Soul food queen Sylvia Woods remembered in New York City

NEW YORK (AP) - Sylvia Woods, the founder of the famed Harlem soul food restaurant that bears her name, was remembered Tuesday by her patrons and friends as a warm and welcoming trailblazer who turned her small eatery into a bustling city gem...

NEW YORK (AP) — Sylvia Woods, the founder of the famed Harlem soul food restaurant that bears her name, was remembered Tuesday by her patrons and friends as a warm and welcoming trailblazer who turned her small eatery into a bustling city gem.

A wake and public service were being held Tuesday at Abyssinian Baptist Church in Harlem. Mayor Michael Bloomberg would be among the speakers. Woods died last week at age 86 after dealing with Alzheimer’s disease for the past few years.

Woods and her husband, Herbert, natives of South Carolina who met as children, started Sylvia’sRestaurant in 1962. The restaurant is a Harlem fixture, with tourists and locals coming there for cornbread, ribs, collard greens, fried chicken and other staples of Southern cooking and politicians, including President Barack Obama, making frequent visits while on the campaign trail.

On Tuesday, mourners filed past an open casket. She was laid out in a cream-colored brocade suit. The altar was adorned with white flowers: roses, orchids and calla lilies.

“She was our shining start,” said Audrey Quintano, 53, who worked for Woods as her executive catering chef in the 1990s and is now preparing to open her own restaurant.

Quintano said that “Miss Sylvia” was her mentor and that Herbert and Sylvia Woods provided a wonderful example of a happy marriage.

“He would act as if he had just met her and he was 19,” Quintano said. “They were the perfect couple.”

Paul George, 63, a retired city worker who lives in the neighborhood, said Woods gave out free food to the community every Monday.

“She was a wonderful, wonderful woman, and she was a woman of God,” he said.

Yvonne Maddox, a frequent customer and neighborhood resident, said, “I’ve known her 17 years. She inspired all of us, especially women. Running a business must not have been easy for a black lady 50 years ago and at the same time raising a beautiful family.”

From its start as a restaurant, Sylvia’s has grown to include multiple cookbooks and a nationwide line of food products. The restaurant marked its 50th anniversary in August. Woods officially stepped down from running the restaurant when she was 80, leaving it in the hands of her children and grandchildren. Herbert Woods died in 2001.

Another service is scheduled for Wednesday at Grace Baptist Church in Mount Vernon, where Woods lived.

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press.

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TheGrio’s Jonathan Radford and Melissa Noel contributed the video.

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