Read A Love Affair with Southern Cooking Online
Authors: Jean Anderson,Jean Anderson
1½ pounds large shrimp in the shell
6 tablespoons (¾ stick) butter, melted (see Tip above)
3 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
2 tablespoons olive oil
½ teaspoon Worcestershire sauce
½ teaspoon black pepper
1 large garlic clove, finely minced
1 large bay leaf, crumbled
¾ teaspoon crumbled dried leaf rosemary
½ teaspoon salt
¼ teaspoon crumbled dried leaf basil
¼ teaspoon crumbled dried leaf oregano
¼ teaspoon ground hot red pepper (cayenne)
¼ teaspoon freshly grated nutmeg
¼ teaspoon sweet paprika
¼ teaspoon hot red pepper sauce
CURRIED SHRIMP AND CHICKEN
MAKES
6
TO
8
SERVINGS
Here’s a southern classic reinvented by Elizabeth Terry, for years the creative force behind Elizabeth on 37
th
, by some accounts Savannah’s finest restaurant. With the help of husband Michael, who abandoned law to lend a hand, Terry opened Elizabeth back in 1981. Eleven years later, she’d made
Food & Wine
’s list of America’s Top 25 Restaurants—a first, surely, for a self-taught chef. Craig Claiborne, the powerful
New York Times
food columnist, came, ate, and raved in private and in print. I myself was so impressed by Elizabeth’s magic that I wrote about her twice: for
Food & Wine
back in the late ’80s, and then again just a few years ago for
More
magazine. The recipe below is adapted from one that accompanied my
Food & Wine
article (a different version appears in Terry’s cookbook,
Savannah Seasons: Food and Stories from Elizabeth on 37
th
, with whimsical art by Elizabeth’s older daughter, Alexis). Both recipes are new spins on Country Captain and both are brilliant; for me, however, my adaptation is easier. After twenty years behind the stove, Terry has left the kitchen, moved to California, and become a potter. Here, too, she is a virtuoso.
1 cup converted rice
1 tablespoon curry powder
2 teaspoons finely minced fresh ginger
1½ teaspoons finely grated orange zest
1½ teaspoons salt
¼ teaspoon ground hot red pepper (cayenne)
2 cups cold water
1½ pounds boneless, skinless chicken breasts, cut crosswise and on the bias into strips 1½ inches wide
¼ teaspoon black pepper
2 medium Granny Smith apples (about ¾ pound), cored and cut into ½-inch dice (do not peel)
1 medium yellow onion, moderately coarsely chopped
1 medium green bell pepper, cored, seeded, and moderately coarsely chopped
One 14-ounce can plum tomatoes, drained well and coarsely chopped
2½ tablespoons dried currants plumped in 2 tablespoons hot water
2 large garlic cloves, finely minced
¾ cup rich chicken broth or stock
1½ pounds medium shrimp, shelled and deveined
½ cup lightly toasted coarsely chopped pecans (about 10 minutes in a 350° F. oven)
Tartar sauce can lift a simple fried catfish to the realms of ecstasy, turn a fried oyster into an emperor’s feast, or ennoble a fried shrimp into knighthood.
—
PAT CONROY
,
THE PAT CONROY COOKBOOK: RECIPES OF MY LIFE
EASTERN SHORE CRAB CAKES
MAKES
4
SERVINGS
Every Southerner within the sound of the surf has a favorite crab cake recipe. This is my own because the crab cakes are as light as sea foam (not enough bread to weight them down) and they taste like crab instead of green peppers and onion and celery. As a Chesapeake waterman’s wife once told me, “I like to taste the crab!”
1 pound lump or backfin crabmeat, picked over for bits of shell and cartilage, and flaked
2 tablespoons minced parsley
2 tablespoons finely grated yellow onion
2 slices firm-textured white bread, torn into bits and soaked in
1
/
3
cup milk (don’t squeeze out the milk)
1 teaspoon Dijon mustard
½ teaspoon salt
¼ teaspoon black pepper
1
/
8
teaspoon hot red pepper sauce
2 tablespoons vegetable oil
1 to 2 tablespoons butter
CHESAPEAKE CRAB BOIL
MAKES
6
SERVINGS
Waterfront fish houses up and down the Chesapeake provide moorings for boats as well as parking for cars. Most serve crab a dozen different ways but a universal favorite is the simplest: live hard-shells boiled (or steamed) in cauldrons with plenty of seasoning served on tables spread with newspaper. Bibs are “standard issue” as are little wooden mallets and metal crackers to deal with the claws. Note:
For this recipe you’ll need a large, deep, nonreactive kettle with a rack and a tight-fitting lid–the kind used for clambakes and boiled lobster.
2 cups beer
1 cup white (distilled) vinegar
¼ cup Old Bay or other spicy seafood seasoning
¼ cup salt
1½ dozen live-and-kicking blue crabs
1 cup (2 sticks) butter, melted
Heirloom Recipe
An Outer Banks recipe as it appeared in
From North Carolina Kitchens: Favorite Recipes Old and New
, a fifty-year-old public-domain collection from the state’s Home Demonstration Clubs.
HATTERAS-STYLE DRUM FISH
The drum, or channel bass, is perhaps the best-liked fish among the people of Hatteras Island, who have a wide variety to choose from. It was formerly sided, salted, dried, and stacked up, and was available at all times, to be soaked out and cooked. Thrifty housewives now pressure-can enough for their own needs. It is cooked, fresh, by many methods, but the following is a traditional style.
One side of drum, about a foot and a half, with head and tail removed, boiled in water with plenty of salt and pepper, until tender. This should be lifted out in two or three pieces and placed on a platter, to be mixed at the table. Boil and mash 8 medium potatoes, salted. Have ½ pound fat salt pork cut into tiny pieces and fried crisp. Place them in a small dish and pour some of the hot grease in a small pitcher. Mince a medium sized onion and place in small dish.
As in a tossed salad, half the pleasure of eating it is in watching the mixing. So it is with the ritual of mixing Hatteras-Style Drum Fish. The novice has to be shown the first time, but can hold his own with the second and third helpings.
On each serving plate, place a heap of mashed potatoes, a large “hunk” of fish, a spoonful (more or less) of cracklins and onions. Mix thoroughly, season with the drippings and more salt and pepper, if desired.
Some like it mixed in the kitchen and brought to the table ready to eat, perhaps garnished with hard-boiled eggs, parsley, etc., but all agree that it’s wonderful food, especially when served with plenty of corn bread (not the sweet variety), coffee, pickles, and a crisp raw vegetable. Serves six hungry people.
—Mrs. Rebecca Burrus, Dare County, North Carolina
RIVER ROAD DEVILED CRAB
MAKES
4
SERVINGS
On Route SC 61, the Ashley River Road linking Charleston with the antebellum plantations some dozen miles northwest, there used to be a little fish house called Captain Buddy’s that served the most delicious deviled crab. On recent visits, I’ve looked in vain for Captain Buddy’s; it seems to have disappeared in Charleston’s modern sprawl. Fortunately, I got the deviled crab recipe years ago.
4 tablespoons (½ stick) butter
½ cup finely chopped celery
½ cup finely chopped green or red bell pepper
2 large scallions, finely chopped (include some green tops)
1 pound lump or backfin crabmeat, picked over for bits of shell and cartilage, and flaked
2 hard-cooked eggs, finely chopped
½ cup mayonnaise (measure firmly packed)
6 tablespoons moderately fine soda cracker crumbs
1 tablespoon finely minced parsley
½ teaspoon salt
¼ teaspoon black pepper
¼ teaspoon hot red pepper sauce
1 to 2 tablespoons milk, if needed to thin the crab mixture (it should be moist, about the consistency of crab salad)
INNER HARBOR CRAB IMPERIAL
MAKES
4
SERVINGS
If America has a Blue Crab Capital, it is surely Baltimore. Its Inner Harbor, once a fetid backwater of rotting piers and tumbledown warehouses, is today a lively tourist attraction with restaurants serving blue crabs every which way. I’m partial to them all but if forced to choose a favorite, I’d pick this 100-plus-year-old Baltimore classic first served at Thompson’s Sea Girt House. I’m not alone. It’s said that “crab cakes are to Crab Imperial as meatloaf is to prime ribs.” Note:
You can prepare this recipe through Step 3 a couple of hours ahead of time. Scoop the crab mixture into the gratin dish, cover
with foil, and refrigerate. When ready to bake, remove the foil, sprinkle with the paprika, and bake uncovered for 20 to 25 minutes or until bubbly and browned.