Read A Love Affair with Southern Cooking Online
Authors: Jean Anderson,Jean Anderson
¾ cup water
4 tablespoons (½ stick) butter
2 teaspoons cider vinegar
2 cups sugar
1 teaspoon peppermint extract
¼ teaspoon vanilla extract
1 drop yellow food coloring
3 drops green food coloring
…three times a day she spread that enormous table with solid food, freshly baked bread, huge platters of vegetables, immoderate roasts of meat, extravagant tarts, strudels, pies—enough for twenty people.
—
KATHERINE ANNE PORTER
,
HOLIDAY
SUGARED AND SPICED PECANS
MAKES
6½
TO
7
CUPS
With pecans being one of the South’s principal crops, southern cooks not only know dozens of ways to prepare them but also continue to dream up new recipes. Spiced pecans, as far as I know, belong to the latter half of the twentieth century, as do their countless variations. This particular recipe is my own. Serve as a snack, add to a tea table, or pass at the end of an elegant dinner. Some people like to serve spiced pecans with cocktails but I frankly find them too sweet to pair with drinks.
4 cups pecan halves
2 large egg whites, beaten until frothy with 3 tablespoons cold water
1½ cups sugar
2 teaspoons ground cinnamon
1 teaspoon ground ginger
1 teaspoon salt
½ teaspoon ground nutmeg
½ teaspoon black pepper
Four states claim pecan pie for their own—Alabama, Tennessee, Mississippi, and Georgia. I have eaten this incarnate richness in each…my choice goes to the Georgia pie.
—
CLEMENTINE PADDLEFORD
,
HOW AMERICA EATS
R
ight up until World War Two (perhaps I should say until war’s end), many southern cookbooks devoted almost as many pages to food preservation as they did to food preparation. Occasionally even more. There’s good reason for this.
The South is hot six to eight months out of twelve (year-round in South Florida); therefore, conserving food safely was every cook’s preoccupation before home freezers revolutionized their lives. So was “putting food by” for the family to enjoy in fallow winter months. Because the South was largely agricultural, food was “home-grown.” And that meant meat and dairy as well as fruits and vegetables.
I find the scope of food conservation in
The Receipt Book of Harriott Pinckney Horry, 1770,
breathtaking. This South Carolina plantation matron teaches not only how “to keep tomatoes for winter use” but also how to extend the shelf life of butter as much as a month by adding a finely pounded blend of salt, sugar, and saltpeter: one ounce per pound of butter. There are also directions on how “to preserve small green oranges” and “dry peaches” plus something I’ve never heard of: “To Mango Muskmellons or Cucumbers”—basically brining and pickling with garlic, horseradish, ginger, and mustard seeds.
I’m not so sure about the “mango-ing,” but Horry’s walnut “catchup” and mushroom “catchup” are recipes I’d like to try. The second comes from her mother, Eliza Lucas Pinckney, as does this recipe for Mushroom Powder:
Take 4 lb. Mushrooms that have been squeez’d and dry them with a little spice [possibly allspice, nutmeg or mace, and black pepper] in the Sun or Oven, and Powder them for Made Dishes.
Note:
For more on this influential mother and daughter, see box, Chapter 7.
Mary Randolph (
The Virginia Housewife,
1824) tells her readers how to cure bacon, beef, and herring. She also offers a recipe for oyster “catsup,” which, she says, “…gives a fine flavour to white sauces, and if a glass of brandy be added, it will keep good for considerable time.”
Randolph doesn’t neglect the more conventional pickles, jams, and brandied fruits, nor do Lettice Bryan
(The Kentucky Housewife,
1839) and Sarah Rutledge
(The Carolina Housewife
, 1847). All three show how to make a variety of “spirits,” and Bryan, under “Domestic Liquors,” shares such quaint recipes as rose brandy, raspberry cordial, and gooseberry wine.
In my few years with the North Carolina Agricultural Extension Service, my first job was to teach 4-H Club girls how to can what they had grown—usually tomatoes, cucumbers, butter beans, yellow squash, peaches, and apples. To be honest, they knew more than I.
Later, as the extension’s woman’s editor in the Raleigh office, I coauthored (with food preservation specialist Rose Ellwood Bryan) step-by-step pamphlets on the correct way to make jams, jellies, and so forth. I even doubled for Rose Ellwood on UNC-TV demonstrating how to can peaches—LIVE for one solid hour with no breaks or commercials. Unfortunately, I became so rattled that I canned the pits instead of the peaches, then got the silly giggles. That ended any dreams of a television career.
Every summer when I was little, my mother flew into an orgy of watermelon-rind pickling using a recipe supplied by a southern friend (you’ll find that recipe on Chapter 7). And during World War Two, she faithfully preserved much of what my father grew in our Victory Garden: strawberries and tomatoes, for sure, but also asparagus, corn cut from the cob, and an end-of-summer soup made of garden gleanings. The jiggling gauge on the lid of Mother’s big pressure canner scared me to bits because I’d heard tales of nasty explosions.
Canning and pickling fell from favor after the war, but once again, thanks to the recent proliferation of farmer’s markets and the dewy produce they sell, Southerners are trying their hands at what their grandmothers had done almost on auto-pilot. Today’s plunge into pickling and preserving, however, has little to do with necessity as it did in grandmother’s day. It’s mainly for fun. Or maybe to take the blue ribbon at the state fair.
Fortunately, twenty-first-century picklers and preservers can use food processors to speed the slicing, dicing, chopping, and puréeing—no matter how old the recipe. That’s something those eighteenth-and nineteenth-century food conservationists would surely have welcomed.
JERUSALEM ARTICHOKE PICKLE RELISH
MAKES ABOUT
6
HALF-PINTS
When I worked as an assistant home demonstration agent in Iredell County, North Carolina, I loved to prowl the countryside and ferret out the local food specialties. Early on I discovered Dixie Dames, a small shop just outside Statesville that sold heavenly homemade pickles and relishes. If memory serves, there were two Dixie Dames (elderly sisters) and the things they sold were made from handed-down family recipes. There were Plantation Circles (watermelon rind pickles the color of celadon) and bread and butter pickles, but my own favorite was the Jerusalem Artichoke Pickle Relish. Jerusalem artichokes, which run wild all over North Carolina, are a type of sunflower in no way related to the prickly green globe artichokes. The Jerusalem part of their name is said to be a corruption of
girasole
,
the Italian word for sunflower. These artichokes are faun-skinned, knobby tubers, supremely crisp, nut-sweet, and low in calories because their starch (inulin) is a form that the body cannot metabolize. Today they’re sold as sunchokes and nearly every green market sells them in season (fall and winter). The recipe that follows is my attempt to reproduce that wonderful Dixie Dames Jerusalem Artichoke Pickle Relish of my youth.
2 to 2½ pounds Jerusalem artichokes, skins scraped off and the tubers coarsely chopped (you will need exactly 1 quart of prepared artichokes)
1 pint coarsely chopped cored and seeded red bell peppers (about 4 large peppers)
1 pint coarsely chopped yellow onions (about 3 large onions)
1 gallon cold water mixed with 1 cup pickling salt (brine)
11
/
3
cups sugar
2½ cups cider vinegar
1½ tablespoons mustard seeds
1 tablespoon ground turmeric
MOUNT OLIVE PICKLES
The farmers around Mount Olive, North Carolina, found themselves in something of a pickle in 1926.
That year had been a very good one for cucumbers in the small town some sixty miles southeast of Raleigh—perhaps a bit too good. There was a glut of cucumbers on the market. What to do?
The town’s Chamber of Commerce decided to go into the pickle business. A company was formed that grew, vat by vat, and eventually transformed Mount Olive into “The Pickle Capital of the South.”
Today the company buys 120 million pounds of choice cucumbers and peppers from nine states as well as Mexico and India. Walk into any supermarket in the South today and you’ll see arrays of Mount Olive pickles, peppers, and relishes.
The company also conducts an annual “pickle drop,” an idea stemming from the reputed skills of American bombardiers during World War Two. They were so accurate, it was said, that they could drop a bomb into a pickle barrel.
This inspired Pickle Packers International in Chicago to invite people to drop pickles from a skyscraper into a barrel on the sidewalk—the winner getting a year’s supply of pickles.
In 1999, the Mount Olive company, describing itself as “The Pickle and Pepper of the Millennium,” decided to stage its own version of a pickle drop every New Year’s Eve.
Over the years the festivities have grown and hundreds attend. A marquee mimics the Times Square event, a band plays the Pickle Polka, and the crowd sings “Auld Lang Syne” while a lighted, three-foot-long plastic pickle is dropped from a flagpole into a redwood vat at the appropriate time.
The appropriate time happens to be seven p.m., which is midnight Greenwich Mean Time. And where does all this take place? At the corner of Cucumber and Vine.
On a hot day in Virginia, I know nothing more comforting than a fine spiced pickle, brought up trout-like from the sparkling depths of the aromatic jar below the stairs of Aunt Sally’s cellar.
—
THOMAS JEFFERSON
CUCUMBER STICK PICKLES
MAKES ABOUT
6
PINTS
Some years ago when I was sleuthing out some of the South’s best home cooks, I was told to look up Mrs. Ivan Dishman of Sugar Grove, North Carolina; that’s up in the Blue Ridge not far from Boone. Better known as “Miz Nannie Grace,” she was famous for her pickles and relishes and was kind enough to share several old family rec
ipes with me. For these pickles she said she “just grabbed cucumbers out of the garden as they matured.” The ones to use are the little Kirbies or pickling cucumbers, which are rarely waxed. For Mrs. Dishman’s special relish, see Blue Ridge Sweet Red Pepper Relish.
22 Kirby cucumbers, each about 5 inches long (approximately 5 pounds)
3 quarts boiling water
1 quart cider vinegar
3 cups sugar
3 tablespoons pickling salt
2 teaspoons celery seeds
1 teaspoon ground turmeric
¾ teaspoon mustard seeds
TIME LINE: the people and events that shaped Southern Cuisine
1995 | | Georgia pecan growers establish the Georgia Pecan Commission to promote year-round sales. |
| | The James Beard Foundation names Elizabeth Terry, chef-proprietor of Elizabeth on 37 |
| | The North Carolina Pork Producers Association begins holding its annual Championship Pork Cook-Off at the Lexington Barbecue Festival. With a population just shy of 20,000, Lexington can boast more than 20 barbecue restaurants. |
1996 | | Krispy Kreme comes to the Big Apple, opening its first doughnut shop on West 23 |
| | Lance Toastchee |
1997 | | Lance snack foods go global, reaching markets across the Caribbean, England, Western Europe, and China. |
| | The James Beard Foundation names Norman Van Aken, chef-proprietor of Norman’s in Coral Gables, Florida, Best Chef in the Southeast. |
| | The Atlanta Bread Company Bakery Café, opened only four years earlier, is so successful there are now more than 160 of them operating in 24 states. |