Read A Love Affair with Southern Cooking Online
Authors: Jean Anderson,Jean Anderson
HAM, OKRA, AND TOMATO SOUP
MAKES
6
SERVINGS
Having grown up in Ohio, my father probably never tasted okra until he moved to Raleigh to teach at North Carolina State College, and it was
“yecchhh!”
at first bite. As a child, I remember his saying, “When I’m elected president, no farmer will be allowed to grow okra.” He was joking, of course. Still, the only times I ever encountered okra were in school cafeterias, at the homes of friends, and at the old S & W in downtown Raleigh where Daddy took us on special occasions. To be honest, I wasn’t crazy about okra either. But my two thoroughly southern nieces, Linda and Kim, have taught me to appreciate it.
1 small ham hock (about 1 pound)
6 cups (1½ quarts) cold water
2 large whole bay leaves, preferably fresh
2 tablespoons bacon drippings
1 large yellow onion, coarsely chopped
1 cup diced ham (from the hock, plus additional ham if needed to round out the measure)
1 tablespoon sugar
1 pound baby okra, stemmed and moderately finely chopped
One 14.5-ounce can crushed tomatoes, with all liquid
1½ teaspoons salt, or to taste
¼ teaspoon black pepper, or to taste
CLEAN-UP-THE-GARDEN VEGETABLE SOUP
MAKES
6
SERVINGS
I had barely begun my job as assistant home demonstration agent in Iredell County, North Carolina, when I was sent to the northern end of the county to persuade a country woman to reinstate her teenage son and daughter in the 4-H Club. Fresh out of Cornell and never having spent much time with country folk, I was startled to find that her home was a four-room cabin with daylight streaking through walls, ceiling, and floor. In the kitchen I came upon Mrs. Farmer, a blowsy, red-faced woman, making soup mix from garden gleanings. Chickens pecked up the spills and shoats (young pigs) snoozed beside the stove. Mrs. Farmer’s opening shot: “Are you a lipper or a dipper?” I had no idea what she meant. “Your snuff,” she continued. “What do you do with it? I’ll bet you’re one of them dainty l’il things what daubs it around with a toothpick”—her definition of a “dipper.” She, a “lipper” and proud of it, pulled out her lower lip and upended a can of Tube Rose directly into it. I was unprepared for the tirade that followed. Under no circumstances would she permit her children to rejoin the 4-H Club because “it was draggin’ them through the flames of hell…’lowed them to dance!” Which she pronounced
dayntz.
Clearly we had no common ground; in fact we could barely communicate. In defense of Mrs. Farmer, however, I will say that she made one terrific soup mix and canned gallons of it “for good winter eatin’.” It’s the basis for this vegetable soup—but no garden needed. I buy the makings at my local farmer’s market.
3 tablespoons bacon drippings or vegetable oil
1 large yellow onion, coarsely chopped
1 medium celery rib, trimmed and thinly sliced (include some leaves)
1 medium carrot, trimmed and thinly sliced
¼ cup coarsely chopped parsley
½ teaspoon dried leaf thyme, crumbled
1 large whole bay leaf, preferably fresh
4 cups (1 quart) chicken stock or broth
3 large dead-ripe tomatoes, cored, peeled, and coarsely chopped (reserve juice) or 2 cups canned crushed tomatoes, with their liquid
1½ cups fresh whole-kernel sweet corn or if unavailable, solidly frozen whole-kernel corn
1 tablespoon sugar
1 teaspoon salt, or to taste
½ teaspoon black pepper, or to taste
8 ounces tender young okra pods, stemmed and sliced ½ inch thick or if unavailable, solidly frozen sliced okra
VIDALIA ONION SOUP WITH SMOKY BACON
MAKES
4
SERVINGS
The inspiration for this elegant onion soup is one that I enjoyed some while back at the Carolina Crossroads Restaurant in Chapel Hill’s historic Carolina Inn. Chef Brian Stapleton here is one of some half dozen gifted chefs bringing sophisticated cuisine to the Raleigh-Durham–Chapel Hill triangle, an area once known for food that “did not soar.” Thanks to the international corporations now doing business in the Research Triangle Park, a vast rural swatch anchored by these three university towns, this is a region of increasingly cosmopolitan and demanding tastes.
4 slices richly smoked bacon, snipped crosswise at ¼-inch intervals
2 large Vidalia onions, coarsely chopped (about 1½ pounds)
2 large garlic cloves, finely minced
2
/
3
cup dry white wine (such as riesling, chardonnay, or pinot grigio)
Five 3-inch sprigs of lemon thyme tied in cheesecloth with 2 large bay leaves (preferably fresh)
1 medium all-purpose potato, peeled and finely diced (6 to 8 ounces)
4 cups (1 quart) chicken stock or broth
½ teaspoon salt, or to taste
1
/
8
teaspoon ground hot red pepper (cayenne), or to taste
1 cup light cream or half-and-half
¼ cup finely snipped fresh chives or garlic chives
CREAMY MIRLITON SOUP
MAKES
6
SERVINGS
Also called chayotes, vegetable pears, or custard marrows, mirlitons are particularly popular in the Deep South where they are grown commercially. Their delicate, faintly sweet flavor reminds me of cymlings (pattypan squash), to which they’re related. Southerners know countless ways to prepare mirlitons, among them this silky soup. Make it a day ahead, then serve hot or cold.
3 tablespoons butter
2 medium-large mirlitons (about 1½ pounds), quartered, peeled, pitted, then each quarter thinly sliced
1 large Vidalia onion (about ¾ pound), halved, peeled, then each half thinly sliced
1 medium celery rib, trimmed and thinly sliced
3 large parsley branches
1 large whole bay leaf, preferably fresh
3 cups chicken broth
½ teaspoon salt, or to taste
¼ teaspoon black pepper, or to taste
1 cup half-and-half
¼ cup buttermilk
2 tablespoons finely snipped fresh chives
Variations
Yellow Squash Soup:
Prepare the soup as directed but substitute 1½ pounds thinly sliced yellow squash for mirlitons and 8 finely chopped large scallions for the Vidalia onion; also add ¼ teaspoon finely chopped fresh (or crumbled dry) rosemary. In Step 2, cook only until the vegetables are soft—15 to 20 minutes—then proceed as directed. Serve hot or cold, garnishing each portion with a small sprig of rosemary instead of freshly snipped chives.
Cool Cucumber Soup:
Prepare the mirliton soup as directed, substituting 1½ pounds peeled, seeded, thinly sliced cucumbers for mirlitons and 8 finely chopped large scallions for the Vidalia onion. Omit the bay leaf and use 3 large dill sprigs in place of the parsley. In Step 2, cook only until the vegetables are soft—15 to 20 minutes—then proceed as directed. Finally, increase the amount of buttermilk to ½ cup. Serve cold and garnish each portion with freshly snipped dill instead of chives.
TIME LINE: the people and events that shaped Southern Cuisine
1775 | | After years of “taxation without representation,” the American colonies rise up against England and the American Revolution begins. |
| | George Washington plants “Mississippi nuts” (pecans) at Mount Vernon. |
| | Using the Cumberland Pass, Daniel Boone and 30 axemen hack through 208 miles of forest between Kingsport, Tennessee, and the Kentucky River, clearing a “Wilderness Trail” for Kentucky-bound colonists. |
1776 | | The American colonies declare their independence from England but the Revolutionary War continues for seven more years. |
| | Many in New Orleans sicken and die from eating spoiled flour. |
1778 | | Louisville is founded and named in honor of Louis XVI. Thanks to its location on the Ohio River, it becomes a major port for goods and passengers steamboating down the Mississippi. Within 50 years, Louisville is Kentucky’s largest city; it still is. |
1779 | | Thomas Jefferson imports pecan trees from Louisiana and plants groves of them at Monticello. |
COOL FLORIDA AVOCADO SOUP
MAKES
4
TO
6
SERVINGS
When I was a teenager, my mother, father, and I piled into our pea-green Mercury and headed to Florida, where my older brother was working as an intern in an architectural firm. I was excited to be heading south (a first, since our relatives all lived in the Midwest), thrilled, too, to be adding three new states to my list. Still under the spell of
Gone With the Wind
,
I yearned to see Tara-like plantations and fields of cotton. From Raleigh, it took us a day and a half to reach Florida; there were no Interstates then and the speed limit was only fifty-five on the open road. We lunched in Charleston, South Carolina, still sleepy, still poor, then drove on to Savannah for the night. Arriving just as shafts of downing sun filtered through tatters of Spanish moss, I thought Savannah the most romantic city I’d ever seen. It was down-at-heel then, even slightly decadent. By noon the next day we were in the land of oranges. What impressed me even more, however, were the avocado trees; every Florida yard seemed to have one. Back home, avocados were a “special order,” still my father the botanist made sure that my brother and I met them early on—sliced thin and drizzled with a not-too-tart vinaigrette. I never dreamed that avocados could be prepared any other way until I tasted a cool, ever-so-lightly curried soup on that first trip to Florida. This is my attempt to re-create that soup from those long-ago flavor memories. Note:
Bright green Florida avocados are much larger than the dark-skinned Hass and Fuertes of California, yet they are more delicate and lower in calories. Indigenous to and cultivated in Latin America for more than 7,000 years, avocados were introduced to Florida in 1833 by horticulturist Henry Perrine. Only at the turn of the twentieth century, however, did they become a commercial crop.