the columns of the paper to exchange recipes with one another, trying to rebuild their lost recipe collections, many of them dating back generations; the book collects the first group of those rediscoveries and reconstructions.
It's vernacular food from the one place in the United States where you used to be able to walk into any establishment, no matter how humble or grand, and be sure of a good meal. The editors say in their introduction, that the book "tells the story, recipe by recipe, of one of the great food cities in the world, and the determination of its citizens, in the face of adversity, to preserve and safeguard their culinary legacy."
xxx, mcvl