Read A Love Affair with Southern Cooking Online
Authors: Jean Anderson,Jean Anderson
BROWN SUGAR SAUCE
MAKES ABOUT
1¼
CUPS
According to James Harrison, who gave me this old Virginia recipe years ago, “When properly made, the sauce will be caramel-like and very dark.” He adds that although it was routinely served at his Grandmother Davis’s house as a topping for Old Virginia Gingerbread, which precedes, it is equally spectacular over vanilla ice cream. Harrison remembers the sauce being put on to simmer just as the family sat down to Sunday dinner. By the time dessert was served, it was ready. If the sauce is to be silky-smooth, you must keep the burner heat at the lowest possible point, using a diffuser, if necessary. The sauce should warm just enough to dissolve all the sugar crystals, not become so hot that the eggs “scramble.”
¼ cup (½ stick) butter, at room temperature
2 cups loosely packed dark brown sugar
2 large eggs
2 tablespoons hot (but not boiling) water
2 tablespoons bourbon or brandy
Good coffee and the Protestant religion can seldom if ever be found together.
—
OLD CREOLE SAYING
TIME LINE: the people and events that shaped Southern Cuisine
1987 | | Lipton manager Mack Fleming and third-generation English tea taster Bill Hall buy the 127-acre Wadmalaw Island tea farm, found the Charleston Tea Plantation, and begin producing this country’s only homegrown tea. They call it American Classic. |
| | Lattimore M. Michael, a Cleveland, Mississippi, grocer known for the superb burgers he serves at his store, opens a restaurant called the Back Yard Burger. A year later he is selling franchises; today there are Back Yard Burgers in some 18 states. |
1988 | | The Virginia General Assembly claims Brunswick stew as Virginia’s own. According to its proclamation, a camp cook named Jimmy Matthews made squirrel stew one day for his master, Creed Haskins. The place: Brunswick County, Virginia. The year: 1828. |
| | After closing many of its Colonial stores, financially troubled Grand Union sells its Virginia and North Carolina Big Star supermarkets to North Carolina’s up-and-coming Harris Teeter chain. |
1989 | | Fred Carl, Jr., begins manufacturing Viking gas ranges for home kitchens in Greenwood, Mississippi. They incorporate many features of heavy-duty professional ranges. |
GRATED SWEET POTATO CAKE WITH COCONUT TOPPING
MAKES ONE
9 × 9 × 2-
INCH CAKE
Of all the sweet potato recipes to come out of the South, this one—similar to but better than carrot cake—may be the most delicious. I admit to having an insatiable sweet tooth, as do too many other Southerners.
Cake
2½ cups sifted all-purpose flour
3 teaspoons baking powder
1½ teaspoons ground cinnamon
1 teaspoon ground ginger
½ teaspoon freshly grated nutmeg
½ teaspoon salt
1 cup granulated sugar
¼ cup firmly packed light brown sugar
1 cup corn oil or vegetable oil
4 large eggs
1½ cups coarsely grated raw sweet potato (about one 8-ounce potato)
¼ cup water
1 cup coarsely chopped pecans, black walnuts, or wild hickory nuts
Topping
½ cup sugar
3 tablespoons cornstarch
¼ teaspoon salt
One 12-ounce can evaporated milk
1 cup sweetened grated or flaked coconut
1½ teaspoons vanilla extract
ALABAMA TEA CAKES
MAKES ABOUT
8
DOZEN COOKIES
(
INCLUDING REROLLS
)
Whenever I thumb through antiquarian southern cookbooks, I’m struck by the dearth of cookie recipes. The reason, I suspect, is that being so small and thin, cookies burned easily in unreliable ovens. Only with the arrival of thermostated ovens in the early twentieth century did cookies come into their own. There is, however, one old-fashioned cookie recipe that appears regularly in early cookbooks and that’s the tea cake. I have tea cake recipes from nearly every southern state but my favorite is this one given to me years ago by Miz Susie Rankin, a wise and witty Alabama farm woman who lived near the town of Demopolis. Miz Susie kept the dough for this 100-year-old recipe in her refrigerator, and any time she “wanted to do something nice for a child,” she’d pull out “a gob of dough” and bake some tea cakes.
1 cup (2 sticks) butter, at room temperature
2 cups sugar
1 tablespoon freshly grated nutmeg
1½ teaspoons vanilla extract
¼ teaspoon salt
2 large eggs
1 teaspoon baking soda dissolved in ½ cup buttermilk
5½ cups sifted all-purpose flour
GEORGIA PECAN BALLS
MAKES ABOUT
3
DOZEN
Adapted from a recipe sent to me by the Georgia Pecan Commission, these cookies remind me of Mexican Wedding Cakes or what Virginia friends call “moldy mice.” Why, I have no idea. Nor could they enlighten me. Not too sweet and easy to make, pecan balls are perfect for the holiday season. Tip:
To get a jump on things, bake them weeks ahead. Layered into airtight containers between sheets of wax paper and stored in the freezer, they’ll taste oven-fresh when thawed.
½ cup (1 stick) butter, at room temperature
2 tablespoons granulated sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
¼ teaspoon salt
1 cup unsifted all-purpose flour
1 cup finely chopped pecans
One 1-pound box confectioners’ (10X) sugar
OLD SALEM SUGAR COOKIES
MAKES ABOUT
5
DOZEN
Whenever I visit Old Salem, an eighteenth-century Moravian village come to life in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, I zip over to the 200-year-old Winkler Bakery and load up on thin-as-onion-skin ginger cookies and these old-fashioned sugar cookies—my all-time favorites. This recipe is my updated, downsized version of the old institutional one. Note:
Because the cookie dough must season overnight before it’s rolled, begin this recipe the day before you bake the cookies.
2 cups plus 2 tablespoons sifted all-purpose flour
½ teaspoon baking soda
½ teaspoon cream of tartar
½ teaspoon salt
½ teaspoon ground nutmeg
¾ cup (1½ sticks) butter, at room temperature
1¼ cups sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
½ teaspoon lemon extract
¼ teaspoon almond extract
2 large eggs
1 large egg yolk
TIME LINE: the people and events that shaped Southern Cuisine
1990 | | New Orleans chef Susan Spicer launches her Bayona restaurant near the French Quarter and introduces dishes that are part Creole, part Cajun, but mostly global. |
| | The Vidalia onion is named Georgia’s official “state vegetable.” |
| | The $15 million World of Coca-Cola museum opens in Atlanta. Today, more than 3,000 tourists trek through each day to learn the story of Coke, or, as Mark Pendergrast, author of |
1991 | | The James Beard Foundation names Emeril Lagasse, chef-proprietor of Emeril’s in New Orleans, “Best Chef in the Southeast.” |
1992 | | Franklin Garland finds the first black Périgord truffle on the acre he’d planted 12 years earlier with spore-inoculated filbert and oak seedlings on his farm near Hillsborough, North Carolina. It weighed more than two ounces. |
| | The James Beard Foundation names Patrick O’Connell of the Inn at Little Washington in Washington, Virginia, Best Chef in the Mid-Atlantic and Mark Militello, chef-proprietor of Mark’s Place in North Miami Beach, Best Chef in the Southeast. |