Read A Love Affair with Southern Cooking Online
Authors: Jean Anderson,Jean Anderson
1 tablespoon vegetable oil
2 cups cold water
1 teaspoon salt
1 cup stone-ground white cornmeal (see Note above)
2 cups milk
2 large eggs, lightly beaten
HUSH PUPPIES
MAKES
3
TO
3½
DOZEN
It was bound to happen: hush puppy mixes and hush puppy “shooters.” I prefer to make mine from scratch and to drop them into the hot fat the old-fashioned way—from a rounded teaspoon—instead of from a spring-loaded “gun” that shoots the batter out in squiggles.
I’m not exactly sure where I ate my first hush puppy, probably on Chesapeake Bay. We sometimes roared across “the little bay” from our summer cottage to eat at some little fish house in Whitestone or Irvington, Virginia. Or maybe it was on one of our jaunts to the Carolina coast.
Wherever, whenever, I couldn’t have been more than eight or ten. From then on, I’ve ordered hush puppies every chance I get—with fried fish, of course, but also with fried chicken and pulled pork (barbecue). For me the perfect hush puppy is fine-textured and light, not too sweet and with just a whiff of onion. And it must come straight from the deep-fat fryer. Any languishing on a steam table turns it leaden in seconds.
As with so many southern recipes, there’s a story to explain this one’s amusing name. Said to date back to the days of Reconstruction after the Civil War, these little corn bread fritters were stirred up by fish camp cooks, fried in deep fat, then tossed to quiet the hounds while their masters ate. In
Southern Food: At Home, on the Road, in History
(1987), John Egerton, an author for whom I have profound respect, writes that hush puppies originated in Florida, probably “in the general vicinity of St. Marks…an old fishing village on the Gulf Coast south of Tallahassee.” Note:
You must use a floury, stone-ground cornmeal when making hush puppies. Those made with granular meal will fly apart in the hot fat.
Vegetable oil (for deep-fat frying)
2½ cups sifted stone-ground cornmeal (preferably white)
1 tablespoon sugar
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon baking soda
½ teaspoon baking powder
1¼ cups buttermilk
¼ cup finely grated yellow onion
1 large egg
Lucia insisted that they have a regular hour for breakfast just like they did for other meals…a regular breakfast made for other regular habits.
—
FLANNERY O’CONNOR
,
THE CROP
SARAH RUTLEDGE (1782–1855)
She wasn’t the first South Carolina lady to write a cookbook. Eliza Lucas Pinckney and her daughter Harriott Pinckney Horry beat her to it with handwritten collections of family receipts and home remedies (both published posthumously in the twentieth century).
But Sarah, in 1847, was the first to publish a major cookbook—“for charitable purposes,” Anna Wells Rutledge writes in her introduction to the 1979 facsimile of
The Carolina Housewife
(University of South Carolina Press). Reluctant to claim authorship, Sarah identified herself only as “A Lady of Charleston.” Altogether proper back then, when, according to local etiquette, a lady’s name appeared in print only three times: at birth, marriage, and death.
That tradition persisted well into the twentieth century. When I was a junior editor at
The Ladies’ Home Journal
in the early 1960s, we wanted to feature Charleston’s exclusive St. Cecilia Ball. Not a chance.
Like Pinckney and Horry, Sarah Rutledge belonged to the planter aristocracy; her father, Edward Rutledge, signed the Declaration of Independence; so, too, her mother’s brother Arthur Middleton. She would have known and socialized with Harriott Pinckney Horry, whose brother Thomas Pinckney took young Sarah to England to be educated along with his own children.
There are more than 550 recipes in
The Carolina Housewife,
twenty-one of them from
The Receipt Book of Harriott Pinckney Horry, 1770,
according to historian Richard J. Hooker, who edited the facsimile edition of that book (University of South Carolina Press, 1984). “At least three of those,” Hooker points out in his introduction to the Horry book, “were ones that Harriott had taken” from her own mother. He is quick to add, however, that some of Horry’s receipts “were so changed in wording [by Rutledge] as to suggest that they might have come indirectly…”
It was common practice for relatives and friends to share favorite recipes just as they do today. Those that Sarah Rutledge gives us are decidedly Lowcountry. There are, for example, some twenty recipes for rice bread in
The Carolina Housewife,
even more for corn and hominy breads. Soups abound, in particular those featuring such local staples as rice, okra, benne seeds, ground-nuts (peanuts), turtle, terrapin, oysters, shrimp, and crab. There are pilaus galore, too, including that Lowcountry rice and black-eyed pea classic called Hoppin’ John.
To quote directly from Sarah Rutledge’s preface: “The one [cookbook] now offered is (as it professes to be) a selection from the family receipt books of friends and acquaintances, who have kindly placed their manuscripts at the disposal of the editor.”
AUNT BERTIE’S CRISPY CORNMEAL PANCAKES
MAKES
4
SERVINGS
My niece Kim has been bragging about these light-as-air “corn breads” for years and urged me to include them in this book. They come from her mother’s side of the family (my brother was Kim’s dad). I never met Aunt Bertie (who died at 79) but like her many sisters, she was a good southern cook. I recently drove down to Fuquay-Varina, North Carolina, where Kim shares a barn-red bungalow with her older sister, Linda, to watch her make Aunt Bertie’s cornmeal pancakes; I’d never tasted them. Like Aunt Bertie, Kim’s a “by guess and by gosh cook.” She rarely resorts to precise measures because she instinctively knows when something’s right or wrong. This time I made her use measuring cups and spoons for this old word-of-mouth recipe. Kim has improved the original by using self-rising cornmeal and her pancakes practically rise off the plate. Linda’s boyfriend, Eric Eibelheuser, a transplanted New Jersey–ite now working in North Carolina, joined us the day Kim tested Aunt Bertie’s cornmeal pancakes and, like the rest of us, was blown away by them. “You could make a meal out of these!” he said. Quite so. Serve them for breakfast, lunch, or supper accompanied by sourwood or tupelo honey or, if you prefer, homemade muscadine, damson, or fig preserves. Note:
Kim says that only a well-seasoned cast-iron skillet will do for frying the pancakes. She pours in about
¼
inch of vegetable oil, then sets over fairly high heat until it’s “spitting-hot.” Kim’s skillet is small—only eight inches across—so she must cook the pancakes in three batches. In my ten-inch skillet, I can do it in two.
½ cup unsifted self-rising, stone-ground yellow cornmeal
¼ cup unsifted all-purpose flour
½ teaspoon sugar
¼ teaspoon salt
1
/
8
teaspoon black pepper
2
/
3
cup cold water (about)
11
/
3
cups vegetable oil (for frying)
HOT DINNER ROLLS
MAKES
2
TO
2½
DOZEN ROLLS
Florence Soltys, one of Chapel Hill’s most accomplished hostesses, often serves these rolls at luncheons and dinners. The recipe, she tells me, is one that she remembers her Tennessee aunt, Rhoda Gray, making when she was a child. Florence also tells me that she descends from two old East Tennessee families: the Grays on her father’s side and the Hills on her mother’s. “We were hill people who settled around Cades Cove,” she adds. That nineteenth-century village is now a major attraction of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. The dairy farm where Florence spent her childhood—“not far from Gatlinburg”—is still in the Gray family. Her brother, a retired veterinarian, now runs it. Note:
This rich yeast dough can be shaped into cloverleaf, fan-tans, Parker House rolls, pan rolls, anything you fancy. I personally favor cloverleaf rolls.
1 cup milk
3 tablespoons butter or vegetable shortening
3 tablespoons sugar
1 teaspoon salt
One ¼-ounce package active dry yeast dissolved in ¼ cup very warm water (105° to 115° F.)
1 large egg, lightly beaten
4 to 4½ cups sifted all-purpose flour
1 tablespoon butter, melted
Food—two banana cakes and a baked ham, a platter of darkly deviled eggs, new rolls—and flowers kept arriving at the back, and the kitchen filled with women…
—
EUDORA WELTY
,
THE GOLDEN APPLES
SWEET POTATO YEAST ROLLS
MAKES
2
DOZEN CLOVERLEAF ROLLS
This recipe is adapted from one sent to me by the North Carolina SweetPotato Commission. This southern state tops all others in the production of sweet potatoes and the commission’s mission is to spread the gospel of the golden tubers: their impressive nutritional value, their round-the-calendar availability, their easy-on-the-budget price, and, not least, their delicious versatility.