Before dying by lethal injection on March 5, 2020, death row inmate Nathaniel Woods requested a last meal of sweet potatoes, spinach, a chicken patty and leg quarter, cooked apples, fries, two oranges and an orange-flavored drink. Woods had only taken one bite when corrections officers escorted him into the execution chamber. He was pronounced dead at 9:01 p.m.
The last meal is a ritual granted to some condemned prisoners in the United States and various countries around the world. Although the custom has a rich and controversial history, last meals evoke a morbid curiosity and leave many people wondering, "What would I choose as my final meal?"
True crime fan and recipe developer Ashley Lecker explored death row last meal requests in her book The Serial Killer Cookbook_, which pairs trivia with recipes of the meals murderers ate during their final hours._ A&E spoke with Lecker about her research, the ripple effect of some crimes and the surprising facts she uncovered about the killers and their last meal requests.
What were some of the more common last meal requests?
As I researched last meals, one theme stuck out: Southern comfort food. This makes sense because capital punishment is something that's more widely used in the South than in the North. Often, death row inmates choose pies, and I've included a variety in the cookbook.
Fried chicken and chicken-fried steak, which are popular southern dishes, were also common among last meals. But ice cream and milkshakes topped the list. Almost every person, if they requested dessert, wanted some type of ice cream. I would say about 80 percent chose this frozen treat. [Oklahoma City bomber] Timothy McVeigh had mint-chip ice cream, and William Bonin [the Freeway Killer] requested chocolate ice cream.
What were some of the more bizarre or exotic last meal requests?
There are several [last meal requests] included in the cookbook that really stand out to me. One is from Robert Buell [who was convicted of the murder of an 11-year-old girl]. He requested a single black, unpitted olive. For the book, what I did is a single-olive tapenade recipe. Typically, tapenade will have a couple of different types of olives, but this recipe has only one type of olive in it.