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・ Leah Ayres
・ Leah Baird
・ Leah Berard
・ Leah Betts
・ Leah Blatt Glasser
・ Leah Blayney
・ Leah Bodine Drake
・ Leah Borromeo
・ Leah Bracknell
・ Leah Buechley
・ Leah Busque
・ Leah Cairns
・ Leah Callahan
・ Leah Cecil
・ Leah Cevoli
Leah Chase
・ Leah Chishugi
・ Leah Clark
・ Leah Cole
・ Leah Coloff
・ Leah Coombes
・ Leah Culver
・ Leah Curtis
・ Leah Curtis (composer)
・ Leah Curtis (footballer)
・ Leah D'Emilio
・ Leah D. Daughtry
・ Leah D. Widtsoe
・ Leah Daniels
・ Leah Dickerman


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Leah Chase : ウィキペディア英語版
Leah Chase

Leah Chase (born January 6, 1923) is a New Orleans chef, author and television personality. She is known as the Queen of Creole Cuisine, and advocates for African-American art and Creole cooking. Her restaurant, Dooky Chase, was known as a gathering place during the 1960s among many who participated in the Civil Rights movement; and was known as a gallery due to its extensive African-American art collection.
Chase has been the recipient of a multitude of awards and honors. In her 2002 biography, Chase's awards and honors occupy over two pages. Chase was inducted into the James Beard Foundation's Who's Who of Food & Beverage in America in 2010. She was honored with a lifetime achievement award from the Southern Foodways Alliance in 2000. Chase received honorary degrees from Tulane University, Dillard University, Our Lady of Holy Cross College, Madonna College, Loyola University New Orleans, and Johnson & Wales University. She was awarded Times-Picayune Loving Cup Award in 1997. The Southern Food and Beverage Museum in New Orleans, Louisiana named a permanent gallery in Chase's honor in 2009.〔
==Life and career==
Leah Chase was born to Creole parents in Madisonville, Louisiana, United States. When Chase was 14 years old, she moved to New Orleans to live with relatives and attend St. Mary's Academy. After high school, Chase worked in the Colonial Restaurant in the French Quarter in New Orleans. In 1945, she married musician Edgar "Dooky" Chase II, whose parents owned the Dooky Chase Restaurant. Chase began working at the restaurant during the 1950s and, over time, she eventually converted the menu to reflect her own family's Creole recipes. She also developed an interest in African-American art and began to display dozens of paintings by local African-American artists.
Dooky Chase's 5th Ward location was flooded by Hurricane Katrina and was not scheduled to reopen until the summer of 2006. To save Chase's African-American art collection from damage, her grandson placed the art collection in storage. The New Orleans restaurant community got together on April 14, 2006 (Holy Thursday) to hold a benefit, charging $75 to $500 per person for a gumbo z'herbes, fried chicken, and bread pudding lunch at a posh French Quarter restaurant. The guests consumed 50 gallons of gumbo and raised $40,000 for the 82-year-old Mrs. Chase. Dooky Chase restaurant was scheduled to open April 5, 2007. It opened mostly for take-out and special events because of a shortage of trained waitstaff.
In the 2012 revival of Tennessee Williams's classic New Orleans play ''A Streetcar Named Desire'', which had an all-African-American cast, a mention of the restaurant Galatoire's (which was segregated during the play's post-war 1940s time period) was changed to a mention of Dooky Chase's Restaurant, which was integrated.
Leah Chase inspired the Disney character Tiana of ''The Princess and the Frog''.
She hosts a cooking show devoted to Creole cooking, and she is the author of several cookbooks.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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