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Cornbread Nation 4: The Best of Southern Food Writing (Cornbread Nation: Best of Southern Food Writing)
 
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Cornbread Nation 4: The Best of Southern Food Writing (Cornbread Nation: Best of Southern Food Writing) [Paperback]

Dale Volberg Reed (Editor), John Shelton Reed (Editor)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Book Description

Cornbread Nation: Best of Southern Food Writing April 1, 2008

This new collection in the Southern Foodways Alliance's popular series serves up a fifty-three-course celebration of southern foods, southern cooking, and the people and traditions behind them. Editors Dale Volberg Reed and John Shelton Reed have combed magazines, newspapers, books, and journals to bring us a "best of" gathering that is certain to satisfy everyone from omnivorous chowhounds to the most discerning student of regional foodways.

After an opening celebration of the joys of spring in her natal Virginia by the redoubtable Edna Lewis, the Reeds organize their collection under eight sections exploring Louisiana and the Gulf Coast before and after hurricanes Katrina and Rita, the food and farming of the Carolina Lowcountry, "Sweet Things," southern snacks and fast foods,
"Downhome Food," "Downhome Places," and a comparison of southern foods with those of other cultures.

In his "This Isn't the Last Dance," Rick Bragg recounts his experience, many years ago, of a New Orleans jazz funeral and finds hope therein that the unique spirit of New Orleanians will allow them to survive: "I have seen these people dance, laughing, to the edge of a grave. I believe that, now, they will dance back from it." "My passport may be stamped Yankee," writes Jessica B. Harris in her "Living North/Eating South," "but there's no denying that my stomach and culinary soul and those of many others like me are pure Dixie." In her "Tough Enough: The Muscadine Grape," Simone Wilson explains that the lowly southern fruit has double the heart-healthy resveratrol of French grapes, thus offering the hope of a "southern paradox." The title of Candice Dyer's brief history says it all: "Scattered, Smothered, Covered, and Chunked: Fifty Years of the Waffle House." In a photo essay, documentarian Amy Evans shows us the world of oystering along northwest Florida's Apalachicola Bay, and for the first time in the series, recipes are given-for a roux, braised collard greens, doberge cake, and other dishes.


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Editorial Reviews

Review

"[The Cornbread Nation] series only gets better with each volume." --Mariani's Virtual Gourmet

"When you feel yourself getting hungry, you know it's right." --Warwick Sabin, Arkansas Review

"Southern food is legendary stuff, but southern food writing may be even better, at least as exampled in these pages." --John Thorne, author of Serious Pig

About the Author

Dale Volberg Reed is a freelance musician and writer. John Shelton Reed is founding coeditor of the journal Southern Cultures. He is the Mark W. Clark Visiting Professor History at The Citadel, and William Rand Kenan Jr. Professor Emeritus of Sociology at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. The Reeds are coauthors of 1001 Things Everyone Should Know about the South.


The Southern Foodways Alliance documents and celebrates the diverse food cultures of the American South. It is a member-supported organization of more than 800 chefs, academics, writers, and eaters. Atlantic Monthly called the SFA "this country's most intellectually engaged (and engaging) food society." www.southernfoodways.com

John T. Edge is director of the Southern Foodways Alliance and Cornbread Nation general editor. He is the author or editor of seven books, including The New Encyclopedia of Southern Culture: Foodways and A Gracious Plenty: Recipes and Recollections from the American South. Edge contributes to a wide array of publications, including Gourmet, the New York Times, Oxford American, and the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. www.johntedge.com


Product Details

  • Paperback: 320 pages
  • Publisher: University of Georgia Press (April 1, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0820330892
  • ISBN-13: 978-0820330891
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 6 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 15.2 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #915,475 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

John Shelton Reed is William Rand Kenan, Jr. Professor Emeritus of sociology at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, where he was director of the Howard Odum Institute for Research in Social Science for twelve years and helped to found the university's Center for the Study of the American South. He has written or edited eighteen books, four of them with his wife, Dale Volberg Reed.

 

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Cornbread Nation ... I ate it up!, August 15, 2008
This review is from: Cornbread Nation 4: The Best of Southern Food Writing (Cornbread Nation: Best of Southern Food Writing) (Paperback)
Being Southern, I enjoy reading stories and accounts of the Southern experience ... especially as it relates to food. Cornbread Nation Vol. IV (with an emphasis on Louisiana foods) is a delightful compilation of food stories from and about the South. I recommend it to non-Southerners as well so they can come to know us beyond the stereotypical "hillbilly" image.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars This Yankee loves Southern cooking, April 18, 2008
This review is from: Cornbread Nation 4: The Best of Southern Food Writing (Cornbread Nation: Best of Southern Food Writing) (Paperback)
The Southern Foodways Alliance was founded to celebrate, teach, preserve, and promote the food cultures of the American South. Cornbread Nation 4: The Best of Southern Food Writing is a collection of stories, poems, and essays about the foodways of the mountain South. It is one of a continuing series which includes Cornbread Nation 1: The Best of Southern Food Writing, Cornbread Nation 2: The United States of Barbecue, and Cornbread Nation 3: Foods of the Mountain South. Don't set your calendar by their appearance (four have appeared in six years), but each edition will whet you appetite and your sense of adventure.

The editors have taken these offerings from symposiums held by the Southern Foodways Alliance and newspapers, magazines, journals, and books. Like its predecessors, the book is something of a homemade quilt, with contents of varying levels of content.

The opening essay is from the wonderful Edna Lewis and sets a very high standard. She writes of her love for the wonders of spring: baby calves, pigs and lambs; a breakfast of shad, skillet potatoes, and batter bread; wild greens and lettuce salads; wild strawberries and cream. If this book does nothing else, gaining an introduction to Edna Lewis is worth the full purchase price.

There's an order of sorts based on themes, but I enjoyed jumping around more. Highlights include:

The history of Tabasco--invented in Louisiana after the Civil War.

Boudin (sausage made of pork, rice and gravy) accompanied by coffee "black as Louisiana sweet crude oil".

Rick Brooks on ordinary people seeking family recipes lost in the floodwaters of Katrina, recipes for bread pudding, sweet-potato casserole, jambalaya, and doberge cake, an eight-layer yellow cake, filled with dark-chocolate frosting and encased in chocolate ganache.

The Colleton family of South Carolina and their dinner for 40 of red rice, she-crab soup, butter beans, chicken purloo (a baked rice dish), fried blue crab, garlic crab, oysters and grits.

Buckshot Colleton is asked about the yellow gunk inside crabs -- "It's the fat of the crab." And in Gullah? "Buckshot's trademark smile curls onto his face. `We call that the fat of the crab'".

A North Carolinian on cornmeal dumplings: "My grandma made'm when the thrashers came. She would pat'm out and lay'm in the pot and when she took'm out and put'm on your plate they had her fingerprints on top".

I've taken my title from Jessica B. Harris's "Living North/Eating South": "My passport may be stamped Yankee, but there's no denying that my stomach and culinary soul and those of many others like me are pure Dixie."

The editors write: "We've closed the book with a benediction. By a preacher. Very Southern, to be sure. Maybe it should have come at the beginning, and we could have called it grace". Starting with Edna Lewis was graceful enough for this reader; the entire series is well worth seeking out and savoring and this volume is no exception.

Robert C. Ross 2008


PS: If you you haven't met Edna Lewis, it's my great pleasure to introduce you. Bob
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