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Elizabeth Terry (née Bennett, born c. 1943) is an American chef who was best known as owner and head chef of the Elizabeth on 37th restaurant in
Savannah A savanna or savannah is a mixed woodland-grassland (i.e. grassy woodland) ecosystem characterised by the trees being sufficiently widely spaced so that the Canopy (forest), canopy does not close. The open canopy allows sufficient light to rea ...
, Georgia.


Early life and education

Elizabeth Terry was born in Salem, Ohio, the first of six children of Gordon Flagg and Nanee Gibbs Bennett. She remembers the influence her grandmother's Louisiana home cooking from when she was child. Terry graduated with a degree in psychology from Lake Erie College in 1966. There, she met her future husband, Michael H. Terry, who was attending neighboring Kenyon College. They married in 1966, and moved to Cambridge, Massachusetts, while Michael studied at Harvard University.


Career

Terry's first jobs before college had been selling bridal clothes and dressmaking in a fabric store. While her husband pursued his studies, she obtained jobs as a probation officer and lab assistant. Following his graduation, they moved to Atlanta, where their first daughter was born. With her husband's encouragement to find something new to do, Terry began working in a cheese and wine shop, then ran her own lunch shop called Thyme For You. They travelled through France on six occasions, where Terry picked up cooking techniques from many chefs. In 1980, they moved to
Savannah A savanna or savannah is a mixed woodland-grassland (i.e. grassy woodland) ecosystem characterised by the trees being sufficiently widely spaced so that the Canopy (forest), canopy does not close. The open canopy allows sufficient light to rea ...
where she planned to open a sandwich shop. This eventually became a restaurant housed on the ground floor of a mansion built in 1900, while the family (now including a second daughter) lived upstairs. The restaurant, Elizabeth on 37th, opened on May 14, 1981. She had researched historical recipes from families living in the local area at the Georgia Historical Society. The year after opening, ''Atlanta Magazine'' described the restaurant as "the finest restaurant anywhere in coastal Georgia." It won several awards, including the 1995 James Beard Foundation Award for Best Chef Southeast, "in part because she adredefined Southern cuisine for the '90s". Terry was featured in magazines including ''
Food & Wine ''Food & Wine'' is an American monthly magazine published by Dotdash Meredith. It was founded in 1978 by Ariane and Michael Batterberry. It features recipes, cooking tips, travel information, restaurant reviews, chefs, wine pairings and season ...
'', ''
Lear's ''Lear's'' was a monthly women's magazine, intended for women over 50. It covered celebrity interviews, women's issues, and many progressive issues. Its slogan was "For The Woman Who Wasn't Born Yesterday". It was published from 1988 until early ...
'', and Delta Air Lines SKY magazine. In 1996, she wrote the cookbook ''Savannah Seasons'' with her daughter Alexis. Some of her recipes had previously been published in newspapers, and one, for boned shad, was included in a book by Craig Claiborne after she had cooked it for him in 1987. In 1998, the Terrys entered into a business partnership with brothers, and longterm employees, Gary and Greg Butch. In the early 2000s, Terry was a visiting chef at cooking demonstrations in New York and at the Kellogg Center,
Michigan State University Michigan State University (Michigan State, MSU) is a public university, public Land-grant university, land-grant research university in East Lansing, Michigan. It was founded in 1855 as the Agricultural College of the State of Michigan, the fi ...
. By 2005, Terry had retired, and the Butch brothers continued to run Elizabeth on 37th, using some of Terry's old recipes. Following the death of her husband in 2012, Terry moved to live near her daughter on the West Coast.


Awards

* 1995 - James Beard Foundation Award for Best Chef Southeast * 2005 -
Barbara Tropp Barbara Tropp (1948-October 26, 2001) was an American orientalist, chef, restaurateur, and food writer. During her career, she operated China Moon restaurant in San Francisco and wrote cookbooks that popularized Chinese cuisine in America. China M ...
President's Award, Women Chefs & Restaurateurs


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Terry, Elizabeth Living people People from Salem, Ohio American chefs American women chefs Women cookbook writers Lake Erie College alumni James Beard Foundation Award winners Year of birth missing (living people) 21st-century American women