Read A Love Affair with Southern Cooking Online
Authors: Jean Anderson,Jean Anderson
TIME LINE: the people and events that shaped Southern Cuisine
1752 | | George Washington inherits Mount Vernon and sets about improving the farm. |
1753 | | Because many Louisianans can’t afford French brandy, the regimental adjutant allows the sale of tafia, a cheap faux brandy made from sugarcane. |
| | The Moravians, Protestant missionaries (German-speaking but originally from the Czech province of Moravia), travel south from Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, and begin settling in the North Carolina Piedmont. They call their community Bethabara (“house of passage”) because they intend it to be merely a way station. Much of it still stands near Winston-Salem. Their contributions to local cooking can be tasted today. |
1755 | | The British begin a ten-year deportation of the French-speaking Acadians from Nova Scotia, shipping them to the American colonies. Denied entry, hundreds are returned to France or sent to England. |
1756 | | Baltimore establishes trade with the British West Indies that will last 100 years. Chief exports: barrel staves, beans, bread, corn, ham, iron, peas, and tobacco. Major imports: rum, slaves, and sugar. |
PINE BARK STEW
MAKES
6
SERVINGS
On a visit to Florence, South Carolina, in 1909, President William Howard Taft was served a bowl of Pine Bark Stew “and pronounced it good.” So says the
WPA South Carolina Guide
(a Depression project launched to assist down-on-their-luck writers, artists, and photographers). In describing the stew, the
Guide
points out that it “contains no pine bark, but is a highly seasoned concoction of fish in tomato sauce.” Stories abound as to the origin of this fish muddle, or more specifically, to the origin of its unusual name. I favor the one involving Revolutionary War commander Francis Marion (“the Swamp Fox”), whose troops holed up in the South Carolina Lowcountry and harassed the Redcoats with relentless raids. Marion’s militia is said to have caught the makings of this stew in creeks and inlets, cooked it over campfires, and served it in bowls improvised of pine bark. I’ve seen bark peeled from pine saplings just the way cork is stripped from oaks in Portugal, and it seems entirely plausible that these canoe-shaped slabs could serve as soup bowls. Some food historians say “piffle,” insisting that pine bark was used to fuel the fire over which the stew simmered. Others suggest that the stew’s pine-bark color gave rise to its name. That seems unlikely because this stew is rosy. I like to think that a bit of resinous bark slipped into the stew by accident improved its flavor and from then on became an integral ingredient. As you might suspect, there are countless versions of Pine Bark Stew. One in my possession calls for
bream, bacon, onions, a full bottle of ketchup, a little vinegar for tartness, some sugar to temper the tartness, ground cloves, and cinnamon, plus peppers both red and black. The ketchup put me off of that recipe. This one seems more authentic. Note:
If you use catfish, make sure that they are home-grown; so many of the catfish now coming to market are from South Vietnam’s polluted Mekong Delta.
6 ounces salt pork or slab bacon, cut into fine dice
1 large yellow onion, coarsely chopped
2 large all-purpose potatoes, peeled and cut into 1-inch cubes
2 large whole bay leaves, preferably fresh
1 teaspoon salt, or to taste
¼ teaspoon black pepper, or to taste
¼ teaspoon ground hot red pepper (cayenne), or to taste
6 bream, bass, catfish, or brook trout fillets (about 2 pounds) (see Note above)
3 cups boiling water
2 medium-large firm-ripe tomatoes, peeled, cored, seeded, and coarsely chopped or 1½ cups canned crushed tomatoes
Although [Mary Randolph] and her husband were both of the Virginia elite, they suffered financial problems…and ultimately opened a boarding house. If it were not for these reverses, she might never have written a cookbook at all. Or, if she had, it might have focused on a richer, more patrician cuisine.
—
JOHN THORNE
,
SIMPLE COOKING
(
ON MARY RANDOLPH’S
THE VIRGINIA HOUSE-WIFE
,
THE FIRST SOUTHERN COOKBOOK
)
TIME LINE: the people and events that shaped Southern Cuisine
1764 | | The first Acadians arrive in Louisiana and settle in the bayous west of New Orleans. By harvesting the gifts of land and sea and preparing them the French way, they create the spicy, gutsy cooking called Cajun. |
1765 | | Raising longhorns, a breed introduced years earlier by the Spaniards, the newly arrived Acadians build vacheries (cattle ranches) west of New Orleans. |
1766 | | Now a town of 3,000, New Orleans is a melting pot of French, Canadians, Germans, Swiss, Creoles, Mulattos, Africans, and Native Americans, not to mention Spaniards arriving by the boatload. |
| | After a 25-year decline, rice production rebounds in the South Carolina Lowcountry and prices remain high until the Revolution. |
| | The Moravians begin building their commercial hub in central North Carolina near their earlier settlement of Bethabara; Salem, they call it. Now painstakingly restored and part of present-day Winston-Salem, this eighteenth-century Moravian town is a living museum offering tours and a variety of demonstrations. Old Salem’s biggest attraction, however, may be the 200-year-old Winkler Bakery, which sells Moravian sugar cake, love feast buns, and peppery ginger cookies. |
ROCK MUDDLE
MAKES
4
TO
6
SERVINGS
Captain John Smith, nosing the
Susan Constant
into Chesapeake Bay in 1607, was awed by the schools of striped bass. After settling at Jamestown, he noted, “The Basse is an excellent Fish, both fresh and salte…There are such multitudes that I have seene stopped close in the river adjoining to my house with a sande at one tyde so many as will loade a ship of 100 tonnes.” To Bankers (those living on the Atlantic’s southern barrier islands), a striped bass is better known as a rock or rockfish. In his
Encyclopedia of Fish Cookery,
A. J. McClane writes, “The striped bass is an anadromous fish like the salmon, a saltwater inhabitant dependent upon fresh water rivers for its reproduction.” He goes on to say that the striped bass is especially common between Cape Cod and South Carolina. On North Carolina’s Outer Banks, the most popular way to prepare rock is in a muddle—what New Englanders would call a chowder. It’s a humble dish beloved by fishermen, who sometimes boil it up right on the beach. Rock Muddle is so closely associated with the North Carolina coast that
The North Carolina Guide,
first published during the Great Depression by the WPA and now updated, includes it in its section on Food and Drink. “Fish muddles,” the
Guide
begins, “are popular in the coastal plain, particularly when the rock are running in the Roanoke. A muddle,” it continues, “is a stew made of various kinds of fish seasoned with fried fat meat, onions, potatoes, and pepper. At least it starts off
that way.” Needless to add, recipes vary significantly. Some call for tomatoes, others don’t. Some begin by rendering salt pork, others by “trying out” bacon. Newer recipes are often spiked with ketchup and/or Worcestershire sauce, but I prefer this old-fashioned muddle devoid of heavy seasoning.
4 ounces slab bacon or salt pork, cut into ¼-inch dice
1 large yellow onion, coarsely chopped
3 medium-size all-purpose potatoes, peeled and cut into ½-inch dice
4 cups water (about)
1 teaspoon salt, or to taste
½ teaspoon black pepper, or to taste
4 pounds rockfish (striped bass), dressed, skinned, and cut into 1½-to 2-inch chunks
REDFISH COURT BOUILLON
MAKES
8
SERVINGS
To classically trained chefs, a court bouillon is an aromatic broth used to cook fish, shellfish, assorted meats, and vegetables. My copy of
The New Larousse Gastronomique
offers nineteen different recipes for court bouillon but none remotely similar to the redfish court bouillon so popular in Mississippi and Louisiana. The recipe here is fairly typical although I’ve halved the amount of bacon drippings. Cajuns, particularly fond of court bouillon, cook it half the day to intensify the flavors. I’ve shortened the time and I still find this version plenty flavorful. Note:
If you use catfish, make sure that they are home-grown; so many of the catfish now coming to market are from South Vietnam’s polluted Mekong Delta. If redfish, red snapper, and catfish are all unavailable, try tilapia. It works well here.
3 tablespoons bacon drippings or vegetable oil
1 large yellow onion, coarsely chopped
1 large green bell pepper, cored, seeded, and coarsely chopped
2 large celery ribs, trimmed and coarsely chopped
6 large scallions, trimmed and thinly sliced (include some green tops)
1 cup coarsely chopped Italian parsley
2 large garlic cloves, finely chopped
2 large whole bay leaves, preferably fresh
Two 8-ounce bottles clam juice
One 8-ounce can tomato sauce
1 cup water
1 cup dry white or red wine
1 tablespoon Worcestershire sauce
1 teaspoon salt, or to taste
½ teaspoon black pepper, or to taste
1
/
8
teaspoon ground hot red pepper (cayenne), or to taste
2½ pounds redfish, red snapper, or catfish fillets (see Note at left)
1½ cups converted rice, cooked by package directions
FROGMORE STEW