Ifrah F. Ahmed grew up watching her mother cook by instinct—no measurements, just memory and feel. Now, her debut cookbook Soomaaliya: Food, Memory and Migration is doing something remarkable: preserving a cuisine that war, displacement, and colonial history have pushed to the edge of being lost. Spanning 75 recipes, the book traces Somali food through the ancient Silk Road spice trade, Italian colonization, and the global diaspora—showing how camel milk, spiced rice, and sambusas have traveled and transformed without losing their essence. Released at a moment when Somali Americans face intensifying political hostility, the book doubles as cultural armor. Ahmed is clear, however—she wrote it for Somalis first. Everyone else is simply welcome at the table.
The Guardian