From Bvio
The
Southern United States has a distinct
cuisine that draws heavily on influences of the various groups that have inhabited the area. The most notable influences come from
African-American,
Native American,
Irish,
French, and
Spanish cuisines.
Soul food,
Creole,
Cajun, and
Tex-Mex are types of Southern cuisine. In more recent history, elements of Southern cuisine have spread north, having an effect on the development of all the varieties of
American cuisine.
Some foods commonly associated with the South are
sweet tea, pit
barbecue,
grits,
biscuits, especially with
gravy,
catfish,
casseroles,
fritters, chicken-fried
steak,
cornbread,
fried chicken, fried pies,
okra and pickled green
tomatoes,
watermelon rind and
peaches.
Fried foods are common in the South, a direct reflection of the influence of slave cooking on the region, since
Africans of the time were fond of deep fat frying. White slaveowners mostly avoided African cultural influences, but cooking styles quickly seeped into all corner of the South because slave women did most of the cooking for plantations, and taught cooking techniques to slaveowners' children. As a result, traditional cooking in the U.S. South reflects the use of African techniques, often in an attempt to create European dishes, with Native American ingredients. An example of a traditional southern meal is deep fried
chicken, field
peas,
turnip greens, cornbread, sweet tea and a dessert that could be a pie (
sweet potato,
pecan,
shoo fly and
peach are traditional southern pies), or a cobbler (peach, blackberry or mixed berry are traditional cobblers).
Fried chicken is among the region's most well-known exports, though
pork is as integral a part of the cuisine, with
Virginia ham the most respected. Green beans are often flavored with bacon and
salt pork, while ham biscuits often accompany breakfast and ham with red-eye gravy is a common dinner dish (in spite of a debate over whether to make red-eye gravy with water or black coffee).
Within the U.S. South, a number of specialized regions exist. In Southern Louisiana,
Cajun and Creole cuisines developed, both distinct types that are commonly bundled together as "Cajun". African American
soul food is well-known, and eaten among black populations throughout the country, as well as among whites in the South. In the Carolinas, the coastal region was a center for rice growing. Local specialties include rice and black-eyed peas flavored with salt pork (''Hoppin' John'') and
Charleston Red Rice, as well as the famous
Charleston She-Crab Soup. Tennessee and Texas are particularly noted for their
barbecue; Carolina barbecue is unique in the South for its use of
vinegar.
==Evolution of Southern cuisine==
The first settlers to arrive in the southern
Appalachian region in the
1700s found the land to be fertile and agricultural opportunities abundant. One of the most important things that happened in this period was interaction with the native tribes of the area. From this interaction came one of the main staples of the southern diet:
corn (maize). Corn was an essential and versatile crop for the early Appalachian settlers. Corn was used to make all kinds of dishes from the familiar cornbread and grits to liquors such as
whiskey and
moonshine, which were important trade items. Though a lesser staple,
potatoes were also adopted from
Native American tribes and were used in many similar ways as corn.
===Native American ingredients===
Native Americans also introduced the first southerners to many vegetables still familiar on southern tables.
Squash,
pumpkin, many types of
beans,
tomatoes (though these were considered poisonous in the beginning), many types of
peppers and
sassafras all came to the settlers via the native tribes.
Some
fruits were available in the area.
Muscadines,
blackberries,
raspberries, and many other wild berries were part of settlers’ diets when they were available.
Early settlers also supplemented their diets with meats. Most meat came from the hunting of native game.
Venison was an important meat staple due to the abundance of
white-tailed deer in the area. Settlers also hunted
rabbits,
squirrels,
opossums, and
raccoons, all of which were pests to the crops they raised.
Livestock in the form of
hogs and
cattle were kept. When game or livestock was killed, the entire animal was used. Aside from the meat, it was not uncommon for settlers to eat organ meats such as
liver,
brains and
intestines. This tradition remains today in hallmark dishes like
chitterlings (pronounced ''chit’lins'') which are fried large intestines of hogs,
livermush (a common dish in the Carolinas made from hog liver), and pork brains and eggs. The fat of the animals was used for cooking and frying.
===Southern cuisine for the masses===
A niche market for Southern food has proven profitable for chains such as
Cracker Barrel, who have extended their market across the country, instead of staying in the South.
"Fast food" Southern chains (which are traditionally characterized by fast service and what is usually considered to be lower-quality food, seen in abundance at Interstate rest stops) that are popular across the country include
Stuckey's and
Waffle House, the former known for being a "pecan shoppe", and the latter known for the number of the toppings one can put on his
hash browns.
Other Southern food chains which specialize in this type of cuisine, but have decided mainly to stay in the South, are
Po'Folks (also known as ''Folks'' in some markets) and
Famous Amos. Another more "fast food" type of selection,
Sonny's Real Pit Bar-B-Q.
==Cajun and Creole cuisine==
Southern Louisiana developed significant culinary traditions, '''Louisiana Creole cuisine''' in South-Eastern Louisiana centered on
New Orleans, Louisiana, and '''Cajun cuisine''' centered on
Acadiana in the South-West.
Both share influnces of traditional cuisine of
France with greater use of
rice and local Louisiana resources as well as
African imports such as
okra.
These settlers also had access to many native costal animals such as
crayfish (commonly called crawfish in the region),
crab,
oysters,
shrimp, and
fish. These seafoods were incorporated into their diets and are still seen today in the various dishes of the region.
Fruits such as figs, plums and grapes were also grown in the region. Pecans and peanuts were grown in the region, providing an alternative protein source.
Creole cuisine was long better known nationally until the explosion of interest in Cajun food in the 1980s.
===Cajun cuisine===
''Main article:
Cajun cuisine''
Cajun cuisine includes influence from
Acadia in
Canada. Rice, which could be used to stretch meals out to feed large families, became a major staple food. Today we still see that influence in many Cajun dishes which are served over a bed of rice. And again, corn was a major staple.
In addition to the above listed foods, Acadian families were introduced to
vegetables such as okra, which is a key ingredient in gumbos and etouffe as well as many other Cajun and Creole dishes. (Many Southerners also enjoy deep-fried okra.)
===Louisiana Creole cuisine ===
''Main article:
Louisiana Creole cuisine''
South-eastern Louisiana was more heavily influnced by
Spain and
Latin America than was Arcadiana. The region also maintained more trade with France and incorporation of more recent French culinary traditions well into the 19th century. The major city of New Orleans, long known for its fine
restaurants, allowed development of more gormet variations of local dishes.
At the start of the
1980s Cajun chef
Paul Prudhomme opened a popular restaruant in New Orleans which started significant influnce of Cajun food on to Creole traditions.
==African-American influences==
''Main article:
Soul food''
Plantations were born after the Southern settlers realized the great region's potential for agricultural profit. The wealthiest land owners began to cultivate the land in larger and larger tracts and in the process began bringing slaves to the region to work the fields. The African slaves brought with them their own dietary traditions.
Most Africans’ diets consisted of greens and various vegetables. Stews were common and rice was a familiar staple to them. At way stations in the
West Indies, those people on their way to becoming slaves picked up various new ideas about
spices and flavoring. Eventually employed in the kitchens of Southern plantations, the slaves passed on their way of cooking to the families they served.
Deep fat frying, cooked down greens and vegetables, puddings, and grilling can all be traced back to slave roots. Foods that became part of the Southern diet from African-American heritage include: okra,
eggplant,
sesame seeds,
sorghum, and some
melons.
The African influence is still most easily recognized in traditional Cajun cuisine. Gumbo (a stew using chicken or seafood, sausage, rice, okra and roux) and Etouffe, (a thicker, less liquid gumbo served over a bed of rice) are all born from African cooking tradition.
==Foods which might be part of a traditional Southern meals==
===Beverages===
*
Buttermilk
*
Coca-Cola
*
Dr Pepper
*
Mint julep
*
Sweet Tea
===Meats===
*
Barbecue (Pork or beef are most common, but goat and chicken are also seen. Sauces vary regionally, tending to be thinner towards the east)
*
Chitterlings (Fried large intestine of a
hog)
*Chicken gizzards (fried)
*Fried chicken (usually flour battered and pan fried, with or without skin)
*Boiled chicken (as in chicken and dumplings)
*Fried fish (Cornmeal battered and pan or deep fried.
Catfish is a southern favorite.)
*Fried steak (flour battered and pan fried)
*Game meat (
venison,
squirrel, and various game foul are most common, but
opossum,
rabbit, and
raccoon are also encountered.)
*Ham (could be fried, roasted, or smoked. May be sugar cured or country (salt cured) depending on use)
*Liver (Most usually pork or fried chicken liver)
===Vegetables===
It is not uncommon for a traditional southern meal to consist of only vegetables with no meat at all, although meat or meat products are often used in the cooking process.
*
Beans (
Limas, pole beans,
pinto beans. Often cooked down with chunks of
ham or
onions)
*
Carrots (cooked with butter and
brown sugar)
*Corn (fried or creamed corn is a typical dish)
*Cooked greens (
collards, turnip, kale,
Poke salad, mustard, and sometimes cabbage)
*
Mashed potatoes
*
Okra (flour battered and pan fried. Also boiled.)
*
Onion (Sliced Vidalia, or whole green onion)
*
Peas (
black-eyed, purple hull, field peas. Cooked down with chunks of ham or onions)
*
Squash (cooked down with onions or fried like okra)
*
Tomatoes (sliced ripe or fried green)
*
Sweet potatoes, including sweet-potato pie
===Breads, other side dishes and complements===
*Biscuits (traditionally prepared with buttermilk)
*
Cornbread
*
Corn pone
*
Hush puppies
*
Deviled eggs
*
Dressing (similar to northern
stuffing, but with cornbread as a base and prepared outside the meat)
*
Gravy is used liberally on meats, potatoes, biscuits, and anything else. May be milk-based (country gravy) or based on coffee or water (red-eye gravy) mixed with the drippings leftover from cooking your meat.
*
Sorghum syrup
*
Sweet tea
===Cajun specialties===
*
Etouffe (a very thick stew made of
crawfish or chicken and sausage, okra and roux served over rice)
*
Gumbo (A soup made of seafood or chicken and sausage, okra, rice, and roux)
===Dessert===
''Cakes''
*
King cake
*
Peach shortcake
*
Red velvet cake
*
Tea cake (more of a
cookie than a cake)
''Cobblers''
*
Blackberry cobbler
*
Dewberry cobbler
*
Peach cobbler
''Pies''
*
Key lime pie
*
Lemon ice box pie
*
Pecan pie
*
Shoo fly pie
*
Sweet potato pie
''Puddings''
*
Banana pudding
*
Bread pudding
*
Corn pudding
*
Rice pudding
==External link==
North Carolina barbecue primer