Read A Love Affair with Southern Cooking Online
Authors: Jean Anderson,Jean Anderson
3 tablespoons butter
3 medium potatoes, peeled, diced, and blanched in hot water (about 1 pound)
1 medium yellow onion, coarsely chopped
1 small green bell pepper, cored, seeded, and diced
1 small celery rib, trimmed and diced
1 tablespoon minced fresh jalapeño pepper
¾ cup finely diced country ham (see Tip above)
2 cups drained, cooked hominy or one One 15-ounce can whole hominy, drained (see Note above)
Salt and black pepper, to taste
1 tablespoon finely snipped fresh chives
GRILLADES AND GRITS
MAKES
6
SERVINGS
To be honest, I can’t remember exactly when or where I first tasted grillades. Louisiana to be sure, but I don’t think New Orleans because I’ve spent more time prowling the countryside than in the Big Easy. I didn’t expect my small-town North Carolina butcher to know what I was cooking the first time I ordered two pounds of top round sliced ½ inch thick. But quick as anything, he said, “You makin’ grillades?” I’ve taken a few liberties with what most folks would consider to be the New Orleans classic. For another layer of flavor, I like to add a little white wine, also a bit of oregano. Note:
Top round is exceptionally lean and unless handled with TLC will be tough. In restaurants, grillades are often scaloppine-thin, but I’ve had better luck keeping them tender if they are
½
inch thick. Here’s another good preventive: Once the browned grillades go into the sauce, keep the heat low and keep the pan covered; too much heat will surely toughen them
.
Tip:
If you prefer not to use bacon drippings in this recipe (they do add flavor), use
¼
cup of vegetable oil instead of two tablespoons each of drippings and oil.
¾ cup unsifted all-purpose flour
1¼ teaspoons salt
½ teaspoon black pepper
2 pounds beef top round, sliced ½ inch thick and each slice cut crosswise into thirds
2 tablespoons bacon drippings (see Tip above)
2 tablespoons vegetable oil
1 large yellow onion, coarsely chopped
12 large scallions (about 2 bunches), trimmed and coarsely chopped (include as many green tops as possible; also reserve 3 tablespoons chopped scallions for a garnish)
1 small green bell pepper, cored, seeded, and moderately coarsely chopped
1 large celery rib, trimmed and finely chopped
3 large garlic cloves, finely chopped
2 large whole bay leaves, preferably fresh
1 teaspoon dried leaf thyme, crumbled
½ teaspoon dried leaf oregano, crumbled
¼ teaspoon ground hot red pepper (cayenne), or to taste
2 tablespoons dredging mixture (reserved from above)
1½ tablespoons tomato paste
½ cup dry white wine
1 cup beef broth
One 14.5-ounce can diced tomatoes, with their liquid
¼ cup coarsely chopped Italian parsley
1 cup grits, cooked by package directions (preferably stone-ground grits)
3 tablespoons coarsely chopped scallions to garnish (reserved from chopped scallions above)
BEEF AND MIRLITON CASSEROLE
MAKES
6
SERVINGS
Wherever mirlitons grow (principally in Louisiana and Florida), these pear-shaped, white-fleshed, pale green vegetables (kin both to cucumbers and summer squash) are also called vegetable pears, christophenes, custard marrows, and chayotes. As far back as the sixteenth century, Spanish explorer Francisco Hernandez found them growing in Mexico (they’re believed to be native to Guatemala) and entered this observation in his journal: “This Aztec chayoti is like a hedgehog…The fruit is eaten cooked and is sold in markets everywhere.” In the Deep South, cooks prepare mirlitons in countless ways and among the best, I think, is this casserole. Note:
Mirlitons (often marketed as “chayotes”) are becoming more widely available beyond the South; many specialty groceries and some supermarkets now stock them. Look for them in late fall and winter.
1½ tablespoons bacon drippings or vegetable oil
2 medium-large mirlitons (about 1½ pounds), quartered lengthwise, peeled, pitted, and cut into ½-inch dice
1 pound ground beef chuck
1 large yellow onion, coarsely chopped
1 small green bell pepper, cored, seeded, and finely diced
1 large garlic clove, finely chopped
One 4.5-ounce can chopped green chilies, well drained
1 teaspoon salt
¼ teaspoon black pepper
2 cups coarsely crumbled stale, firm-textured white bread (about 4 slices)
2 cups coarsely shredded sharp Cheddar cheese
ROASTED RACK OF LAMB WITH FIELD PEA RELISH
MAKES
4
SERVINGS
No one in the Raleigh neighborhood of my childhood would eat lamb, and my friends were startled to learn that my mother often broiled lamb chops or roasted a leg of lamb. One night a school chum who had come home with me after school stayed for dinner. Enjoying the meal, she turned to compliment my mother: “Miz Anderson, that was the best steak I ever ate.” Mother smiled, then added, “I’m glad you liked those little steaks, Bettie Lou. But actually they were lamb chops!” My friend gagged. “But we
never
eat lamb! We
hate
lamb!” That was the first time lamb had passed Bettie Lou’s lips
and I suspect that it was the last. Old habits die hard down south. This peculiar prejudice appears to be a “class” thing; certainly it has nothing to do with the range wars out west. The South’s better-educated, more aristocratic families have always eaten lamb, indeed since Colonial days. Only the hardscrabble folk and those descended from them eschew it. Fortunately, Walter Royal, a gifted southern chef whom I once profiled for
Food & Wine,
appreciates the merits of lamb and does it proud with a peppery field pea relish. The recipes here are adapted from those that accompanied my article.
4 large garlic cloves, finely minced
1 tablespoon minced fresh rosemary or 1 teaspoon dried leaf rosemary, crumbled
½ teaspoon coarse or kosher salt
½ teaspoon hot paprika
¼ teaspoon hot red pepper flakes, crushed
¼ teaspoon black pepper
One 8-rib rack of lamb (about 3 pounds; have the butcher “french” the rib ends)
1 tablespoon fruity olive oil
Field Pea Relish
The North seldom tries to fry chicken and this is well; the art cannot be learned north of the line of Mason and Dixon.
—
MARK TWAIN
Heirloom Recipe
SPICED ROUND OF BEEF, FOR CHRISTMAS
Several of the early fund-raiser cookbooks in my collection contain recipes for Spiced Beef, a Christmas classic in many parts of the South. This one is fairly representative.
15 pounds off the round of beef, with the bone in
¼ cup saltpeter
1
/
3
box kitchen salt (Morton’s)
1 small can ground cinnamon
1 small can ground cloves
1 quart black molasses
1 small can ground allspice
Combine the saltpeter, salt, spices, and molasses, and rub into the beef. Tie beef around with strips of gauze bandage, to hold it in shape. Place in large enamel roaster, cover, and keep in refrigerator (or, if no room, keep on cold porch) one day for each pound. Turn meat daily and baste it several times a day with the mixture and the beef juice which collects. When ready to cook, add enough water to cover, and simmer very slowly for 3 hours; let cool in the water. Trim, then tie fresh gauze strips around it. Serve sliced paper-thin, with eggnog and crackers.
—
The Church Mouse Cook Book
, compiled by the Women of St. Paul’s Episcopal Church, Ivy, Virginia, 1964
Recipe contributed by Mrs. Robert T. Phillips, Greenville, South Carolina