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The Kitchen Sisters Present

Kibbe at the Crossroads - Lebanese Immigrants and Cooking in the Mississippi Delta

The Kitchen Sisters Present

The Kitchen Sisters & Radiotopia

Society & Culture

4.61.3K Ratings

🗓️ 19 August 2025

⏱️ 21 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

We travel to the Mississippi Delta and the world of Lebanese immigrants, where barbecue and the blues meet kibbe, a kind of traditional Lebanese raw meatloaf. Lebanese immigrants began arriving in the Delta in the late 1800s, soon after the Civil War. Many worked as peddlers, then grocers and restaurateurs.

Kibbe — a word and a recipe with so many variations. Ground lamb or beef mixed with bulgur wheat, cinnamon, salt and pepper. Many love it raw. However it’s made, it’s part of the glue that holds the Lebanese family culture together in the Mississippi Delta and beyond.

We visit Pat Davis, owner of Abe’s BAR-B-Q at the intersection of Highway 61 and 49 in Clarksdale, Mississippi, the famed crossroads where, legend has it, blues icon Robert Johnson made a deal with the devil to play guitar better than anybody. Since 1924 Abe’s has been known for it’s barbecue, but if you know to ask, they’ve got grape leaves in the back.

Chafik Chamoun, who owns Chamoun’s Rest Haven on Highway 61, features Southern, Lebanese and Italian food — but he’s best known for his Kibbe. Chafik arrived in Clarksdale from Lebanon in 1954, and first worked as a peddler selling ladies slips and nylon stockings.

Sammy Ray, Professor Emeritus at Texas A&M University, Galveston, talks about growing up in a barbecue shack that his mother ran on the edge of what was then called “Black Town.” His father peddled dry goods to the Black sharecroppers.

During the civil rights movement in the 1960s, Abe’s BAR-B-Q and Chamoun’s Rest Haven were some of the only restaurants in the area that would serve Black people. “We were tested in 1965,” Pat Davis remembers. “A bunch of Black kids went to all the restaurants on the highway and every one refused them except Chamoun’s and my place. And everybody else got lawsuits against them.”

The list of famous Lebanese Americans is long and impressive. Ralph Nader, Paul Anka, Dick Dale, Casey Kasem, Khalil Gibran and Vince Vaughn, to name a few. But the one most people talked about on our trip was Danny Thomas. Pat Davis took us out in the parking lot to listen to a CD that he just happened to have in his car of Danny Thomas singing in Arabic.

“We called ourselves Syrians when we first came here,” Davis says. “And until Danny came and said he was Lebanese then we all began to realize we really are Lebanese and Danny Thomas can say it. So we’re Lebanese now.”

Produced by The Kitchen Sisters (Davia Nelson & Nikki Silva), mixed by Jim McKee, for the James Beard Award winning Hidden Kitchens series on NPR.

The Kitchen Sisters Present is produced by The Kitchen Sisters with Nathan Dalton and Brandi Howell. We are part of PRX's Radiotopia, a curated network of podcasts created by independent producers.

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Transcript

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0:00.0

Radio Topia. Welcome to the Kitchen Sisters present. From PRX. We're the Kitchen Sisters,

0:07.2

Davia Nelson, and Nikki Silva. Hi, I've got another Radiotopia podcast I know you're going to like.

0:15.9

It's called Home Cooking. It was launched back in March 2020 at the start of the lockdown to help you figure

0:22.7

out what to cook. Well, it's back for a whole new season. It's co-hosted by chef and author of the

0:28.8

best-selling cookbook, Salt, Fat, Acid Heat. I'm sure you've seen that around or own a copy. It's

0:35.1

fantastic. And Rishi K. Shireway, host and creator of one of my favorite

0:40.0

Radiotopia podcast's Song Exploder. Listeners from around the world send them their cooking questions.

0:46.7

Their answers are informative and a lot of fun. Home cooking was named one of the 100 best

0:52.3

podcasts of all time by time. Their website, homecooking.

0:56.5

Show, has transcripts and recipes to go along with each episode. It's a podcast that'll

1:02.1

make you hungry and make you laugh. Go subscribe to home cooking. You're going to love these two.

1:08.0

They are a kick. They said the blues was born here, in Coxdale.

1:15.5

We have a blue museum here. I don't want no more blues. I have blue when I was young. We used to

1:21.3

have the blues in the field in the old country. My mother singing all that sad songs, I'll never

1:26.4

forget it. Cut in the wheat, picking the grapes.

1:34.3

Today, we're revisiting a story from our Hidden Kitchen series about immigration, a timely topic at the moment, and the merging of cultures and foodways and music. The story came to us from

1:46.4

John T. Edge and the Southern Foodways Alliance. We were headed for the SFA's annual symposium

1:52.4

in Oxford, Mississippi, and we asked John T. about hidden kitchens in the Delta, Kibby, he said.

1:59.1

John T. began telling stories of the Lebanese people who migrated to Mississippi and

2:03.6

waves beginning in the 1870s through the 1920s and even into the 1960s.

2:09.6

John T. pointed us down the road and said,

2:11.6

Be sure to read down the menus.

...

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