Read A Love Affair with Southern Cooking Online
Authors: Jean Anderson,Jean Anderson
1 cup granulated sugar
¾ cup firmly packed light brown sugar
1 tablespoon stone-ground cornmeal
¼ teaspoon salt
5 large eggs
1
/
3
cup heavy cream
1 tablespoon cider vinegar
1 tablespoon vanilla extract
½ cup (1 stick) butter, melted
One 9-inch unbaked pie shell (see About Pie Crusts, frontmatter)
MAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE
One of the advertising world’s best-known slogans, “Good to the last drop!” wasn’t created by an astute account executive. It was uttered by a United States president.
While visiting Nashville, Tennessee, back in 1907, President Theodore Roosevelt sipped a cup of the Maxwell House coffee, smiled, and said, “Good to the last drop!”
The Maxwell House Hotel had been serving its signature coffee since 1892 when an entrepreneur named Joel Cheek showed up with one of his prize blends, hoping to make a sale. He succeeded and soon Cheek’s prize blend was so popular the hotel gave it its name.
Cheek, a farmer’s son, started his career with the single silver dollar his father had given him when he turned twenty-one. “Freedom dollar,” his father called it, meaning he was free to go out on his own.
By 1900, Cheek was producing the Maxwell House blend for home use. And though he didn’t create its famous slogan, he believed in advertising and put plenty of money into it.
The company that eventually became General Foods bought Maxwell House in 1928. Since then, there’s been no need to tell the company to wake up and smell the coffee; it not only has kept abreast of coffee trends but also has created a few.
In 1976 Maxwell House developed a special grind for automatic drip pots—a first. And today it offers flavored coffees and prepacked pods for the new single-cup brewers.
But no matter how the method of brewing coffee changes, Maxwell House remains “Good to the last drop!”
NANNIE HALL DAVIS’S “FRENCH” PUDDING PIE
MAKES
8
TO
10
SERVINGS
Like many Virginians, my friend Maria Harrison Reuge was raised on damson plum preserves. This particular recipe, given to me by her parents when I visited them at their James River farm, is a chess-type pie flavored with damson preserves (see Sources, backmatter). The recipe belonged to Maria’s great-grandmother and when I asked if it was French, Maria’s father said, “No. In those days, whenever you thought something extra good, you’d call it French.”
1 cup (2 sticks) butter, at room temperature
1 cup sugar
4 large eggs, separated
1 cup damson plum preserves (see headnote)
One 10-inch unbaked pie shell (see About Pie Crusts, frontmatter)
Brown Sugar Sauce (optional)
JEFF DAVIS PIE
MAKES
8
SERVINGS
Although born in Kentucky, Jefferson Davis moved to Mississippi when he was a child and grew up there. This rich-as-Croesus pie named in his honor was given to me by my good Mississippi friend, Jean Todd Freeman. The two of us worked together in New York at
The Ladies’ Home Journal
,
I in the food department and Jean as fiction editor. We often traveled about the Deep South on article assignment together and during those trips she taught me much of what I know about it today. Jean told me that this pie recipe is nearly 150 years old and that it had been created by a good plantation cook who admired the president of the Confederacy. I later learned that there are as many stories about the origin of Jeff Davis pie as there are different recipes for it. Some say that the pie was actually created by a freed slave working for a Missouri merchant and that it was
his
admiration for Davis that prompted her to name her pie after him. Some Jeff Davis pies call for brown sugar instead of white; some add nuts, chopped dates and/or raisins; some are heavily spiced; some are made with evaporated milk instead of cream; and some are lavishly swirled about with meringue. I personally prefer Jean’s version. A similar pie—all butter, sugar, and eggs but no milk or cream—is popular in Charleston and elsewhere about the Lowcountry. It’s known as Transparent Pie because its filling, once baked, is nearly clear. Translucent would be a truer description, but a pie named “translucent” hasn’t the appeal or glamour of one called “transparent.”
1¾ cups sugar
1 tablespoon all-purpose flour
½ cup (1 stick) butter, at room temperature
1 cup heavy cream
2 large whole eggs
4 large eggs, separated
¼ teaspoon freshly grated nutmeg
¼ teaspoon salt
One 9-inch baked pie shell (see About Pie Crusts, frontmatter)
TIME LINE: the people and events that shaped Southern Cuisine
1977 | | The first Vidalia Onion Festival is held in—where else?—Vidalia, Georgia. |
| | Jack Fulk and Richard Thomas open the first Bojangles’ restaurant in Charlotte, North Carolina, offering fresh Cajun-style chicken and from-scratch buttermilk biscuits among other southern favorites. Today there are some 340 Bojangles’ restaurants at home and abroad. |
1978 | | Chef Alex Patout opens his first Cajun restaurant in New Iberia, Louisiana. |
| | Catering to the increasing demand for specialty foods, Michael Barefoot moves A Southern Season to larger quarters in Chapel Hill’s Eastgate Shopping Center. His well-stocked food emporium also begins attracting national attention. |
| | Phyllis Jordan enters the coffee and tea business in New Orleans. By the turn of the twenty-first century, P. J.’s Coffee & Tea has grown from a single retail shop to a multimillion-dollar business that not only imports, roasts, and distributes fine coffees but also franchises cafés where exotic coffees and teas can be enjoyed with fresh-baked pastries. |
CLASSIC PECAN PIE
MAKES
8
SERVINGS
I’d always thought that pecan pie predated “the late unpleasantness,” as Southerners used to call the Civil War, or perhaps even belonged to Colonial Days. But in researching my
American Century Cookbook
(1997), I discovered to my great surprise that it became popular only in the twentieth century. Even John Egerton, a southern culinary historian and author whom I respect, says that he’s found “no recipes or other bits of evidence to prove” that pecan pie existed long ago. Another food historian, Meryle Evans,
believes that pecan pie dates only as far back as 1925 and that it was created by Karo home economists to “push product.” The majority of pecan pies do contain corn syrup—either light or dark. I prefer the former. I also prefer this recipe given to me by a friendly neighbor who loved to teach “the little Yankee girl,” as she called me, all about southern food. I was an eager pupil.
11
/
3
cups perfect pecan halves
One 9-inch baked pie shell (see About Pie Crusts, frontmatter)
1 cup firmly packed light brown sugar
1 cup light corn syrup
3 large eggs, lightly beaten
2 tablespoons lightly browned melted butter
1 tablespoon all-purpose flour
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
¼ teaspoon salt
ALABAMA PEANUT PIE
MAKES
8
SERVINGS
Although George Washington Carver (see box, Chapter 6) is credited with creating peanut butter, the peanut butter cookie, and numerous other peanut desserts, this particular pie may or may not be his. It’s something I adapted from an anonymous recipe in an old southern community cookbook.
1 cup blanched, shelled raw peanuts
1 cup sorghum molasses or dark corn syrup
½ cup sugar
½ cup (1 stick) butter, at room temperature
3 large eggs
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
¼ teaspoon salt
¼ teaspoon freshly grated nutmeg
One 9-inch unbaked pie shell (see About Pie Crusts, frontmatter)
Heirloom Recipe
MRS. LEE’S CAKE
Here, just as it appears in
The Robert E. Lee Family Cooking and Housekeeping Book
written by Lee’s great-granddaughter Anne Carter Zimmer (1997), is the original Robert E. Lee Cake. Here it is titled simply “Mrs. Lee’s Cake.”
Twelve eggs, their full weight in sugar, a half weight in flour. Bake it in pans the thickness of jelly cakes. Take two pounds of nice “A” sugar, squeeze into it the juice of 5 oranges and three lemons together with the pulp. Stir in the sugar until perfectly smooth, then spread it over the cakes as you would jelly—putting one above another till the whole of the sugar is used up.
—Mrs. Robert E. Lee
GENERAL ROBERT E. LEE ORANGE AND LEMON CAKE