Read A Love Affair with Southern Cooking Online
Authors: Jean Anderson,Jean Anderson
Back in the 1970s when I began writing a food series for
Family Circle
magazine called “America’s Great Grass Roots Cooks,” the first person I profiled was a North Carolina farm woman in Rockingham County. From my growing-up years in the Tar Heel State, I knew that I’d find there just the person to kick off the series. And so I did: Mrs. Oscar McCollum, who lived just outside the county seat of Reidsville. Of this dish she said, “This is a real old recipe. One I grew up on. I put up my own tomatoes, so I use them. But you could use store-bought.”
3 cups home-canned or store-bought tomatoes with their liquid
4 tablespoons (½ stick) lightly salted butter
3 cups moderately coarse stale white bread crumbs (not dry crumbs)
3 tablespoons sugar
1 teaspoon salt
¼ teaspoon black pepper
¼ teaspoon ground allspice
Soft as butter in August.
—
OLD NORTH CAROLINA SAYING
His wife, Regina, lived out her life here, much beloved by the Kitchen Gang, of which she was a baking, frying, slicing, dicing bonafide member.
—
ANNE RICE
,
BLACKWOOD FARM
TIME LINE: the people and events that shaped Southern Cuisine
1930 | | Planters of Suffolk, Virginia, introduces peanut cooking oil. |
| | Time |
| | The chestnut blight has reduced southern chestnut forests to skeletons, destroying an important source of food. |
| | Warner Stamey, a high schooler who’d worked at Jess Swicegood’s Lexington Barbecue, opens a place of his own in Shelby, North Carolina, modeling everything after Swicegood’s—right down to the sawdust on the floor. |
| | George W. Jenkins opens the first Publix grocery in Winter Haven, Florida. Today there are nearly 1,000 employee-owned Publix supermarkets scattered across the South. |
1930s | | The Brock Candy Company of Chattanooga creates a new Christmas favorite: chocolate-covered cherries. |
| | Harland Sanders opens a restaurant in Corbin, Kentucky. The house specialty: fried chicken “battered” with a secret blend of herbs and spices. (See Colonel Harland Sanders, Chapter 3.) |
FRIED GREEN TOMATOES
MAKES
4
TO
6
SERVINGS
Every southern cook has a pet recipe for fried green tomatoes and this one is an amalgam I’ve evolved over the years. What gives these tomatoes especially good flavor is the flour-and-cornmeal combo used to dredge them, also the addition of bacon drippings to the frying oil. Two of my favorite appetizers, Black-Eyed Pea Hummus and Shrimp Rémoulade, call for fried green tomatoes—and you won’t go wrong using this recipe. Note:
I find the granular yellow “supermarket” cornmeal too gritty for dredging the tomatoes, so if the stone-ground is unavailable, simply double the amount of flour below.
6 hard green tomatoes, each measuring 2 to 2½inches across
1 extra-large egg
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon black pepper
1 cup fine dry bread crumbs
½ cup unsifted all-purpose flour
½ cup unsifted stone-ground yellow cornmeal
¼ cup vegetable oil plus 2 tablespoons bacon drippings, or 6 tablespoons vegetable oil (for frying)
“That reminds me, whatever you do, Kate…take that fresh Lady Baltimore cake out to the house…And make Rachel hunt through the shelves for some more green tomato pickle.”
—
EUDORA WELTY
,
KIN
CORN BREAD DRESSING WITH PECANS AND BACON
MAKES
12
TO
14
SERVINGS, ENOUGH TO STUFF A
12-
TO
15-
POUND TURKEY
Many corn bread dressings are made with sausage, but because those dressings tend to be greasy, I prefer a good lean bacon cooked until crisp and brown. This dressing is fairly light—not too moist, not too dry. I always bake it separately because I think this method safer. If you want to stuff the bird, do so just before you shove it into the oven. Spoon the dressing lightly into the body and neck cavities, then truss the bird. If there’s extra dressing—and there usually is—bundle it in aluminum foil and bake 30 to 35 minutes at 350° F.
It’s important to make the corn bread a day or two before you use it. I split it horizontally, spread it on a baking sheet, and let stand at room temperature, turning the pieces several times as they dry. I also set the slices of white bread out to dry. Note:
To toast the pecans, spread in a jelly-roll pan or rimmed baking sheet, then set on the middle shelf of a 350° F. oven for 10 to 12 minutes, stirring well at half-time.
12 cups (3 quarts) ¾-to 1-inch chunks stale, dry corn bread (Iron Skillet Corn Bread, Chapter 5, or your own favorite recipe; see headnote)
6 slices stale, dry firm-textured white bread, cut into ½-inch cubes (see headnote)
2 cups coarsely chopped toasted pecans (see Note above)
½ cup coarsely chopped parsley
1 pound hickory-smoked bacon, each slice cut crosswise into strips ½ inch wide
1 cup (2 sticks) butter, melted, or 1 cup bacon drippings or vegetable oil
2 very large yellow onions, coarsely chopped
4 large celery ribs, trimmed and coarsely chopped (include a few leaves)
1 tablespoon rubbed sage
1½ teaspoons dried leaf thyme, crumbled
6 cups chicken broth or stock
3 extra-large eggs, well beaten
1 teaspoon salt
½ teaspoon black pepper
CHESAPEAKE OYSTER–CORN BREAD DRESSING
MAKES
10
TO
12
SERVINGS
Some years ago when
Food & Wine
asked me to write an article on regional American turkey stuffings, I knew that this one was a “must.” I’d found it in my mother’s recipe file, dog-eared and double-starred. Ever meticulous about recipe sources, Mother had written “Mrs. Johnson, Whitestone, VA” in the upper right-hand corner of the card. She was the wife of the farmer who served as caretaker for our summer cottage. Located on what we called “the little bay,” an inlet of the Chesapeake, our cottage was just downriver from an oyster pound. Even though I’m allergic to oysters, I did enjoy chugging up Anti-Poison Creek with my father to fetch them for my mother. The recipe below is adapted from the one that appeared in
Food & Wine.
Note:
As for corn bread, use any favorite recipe (not a mix because most are too sweet) as long as it’s firm enough to break into chunks without disintegrating. I favor Iron Skillet Corn Bread.
1½ pints shucked oysters with their liquor
5 cups coarsely crumbled stale, dry corn bread (see Note above)
4 cups coarsely crumbled soda crackers
4 medium celery ribs, trimmed and coarsely chopped (include a few leaves)
1 medium yellow onion, coarsely chopped
¼ cup minced fresh parsley
2 teaspoons poultry seasoning
1 teaspoon finely grated lemon zest
1 teaspoon black pepper, or to taste
½ teaspoon salt, or to taste
¾ cup (1½ sticks) butter, melted
1 tablespoon fresh lemon juice
CAJUN RICE, SAUSAGE, AND TASSO DRESSING
MAKES
10
TO
12
SERVINGS
Here’s another recipe adapted from my
Food & Wine
feature on regional American dressings. The inspiration for this one was Miss Tootie Guirard, a fine Cajun cook whom I’d interviewed some years earlier for
Family Circle.
I spent a week with Miss Tootie in St. Martinville, Louisiana, and left with a notebook full of colorful Cajun sayings and culinary wisdom. According to Miss Tootie, no Cajun cook would ever “rush a roux.” It should brown slowly, ever so slowly, so that its flavor is robust but not bitter. Because of the saltiness of the sausage, tasso, and broth, this dressing is unlikely to need additional salt. But taste before serving. Note:
The best plan is to make this long-winded recipe a day in advance, refrigerate it, and reheat just before serving. I fluff the dressing, cover, and microwave on REHEAT (75 to 80 percent power) for 10 to 15 minutes.
Tip:
To save time, prepare the roux and rice mixtures simultaneously.