Read A Love Affair with Southern Cooking Online
Authors: Jean Anderson,Jean Anderson
SWEET POTATO PIE
MAKES
6
TO
8
SERVINGS
Baked sweet potatoes, I think, make better pie than boiled sweet potatoes. For two reasons: Baked sweet potatoes are never watery, and that stint in the oven caramelizes some of their natural sugars, making for richer, deeper flavor (I give them about one hour at 400° F.). There are dozens of recipes for sweet potato pie, but this one—a merging of several different recipes that I’ve collected in my prowls about the South—is especially good because it’s not cloyingly sweet.
2 cups firmly packed unseasoned mashed, cooked sweet potatoes (about 2 pounds)
¼ cup granulated sugar
¼ cup firmly packed light brown sugar
2 tablespoons all-purpose flour
¾ teaspoon freshly grated nutmeg or ¼ teaspoon ground nutmeg
¼ teaspoon ground cinnamon
¼ teaspoon ground ginger
¼ teaspoon salt
3 large eggs
¾ cup milk or evaporated milk (I prefer the latter)
3 tablespoons butter, melted
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
One 9-inch unbaked pie shell (see About Pie Crusts, frontmatter)
TIME LINE: the people and events that shaped Southern Cuisine
1972 | | Doubleday, attracted by |
| | After failing to grab the New Orleans lunch crowd with his Chicken on the Run, Al Copeland rethinks his fast-food restaurant, spices up his fried chicken, and reopens as Popeyes. It is the first restaurant in a huge chain of Popeyes. |
| | Newly acquired by the Federal Company, the Knoxville mill built by J. Allen Smith is renamed White Lily Foods after its bestselling White Lily Flour. |
| | Sandy Beall and four University of Tennessee fraternity brothers open the first Ruby Tuesday restaurant next door to the Knoxville campus. Their aim of serving quality food at a fair price in a casual atmosphere catches on; today there are hundreds of Ruby Tuesdays scattered across the country. |
SWEET POTATO MERINGUE PIE
MAKES
6
TO
8
SERVINGS
Tabor City, North Carolina, is “The Yam Capital of the World,” so it’s not surprising that the state stages its annual Yam Festival there the fourth weekend in October. “Yam” is a misnomer, for what Tabor City celebrates with parades and “yam royalty” coronations is the sweet potato harvest. North Carolina produces 40 percent of America’s sweet potatoes, more than any other state, so is it any wonder that this little town and outlying areas are blessed with imaginative cooks who prepare sweet potatoes every which way? This unique sweet potato pie is one of them. What makes it unique? For starters, the filling, made altogether with granulated sugar (no brown sugar) and spiced only with nutmeg (no cinnamon, no ginger), isn’t the usual custardy pumpkin-pie type; it has the silken texture of whipped sweet potatoes. And then there’s that cloud of meringue on top.
2 cups firmly packed unseasoned mashed, cooked sweet potatoes (you’ll need about 2 pounds of sweet potatoes)
½ cup sugar
¼ teaspoon freshly grated nutmeg
¼ teaspoon salt
3 large pasteurized egg yolks (see About Pasteurized Eggs, frontmatter)
1 cup milk
2 tablespoons butter, melted
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
One 9-inch unbaked pie shell (see About Pie Crusts, frontmatter)
3 large pasteurized egg whites, beaten to soft peaks with ¼ cup sugar (meringue)
TAR HEEL GREEN TOMATO PIE
MAKES
6
SERVINGS
More than a hundred years old, this unusual pie was a dessert favorite at end-of-summer picnics back when I was an assistant home demonstration agent in Iredell County, North Carolina. Always held in August (green tomato time), these feasts were—and still are—the surest way to taste southern country cooking at its best. I soon learned that if I wanted any green tomato pie, I’d better grab a slice at the outset and save it for dessert; it disappeared that fast. Tip:
If I’m in a rush, I’ll use the commercial unroll-and-use pastry circles now sold at many supermarkets (look for them near the refrigerated biscuits) instead of making the crust from scratch. The elderly farm woman who gave me this recipe so many years ago would have loved these handy time-savers.
8 medium-size green tomatoes (2 to 2¼ pounds), cored and sliced ¼ inch thick but not peeled
1 tablespoon fresh lemon juice
½ cup firmly packed light brown sugar
½ cup granulated sugar
½ cup unsifted all-purpose flour
½ teaspoon salt
¼ teaspoon ground cinnamon
¼ teaspoon freshly grated nutmeg
4 tablespoons (½ stick) ice-cold butter, cut into small dice
Pastry for a double-crust 9-inch pie (see Tip above)
1 tablespoon light or heavy cream
1 pint vanilla ice cream (optional)
VINEGAR PIE
MAKES
6
TO
8
SERVINGS
In olden days when lemons were scarce, enterprising cooks would counterfeit lemon chess pie by substituting cider vinegar, which was cheap and widely available, for precious lemon juice. This recipe comes from Lillian Waldron, an old friend of my stepmother, Anne Anderson; the two grew up in Lynchburg, Virginia. Anne says that vinegar pie is one of her most requested desserts and a particular favorite of her granddaughters, Linda and Kim Anderson. Tip:
To catch boilovers, bake the pie on a baking sheet.
1½ cups sugar
½ cup (1 stick) butter, melted
3 large eggs
1½ tablespoons cider vinegar
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
One 9-inch unbaked pie shell (see About Pie Crusts, frontmatter)
BUTTERMILK PIE
MAKES
6
TO
8
SERVINGS
Like Vinegar Pie, Buttermilk Pie was often baked in lieu of lemon chess pie because in the butter-churning days of old, there was always plenty of buttermilk on hand. To this day, Buttermilk Pie is beloved throughout the South. Tip:
To catch any boilovers, it’s a good idea to set the pie on a baking sheet before you slide it into the oven.
1½ cups sugar
3 tablespoons all-purpose flour
6 tablespoons (¾ stick) butter, melted
3 large eggs
1½ cups buttermilk
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
¼ teaspoon freshly grated nutmeg (optional)
One 9-inch unbaked pie shell (see About Pie Crusts, frontmatter)
TIME LINE: the people and events that shaped Southern Cuisine
1973 | | Stephen Kuhnau, who’d grown up sickly in south Louisiana, opens a health food store in Kenner and begins serving “smoothies”—nutritious fruit shakes he’d created years earlier while jerking sodas. Before long, Smoothie King bars are popping up all over the U.S. and Stephen Kuhnau has been crowned “Mr. Smoothie King.” |
1974 | | Now fully restored, the Shaker Village at Pleasant Hill, Kentucky, offers rooms for overnighters, each furnished in the simple form-follows-function Shaker style. |
1975 | | Michael Barefoot opens a 500-square-foot coffee roastery in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, and calls it A Southern Season. Today it is one of America’s premier specialty food shops. |
| | Using his grandmother’s biscuit recipe, Maurice Jennings launches Biscuitville to serve quality breakfasts to those in a hurry. This Burlington, North Carolina–based fast-food chain now operates dozens of restaurants in Virginia and North Carolina. |
MOONPIE
Traveling the East Tennessee mining country back in 1917, Chattanooga bakery salesman Earl Mitchell asked the miners what sort of snack they’d like. Something filling for their lunch pails is what they wanted.
“How big?” Mitchell asked.
“As big as the moon and twice as thick!” one miner replied, cupping his hands to frame a newly risen full moon.
Back at the Chattanooga bakery, Mitchell saw marshmallow-dipped graham cookies, big round ones drying in the sun. Mitchell suggested adding a second cookie, then coating the cookie sandwich with chocolate. It was done.
Ah, thought Mitchell. MoonPie.
Soon after, the MoonPie began its steady march throughout the South and by the time of the Great Depression, it had become a staple.
The drink of choice to wash down a MoonPie was Royal Crown Cola, and in no time “Gimme an RC and a MoonPie” was almost a mantra.
Only a nickel for the pie and a nickel for the drink, together they were enough to hold anybody—even a hungry ten-year-old boy—till suppertime.
The first MoonPies—marshmallow-filled, chocolate-dipped cookie sandwiches—were about the size of small Frisbees (well, almost). Now, in addition to the original, they also come in such flavors as banana, strawberry, and coconut.
Today the MoonPie is celebrated in song (“Weezie and the MoonPies,” to name just one) and tossed from floats into crowds of Mardi Gras revelers. There’s even a World Championship MoonPie Eating Contest every year in Oneonta, Alabama.
Yvette Lance, a contest organizer, says the object is to see who can down the most MoonPies in five minutes. No drink allowed, not even an RC. The records: twelve for the big double-deckers and twenty-one for the smaller MoonPies. The winner gets a fifty-dollar Wal-Mart gift certificate and a new title: “MoonPie King of the Year.”
BLACK BOTTOM PIE
MAKES
6
TO
8
SERVINGS
No one knows for sure when or where this southern classic originated. On one of the many online food sites, I read that a recipe for Black Bottom Pie had appeared in Lafcadio Hearn’s
Creole Cook Book
(1885). Not true—nor does anything remotely similar. According to James Beard
(
American Cookery,
1972), the recipe began showing up in cookbooks early in the 1900s. In community cookbooks, perhaps. Yet long research for my
American Century Cookbook
(1997) turned up no mention of black bottom pie before 1940. That year both
The Woman’s Home Companion Cook Book
and
The Good Housekeeping Cook Book
printed recipes for it, although only the latter called it Black Bottom Pie.
Woman’s Home Companion
not only titled it Two-Tone Chocolate Rum Pie but also changed the crumb crust from gingerbread to chocolate.
Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings’s
Cross Creek Cookery,
published two years later, is by most accounts the book that launched Black Bottom Pie. Combining two recipes, one obtained from an old hotel in Louisiana and another from a southern friend, Rawlings was positively lyrical about the version she’d created: “I think that this is the most delicious pie ever eaten…a pie so delicate, so luscious, that I hope to be propped up on my dying bed and fed a generous portion. Then I think that I should refuse outright to die…” For her crumb crust, Rawlings says to roll fourteen gingersnaps to fine crumbs; fourteen of today’s cookies would barely dust the bottom of a pie tin.
As for the pie’s name, some suggest that it derives from the Black Bottom Stomp, a New Orleans dance popular in the 1920s and ’30s—about the time the pie was gaining local fame. Others insist that it comes from the color of the bottom (chocolate) layer—as black as bayou mud. Despite its unknown origin, Black Bottom Pie has remained a southern favorite for nearly seventy years. Note:
Because the egg whites used in the top (rum) layer are not cooked, it’s best to use pasteurized eggs for this recipe.
Tip:
The easiest way to make chocolate curls is to run a swivel-bladed vegetable peeler over a square of room-temperature semisweet chocolate. At first the curls may break, but as the heat of your hands softens the chocolate, you’ll be able to shave off lovely long curls.
Crumb Crust
1½ cups finely crushed gingersnaps (about thirty 2-inch round cookies)
4 tablespoons (½ stick) butter, at room temperature
Bottom (Chocolate) Layer
½ cup sugar
1½ tablespoons cornstarch
4 large pasteurized egg yolks, beaten well (see About Pasteurized Eggs, frontmatter)
2 cups steaming hot milk
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
Two 1-ounce squares unsweetened chocolate, broken into small pieces (I whack the still-wrapped squares with a cutlet bat, then unwrap)
Top (Rum) Layer
1 envelope unflavored gelatin, softened in 3 tablespoons cold water
2 tablespoons rum, preferably dark rum (though not traditional, bourbon is also good)
4 large pasteurized egg whites
1
/
8
teaspoon cream of tartar
½ cup sugar
Topping
1 cup heavy cream, beaten to fairly stiff peaks
Semisweet chocolate curls (see Tip at left)
Heirloom Recipe
ORANGE PUDDING
Shirley Plantation, sprawled along the banks of the broad but sinuous James River, dates back to a land grant of 1613. The eleventh generation of the Hill-Carter family to call Shirley home now lives in the Great House (circa 1723), a tall, proud red brick mansion with a unique Queen Anne forecourt. It was here that Ann Hill Carter, the mother of Robert E. Lee, once lived; in 1793 she married “Light Horse Harry” Lee in the parlor. Among Shirley’s eight original eighteenth-century brick buildings is the stone-floored kitchen with double hearths, bake oven, and upstairs quarters for the cooks and other domestic slaves. The house and grounds are open to the public daily; the old kitchen is also used for special programs and exhibits. The Shirley Plantation Collection (handwritten Carter family receipts and other plantation documents) is now housed at the John D. Rockefeller Jr. Research Library at Colonial Williamsburg. That’s where a Shirley volunteer researcher found this old family favorite.
Set 1 pot of milk over the range in a saucepan. Mix one tablespoonful of corn starch with two tablespoonsful of cold milk and the yolks of three eggs adding four tablespoonsful of sugar and a little salt.
When the milk is hot-not-boiling stir in the mixture and let it boil stirring constantly. Peel and slice five oranges removing the seeds and lay them in a dish sprinkling each layer with sugar.
While the custard is still hot pour over the oranges. Beat the whites to a stiff froth adding two tablespoonsful of sugar and pour over the top of the custard.
Serve when quite cold.