Read The Darling Dahlias and the Eleven O'Clock Lady Online
Authors: Susan Wittig Albert
Here are some books I found helpful in creating
The Darling Dahlias and the Eleven O'Clock Lady.
You will also find numerous resources listed in the five earlier books in the series.
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Cohen, Stan.
The Tree Army: A Pictorial History of the Civilian Conservation Corps, 1933â1942
(1980).
Davis, Ren and Helen.
Our Mark on This Land: A Guide to the Legacy of the Civilian Conservation Corps in America's Parks
(2011).
Hill, Edwin G.
In the Shadow of the Mountain: The Spirit of the CCC
(1990).
Maher, Neil M.
Nature's New Deal: The Civilian Conservation Corps and the Roots of the American Environmental Movement
(2009).
Pasquill, Robert.
The Civilian Conservation Corps in Alabama, 1933â1942: A Great and Lasting Good
(2008).
If there were no other reason to live in the South, Southern cookin' would be enough.
MICHAEL A. GRISSOM,
SOUTHERN BY THE GRACE OF GOD
Fried Apples
Served over waffles or with buttermilk biscuits, sausage, and gravy, fried apples are a traditional Southern breakfast dish. But they may appear as a side dish, like a vegetable, for dinner or supperâand in fact are even listed as a vegetable in old cookbooks, where they are sometimes flavored with bacon or sausage drippings. Of course, fried apples aren't fried at allâbut simply braised over low heat, in a heavy skillet. Use firm, tart pie apples, such as Granny Smiths or Gravensteins.
1½ cups apple cider plus ½ cup
5 tart apples, peeled and sliced
2 tablespoons butter
1 tablespoon cornstarch
3 tablespoons sugar
1 teaspoon cinnamon
½ teaspoon nutmeg
¼ teaspoon cloves
Pour 1½ cups of apple cider into a skillet over medium heat. Add apple slices and cook until tender. Add butter and remove from heat. Mix together remaining ½ cup apple cider, cornstarch, sugar, and spices in a small bowl. Pour over apples, return to low heat, and stir gently as the sauce thickens.
Jam Thumbprint Cookies
This traditional butter-cookie recipe appears in almost every cookbook after the Civil War, sometimes with pecans, sometimes without. (Pecans, of course, are a Southern favorite and are added to just about anything.) Children love to fill the “thumbprints” and drizzle the glazeâfun for grown-up cooks, too. Choose a single jam or several different jams and marmalades.
1 cup butter or margarine, softened
â
cup sugar
½ teaspoon vanilla extract
2 cups all-purpose flour
½ cup finely chopped pecans
½ cup jam
GLAZE
1 cup powdered sugar
2 to 3 teaspoons water
1 teaspoons vanilla extract
Combine butter or margarine, sugar, and vanilla extract in bowl. Beat until creamy, scraping the sides of the bowl often. Add flour and chopped pecans. Beat until well mixed. Cover and refrigerate at least 1 hour, or until firm.
Heat oven to 350°F. Shape dough into 1-inch balls. Place 2 inches apart on ungreased cookie sheets. Make thumbprint indentation in center of each cookie, and fill with about ¼ teaspoon jam. Bake 14â18 minutes or until edges are lightly browned. Remove to rack and cool completely. To glaze: Combine all glaze ingredients in bowl and stir until smooth. Drizzle over cookies. Makes about 3 dozen.
Ophelia's Recipe for Cake Flour
During the Depression, specialty products like cake flour were expensive and were often not stocked in the smaller stores.
Measure out the amount of all-purpose flour called for by your recipe. For every 1 cup of flour remove 2 tablespoons of flour and replace with 2 tablespoons of cornstarch. Sift 5â6 times before using. (If you don't have a flour sifter, use a strainer. Fill it with flour, hold or place it over a bowl, and tap a knife against it.) Be sure to measure the flour one more time, after it's been sifted and before you use it in the recipe.
The Diner's Special Southern Corn Pudding
Southern corn pudding is the savory, whole-kernel version of the sweeter Indian pudding made with cornmeal and molasses that was a Northeastern colonial staple. Corn pudding, also called Puddin' Corn and Hoppy Glop, is traditionally made with fresh corn, but you can also use canned cream-style
corn. Cooks developed their favorite variations, adding onions, garlic, cheese, tomatoes, and other vegetables.
2 cups fresh corn or 1 can cream-style corn
2 tablespoons flour
1 tablespoon sugar
1 teaspoon salt
Pepper
2 eggs
1 cup milk
3 tablespoons butter, melted
Preheat oven to 350ºF. Mix together corn, flour, sugar, salt, and pepper. Beat eggs with milk and melted butter, and add to corn. Pour into a greased baking dish. Bake 30 minutes. Serves 6.
Raylene's Lemon Chess Pie
Southern cooks were famous for their sweet, egg-rich custard pies, including chess pie (also called chess cake, chess tart, and sugar pie). This recipe (which includes cornmeal for thickening) is for the popular lemon-flavored variation; if lemons weren't available, vinegar was often substituted, or buttermilk. Food history expert Karen Hess tells us how this pie got its odd name: “Since the archaic spellings of cheese often had but one âe' we have the answer to the riddle of the name of that southern favorite âChess Pie'. . . (The tradition of making cheesecake without the cheese goes back to early seventeenth century and beyond . . .)”
âThe Virginia House-wife,
by Mary Randolph, with Historical Notes and Commentaries by Karen Hess, p. 289
4 eggs
1½ cups sugar
½ cup lemon juice
¼ cup butter, melted
1 tablespoon cornmeal
2 teaspoons all-purpose flour
â
teaspoon salt
Pastry for 9” pie
In a large bowl, beat eggs for 3 minutes. Gradually add sugar and beat until mixture becomes thick and lemon-colored. Beat in the lemon juice, butter, cornmeal, flour, and salt. Pour into pastry shell. Bake at 350°F for 35â40 minutes or until a knife inserted near the center comes out clean. Cool on a wire rack for 1 hour. Refrigerate for at least 3 hours before serving.
Charlie Dickens' Favorite Grilled Cheese Sandwich
The Vidalia onion is a sweet variety of onion that was first grownâby accidentâin Toombs County, Georgia, in the early 1930s. The fact that they are unusually sweet is due to the low sulfur content of the soil in which the onions are grown. (Sulfur makes onions pungent.) The Piggly Wiggly food chain, headquartered in nearby Vidalia, Georgia, put the onions in their produce bins, and it wasn't long before visitors were taking these oddly sweet onions back home to their friends. The Vidalia onion is now the official state vegetable of Georgia. This recipe makes one substantial sandwich.
3 strips bacon
2 tablespoons softened butter mixed with â
teaspoon garlic powder
2 thick slices bread of your choice
2 slices Swiss cheese
2 thin slices tomatoes
Italian seasoning, salt, pepper
2 medium-thick Vidalia onion slices
Fry bacon until crisp in a skillet over medium heat. Remove bacon and drain drippings, saving drippings for another use. Generously spread one side of a slice of bread with butter-garlic mixture. Place bread butter-side-down in skillet and top with 1 slice of cheese. Top with tomato slices and sprinkle with Italian seasoning. Top tomatoes with onion slices, bacon strips, and second slice of cheese. Butter the second slice of bread on one side and place butter-side-up on top of sandwich. Grill until lightly browned and flip; continue grilling until both slices of cheese are melted. (Cover the skillet to help the cheese melt.)
Fannie's Tomato Soup
2 yellow onions, diced
½ teaspoon minced garlic
5 tablespoons butter
3 tablespoons sugar
1 teaspoon salt
½ teaspoon black pepper
1 (15 ounce) can crushed tomatoes
½ teaspoon dried thyme
¼ teaspoon dried savory
¼ teaspoon marjoram
4 cups water
1 cup half-and-half
4 basil leaves, julienne cut
In a large saucepan over medium heat, sauté the onions and garlic in butter until softened. Add sugar, salt, and pepper. Cook until the sugar is dissolved, stirring. Add the tomatoes and herbs and cook for 5 minutes. Add water. Simmer for 15 minutes.
Set the soup aside to cool. When cooled, puree the soup in a blender. Return the soup to the stove, simmer 5 minutes, and then add the half-and-half. When heated through, sprinkle the basil leaves for garnish.
Lucy Murphy's Jefferson Davis Pie
This pie, named in honor of the president of the Confederacy, is a fruit-filled, spiced version of the chess pie (above). Lucy's recipe includes granulated sugar and adds a meringue; other Jeff Davis recipes use brown sugar and omit the meringue. Perhaps it is better not to worry about the “historicity” of these recipes. Anne Carter Zimmer, in her commentary in
The Robert E. Lee Family Cooking and Housekeeping Book
(p. 131), remarks, “I began to realize that receipts [recipes] are a kind of folklore. Like folktales, they are recreated each time they are made or told, and each time they can beâand often areâchanged by the taste and times of the maker.”
½ cup softened butter
1½ cups sugar
4 egg yolks
2 tablespoons flour
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1 teaspoon nutmeg
½ teaspoon allspice
¼ teaspoon cloves
1 cup whipping cream
½ cup chopped dates
½ cup raisins
½ cup coarsely chopped pecans
Unbaked 9-inch pie shell
MERINGUE
4 egg whites
½ cup sugar
Preheat oven to 300ºF. Cream the butter and sugar until light and fluffy. Beat in the egg yolks, then add the flour and spices and mix until combined. Add the cream, dates, raisins, and pecans, mix well, and pour into the pie shell. Bake until set but still slightly soft in the middle, about 40 minutes.
To add the meringue: Remove the pie and increase the oven heat to 350ºF. Beat the egg whites until foamy. Gradually add the sugar, and beat until the meringue forms firm peaks. Spread over the baked pie, sealing it to the crimped edges of the shell. Bake until golden brown. Serve at room temperature.
A Baker's Dozen Ways to Do It Easier, Faster, Better
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