Saturday, October 1, 2011

What was the traditional food like in the South during the 1930's?

I have a project to do about food from To Kill A Mockingbird and that era. I know cakes (maybe like Lady Baltimores) from the ones Miss Maudie has baked. I saw a food/book club website that suggested things like pecan pie, oatmeal raisin cookies, and the like.





Anyone else have any ideas/suggestions/recipes? It doesn't even have to be from the book; old tradition Southern food would be fine.|||fried chicken, apple pie, biscuits, pork roasts, collard greens, would you believe manatees. craw fish, shrimp, pancakes, shoe fly pie, mo-lass pie, Shepard's pie, 7 bean soup, here is a site that will really help you southern recipes from flavored of the south, http://myweb.cableone.net/howle/page/sou鈥?/a> it has nothing but southern old recipes good luck have fun.|||When I think of the South, I think of homemade buttermilk biscuits.|||fried chicken ( you killed your own) homegrown vegetables, bbq|||Hershey Chocolate Fudge Cake (1930)





1 3/4 c Unsifted all-purpose flour


1 ts Baking powder


1 ts Baking soda


1/2 ts Salt


1/2 c Vegetable shortening


1 1/2 c Sugar


2 Eggs


1 ts Vanilla


2/3 c Cocoa


1/2 c Hot water plus


1 tb Hot water


1 c Sour milk*





Grease and flour two 9" layer cake pans. Preheat oven to 350F. Combine


flour, baking powder, baking soda and salt on wax paper. In large mixing


bowl, beat shortening, sugar, eggs and vanilla until light and fluffy.


Blend cocoa into hot water to make a smooth paste; gradually add to creamed


mixture. Add flour alternating with sour milk to creamed mixture. Pour


batter into prepared pans. Bake at 350F for 30 minutes, or til tops spring


back when lightly pressed. Cool on wire racks for 10 minutes. Remove from


pans; cool completely. Spread with your favorite frosting.





* To sour milk: Add 1 Tablespoon vinegar to one cup milk.














1930 Quick Tomato Soup Cake





1 pk Spice cake mix


1 cn Tomato soup


1/4 c Water





Mix cake as directed using tomato soup and water for liquid. Add eggs if


called for. Bake as directed. Frost if desired.|||This was the Depression Era: Lots of corn bread, cooked in a cast iron skilled with bacon fat or lard. Field greens, mustard or turnip. Black-eyed peas, purple hull beans, cream peas. Lemonade. Unsweet or sweet iced tea. Catfish. Sorghum or molasses. Watermelon. Fried chicken on Sundays. Pecan pie! BBQ. All the good stuff that present-day Southerners eat.





The Mississippi Delta has a strong tradition of tamales. Check out www.southernfoodways.com ...





EDIT: a more direct link: www.tamaletrail.com !!!!!

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