I’m carrying on the legacy of Black bakers before me
Their skill and knowledge is why I bake today

Carla Briggs is one of the bakers featured in our Let Good Things Rise series, and we're thrilled to welcome her to the blog to reflect on how she (and her sweet potato cinnamon rolls!) embody a long Black culinary lineage.
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Early one Saturday morning, my nephew and I gather to make Sweet Potato Cinnamon Rolls. The joy of being my assistant is written all over his face. At 12 years old, he is learning the art and science of being a great baker.
Together, we go through the bread-baking process. He peels, cooks, and mashes the sweet potatoes until they’re the perfect consistency to add to the dough. We follow the recipe, measuring out all the ingredients with meticulous attention to detail. I talk to him about gluten development and the kneading process. After the ingredients are added to the stand mixer and kneaded for a few minutes, we stop and pull out a piece of dough to do a windowpane test, checking if it's fully kneaded. He’s surprised there’s so much science and work that goes into baking.
I share my knowledge and expertise with him because I’m excited he wants to learn, but also because I want him to have a set of skills he can use to make money and create wealth for himself. My time with him reminds me of my early days as a baker and the valuable time I spent in the kitchen with women who shaped my culinary career without ever experiencing their own success or fame in a professional kitchen.
I come from a long line of gifted chefs and bakers; despite their talent and skill, they struggled to create or maintain wealth that would change their legacy in part because of the color of their skin.
Historically, the contributions of African Americans to the food industry are not common knowledge. In fact, it was the work of scientists of color that even made it possible to bake this simple recipe for Sweet Potato Cinnamon Rolls.
Chemical engineer Norbert Rillieux, a New Orleans-born free man of color, revolutionized sugar processing in the early 19th century with his invention of the multiple effect evaporator, which became the basis for all modern industrial sugar evaporation. But even though his method was cheaper, safer, and more efficient than existing sugar production, he still experienced racist treatment, including being mistaken as an enslaved person while applying for a patent.
George Washington Carver’s research in the early 20th century gave farmers insight into how to save and use sweet potatoes. His in-depth writing and agricultural inventions have been invaluable to the industry, but he lived a simple life.
As a bread baker myself, I’ve found the accomplishments of Joseph Lee particularly inspiring: a 19th century baker, he invented a bread machine with superior kneading action that enabled commercial bakers to make consistent products. He used his knowledge, talent, and problem-solving skill to change the way commercial bakers bake, even today.
Learning of the immeasurable ways Black people have contributed to the food industry is an example of why representation matters.
We’re told that our contributions are not meaningful; that we are the help and the assistants, not the game-changers. These scientists did groundbreaking work that benefited so many people, but they were thought of as less than human. The industry and media paints people of color as inferior, but the ways they have improved the world make them great.
Ultimately, knowing that people who look like me have made an impact in food changes the way I think about my role in this industry. It shows and tells me that my contribution is not worthless.
Listen to my story and do a simple dive into our country's history of racial inequality in food. You’ll see the culinary injustice that has happened in the past — from enslaved chefs whose contributions went unacknowledged to Black farmers who were forced off their land — and is still happening today. The foodservice industry is full of people of color, but despite their gifts and skills women and men of color are not treated fairly, don’t get the same opportunities, and are not building wealth despite their contributions.
Exceptional women and men show up with confidence, consistency, creativity, resourcefulness, and dedication to their craft, families, and communities in amazing ways each day, but they’re often robbed of their industry-changing culinary ideas. When these ideas and contributions are taken, the wealth gap perpetuates and people struggle to live sustainable lives.
My mother, great-grandmother, grandmother, aunts, and family friends were the foundational instructors of my culinary education, and they look just like me. These gifted women were precise in measurement but seldom used a measuring cup; knowledgeable about recipes but often never referenced a cookbook.
I remember the tin of index cards full of shorthand recipes my great-grandmother referenced to make her delicious creations; those cards were an example of the confidence and beauty she instilled in her food. She spent most of her life in a field working with minimal education, but she was able to perfect her skills in baking and loving her family.
Her contribution to food is small and unnoticed to many, but because she shared her gift, I am now able to share mine. I honor her and others by using the knowledge they have taught me to build wealth and legacy for my family.
The joy and passion for baking I received from my great-grandmother and other women in my family is why my bakery, Viola’s Heritage Breads, was created. It exists because I get to watch my nephew discover confidence and joy in a craft that I have spent years finding creative freedom and confidence in.
Through Viola’s Heritage Breads my hope is simple: to create a legacy around baking that is rooted in the heritage of the gifted women and men who came before me, maximizes my gifts and skills, creates opportunity, and paves a path for people who look like me to share their amazing gifts with the world.
For more personal recipes and baking stories, see our Let Good Things Rise homepage.
Cover photo by Eloi Moli
September 25, 2022 at 9:38pm
Having lived in New Orleans, I have been fortunate to personally sample delicious items from Viola's Heritage Breads. Each model has been a delight & I look forward to the next chance to taste the magic they create. The narrative Carla shares regarding the gross inequities people of color have experienced in the culinary industry are so disheartening. I appreciate her efforts to educate & share her gift with us all.
April 17, 2022 at 2:03am
I am another, African-American, who loves the culinary arts, and, making bread is a wonderful art! I have a, Holy Bible quote, on what bread means to me, today, Cast Your Bread on the Water, Ecclesiastes 11:1, (NKJV). Okay, keep up the good work, and, praise the lord!
April 3, 2021 at 6:27pm
thank you Carla for sharing your recipe and posting your story. I made the sweet potato cinnamon rolls and it was simply delicious. I have ended my search for the perfect recipe, you have it! I shared this recipe with my daughter and it was an instant hit at the brunch she attended. I myself watched and helped my grandmother bake in the kitchen, she never used a recipe and sadly we never wrote any of them down while she was still alive, so her amazing dishes died with her. I have since found some recipes that were very close to what I remember in some hungarian and polish cook books.
Thank you for sharing your heritage
March 14, 2021 at 5:32pm
Such a moving story. Thank you for the history of the continuing contributions made by black scientists that benefit us all so sweetly.
I will be making these for the next outdoor, socially distanced, family gathering we have when it is a bit warmer.
March 15, 2021 at 10:10pm
In reply to Such a moving story. Thank… by Beekeeper (not verified)
AMEN!!!
February 7, 2021 at 5:14pm
Thank you for such an interesting article.It gives me something to delve into more, researching these fine men's inventions on a very cold -26C! weekend. I am making sour dough cinnamon rolls using a recipe from this website but I will try the sweet potato ones next as my daughter loves sweet potatoes.
I like the idea of sharing stories and recipes.
February 1, 2021 at 6:11pm
Thank you for sharing your baking experiences with us ,Love that you’re teaching the next generation the wonderful art of baking . I did this too with children I have cared for in my nanny career and gives me delight to see their baking creations now. Teaching them to bale with love and joy is what it’s all about.😊
February 1, 2021 at 1:34pm
Thank you for your heartfelt story. It truly is sad seeing and hearing how prejudice among the human race has oppressed many. We all have something great to offer. Are we not to Love and treat one another as we would want to be treated.
Diversity is wonderful! I look forward to trying the sweet potato cinnamon rolls soon as well as other recipes. Let us grow, learn and love one another.
February 1, 2021 at 12:46pm
Thank you for teaching me about Joseph Lee. I did not know about him or his huge contribution to the baking industry! We need more historical facts like this so that we can appreciate those who came before us!
February 1, 2021 at 5:41am
Thank you for sharing. I learned quite a bit about baking from my grandmother, mom and relatives. Working to pass along baking tips to others. You are an inspiration. I also felt baking and cooking a great way to introduce children to the world of measuring and fractions. As they measure and use these tools do not realize they are learning math facts.
Pagination