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My mom was from Alabama, and she used to make pig feet and hoppin John in the pressure cooker. Lawdamercy, that was sooo good with some Louisiana hot sauce and grape Koolaid to wash it all down. Talk about cloggin your arteries, can't eat too much of it now. You're asking for a heart attack. | |
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it's good for the soul. | |
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Oooo, you don't know what you're missing! They are sooo good cooked in butter and garlic in their shells. | |
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LBrent said: Y'all pretty much covered it all, but I just thought I'd mention that my mother in law used to fry chicken in bacon grease. I can't describe how delicious it was. I wonder if the mason jar of saved bacon grease is a white people thing. Every southern white mama and grandma I know had it and seasoned everything with it. Murica: at least it's not Sudan. | |
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Horsefeathers said: LBrent said: Y'all pretty much covered it all, but I just thought I'd mention that my mother in law used to fry chicken in bacon grease. I can't describe how delicious it was. I wonder if the mason jar of saved bacon grease is a white people thing. Every southern white mama and grandma I know had it and seasoned everything with it. This was supposed to be in response to the person who said soul food and country cooking were similar except black people used more lard. Murica: at least it's not Sudan. | |
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Horsefeathers said: LBrent said: Y'all pretty much covered it all, but I just thought I'd mention that my mother in law used to fry chicken in bacon grease.
I can't describe how delicious it was. I wonder if the mason jar of saved bacon grease is a white people thing. Every southern white mama and grandma I know had it and seasoned everything with it. My mother in law is deceased now, but worked for many years in the cafeteria of the junior high school. Every day they cooked bacon for the cafeteria breakfast, then collected the bacon grease in a jar. When it was full each lady took turns taking home a big jar. These were all black ladies with southern backgrounds, Carolina mostly, living in NY. [Edited 9/11/16 11:24am] | |
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Naw, I'm still here But I checked in on this thread AFTER a long time though... | |
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No, it's not just a "white people thing." I think it has its roots in southern black folks' kitchens. My mom is from Alabama, and she kept a tin canister on the kitchen countr by the stove, and after every batch of fried bacon, she would deposit the bacon drippings in that can. She used it to season almost everything that called for some type of fat, be it greens, string beans, cabbage, fried chicken, liver and onions, and even pancakes, the kind that called for milk, egg and fat. I do the same thing to this day. I know it's not particularly healthy, but you can't beat the flavor it adds to southern cooking.
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domainator2010 said:
Naw, I'm still here But I checked in on this thread AFTER a long time though... Oh. | |
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. Andy is a four letter word. | |
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My family is having soul food on Christmas We usually make the traditional Christmas dinner (ham,stuffing,etc) but this year we want to try something different.We're gonna have gumbo,fried fish,black eyed peas,greens,etc.I can't wait. | |
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....with pecan pie and sweet potato pie for dessert! | |
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Bull fucking shit Yes Jiffy is low budget cornbread and not the best on the market but you can doctor that shit up like my mom. The secret to good cornbread is getting that right mix of oil in it so that it can taste fluffy. And shit what's the use of eating cornbread if it don't have a little sweetness to it. You might as well eat fucking plain white bread. I prefer cornbread made from real corn meal like Martha White but don't be stingy with the tugah. Don't laugh at my funk
This funk is a serious joint | |
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I LOVE,LOVE,LOVE Jiffy cornbread it's really the only kinda cornbread that my family has ever used
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A family friend taught me to add a can of creamed corn to Jiffy. Makes it sweet, fluffy and yummy. | |
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I'm going to have a go at making my first ever corn bread today. This is the recipe that I will be using: http://www.foodnetwork.co...ecipe.html Life Matters | |
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I too prefer it when cornbread tastes sweeter. Life Matters | |
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Puh-lenty of bred n' born, tried n' true southerners and southern cooks use Jiffy mix, and many prefer sweeter cornbread. It's one of those southern snobbery things like Duke's mayo which is supposed to be a southern staple, but someone around here is still buying Hellman's because it keeps disappearing from store shelves. They just might not admit it in a discussion about "real" southern cooking. I probably lose southern points for my dislike of all cornbread, sweet or not. Murica: at least it's not Sudan. | |
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CherryMoon57 said:
I too prefer it when cornbread tastes sweeter. Honey works in place of sugar, white corn meal adds a unique sweetness. None of it s actually cake sweet, but it's sweet. | |
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Thank you morningsong, I'm just about to start it now. [Edited 9/18/16 9:47am] Life Matters | |
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mmmm.I'll have to try that | |
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Mom and Grandma didn't use the mason jar. It was an actual container with a strainer on top to pour bacon grease and leftover fried chicken grease into. It was some sort of metal (not stainless steel). And this was used into the 1980s. Chicken was cooked in a cast iron skillet but not fully immersed in the grease. You cooked one side, then the other.
And they cooked it in Crisco! As a little girl I thought it was icing and when the adults were down for the Sunday afternoon nap I grabbed a fingerful of what I thought was going to taste like butter creme. I ruined a couple of toothbrushes trying to get that out of my mouth. Then had to go get my own switch for ruining the toothbrushes. Style is the second cousin to class | |
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A wilted lettuce salad is heaven. Style is the second cousin to class | |
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A lot of people also used to use coffee cans for their saved fat. Remember metal coffee cans? #old Murica: at least it's not Sudan. | |
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I was in the grocery store to buy cooking oil and I laughed when I saw Crisco makes coconut oil.
I was like, "Well, alright, Crisco, gettin with the healthy thing, huh?"
A friend of mine growing up, her grandmother used Crisco on her feet. She kept a small tub of Ponds Cold Cream mixed with Crisco to coat her feet every night then cover in socks to keep away what she called "slave feet" (tough crusty skin on the feet)
Old folks can be so politically incorrect LMAO | |
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Prince, in you I found a kindred spirit...Rest In Paradise. | |
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