Read A Love Affair with Southern Cooking Online
Authors: Jean Anderson,Jean Anderson
2 envelopes unflavored gelatin
½ cup cold water
One 7-pound chunk ripe watermelon
One 6-ounce can frozen pink lemonade or limeade concentrate, thawed
¼ cup light corn syrup
2 tablespoons sugar, or to taste
2 tablespoons fresh lime or lemon juice, or to taste
¼ teaspoon salt
Two to three drops red food coloring (optional)
FROZEN FRUIT SALAD
MAKES
8
SERVINGS
No southern cookbook would be complete without at least one frozen fruit salad because they were all the rage fifty years ago. Apparently they were known even earlier; in
Fashionable Food
(1995), Sylvia Lovegren reprints a frozen fruit salad recipe that had appeared in
The Kelvinator Book of Recipes
in the late 1920s or early ’30s—just when refrigerators were replacing iceboxes in homes across the South. (In some areas, Kelvinator is generic for refrigerator, as in “Honey, would you go to the Kelvinator and get me a Coke?”) As for frozen fruit salads, I don’t remember their being popular in my hometown of Raleigh until the ’50s. Suddenly everybody was talking about them. And in competitions as fierce as any card game, bridge club hostesses were one-upping one another by creating ever more cloying frozen fruit salads. Calling them “salads” was absurd, a silly euphemism. They were dessert pure and simple although often served on iceberg lettuce
—
with
the main course. This recipe is representative of the frozen fruit salads so popular in the 1950s South, also of those endlessly recycled in community cookbooks. I like the fact that it contains chopped pecans and doesn’t contain canned fruit cocktail or whipped cream. Still, it’s plenty rich.
One 8-ounce package cream cheese, at room temperature (use the lighter version, Neufchâtel, if you like)
One 8-ounce can crushed pineapple, with its liquid
2 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
One 6-ounce jar red maraschino cherries, drained
One 3.5-ounce jar green maraschino cherries, drained
2 cups miniature marshmallows
1 cup coarsely chopped pecans
SWEET POTATO CHEESECAKE
MAKES
10
TO
12
SERVINGS
Southerners so love sweet potatoes that they will stir them into soups, salads, breads, puddings, cakes, even cheesecakes. There may be as many cheesecake recipes as there are cooks who make them but this one of mine “gets a gold star,” as one friend put it. The variety of sweet potato that I prefer is the red-skinned Beauregard because of its brilliant orange flesh. Note:
For better flavor, I bake the potato instead of boiling it—one hour at 400° F. is about right. Be sure to prick the potato several times before it goes into the oven, otherwise it may explode. Cool the potato until easy to handle before peeling and puréeing—a snap in the food processor. I also buzz the gingersnaps to crumbs in the processor and chop the pecans there as well. I’ve even been known to mix the filling by processor, churning the first nine ingredients until smooth, pulsing the eggs in one at a time, then with the machine on, drizzling the milk down the feed tube as slowly as possible.
Crust
2 cups fine gingersnap crumbs (about forty 2-inch-round cookies)
1 cup pecans, very finely chopped
½ cup (1 stick) butter, melted
¼ cup raw sugar (available at most supermarkets)
¼ teaspoon freshly grated nutmeg
Filling
Two 8-ounces packages light cream cheese (Neufchâtel), at room temperature
1¼ cups firmly packed puréed, baked sweet potato (about 1 very large or 1-pound sweet potato)
2
/
3
cup raw sugar ¼ cup firmly packed light brown sugar
1 tablespoon bourbon
¾ teaspoon ground cinnamon
¾ teaspoon ground ginger
½ teaspoon freshly grated nutmeg
¼ teaspoon salt
2 jumbo eggs
1 cup evaporated milk (use “light,” if you like)
Topping
1 cup sour cream (use “light,” if you like)
¼ cup raw sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
¼ cup finely chopped, lightly toasted pecans (4 to 5 minutes in a 375° F. oven)
BANANAS FOSTER CHEESECAKE
MAKES
10
TO
12
SERVINGS
I’ve breakfasted on Bananas Foster at Brennan’s, the New Orleans restaurant where chef Paul Blangé created the recipe more than fifty years ago. Named for Richard Foster, a local merchant and Brennan’s regular, this classic (bananas caramelized, flamed with rum, and served over vanilla ice cream) has appeared in countless cookbooks and is now all over the Web. But few know this elegant variation, which I had the good sense to order at Café Vermillionville in Lafayette while researching a Louisiana article for
Gourmet
.
Bananas Foster Cheesecake is a make-ahead and about all it has in common with the Brennan’s classic are bananas, butter, brown sugar, and rum.
Crust
Nine 5 × 2½-inch graham crackers
2 tablespoons granulated sugar
4 tablespoons (½ stick) butter, melted
12 to 13 ladyfingers, halved crosswise
Banana Filling
4 tablespoons (½ stick) butter
½ cup firmly packed dark brown sugar
2 tablespoons banana liqueur
2 tablespoons dark rum
½ teaspoon vanilla extract
1
/
8
teaspoon ground cinnamon
4 medium firm-ripe bananas, peeled, halved crosswise, then each half cut lengthwise into slices ¼ inch thick
¼ cup lightly toasted sliced almonds (about 5 minutes in a 350° F. oven)
Cream Cheese Layer
Three 8-ounce packages cream cheese, at room temperature
1 cup granulated sugar
5 large eggs, lightly whisked
2 tablespoons banana liqueur
1 tablespoon vanilla extract
Praline Topping
1 cup (2 sticks) butter
1 cup firmly packed dark brown sugar
1½ tablespoons water
1½ cups very lightly toasted pecans (5 to 8 minutes in a 350° F. oven)
TIME LINE: the people and events that shaped Southern Cuisine
1969 | | Dan Evins opens the first of a string of Cracker Barrel restaurants in Lebanon, Tennessee. |
| | The Captain D’s seafood chain (originally called Mr. D’s) debuts in Donelson, Tennessee. Its quickly served seasonal seafood is so popular that by the turn of the twenty-first century, there are more than 550 Captain D’s scattered across 22 states. |
| | The original Long John Silver’s begins serving fish and chips in Lexington, Kentucky. |
1970 | | The U.S. Department of Agriculture relocates its Georgia peach and pecan research stations to Byron, Georgia, and establishes the USDA Southeastern Fruit and Tree Nut Research Laboratory. This new research facility not only seeks ways to control the pests and diseases attacking peaches and pecans but also those affecting Asian pears, apples, blueberries, Chinese chestnuts, nectarines, and plums, all important southern crops. |
1970s | | Switching to European varietals, Virginia vintners begin producing cabernets, chardonnays, and rieslings. By 1982, the majority of Virginia wines are varietals. |