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Cooking & Recipes, Old and New

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Wednesday
10Feb2010

Appalachian Stack Cake

Apple Stack Cake. Click on image for source and licensing information.One sure sign of a genuine specimen of folk cuisine is an abundance of old family recipes which are generally similar but differ in details.  Stack Cake is the real thing -- you can collect as many "authentic" recipes for stack cake as you would like.

Stack Cake is made of 6 to 8 layers of cake with an apple-based filling between the layers.  A common apocryphal story is that it originated as poor-folks' wedding cake, with several guests each contributing a layer.  Another story holds that it was brought to Kentucky in 1774 by pioneer James Harrod; but this seems unlikely, since Stack Cake did not become known until a century later.

The emergence of Stack Cake in the second half of the 19th century seems to have followed the widespread availability of two of its important ingredients -- refined wheat flour and sorghum molasses.  Along with the use of sorghum molasses in the cake, the use of dried apples to make the filling is consistent with an origin, if not in Kentucky, at least somewhere in Southern Appalachia.  The ingredient list also is consistent with numerous family traditions holding that Stack Cake was made at Christmas -- a season when Backcountry families would have had plenty of flour, sorghum molasses, and dried apples, and the time to make Stack Cake, which takes some doin'.

How can you recognize one of the "genuine" Appalachian Stack Cake recipes? I suggest that the ingredients should include sorghum molasses, shortening (Crisco or lard), buttermilk, and dried apples, and should exclude anything which would not have been available in Appalachia in the late 19th century.

When you're ready to make stack cake, here are some recipes for starters:

Appalachian History, Stack Cake

Appalachian Heritage, Dried Apple Stack Cake

About.com: Southern Food, Tennessee Apple Stack Cake

Uncle Phaedrus, Kentucky Stack Cake

Cooks.com, Dried Apple Stack Cake

Suite101, Apple Butter Stack Cake

Saturday
28Jun2008

Backcountry Cuisine: Applewood-Smoked Trout

Brook%20TroutCIess.jpg 

As I write these words, a Backcountry culinary tradition is cooking in the charcoal grill on my patio: applewood-smoked trout.

Click to read more ...

Sunday
18May2008

Backcountry Cuisine: Brown Beans and Cornbread

Brown beans and corn bread are the "national" dish of the Backcountry.  There are countless recipes ranging from traditional to juiced-up modern.  My recipes are closer to traditional:

Click to read more ...

Sunday
22Jun2008

Backcountry Cuisine: Cornmeal Mush

Cornmeal mush dates from the early settlement of colonial America and is generally credited to the Scottish and Scotch-Irish settlers who were accustomed to making oatmeal porridge in their native lands.  Oatmeal porridge - - we usually call it simply "oatmeal" - - is a simple dish made by cooking oat groats in water with a bit of salt.  The Backcountry settlers adapted this simple recipe to produce cornmeal mush.  There are numerous recipes for making cornmeal mush; I'll lay out the basics and you can make it more complicated of you wish.

Click to read more ...

Thursday
19Nov2009

Backcountry Cuisine: Livermush

Odd and unusual foods in the Southern Backcountry cover a broad range of delicacies (and indelicacies) -- fried pickles, deep-fried Oreos, fried green tomatoes, frogs' legs, fried grits, chicken-fried squirrel, and others, mostly with the word "fried" expressed or implied.  Outstanding among these is livermush, including liver pudding, a Backcountry phenomenon with its epicentre in central North Carolina.

One of our local groceries recently began carrying a variety of liver pudding, Jenkins, which serves the purpose well when the need for livermush arises.  Before I go further, let me hasten to acknowledge that livermush purists -- yes, you read that right, livermush purists -- will insist that liver pudding is not really livermush. Nonetheless, when we were kids, liver pudding was called "livermush," and that's how we think of it. 

Specifically, what we called "livermush" was and is Neese's Liver Pudding, made in the North Carolina Piedmont and distributed throughout much of North Carolina and into parts of the Virginia and South Carolina Piedmonts.  Neese's also makes Neese's Liver Mush, distributed in Western North Carolina, a hotbed of livermush purism.  Both products are made with hog's liver; the spices are somewhat different and liver pudding contains more corn meal. 

The story of Neese's Sausage has a classic Backcountry beginning:

The Neese history begins with family members immigrating to America in the early 1700s. In 1769, George Neese (born 1744) moved to what is now Guilford County, North Carolina, traveling the great wagon road through the Shenandoah Valley from Berks County Pennsylvania.

Neese's Company History.  The company remains a family-run business and still makes its product line with pure ingredients, delivered fresh to its customers.  Which explains why we unfortunately can't get the real thing where I live and have to make do with a substitute.

There are four other North Carolina producers -- Mack's Livermush and Meats and Jenkins Foods, both in Shelby, Hunter's in Marion, and Frank Corriher Beef and Sausage in China Grove, all of which have avid followings.  And if you think I'm overstating the case by the use of such terms as "purist" and "avid," consider that North Carolina boasts three (3) annual livermush gatherings -- the Livermush Festival in June in Marion, North Carolina, the Fall Festival and Liver Mush Expo in Shelby, N.C., and another Livermush Festival in Drexel, N.C. As far as I can determine, these are the only such events in the known universe. Purists. Avid.

How does one cook livermush? Fry it, of course.  Traditionally, in bacon drippings or lard, but I recommend a vegetable oil such as Crisco or peanut oil, and on the sparse side.  There are, inevitably, two schools of thought on the matter of cut -- thick and thin.  "Thick" means you cut off slices of one-half inch or so, and brown both sides in oil until heated through.  "Thin" livermushers prefer slices of one-fourth inch or less, fried in oil until the slab is crispy.  Serve with a side of grits (boiled, not fried) and eggs over-easy, or scrambled if you must.

There are variations, such as the livermush sandwich for lunch and -- you had to know this would be so -- Livermush-on-a-Stick, Mack's specialty at the Shelby Liver Mush Expo: slices of livermush which have been battered and deep-fried.

So where do I stand on this vitally important point of Backcountry cuisine? Non-purist Neese's Liver Pudding, sliced thick, with yellow grits and eggs over easy.  Those thin-slice, white-grits, scrambled-eggs types just don't know what they're missing.