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We eat a lot vegetables in our house. In fact, I like to think that I cook a way above average amount of vegetables. Black beans, blackeyed peas, green beans, asparagus, butterbeans, corn, squash, carrots, tomatoes, okra, sweet potatoes, eggplant – all of these things are regular parts of our diet.
But.
I was born and raised in Mississippi. I spent the first three years of my married life in south Louisiana. And I now live in Alabama. And while we do eat healthily for the most part, I occasionally call upon my Southern cooking heritage when it comes to adding bacon and butter to our vegetables. So while I feel confident telling you that you could stop by our house on almost any night of the week and find several vegetables from which to choose, you should probably know in advance that you might not be eating them steamed and flavored with the teeniest bit of olive oil when you visit.
However, I think you’ll find that you’ll appreciate the temporary vacation from worries about your cholesterol when you experience that first taste of bacon fat in your peas.
Yes ma’am. Pass the cornbread. Please and thank you.
So just in case you’ve never experienced the joy of preparing and eating vegetables in the Deep South – I thought I’d offer a brief tutorial here today. You probably wouldn’t want to follow these rules all the time, but every once in awhile it’s good to kick up your soul food heels. And while it is not necessary for you to visit your cardiologist before implementing these methods in your own cooking, it is certainly recommended. As I always like to say, an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of really good butter.
Amen.
1) If there’s no form of pork product in your vegetable, you’re doing something wrong.
I grew up knowing beyond a shadow of a doubt that pigs and vegetables are BFFs. They go together like peas and, well, ham hocks. And even when I cook vegetables that aren’t traditional Southern staple – like black beans – I like to fry a little bacon, remove it from the pan, and then use those bacon drippings to season my beans. Which leads us straight to tip #2…
2) A little bit of bacon makes every vegetable better.
Sprinkle some crumbled bacon on a cooked sweet potato. Or mix it up in some green beans with sugar and vinegar. Or stir it up with some eggplant, onion, garlic and butter. Or add it to your bread crumbs when you’re dredging green tomatoes. YOU CAN’T GO WRONG. And more importantly? Your life will never be the same.
3) Go big with real butter or go home.
Now contrary to what you might think, I’m not advocating that you use large quantities of butter when you cook vegetables. But I am advocating that you use real butter. Nothing from a tub. Nothing that “tastes like” butter. I’m talking about the real deal butter – the best thing that ever happened to baked sweet potatoes or fresh squash. I’d rather use a teaspoon of the real stuff than a tablespoon of the fake stuff. Let’s embrace the real-live butter. It’s the right thing to do.
So. There you have it. The three primary ways I like to take perfectly healthy foods and occasionally make them significantly less healthy. And I’m so grateful that you’ve joined me on this somewhat fat-laden portion of my culinary journey.
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So this year I had to make my own birthday cake, and I was kind of bitter about it. It was for my 30th birthday too. My husband had a crazy week and somehow could not find the time. So I decided I was going to make a FANCY cake for myself as long as I was making it. I had a new pan that I had not used yet (year old, whoops!) and I was going to use it. I followed all directions, greased the pan properly, and let it cool (WITH A TIMER SET) the proper amount of time. When I flipped it over to get it out of the pan in came out in crumbled pieces. I figured screw it and put frosting on the parts that were together enough to hold that and stuck a “30” candle in it and called the wrecked cake DONE! :)
Butter, butter and a side of butter.
And cheese.
And bacon grease.
I must have fried sweet potatoes! I eat them as fast as they come out of the skillet!
I love real butter!!! My favorite comfort food right now is toast with real butter and real, raw honey drizzled on top. Yum!
And my fav Laughing Cow product? The new Tomato Basil Mozzarella wedges. Spread one on a bun, layer some roast turkey breast and your favorite veggies, and you’ve got a great sandwich! Again, yum!!!
Used to have an aluminum can on the stove to collect bacon grease which then went into so many different dishes (yeah, including veggies). Stopped doing that a number of years ago, and now I’m wondering why after reading the post. Guess it’s back to the bacon for me.
By the way, margarine and/or “spreads” have no place in my home. It’s real butter, all the way.
Salsa. Salsa with beef, salsa with chicken, salsa with omlettes, salsa with salsa.
One day a friend and I were eating lunch together. She happened to have pizza and I can’t remember what I was eating. Anyway, during the course of our lunch we were talking and laughing. At one point, my friend laughed so hard that her bite of pizza flew out of her mouth and landing on my clothing!
sazzyfrazz at gmail dot com
I have a funny story. I told my daughter that I could change the color on tv. We watched the Wizard of Oz and I told her I would change the color after Dorothy’s house crashed in the tornado. Her eyes opened up wide, and she was like, “Wow, Daddy, you were right!â€
I don’t have a funny cooking related story, except that my daughter loves dinosaur pancakes, rather than mickey mouse pancakes. She’s a tomboy.
pauleyd68 (at) yahoo (dot) com
I didn’t know that greenbeans were actually bright green until I was about 10 because in the Deep South they cook them with hamhocks and bacon to the point that they are brownish mush.
I swear I’ve heard people here called lightly steamed green beans “Yankee Beans”….go figure