Read A Love Affair with Southern Cooking Online
Authors: Jean Anderson,Jean Anderson
4 tablespoons (½ stick) butter
1 small yellow onion, finely chopped
2 tablespoons all-purpose flour
1
/
8
teaspoon white pepper
1
/
8
teaspoon ground hot red pepper (cayenne)
1
/
8
teaspoon freshly grated nutmeg
1 cup half-and-half
2 tablespoons Amontillado sherry
½ cup mayonnaise (measure firmly packed)
2 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
½ teaspoon salt
1 pound lump crabmeat, picked over for bits of shell and cartilage, then flaked
Sweet paprika
TIME LINE: the people and events that shaped Southern Cuisine
1906 | | William Emerson Brock, a traveling salesman for the R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company of Winston-Salem, North Carolina, buys Chattanooga’s Trigg Candy Company. Three years later, he reincorporates it as the Brock Candy Company and builds it into one of America’s premier confectioners. |
| | Young Italian immigrant Amedeo Obici, who had been selling his roasted peanuts from a horse-drawn cart in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, founds Planters with fellow immigrant Mario Peruzzi. In less than ten years, they relocate to the Virginia peanut country. (See Planters Peanuts, Chapter 1.) |
| | Owen Wister’s romantic novel |
| | To accommodate the growing community of Italians in New Orleans’s French Quarter, Salvatore Lupo creates the muffaletta sandwich at his Central Grocery. It’s a round loaf stuffed with Italian salami, ham, cheese, and olives. |
| | When soil depletion and hurricanes destroy the pineapple crop in the Florida Keys, growers switch to Key limes. |
CRABMEAT NORFOLK
MAKES
4
SERVINGS
No one is quite sure who created this elegant but easy crab dish or how it got its name. For years, Crabmeat Norfolk was the specialty of the old, original O’Donnell’s Restaurant in downtown Washington, D.C., and to this day, it’s a signature dish at O’Donnell’s Seafood Restaurant in Gaithersburg, Maryland. This restaurant claims that Tom O’Donnell created Crabmeat Norfolk (or at least the Norfolk style of cooking shellfish) back in 1922 while cruising the Chesapeake; he’d pick the meat from fresh-caught crabs and sauté it quickly in butter. On the other hand, Craig Claiborne, for years the food columnist of
The New York Times
,
credits W. O. Snowden of Norfolk’s late, lamented Snowden and Mason Restaurant for creating the recipe in 1924. Snowden’s butter-bathed lumps of crab delicately spiked with vinegar is the version most widely accepted today. It was baked, Claiborne wrote, “in a Norfolk aluminum pan,” a sort of gratin that was manufactured in Norfolk at the time. Hence the name Crabmeat Norfolk. The recipe here approximates the original. To accompany it I like fluffy boiled rice and a salad of crisp greens or, even better, fresh asparagus drizzled with olive oil, then roasted for 10 to 12 minutes in a 400° F. oven.
1 pound lump crabmeat, picked over for bits of shell and cartilage, then flaked
1½ tablespoons white wine vinegar or tarragon vinegar
¼ teaspoon salt
¼ teaspoon hot red pepper sauce
¼ teaspoon Worcestershire sauce
5 tablespoons cold butter, cut into small dice
Harder than a landlord’s heart.
—
DAMON RUNYON
,
ON THE TOUGHNESS OF FLORIDA STONE CRAB SHELLS
CRISPY SOFT-SHELLS
MAKES
4
SERVINGS
“It usually comes in the third or fourth week of May, with a full waning moon,” William W. Warner writes in his Pulitzer Prize–winning
Beautiful Swimmers: Watermen, Crabs and the Chesapeake Bay
(1976). “Not hundreds, but thousands of peelers will be taken by the best scrappers. The first run of soft crabs, as it is always called, has begun.” When I was a little girl spending a chunk of every summer at our Chesapeake Bay cottage, an old waterman told me that a soft-shell is merely a crab that has shed its hard shell. “Only way for ’em to grow,” he explained. I wasn’t aware until years later that soft-shells were a singular delicacy. In New York we cheered the spring arrival of soft-shells, then plunged into a summer of feasting, sometimes at home but more often at restaurants where these fragile creatures were treated with respect. Today, “piling on” seems to be the mantra of trendy chefs: piling on of sauces, piling on of seasonings, piling on of garnishes and accoutrements. Too bad. I’ve yet to see anyone improve on fresh soft-shells bounced in and out of a hot skillet. And I think most Southerners would agree.
8 fresh soft-shell crabs, cleaned and dressed
½ cup unsifted all-purpose flour
¼ cup unsifted stone-ground cornmeal
1 teaspoon salt
½ teaspoon black pepper
2 to 4 tablespoons vegetable oil
2 tablespoons butter
2 large lemons, quartered lengthwise
HERBED CRAB SALAD
MAKES
4
SERVINGS
Here’s another original from Lisa Ruffin Harrison of Evelynton Plantation on the James (see her Charcoal-Grilled Shad Roe, Chapter 3). “There’s no better summer lunch in this world,” she says, “than this crab salad served in tomatoes fresh from the garden.” For hors d’oeuvre, Lisa sometimes stuffs the crab salad into cherry tomatoes; there’s enough here for six dozen. The only crabmeat to use is “backfin lump,” Lisa says. The challenge is to keep the lumps intact as you
pick over the crab, removing bits of shell and cartilage, then mix in the herb mayonnaise.
4 large sun-ripened tomatoes
½ teaspoon salt
1 pound lump crabmeat
2 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
1
/
8
teaspoon ground hot red pepper (cayenne)
1
/
8
teaspoon black pepper
4 to 5 tablespoons Fresh Herb Mayonnaise (recipe follows)
2 to 3 tablespoons finely snipped fresh chives
FRESH HERB MAYONNAISE
MAKES ABOUT
2
CUPS
This quick mayonnaise is delicious with chicken, turkey, and shrimp salad as well as with the crab salad that precedes. It was created by Lisa Ruffin Harrison of Evelynton Plantation, who grows her own herbs. Note:
Because this mayonnaise calls for raw eggs, use the pasteurized here (see About Pasteurized Eggs, frontmatter).
Update:
A busy working mother like many women today, Lisa has simplified this recipe, which originally appeared in
Bon Appétit
back in the late 1980s. That was shortly before she married. “If you don’t feel like making a mayonnaise, which these days I find I never have time for,” she recently e-mailed me, “just use a good mayo like Duke’s, our fabulous local brand. Without Duke’s I’d use Hellmann’s but no sweet varieties—heaven forbid!” That means omitting the eggs and the oil below and blending a good commercial mayonnaise with the remaining recipe ingredients. And how much mayonnaise would that be? My suggestion—not Lisa’s—would be to start with 1 cup because this is a good dressing to have on hand. If the flavors seem strong, blend in another half cup or so. Lisa’s homemade mayonnaise, after all, makes two cups.
2 large pasteurized eggs (see Note above)
2 tablespoons Dijon mustard
1 tablespoon fresh lemon juice
3 tablespoons coarsely chopped fresh basil
3 tablespoons coarsely snipped fresh dill
2 tablespoons coarsely chopped Italian parsley
1
/
8
teaspoon ground hot red pepper (cayenne)
1
/
8
teaspoon black pepper
1
/
8
teaspoon salt
1 cup vegetable oil
TIME LINE: the people and events that shaped Southern Cuisine
1907 | | While touring Nashville, Tennessee, President Theodore Roosevelt pauses for a cup of coffee at the famous Maxwell House Hotel. “Good to the last drop,” says old Rough ’n’ Ready, creating the slogan still attached to that coffee today. (See Maxwell House Coffee, Chapter 6.) |
| | Just three years after Syrian immigrant Abe Doumar improvised the first ice cream cone at the St. Louis World’s Fair, he sets up shop at Norfolk, Virginia’s Ocean View Amusement Park. Using the four-waffle iron he invented, Doumar sells 23,000 cones in a single day. Those hand-crafted waffle cones are still served at Doumar’s in downtown Norfolk. |
| | Turnbull Bakeries of Chattanooga begins manufacturing sugar cones. |
| | The Peanut Depot fires up its roasters on warehouse row in Birmingham, Alabama. It has been roasting peanuts ever since—for grocery stores, sports arenas, and tourists’ noses to the source. |
| | In top hat and tails, President Theodore Roosevelt sails into Norfolk, Virginia, to open the Jamestown Exposition in nearby Hampton Roads. Other VIPs at the six-month world’s fair commemorating the 300th anniversary of America’s birth: Mark Twain, Booker T. Washington, William Randolph Hearst, and Samuel Gompers. |