



Punjabi Spice Meets Cincy Nice

To Reserve Your Meal: https://www.showclix.com/…/soul-plates-punjabi-spice…
Visitation Hours and Meal Pickup : Wednesdays from 4pm – 7:30pm
Pickup Location: 1310 Pendleton St, Cincinnati, OH 45202
Virtual Dinners: Wednesdays, 7:45-8:45pm
Soul Plates invites the community to go deeper into the diverse flavors and traditions and that define us as cultures, communities and individuals by reflecting on soul food and our connection to food as a form of resistance, an act of joy, an expression of love, and deep down, a part of who we are. Soul Plates is generously supported by ArtsWave, Kroger, and the Cincinnati Development Fund.
Each Wednesday in February, join Soul Plates for a shared meal and intimate conversation as we pass the culture through smell, taste, sound & storytelling.
Each Soul Plate is unique to the culture & memories of our dinner hosts. Your Soul Plate will include a prepared dish, a paired beverage (non-alcoholic), a curated dinner playlist, the evening’s table topics + few surprises to help transport you into each dinner host’s kitchen and memories. Dishes may include some light assembly and re-warming.
Wednesday, February 10:
The Dinner Host: Nav Lekhi of Preet’s
The Memory: Punjabi Spice meets Cincy Nice
The Menu:
Grilled Paneer Sandwich loaded with curry slaw, mint chutney and tamarind pickles
Side of Achari Grippos
Mango Juice
Feeds 1 (or a small tasting for 2). Light assembly & re-warming required.
For full details, visit: soulplates.org/gather
Wednesday, February 3
The Dinner Host: Nickey Stevenson of Southern Grace Cincy
The Memory: A Sunday Meal at Big Momma’s House
The Menu:
Southern Baked Chicken with Sides:
Mashed Potatoes
Green Beans
Cornbread
Peach Cobbler
Sweet Tea
Feeds 1-2. Re-warming required.
For full details, visit: soulplates.org/gather
Time
Wednesday, February 10, 2021 AT 4 PM – 9 PM
Location
The Annex Gallery
1310 Pendleton Street
Cincinnati Ohio
45205



Philately was one of the small devotions of my childhood. I inherited hundreds of stamps from my father. I could never say whether he collected them himself or simply bought them for my brother and me. Among all of them, one in particular held my gaze with disproportionate insistence: a reproduction of The Sleeping Gypsy, the 1897 painting by Henri Rousseau that I finally saw years later at the MoMA.



Staged Self-Portraits, Erased Histories and the Recasting of the American Dream

The first solo exhibition of young photographer Mark Duc Nguyen