southern food

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My two previous posts give a skewed idea of my usual food preoccupations, and this post is going to skew it even further. I’m going to talk about a controversial delicacy that inspires either rapture or revulsion: boiled peanuts.

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There are a few reasons for my current fixation on Southern food: It’s summer, which means the Southern dish I crave the most—fried okra—is in season; I haven’t been home for a while; and I recently got The Lee Bros. Southern Cookbook. The Lee brothers write for The New York Times, their cookbook won the James Beard Award, and their names pop up in food publications all the time. I knew they were from Charleston, South Carolina, but it wasn’t until I got the cookbook that I discovered they were not really Southerners. They are Yankee transplants, the children of academics. In other words, carpetbaggers.

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I had to avert my eyes while adding the mayonnaise.

The white bean and collard green casserole/gratin was not the first John T. Edge recipe I’ve seen that involves Ritz crackers. A few years back he contributed an article about a Southern potluck dinner to Food and Wine, featuring a broccoli and wild mushroom casserole that’s topped with Ritz crackers. Basically it’s a fancified version of a broccoli casserole made with cream of mushroom soup, except without the cream of mushroom soup. Instead you use real wild mushrooms and make a roux. I cannot tell you how much mayonnaise is involved in this recipe because you would never eat it if you knew. Both times that I’ve made this dish (for parties, always devoured), I’ve had to avert my eyes while adding the mayonnaise. That basically sums up my feelings about most Southern cooking. Avert your eyes, and your taste buds will be rewarded while your arteries pay the price.

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