
To help keep our community authentic, we're showing information about accounts on Linktree.
Mecca Bos has been a member of Linktree for 1 year and joined in December 2024. The social media accounts linked to from Mecca Bos are: • Instagram Besides social media accounts, MeccaBos1 has populated their site with: • Free Immigrant Kitchen July 20! • In the Twin Cities’ Robust Dining Scene, Few Black-Owned Businesses (Published 2020) • MinneCulture Podcast | Ep. 30: The Godfather of Black Space in Minneapolis • The Chitlins Question • Aunt Jemima, Mammy, and Me • I’m a New (Really New) Nigerian Chef • A Broken Arm Permanently Altered My Relationship with the Kitchen • The Eater Guide to the Heartland • We need more Native American restaurants | Food and Environment Reporting Network • Anthony Brutus Cassius and the First Black-Owned Bar in Downtown Minneapolis • "Truly a Cambodian Dish" • “Home is where my feet are” • Sarah White: Curry Mother, Healer, Kale Masseuse, Land Steward • "We Win in Our Story" • Elsa & Jeremy • Tastes Like Africa • George Floyd, Remembered: “He Was a Beautiful Man” • It’s Never Too Late to Make Your First Hotdish • Kamal Mohamed wants to serve new, Ethiopian-inspired food at his dining spot, StepChld. He also wants to throw out the old, tyrannical ways of running a restaurant. • Love in a cornhusk: Tamales ritual makes family out of friends • Hmong snack connects present with the past • As immigrants, John Gebretatose and his mother learned to make french fries with Eritrean dipping sauce. The experience, he recalls, helped him feel like a ‘normal’ American kid. • The East African twist on an American staple • The secret ingredient is time: Minneapolis chef Gustavo Romero shares the family recipe that you won’t find at his hit Minneapolis taqueria, Nixta. • When fufu is a taste of love and a taste of home • 'This is good food': Reclaiming a classic Nigerian dish in Minnesota • Black Women Are Key to the American Kitchen - But Remain Invisible • Hastings natives create graphic novel from difficult hometown history • Bars as safe spaces for people of color in Minneapolis