Read A Love Affair with Southern Cooking Online
Authors: Jean Anderson,Jean Anderson
TIDEWATER PEANUT SOUP
MAKES
6
SERVINGS
Peanut soup, it’s said, was one of George Washington’s favorites, not surprising given the fact that Mount Vernon was in Tidewater Virginia—“peanut country.” These underground legumes grow equally well in Tidewater North Carolina, so peanut soup has long been a specialty there, too. In the old days, cooks would shell the peanuts, roast them, mash them to paste, then simmer them into soup. This modern version takes advantage of peanut butter; use your favorite brand.
2 tablespoons butter or bacon drippings (I prefer the latter)
1 large yellow onion, coarsely chopped
1 large celery rib, trimmed and coarsely chopped
1 large ripe tomato, peeled, cored, and coarsely chopped, or ½ cup tomato sauce
½ teaspoon crumbled leaf thyme
½ teaspoon freshly grated nutmeg or ¼ teaspoon ground nutmeg
½ teaspoon salt, or to taste
¼ teaspoon black pepper, or to taste
¼ teaspoon ground hot red pepper (cayenne)
2½ cups chicken broth
1 cup firmly packed creamy-style peanut butter
¾ cup milk
¾ cup half-and-half
2 tablespoons medium-dry sherry, tawny
¾ cup firmly packed sour cream beaten until smooth with ¼ cup milk (topping)
2 tablespoons finely snipped fresh chives (garnish)
PEANUTS
Where did peanuts originate? Some say Bolivia, others Peru, and still others Brazil. When in doubt about the life history of plants, I turn to a source I trust:
Economic Botany
(1952) by Harvard professor Albert Hill.
“The peanut,” Hill writes, “is a native of South America but was early carried to the Old World tropics by the Portuguese explorers and is now grown extensively in India, East and West Africa, China, and Indonesia.”
“Portuguese” is the clue here. Following the lead of Prince Henry the Navigator, explorer Pedro Alvarez Cabral claimed Brazil for Portugal in 1500, which suggests that peanuts may be indigenous to that equatorial country. However, jars of them have also been found in the Incan graves of Peru. Were peanuts carried from Brazil to Peru? Or vice versa? Or did they grow in both places simultaneously?
Most culinary historians agree, however, that African slaves, believing peanuts to possess souls, brought them to Virginia from the Congo.
Nguba,
they called them (now Anglicized into “goober”). Slaves planted peanuts throughout the South, in the beginning for their own use. Virginia’s first commercial crop was harvested as silage in Sussex County in the 1840s, North Carolina’s some thirty years earlier around Wilmington.
During the Civil War, the Blues and Grays both subsisted upon peanuts. The Yanks developed a taste for the curious groundnuts that had to be dug and carried some of them home. Soon after, cries of “Hot Roasted Peanuts” rang through the stands of P. T. Barnum’s circuses.
Only in the early twentieth century, however, did peanuts became a major cash crop. The boll weevil had killed King Cotton, farms lay fallow, and down-and-out southern farmers were desperate. The peanut was their salvation. And George Washington Carver of Alabama’s Tuskegee Institute was their savior. He devoted his life to proving the value and versatility of this lowly legume. For despite common belief, the peanut is more
pea
than
nut
.
Today, four types of peanuts are grown: Runners (54 percent of them are churned into peanut butter)…Virginias (plump and sweet, the roaster’s choice)…Spanish (small “snacking” nuts also commonly used in candy)…and Valencias (little redskins roasted in the shell).
Peanut trivia abounds: Two presidents grew peanuts (Thomas Jefferson and Jimmy Carter, who still owns a Georgia peanut farm); astronaut Alan Shepard carried a peanut to the moon; and a good
schmear
of peanut butter on the lips of Mr. Ed is what kept everybody’s favorite TV horse talking back in the 1960s.
LIGHTLY CURRIED PEANUT BISQUE
MAKES
6
SERVINGS
Completely different from the peanut soup that precedes, this one is the creation of Lisa Ruffin Harrison, a gifted home cook whom I interviewed back in the 1980s for a
Bon Appétit
article on James River plantations. I photographed at Evelynton, where Lisa grew up. “This soup is a kind of African variation on the Virginia original,” Lisa says. “It should have a blend of spicy ethnic flavors and I prefer it with a good dose of cayenne,” she adds, explaining that she loves to update old southern recipes. “The walnuts take the candy-bar sweetness out of the peanuts.” So do pecans, which Lisa says she now prefers to walnuts.
3 tablespoons butter
2 medium celery ribs, trimmed and coarsely chopped
1 large yellow onion, coarsely chopped
1 teaspoon curry powder
½ teaspoon ground cumin
1
/
8
teaspoon ground coriander
1
/
8
teaspoon ground turmeric
1
/
8
teaspoon ground hot red pepper (cayenne)
1
/
8
teaspoon black pepper
¾ cup firmly packed chunky or creamy peanut butter
5 cups rich chicken stock or broth
½ cup coarsely chopped pecans or walnuts
½ cup heavy cream
½ teaspoon salt, or to taste
Garnishes
½ teaspoon sweet paprika
¼ cup coarsely chopped roasted unsalted peanuts
2 tablespoons finely snipped fresh chives
6 tablespoons mango chutney (optional)
ROYAL SWEET POTATO SOUP
MAKES
6
SERVINGS
“Royal” doesn’t refer to “royalty” but to Alabama-born Walter Royal, one of the South’s most dedicated chefs. Barely out of graduate school, Royal headed to North Carolina’s Fearrington House near Chapel Hill to work with his idol, Edna Lewis. He later became sous chef at Ben and Karen Barker’s Magnolia Grill in Durham, and he is now executive chef at the Angus Barn, an immensely popular restaurant near Raleigh. Royal likes to improvise with what the South grows best, in this case sweet potatoes. For the North Carolina SweetPotato Commission, he created a soup that’s both silky and savory. No sugar and spice here—nor in my adaptation below.
3 slices hickory-smoked bacon, cut crosswise into strips ½ inch wide
2½ pounds sweet potatoes, peeled and diced
1 medium Granny Smith apple, peeled, cored, and coarsely chopped
1 medium yellow onion, coarsely chopped
1 large carrot, peeled and coarsely chopped
1 medium celery rib, trimmed and coarsely chopped (include a few leaves)
1 large shallot, finely chopped
1 large garlic clove, finely chopped
½ teaspoon dried leaf basil, crumbled
½ teaspoon dried leaf oregano, crumbled
¼ teaspoon dried leaf thyme, crumbled
1
/
3
cup unsifted all-purpose flour
8 cups (2 quarts) rich chicken stock or broth
1½ teaspoons salt, or to taste
½ teaspoon black pepper, or to taste
¼ teaspoon hot red pepper sauce, or to taste
1 cup heavy cream
Garnishes
Sour cream or crème fraîche
Reserved cooked bacon
6 sprigs of fresh lemon thyme
TIME LINE: the people and events that shaped Southern Cuisine
1793 | | Louisiana Governor Francisco Luis Carondelet begins closing bars and taverns. |
1796 | | Because of meager harvests, Louisiana bans the export of corn, flour, and rice. |
| | The Newsom family develops a recipe for smoke-curing hams on their Virginia farm. The family later moves to Kentucky and today Colonel Bill Newsom’s Aged Kentucky Country Hams are cured according to that 1796 recipe. (See Sources, backmatter.) |
1797 | | George Washington builds a distillery beside his prosperous grist mill at Mount Vernon and in the first year makes $7,500 on 11,000 gallons of whiskey—a fortune in those days. |
1798 | | To improve city lighting, New Orleans butchers and bakers agree to pay a “chimney tax.” At the same time, local bakers manipulate the price of flour. |
1799 | | French botanist François André Michaux plants tea in the South Carolina Lowcountry near Charleston on what is now Middleton Place Plantation. |
If anything could be called the national dish of the South, perhaps barbecue, even more so than fried chicken, would be it.
Damon Lee Fowler,
Classical Southern Cooking
L
eaf through almost any early southern cookbook and you’ll discover an extraordinary variety of meat, fish, and fowl as well as some unexpectedly sophisticated recipes.
In Mary Randolph’s
Virginia House-wife
(1824), I find sweetbreads, saddle of mutton, black sausage, and goose. Game bird, rabbit, and venison recipes abound in Lettice Bryan’s
Kentucky Housewife
(1839); she even offers a few ways to prepare beef cheeks. A glance, moreover, at Sarah Rutledge’s
Carolina Housewife
(1847) turns up turtle, terrapin, and mullet roes in addition to more familiar fare. Not even Mrs. Dull’s
Southern Cooking
(1928) neglects calf’s brains, sweetbreads, goose, duck, rabbit, or possum.
Why, then, have so many of these fallen from favor for the home cook? Times change, tastes change. The Civil War killed the planter aristocracy and now the self-sufficient family farm is “going with the wind,” thanks to our increasingly ravenous agro-business. Supermarkets proliferate, driving the mom-and-pop grocery and family butcher out of business; stricter hunting and fishing laws, not to mention better protection of endangered species, make wild game and fish less readily available. Finally, the big food companies have wooed and won home cooks with a staggering array of convenience foods. I find this particularly dismaying down south because Southerners have always taken pride in their distinctly regional cuisine. Old family recipes were cherished and preserved from generation to generation.
So what do southern supermarkets sell today? Sealed-in-plastic hamburger, steaks,
and roasts precut half a continent away; packaged poultry parts; canned or frozen seafood. Most southern meat departments, furthermore, are devoted to pork: chops, ribs, roasts, country ham slices as well as big pink packing-house hams, side meat, salt pork, bacon, and fresh-daily local sausages—hot or sagey links, patties, or one-pound blocks. Anything else is a “special order” and good luck with that. Fortunately, farmer’s markets, food co-ops, and specialty groceries are beginning to fill the void in many parts of the South.
The scent of sausage frying spins me back to my childhood. Not to my mother’s kitchen but to, of all places, the local car pool. I was a little girl during World War Two and to save on gas, neighbors took turns driving four or five of us kids to school, one of whom always smelled of freshly fried sausage. We got a good whiff the instant she slipped into the car.
Sausage for breakfast sounded wonderful compared to the oatmeal, orange juice, and rich Jersey milk I downed every morning (along with a tablespoon of mint-flavored cod liver oil).
My midwestern mother never fried sausage or chicken or pork chops or any of the other things Southerners automatically dropped into hot fat. She was a good meat-and-potatoes cook but the meats she chose confounded my southern friends: leg of lamb, breast of veal, rabbit, beef heart and tongue, calf’s liver. There were husky goulashes, pot roasts, even Wiener schnitzel, which I adored because it tasted like fried chicken.
Although Mother occasionally baked a ham, I don’t remember her ever cooking fresh pork. To be honest, I don’t know whether it was rationed during World War Two or not (I was too young to pay much attention). I do remember, however, that roast beef and steaks were strictly rationed and reserved for special occasions. Also that beef heart and tongue, and rabbit required few of the precious “red points” in my mother’s ration book. Perhaps none at all. And with chickens in the backyard, we never ran out of meat or eggs.
For Mother, chicken was something to stuff and roast like turkey, something to stew, fricassee, or bubble into a massive pot of Country Captain (a southern recipe obtained from a friend). Still, chicken never hit the skillet in Mother’s kitchen, much as I begged her to fry it.
For that reason, I loved going home from school with chums;
their
mothers might be frying chicken for supper and I might be asked to stay.
As for fish, Mother made a mean oyster stew (which I couldn’t eat—I’m allergic to oysters), a fairly classic salmon loaf, and tuna salad. But boiled crabs were my favorite. Using pieces of string tied to safety pins threaded with bacon, my brother and I would catch crabs right in front of our summer cottage on Chesapeake Bay. Mother would drop them into a huge cauldron of sea water bubbling on the old wood stove—
just like the local salt who had taught her the Virginia way to cook live-and-kicking blue crabs.
Most of what Mother prepared, however, came out of her Illinois background, her college days at Wellesley, or her early married years in Vienna, where my father had been teaching. Exotic stuff in our devoutly southern neighborhood. The kids liked to make fun of the “Yankee” food my family ate and I didn’t like that. Today I’m proud that my mother had the courage to be “different.”
Back then, however, I yearned for the pork chops, fried chicken, barbecue, and sausages my friends’ mothers served. They were more to my liking and in many ways still are, thus I’ve spent a lifetime learning to cook them as Southerners seem almost genetically programmed to do.
I have no idea why I’ve always been so in love with southern food. If I were Shirley MacLaine, I’d swear that I’d been southern in an earlier life.
So what you’ll find in this chapter are hefty helpings of the old-fashioned southern meat, fish, and fowl dishes I adored as a child along with imaginative improvisations by some of the New South’s best young chefs. Dig in.
Brunswick stew is what happens when small mammals carrying ears of corn fall into barbecue pits.
—
ROY BLOUNT, JR
.
TIME LINE: the people and events that shaped Southern Cuisine
1800 | | With the price and quality of bread fluctuating wildly, Louisiana creates two grades—premium and common—and fixes the price of each. |
| | Virginians, still determined to make good wine, begin hybridizing American and European grapes: the New World varieties for hardiness, the European for finesse. (See Southern Wines, Chapter 3.) |
| | Wave after wave of Virginians abandon their worn-out farms and seek fertile ground in Tennessee, Kentucky, and Ohio. But they take Virginia culture and cuisine with them. |
1802 | | President Thomas Jefferson serves home-cranked ice cream at the White House. |
1803 | | With the Louisiana Purchase, French-Spanish Louisiana falls into American hands and its spicy flavors begin to enrich the culinary melting pot. |
| | The population of New Orleans is now predominantly French Creole (50 percent) and Spanish (25 percent). Both influence Louisiana cooking. |
1805 | | Members of the Shaker religious sect arrive in central Kentucky and begin converting local citizens to their celibate way of life. They will influence Kentucky cooking. |
APPLE AND BOURBON–BASTED PORK LOIN
MAKES
6
SERVINGS
To keep pork roasts moist, Southerners baste them with everything from orange juice to Coca-Cola. Bourbon is an old favorite; so is apple juice or cider and I’ve combined the two here. With pork leaner than ever, keeping it moist is doubly difficult. It helps, I find, to use more artisanal pork such as that produced by Niman Ranch and to roast it at a high temperature for a short period of time so the heat sears the outside of the meat and seals in the juices. Finally, roasting pork to a lower internal temperature (145° to 150° F.) makes it more succulent. Although tinged with pink, this pork is perfectly safe to eat; the microbes that cause trichinosis are killed at 140° F. Indeed trichinosis, prevalent when hogs were slopped with kitchen scraps, is a thing of the past. Still, if like many Southerners you prefer well-done pork, give the roast another 15 to 20 minutes in the oven. Note:
It’s important that the pork loin be wrapped in a thin layer of fat—this, too, increases the roast’s succulence.
One 2¾-to 3-pound boned and rolled pork loin (see Note above)
½ teaspoon black pepper
1 cup apple juice (I use an organic Gravenstein juice that has deep apple flavor)
¼ cup bourbon
2 tablespoons spicy brown mustard
1¾ cups chicken broth
½ cup half-and-half
5 tablespoons all-purpose flour
½ teaspoon salt, or to taste
TIME LINE: the people and events that shaped Southern Cuisine
1806 | | With Carnival getting out of hand, the Louisiana governor bans masked balls and parades. |
1808 | | The U.S. Constitution outlaws the slave trade. |
1810 | | President Madison annexes West Florida, which includes Florida west of the Appalachicola River and parts of Alabama and Mississippi and Louisiana east of the Mississippi. |
1813 | | A proper market goes up near the levee in New Orleans with flagstone floors and slate roofs. Popular items: calas (hot rice cakes), Texas beef at 12½ cents a pound, |
1815 | | The Shakers begin building Pleasant Hill, their settlement in the Kentucky bluegrass. By the 1850s, there are some 600 Shakers at Pleasant Hill occupying 250 buildings and working 2,800 acres of land. They become famous for their seeds, their produce, their furniture, their architecture, and their food. |
SPICY GRILLED PORK TENDERLOIN
MAKES
4
TO
6
SERVINGS
I hesitate to call this “barbecue” although some people might. It’s unlike any barbecue I’ve eaten; still it’s a popular way to prepare pork tenderloin down south. Note:
If you have no gas or charcoal grill, roast the tenderloins in the oven following the directions below.
2 large whole garlic cloves
4 large scallions, trimmed and chunked (white part only)
¾ cup pineapple juice
½ cup cider vinegar
One 8-ounce can tomato sauce
2 tablespoons tomato ketchup
2 tablespoons molasses (not too dark)
2 tablespoons Dijon mustard
1 tablespoon packed light brown sugar
1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce
½ to 1 teaspoon hot red pepper sauce (depending on how “hot” you like things)
Two 1-pound pork tenderloins
2 tablespoons cold butter, diced