“She’s been a community staple for years,” the source said. “She would pull up to different nightclubs to serve food. She’s given food to the homeless countless times. If you’re someone in her area that patronizes her business, she’s the first one to jump and go overboard.”When the business was finally able to open a storefront off of Dolley Madison Road after the pandemic, the community was excited to welcome another Black restaurant to the scene.“There’s not that many Black businesses around here,” said Mutsa Mukahanana, who visited the restaurant last year after it went viral. “There’s not a lot of options for soul food.”
It sounds like she got her start carrying plates of food to sell in nightclubs, eventually earning enough to open the brick-and-mortar store. Many of her base customers are likely 'exotic dancers,' and while she wants them to come around she also wants the community as a whole to feel like it's a decent place where they can bring their family. The motto of the restaurant, "God did it," is also suggestive of motive, as are the worshipful videos she posts on FB.
Apparently she originally became famous because of a TikTok account called Ride with Yusuf, who loved the place.
"When I had her food last year it was amazing," the TikTok star who goes by the name Ride with Yusuf, and has 140,000 followers, said on Labor Day. "The love and soul she put in that food was amazing."
It's her right and her business, he said before adding that he didn't know anything about her business policies. He said he had nothing but good interactions with her[.]
So if any of you like soul food, and happen to be in Greensboro, I hear it's pretty good.
6 comments:
May I suggest reading Fr Nix discussion of Men and Womans Fashion from a historical and biblical point of view?
Seems you both are discussing fashion at the same time...
Which I find somewhat fascinating.
Greg
https://padreperegrino.org/2024/09/fashionfatima/
I would like to ask these "reporters" if they never encountered a restaurant with a dress code before, and why they consider this establishment's requirements noteworthy.
Probably because there’s become a cultural objection to telling women what to wear. I’ve been excluded from restaurants a couple of times over it. One wanted men to wear a tie; the other wanted sleeves on men’s shirts. (I was coming from a Scottish Highland Games at the time; the shirt was hand-woven wool, but didn’t have sleeves for performance reasons.)
But when I told my wife about the story, she said the same thing: “Is that legal?”
I don't know if they still do, but High Hampton Inn restaurant had a dress code for men and women for dinner hours. Tie and coat for the men and dresses for the women
The only time I’ve ever been in a restaurant at High Hampton I was carrying a fire axe. They lost one a couple of years ago, fortunately in an outbuilding and not inside the historic inn.
From "local press" link:
Written on the glass (on the entry door) is everything from, “NO crop tops,” to “DO NOT ENTER IF YOU HAVE ON SHORTS,” with the first two words underlined.
Sounds like an Ann Althouse sort of place. I wear shorts 6-7 months of the year- say from 75 degrees on up-so they won't be getting my business.
When I was working in Trinidad, an elderly black woman called me a "white MFC" for wearing shorts. Which a high proportion of Trini males did, also. She told me she thought that I was slumming it in Trinidad, that I wouldn't be wearing shorts in the US. Oh well..
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