T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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3289.1 | | XCUSME::KENDRICK | | Tue Oct 29 1991 16:21 | 5 |
| How about some pinto beans, collard or mustard greens, kale or fried
okra?
T
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3289.2 | Southern BBQ... | SAHQ::WILLARD | REMEMBER THE PRIME DIRECTIVE | Tue Oct 29 1991 16:21 | 13 |
| Bob:
Standard fare when serving BBQ is Cole Slaw, and BBQ beans, kind of
like our baked beans but different. French fries are optional.
Dessert is Banana pudding, made with vanilla wafers....
Beverage of choice is ice tea (not iced) with a sugar level
comparable with straight glucose...
My husband and I have been transplanted (5 years now!) and love good
barbeque...
Cynthia
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3289.3 | | SHALOT::KOPELIC | Quality is never an accident . . . | Tue Oct 29 1991 16:36 | 12 |
|
The other standard is not bisquits, but hushpuppies!
Took me awhile to figure out why all of these people were going out to
lunch at a place where they used a bar-b-que grill. I kept asking
what... hamburgers, hot dogs, steak, chicken ... of course I've had
bar-b-q before :-)
I'm suprised noone has gotten into the "eastern NC vs. westen NC" style
"Q"
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3289.4 | | UPBEAT::JFERGUSON | Judy Ferguson-SPS Business Support | Tue Oct 29 1991 16:58 | 4 |
| I'd vote for a good Coconut Cake for dessert. Always a standard
with my family...with Banana Pudding a close second.
Judy
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3289.5 | Puddin' story | GENRAL::KILGORE | Ah, those Utah canyons..... | Tue Oct 29 1991 17:10 | 9 |
| Mentioning Banana Pudding reminds me of a family story. My dad's from Georgia
and his sisters used to make Banana Pudding for him. Shortly after my parents
were married, he asked Mom if she would fix some for him. She found some
recipes in cookbooks and made several variations and none of them were like
what his sister's used to fix. After a couple years Mom finally got tired of
dad complaining about her Banana Pudding and asked one of his sister's for her
recipe. She said "Hun, it's on the side of the `nilla wafer box!" She had it
all along but never tried that particular recipe. She laughs just thinking
about this episode.....
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3289.6 | What kind of southern do you want? | CNTROL::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Tue Oct 29 1991 17:44 | 6 |
| If you're having a Texas barbecue you need to serve cole slaw, potato
salad, barbecued pinto beans, white bread, raw onion slices, and dill
pickles. Lots of (ice) tea, and beer. I never had room for dessert.
For any southern meal you need about a half dozen different vegetable
dishes.
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3289.7 | NO biscuits! | AUNTB::MONTGOMERY | D-D-D-Dittos! | Tue Oct 29 1991 18:47 | 13 |
|
No, no, NO biscuits with BBQ, what ya'll want is hushpuppies. Baked
beans are good, with slaw, personally I like marinated cabbage and
onion in the vinegar-sugar-water marinade. Do some yams somehow, fried
or baked, or at least do baked sweet potatoes. Potato salad is a great
idea. Beverage, hmmmm, mint julep? And for dessert, I'd go for
something light, fruity, tangy, say...lemon meringue pie or key lime
pie. Pecan pie is of course very Southern, or try a hickory nut pie if
you have time.
An earlier note siad it first, serve lots of vegetables.
Helen
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3289.8 | Hush now. | FSOA::BERICSON | MRO1-1/L87 DTN 297-3200 | Wed Oct 30 1991 10:21 | 13 |
| OK sounds real good... seems to be almost a religon around southern
cooking. What's this about TX vs the rest of the south... there's
here, Mason Dixon and there.
Hushpuppies.. did a directory on it but no listings...
I have an old pair around the house.. should I use filet of sole,
spiced tongue, laced drinks, or would we all end up as odor eaters?
So if anyone wants to bother to try to educate a Yank on hushpuppyalia
.. you might need a 2x4 to get his attention... it would be
appreciated.
Bob
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3289.9 | | CNTROL::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Wed Oct 30 1991 13:00 | 11 |
| �What's this about TX vs the rest of the south...
It's not just TX vs the rest of the south. The south is very regional
when it comes to cooking (or probably just about anything). There are
at least 3 styles of southern barbecue, there are 2 distinctly
different styles of cuisine in Louisiana alone (cajun, creole). To
think all that Texas offers is tacos and barbecue is also misleading.
There is a very strong German influence in several pockets of Texas as
well as influences from neighboring Lousiana. Try telling someone from
Minnesota that northern cooking means clambakes and at the least you'll
get a strange look.
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3289.10 | Sweeten the deal... | SAHQ::WILLARD | REMEMBER THE PRIME DIRECTIVE | Wed Oct 30 1991 15:32 | 7 |
| Ok, Bob...
Being transplanted, see this note .2, I'm sweeten the deal....Let me
look around this weekend and I'll see if I can find you a decent,
cheap, southern (GA) cookbook.
Cynthia
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3289.11 | Hushpuppies | AUNTB::MONTGOMERY | D-D-D-Dittos! | Wed Oct 30 1991 17:12 | 17 |
| Hushpuppies are a kind of cornbread. There's a story something about
tossing them to dogs to keep them from begging while dinners cooking.
Apparently, you toss your dog one and say "Hush, puppy."
2 cups corn meal
2 teaspoons baking powder
1 teaspoon salt
1 1/2 cups milk
1/2 cup water
1 large onion, chopped fine.
Mix it all up, add more corn meal or milk as necessary to make a soft
dough. Drop by spoonfuls into hot fat and fry 'til golden.
This stuff is a necessity with pork BBQ as well as fish fries.
Helen
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3289.12 | Our Southern BBQ | WR2FOR::ABELLAR_MA | | Wed Oct 30 1991 18:35 | 8 |
| When we have a BBQ we make pinto beans w/smoked neck bones. Creole
potato salad,ham hocks and collard greens, hush puppies, or cracklin'
corn bread, and for dessert Red Velvet cake, banana pudding, or peach
cobbler. To drink, we have lots and lots of sweetened iced tea. If you
would like any of the above recipes, let me know.
Mary
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3289.13 | N'Olins! | MILPND::LANDINGHAM | Mrs. Kip has Moved! | Wed Oct 30 1991 20:46 | 2 |
| To me, there's nuthin' like creole cooking. The real stuff, not
cajun/creole feeble attempts at some local establishments.
|
3289.14 | Some authentic Southern recipes | SCAACT::RESENDE | Pick up the pieces & build a winner! | Sun Nov 03 1991 23:03 | 116 |
| Just a note on Nathalie Dupree. We watch her show often on Saturday
mornings. Her cooking is authentically Southern, though perhaps
somewhat more sophisticated than most families have for everyday fare.
Most of her recipes (at least the ones we've tried) are delicious, and
we have learned from her technique. A word of warning, though ...
We've jokingly dubbed her show Nathalie Dupree's "Cooking with Butter"
because the things she makes, while absolutely delicious, are rarely
healthy in any sense of the word. She uses lots of fat, which is
probably why her cooking is so good!
One other comment -- on barbeque. I grew up in Florida, and my wife
grew up in North Carolina. We both thought we knew what good barbecue
was. Then we moved to Alabama. There is no comparison! The BBQ in
Alabama was head and shoulders above anything we'd ever tasted -- it
wasn't even like the same food! Then we moved to Texas, and (sorry,
Texans) the BBQ here can't even compare. We've had some of the best
food of our lives here in Texas, but BBQ ain't among the winners. So
if you want really mouth-watering, to-die-for BBQ, get a recipe from
someone in Alabama!
My wife and I both grew up in the South. My Mom wasn't too much
of a cook when I was growing up, but Pat's was. Trouble is, many of the
things that are pretty much standard don't really have recipes, or at
least not very specific ones. Here are a few things:
o Banana pudding: Use the recipe on the Nilla vanilla wafers box. It
can't be beat.
o Fried okra: Wash okra, and slice about 1/4 inch thick, discarding
the stem ends. Toss in a brown paper bag with cracker meal. You can
buy cracker meal in a box or make your own from saltines in the food
processor. Deep fry in a skillet in about 2" of oil at a *very* high
temperature, stirring often, until brown and crispy. Don't worry if
some of the breading comes off -- enough will stick to make it ummmmmmm
good!
o Buttermilk biscuits: My wife got this from her mother, who got it from
her mother, who got it from her mother ... don't know how many
generations it goes back. Pat's mother was the one who started making
it with buttermilk -- previous generations used something called
clabber, which isn't really available now, but Pat says had an even
sour-er flavor than buttermilk.
2 cups self-rising flour
1 tablespoon powdered sugar
1 tablespoon baking powder
1/3 cup shortening
More than 3/4 cup but less than 1 cup buttermilk
Stir dry ingredients together. Cut in shortening. Add buttermilk and
stir with a fork just until mixed (do not overmix). You will have
something softer than most doughs but slightly stiffer than most
batters, and very light. Turn onto a floured board and roll in flour
till coated enough not to be sticky (do not knead). Roll or pat out
about 1/2 to 3/4 inch thick, and cut with a round cutter. Do not twist
cutter when you lift it up. Place biscuits touching each other on a
greased cookie sheet. Brush the top of each with melted butter
(optional). Bake at 425 degrees till golden brown.
o Buttermilk cornbread: This is *not* a sweet cornbread, so if that's
the kind you like then you probably won't like this. But it's
authentically Southern. My wife's mother made this, but didn't measure
anything so couldn't really come up with a recipe and never got around
to taking the time to measure everything out and write it down. Pat
finally convinced a friend of hers to ask her grandmother, who made
identical cornbread, to measure the ingredients and write them down.
And that's how we got the recipe.
1 cup white corn meal (not corn meal mix)
1/4 teaspoon baking powder
1/4 teaspoon baking soda
1/4 teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon bacon grease (you can use oil but it won't be the same)
1 egg
1 cup buttermilk
Preheat oven to 450 degrees. Grease a #5 cast iron skillet with bacon
grease and put it in the oven while it's preheating. Mix all
ingredients together and pour into sizzling skillet. Bake 25 minutes.
Turn cornbread out onto a plate and slice into wedges like a pie.
o Creamed corn: Pat learned how to make this from the mother of one
of her friends who was a wonderful Southern cook. It's great!
Cut corn off cobs, then scrape cob with back of knife to get the
cornstarch out into the bowl with the kernels. Put corn in a saucepan.
If desired, fry out some fatback and season the corn with the resulting
grease. Cook over medium heat till hot. Add some milk. Bring to a
slow boil. Mix a teaspoon or so of boxed commercial cornstarch with a
little cold water. When corn is boiling, pour the cornstarch-water
mixture into boiling corn *very* slowly in a thin stream, stirring
constantly. Continue to boil for 2 - 3 minutes, till thickened.
o Greens: A staple in the South.
Wash and "look" greens (that is, examine them for bad spots, bugs,
etc). If you're cooking mustard greens, use only those that were
picked after the first fall frost. Till they're frost-bitten, they're
bitter. Put them in a saucepan with a large slab of fatback, some
salt, and some water. Cover and simmer till done, usually around an
hour or so.
o Black-eyed peas: These are mouth-watering. Recipe is from Southern
Living magazine a few years ago.
1 16-oz pkg black-eyed peas
6 cups water
4 slices hickory-smoked bacon
1 tablespoon salt
1 tablespoon sugar
1 tablespoon white wine vinegar
1/4 teaspoon black pepper
1/4 teaspoon garlic salt
Soak peas 8 hours. Drain. Combine with other ingredients, cover, and
simmer 1-1/2 hours.
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