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Southern

Asian, Healthy, Leftover Magic, Rice, Southern, Weeknight

Leftovers make great fried rice

February 4, 2015

How many times have you had leftover rice sitting in your fridge? For us here in south Louisiana, it’s a lot. Red beans and rice, crawfish étouffée, gumbo and other dishes can leave behind a surplus of perfectly cooked rice. But no matter where you live or what you cook, there’s no need to toss the rice that may be taking up space in your refrigerator. Combined with the roast chicken or grilled shrimp that are probably also lying in wait, those plump grains are easily converted into fried rice, a quick and convenient dish with great umami and rib-sticking flavor.

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Desserts, Southern

Orange pound cake with orange glaze

February 2, 2015

Pound cake. Yum. What self-respecting Southerner doesn’t love it? My sweet mom makes one for me and my crew every time we head to Georgia to see her. I like to pretend it’s just for me, but it’s really for my husband John. Spoiled son-in-law. We eat it as a late night snack as soon as we arrive, weary after an 8-hour drive that should have only taken 7. We eat it for dessert. We toast thick slices for breakfast (and sometimes add more butter on top). We saw off thin slivers each time we walk by the lucite cake plate to “even it out.” It’s long gone before the weekend is over.

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Fresh from the Gulf, Oysters, Southern, Super Bowl

Super Bowl Sunday: River Road Recipes’ Oysters Fitzpatrick Gets Saucy

January 28, 2015

Oysters are the perfect addition to the 2015 Super Bowl party menu, both as a nod to two seafood-centric coastal locales, New England and Seattle, and to our own Gulf oyster season still underway here in South Louisiana. For parties, I like to serve them baked or grilled on the half-shell, and for the Super Bowl in particular, adding bacon and barbecue sauce makes them festive and football-y. Pretty sure that’s a word this week.

One of my all-time favorite oyster recipes is Oysters Fitzpatrick from the Junior League of Baton Rouge’s 1959 food bible, River Road Recipes, but here I’ve reworked it with a locally made barbecue sauce, Jay D’s, made by my friend and fellow food writer/blogger Jay Ducote (BiteandBooze.com).

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Farmers Markets, Healthy, Southern, Vegetables

Roasting fresh turnips brings out sweetness

January 26, 2015

Fresh turnips are in full supply right now at Southern farmers markets and they’re one of the easiest and most satisfying winter veggies to prepare. I picked some up last week from the Red Stick Farmers Market in Baton Rouge. If you’re not yet in the habit of cooking turnips, give them try. And if their reputation for bitterness scares you or your kids, fear not. Roasting brings out their natural sweetness. Another secret is how you peel them.   Continue Reading…

New Year's, Southern, Vegetables

Cabbage or greens for NYD? Both.

December 31, 2014

The South agrees that black-eyed peas are required eating for good luck in the New Year, but there’s variation in the region about which greens are best for shoring up your chances for prosperity. Do you cook up a mess o’ collards, a pot of mustards or is cabbage front and center on your New Year’s Day plate? Louisiana leans toward cabbage – displays holding huge heads of Savoy alongside dried Camellia brand black-eyed peas and boxes of Jiffy corn bread mix are fixtures in local supermarkets. I love cabbage, and this New Year’s at our house, it takes the form of coleslaw with a homemade orange-celery seed dressing.

But my family likes other greens, too, and I can’t get away with keeping them off the January 1 menu. This year, it’s mustard greens. They’ve found their way into a variation on tomatoes Provençal. No, it’s not exactly tomato season, but I did find hothouse tomatoes from a regional farm in one of my favorite local grocery stores. Using Julia Child’s recipe as a springboard, I combined fresh white breadcrumbs with slivered and sautéed greens and a little grated Parmesan cheese. Here’s how:

New Year’s Day Tomatoes Provençal

Serves 6

1 strip bacon, diced

2 cups chopped mustard greens (wash and remove thick stems before chopping)

3 medium tomatoes

1 1/2 fresh white breadcrumbs

2 tablespoons grated parmesan cheese

1/2 teaspoon salt

Olive oil for drizzling

Preheat oven to 400. Slice tomatoes in half and carefully scoop out pulp. Season inside with salt and pepper and invert to allow remaining liquid to drain. In a medium to large skillet, render bacon pieces until crisp. Remove bacon from skillet, leaving behind about 1/2 teaspoon rendered fat. Place bacon on paper towels to drain. While pan is still hot, sauté greens in fat for about three minutes. In a medium bowl, toss bread crumbs, parmesan cheese, bacon, salt and greens. Combine thoroughly, then fill each tomato half with mixture. Bake for 20 minutes or until nicely browned.

Cajun, Road Food, Southern

Driving under the influence

December 26, 2014

For many of us, the holidays cue road trips to see family members reachable by car, but in Louisiana that also means entering the orbit of the dozens of Cajun meat markers that line certain stretches of road. Many of us are in the habit of pulling in on two wheels and stocking up on smokehouse pork sausage, hogshead cheese, fresh boudin, cracklins and boudin balls to take home, deliver to lucky folks or scarf down while driving.

Our routine includes stopping at Kartchner’s in Krotz Springs, Louisiana en route from Baton Rouge to Alexandria, where my husband’s family lives. A requisite order here includes three each of the boudin balls – pork, crawfish and jalapeño-cream cheese. We also nab a few ounces of cracklins, root beer all around and lots of napkins.

BoudinBalls1

It’s not a road trip without a grease-stained brown paper bag.

I tend to be a purist – favoring the pork boudin balls – but I’m in the minority.

BoudinBalls2

My husband and daughter like crawfish best, while my 10-year-old son is a consistent jalapeno-cream cheese guy. His obsession with them got me thinking: How long has the jalapeño-cream cheese boudin ball been part of the Cajun meat market experience, anyway? Look around the refrigerator cases at most of these roadside gems and you see jalapeño and cream cheese stuffed in all manner of items. It’s just one of many ways you can get your meat doozied up by the heavy handed Cajun butcher. Few things on the menu aren’t deep fried, seasoned to oblivion or stuffed with cheesy-fatty-spicy goodness. At some point, one of these meat masters decided to take the ingredients of the jalapeño popper and stuff them inside whatever was close by – a pork chop, a boudin ball, a butterflied shrimp – and it became standard fare.

Do you have a sense of when this started? Or do you have a favorite menu item you’d like to share? Leave a comment! I’d love to hear from you.