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Cornbread

Cornbread is a quick bread made with cornmeal, associated with the cuisine of the Southern United States, with origins in Native American cuisine. It is an example of batter bread. Dumplings and pancakes made with finely ground cornmeal are staple foods of the Hopi people in Arizona.[1] The Hidatsa people of the Upper Midwest call baked cornbread naktsi. Cherokee and Seneca tribes enrich the basic batter, adding chestnuts, sunflower seeds, apples, or berries, and sometimes combine it with beans or potatoes.[2] Modern versions of cornbread are usually leavened by baking powder.[3]

Cornbread
Skillet cornbread
TypeQuick bread
Created byNative Americans
Main ingredientsCornmeal, baking powder
VariationsBaked cornbread, Cracklin' bread, Corn pone, Hot water cornbread, Johnnycakes, Hushpuppies
  • Cookbook: Cornbread
  •   Media: Cornbread

History edit

 
Cornbread, prepared as a muffin

Native people in the Americas began using corn (maize) and ground corn as food thousands of years[4] before Europeans arrived in the New World.[5] First domesticated in Mexico around six thousand years ago, corn was introduced to what is now the United States between three thousand and one thousand years ago.[6] Native cooks developed a number of recipes based on corn, including cornbread, that were later adopted by European settlers and enslaved African people—especially those who lived in Southern colonies. Aside from eating corn on the cob, Native people also mixed corn kernels with lye to produce hominy through an ancient process called nixtamalization.[7] Both hominy and unprocessed corn were then ground up to varying degrees to make dishes like sofkee (a corn-based soup or drink) and grits or to make cornflour. Frequently, cornflour was, and continues to be, used to make various cornbreads, like corn or ash pone, tamales, arepas, and tortillas. In contrast, cornmeal tends to be coarser than cornflour and is produced by grinding dry, raw corn grains. Besides cornbread, Native people also used cornmeal and hominy to make grits and alcoholic beverages, such as the Andean chicha.

Although Native people in the Americas first cultivated corn, it was introduced in West Africa by European traders shortly after contact through the Atlantic slave trade, and quickly became a major staple in African cooking.[6] Cornbread dishes like kush, for example, in Senegambia and the Sahel represent the transference of cuisine and culture that occurred across the Atlantic Ocean.[8] Cornbread has become a "cornerstone" of cuisine within the southeastern United States as well as being featured on the plates of African Americans, European Americans, and Native people alike.[9]

In its earliest developments in the American colonies, cornbread was a simple combination of ground cornmeal and water that was then stirred together and baked over an open fire or in a hearth.[10] At this point in its history, cornbread's role in Southern cuisine emerged out of necessity. Although white farmers in the Northeast and Midwest could grow wheat and rye, the heat and humidity of the South made European wheat wither and turn rancid.[11]

Debate edit

In the 1800s, the addition of other ingredients, such as buttermilk, eggs, baking soda, baking powder, and pig products (rendered bacon and ham hog fat), greatly changed the texture and flavor of earlier iterations of cornbread, making it much more similar to the version that is eaten today.[10] Although those ingredients were introduced in the 1800s to improve the texture and taste of cornbread, there are two other common ingredients that were excluded from most recipes until the 1900s: sugar and wheat flour.[12] As traditional stone mills were replaced with more-efficient steel roller mills in the 20th century, the quality of cornmeal was degraded. The heat from the steel rollers detracted from the corn kernel's natural sweetness and flavor and reduced the particle size of the cornmeal produced.[12] As a result, newer cornbread recipes adapted, adding sugar and wheat flour to compensate for the reduced sweetness and structural integrity of the cornmeal. In addition, the introduction of steel roller mills ushered in a new look to cornmeal; the new cornmeal tended to be yellow, whereas the old-fashioned stone ground cornmeal in the coastal South had been traditionally white. Following the proliferation of the more finely-ground yellow cornmeal, debates arose surrounding sweet vs. savory cornbread and white vs. yellow cornmeal—debates which still occur among cornbread eaters and cookers today. The importance of these differences for some cooks and eaters cannot be overstated; in 1950, for example, Francine J. Parr of Houma, Louisiana, posted a desperate headline in the Times-Picayune, "Who's Got Coarse Grits?," further explaining, "The only grits we can get is very fine and no better than mush. In short, I'm advertising for some grocer or other individual selling coarse grits to drop me a line."[12] Like Parr, some Southerners still prefer the traditional white cornmeal.

Types of cornbread edit

Cornbread is a popular item in Southern cooking and is enjoyed by many people for its texture and aroma. Cornbread can be baked, fried, or (rarely) steamed. Steamed cornbread is mushy, chewier, and more like cornmeal pudding than what most consider to be traditional cornbread. Cornbread can also be baked into corn cakes.

Baked cornbread edit

 
Home-baked cornbread made with blue cornmeal

Cornbread is a common bread in United States cuisine, particularly associated with the South and Southwest, as well as being a traditional staple for populations where wheat flour was more expensive. Cornbread, especially leftovers, can be eaten as a breakfast. It is also widely eaten with barbecue and chili con carne. In parts of the Southern and Southwestern United States, cornbread, accompanied by pinto beans, has been a common lunch for many people. It is still a common side dish for many suppers, often served with butter. Cornbread crumbs are also used in some poultry stuffings or dressing as it is called; cornbread stuffing is particularly associated with Thanksgiving turkeys.

In the United States, northern and southern cornbread are different because they generally use different types of corn meal and varying degrees of sugar and eggs.[13] Southern cornbread has traditionally been made with little or no sugar and smaller amounts of flour (or no flour), with northern cornbread being sweeter and more cake-like. Southern cornbread traditionally used white cornmeal and buttermilk. Other ingredients such as pork rinds are sometimes used. Cornbread is occasionally crumbled and served with cold milk or clabber (buttermilk), similar to cold cereal. In Texas, Mexican influence has spawned a hearty cornbread made with fresh or creamed corn kernels and jalapeño peppers and topped with shredded cheese. Cornbread is typically eaten with molasses in the southern states and with butter and honey in the northern states of America.

 
Pan-baked Southern-style cornbread, made with yellow cornmeal.

Skillet-fried or skillet-baked cornbread (often simplified to cornbread or skillet bread) is a traditional staple in the rural United States, especially in the South. This involves heating bacon drippings, lard or other oil in a heavy, well-seasoned cast iron skillet in an oven, and then pouring a batter made from cornmeal, egg, and milk directly into the hot grease. The mixture is returned to the oven to bake into a large, crumbly and sometimes very moist cake with a crunchy crust. This bread tends to be dense and is usually served as an accompaniment rather than as a bread served as a regular course. In addition to the skillet method, such cornbread also may be made in sticks, muffins, loaves or baking pans.

A slightly different variety, cooked in a simple baking dish, is associated with northern U.S. cuisine. The batter for northern-style cornbread is very similar to and sometimes interchangeable with that of a corn muffin. A typical contemporary northern U.S. cornbread recipe contains half wheat flour, half cornmeal, milk or buttermilk, eggs, leavening agent, salt, and usually sugar, resulting in a bread that is somewhat lighter and sweeter than the traditional southern version.

Unlike fried variants of cornbread, baked cornbread is a quick bread that is dependent on an egg-based protein matrix for its structure (though the addition of wheat flour adds gluten to increase its cohesiveness). The baking process gelatinizes the starch[clarification needed] in the cornmeal, but still often leaves some hard starch to give the finished product a distinctive sandiness not typical of breads made from other grains.[citation needed]

Crackling bread edit

A primarily Southern dish consisting of cornbread with pork cracklings inside. It can be prepared with any method, but a skillet is most common as it allows for making the cornbread crispier.

Corn pone edit

Corn pone (sometimes referred to as "Indian pone") is a type of cornbread made from a thick, malleable cornmeal dough (which is usually egg-less and milk-less) and cooked in a specific type of iron pan over an open fire (such as a frontiersman would use), using mostly bacon grease, but later, butter, margarine, shortening, or cooking oil. Corn pones are a staple of Southern U.S. cuisine and have been discussed or referenced by many American writers, including Mark Twain.[14]

In the Appalachian Mountains, cornbread baked in a round iron skillet, or in a cake pan of any shape, is still referred to as a "pone" of cornbread (as opposed to "hoe cakes", the term for cornbread fried in pancake style); and when biscuit dough (i.e., "biscuits" in the American sense of the word) is occasionally baked in one large cake rather than as separate biscuits, this is called a "biscuit pone".

The term "corn pone" is sometimes used derogatorily to refer to one who possesses certain rural, unsophisticated peculiarities ("he's a corn pone"), or as an adjective to describe particular rural, folksy or "hick" characteristics (e.g., "corn pone" humor). This pejorative term often is directed at persons from rural areas of the Southern and Midwestern United States. A character in the Li'l Abner comic strip, General Jubilation T Cornpone, was a mythical Civil War general from Dogpatch known for his retreats and imputed cowardice. President John F. Kennedy's staffers, who were mostly Northeastern Ivy League elites, openly mocked Texan Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson's rural speech patterns, referring to Johnson behind his back as "Uncle Cornpone" or "Rufus Cornpone".[15]

Hot water cornbread edit

 
Johnnycakes on a plate

Cooked on a rangetop, one frying method involves pouring a small amount of liquid batter made with boiling water and self-rising cornmeal (cornmeal with soda or some other chemical leavener added) into a skillet of hot oil and allowing the crust to turn golden and crunchy while the center of the batter cooks into a crumbly, mushy bread. These fried breads are typically 3–4 inches (8–10 cm) in diameter and soft and very rich. Sometimes, to ensure the consistency of the bread, a small amount of wheat flour is added to the batter. This type of cornbread is often known as "hot water" or "scald meal" cornbread and is unique to the American South.

Johnnycakes edit

Pouring a batter similar to that of skillet-fried cornbread, but slightly thinner, into hot grease atop a griddle or a skillet produces a pancake-like bread called a johnnycake. While johnnycake often denotes this pancake-like cornbread, it is also used in a scattered sense as a more general term for cornbread, chiefly in the North.[16]

Hushpuppies edit

A thicker buttermilk-based batter that is deep-fried rather than pan-fried forms the hushpuppy, a common accompaniment to fried fish and other seafood in the South. Hushpuppy recipes vary from state to state, some including onion seasoning, chopped onions, beer, or jalapeños. Fried properly, the hushpuppy will be moist and yellow or white on the inside, while crunchy and light to medium-dark golden brown on the outside. Although Native people ushered corn and cornmeal into African people's diets, African cooks are generally credited with introducing the frying of foods in fats. The combination of Native cornmeal and the African technique of frying, therefore, led to the creation of hushpuppies.[6]

Fried cornbread edit

 
Collard sandwich with fried cornbread, collard greens, and fatback

Alongside other iterations of Native cornbread, the Lumbee people in southeastern North Carolina have a unique method of cooking their cornbread. The “fried cornbread” or “frybread” that most Lumbee families serve with meals differs from both hushpuppies and johnnycakes. Prepared with yellow cornmeal, egg, buttermilk, and salt, the cornbread batter is thinly poured into a cast-iron skillet to fry.[17] As Eric Locklear, a member of the Lumbee tribe and owner of Fuller’s Old-Fashioned BBQ, notes, “It’s got a crunch around it. I mean, it ain’t thick; it don’t look like pancakes. It’s real thin and crunchy”.[18] After the fried cornbread is made, it is typically served with slices of cheese or collard greens. Glen Hunt, owner of Lumbee Homemade Ice-Cream in North Carolina, states, “You know how the old folks like to eat collards? They like to get a piece of cornbread and dip it in those collards and eat it with their fingers".[18] In the article, “As We Cooked, We Lived: Lumbee Foodways,” Malinda Maynor Lowery goes on to track the creation of the collard sandwich—a Lumbee special, which features two pieces of fried cornbread with collard greens and fatback meat. Dorsey Hunt, co-owner of Lumbee Homemade Ice-Cream, notes that “[Lumbee people] just started putting [fried cornbread and collards] together and made a sandwich out of it. …We made the cornmeal fritters, and just put the collards in between it. Put your fatback meat and chow-chow”.[18]

See also edit

Notes and references edit

  1. ^ Cumo, Christopher (2021). Ancestral Diets and Nutrition. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 9781000176094.
  2. ^ New York State Museum Annual Report. 1910. p. 70.
  3. ^ Wilson, C. R. (2007). "Cornbread". In J. T. Edge (ed.), The New Encyclopedia of Southern Culture: Vol. 7: Foodways (pp. 152–154). The University of North Carolina Press.
  4. ^ Teosinte was known in Rio Balsas (Mexico) valley from 9000 BP and was introduced in what is now the United States by the Anasazis circa 1000 AD
  5. ^ "Corn Bread". Indians.org. Retrieved May 14, 2012.
  6. ^ a b c Gilmer, Robert A. (2015). Wallach, Jennifer Jensen (ed.). "Native American Contributions to African American Foodways: Slavery, Colonialism, and Cuisine". Dethroning the Deceitful Pork Chop: Rethinking African American Foodways from Slavery to Obama: 17–29. doi:10.2307/j.ctt1ffjdh9.8.
  7. ^ Dragonwagon, Crescent (2007). The Cornbread Gospels. Workman Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7611-1916-6.
  8. ^ Twitty, Michael (November 20, 2015). "A People's History of Cornbread Stuffing". VICE.
  9. ^ "A Southern Commandment". PineStraw Magazine. October 28, 2016. Retrieved November 4, 2019.
  10. ^ a b Melvin, Robby (December 9, 2016). "The Southern History of Cornbread". Southern Living.
  11. ^ Lee, Carissa (November 18, 2021). "The A-Maize-ing History of Cornbread". The Stanford Daily.
  12. ^ a b c Moss, Robert (June 5, 2019). "The Real Reason Sugar Has No Place in Cornbread". Serious Eats.
  13. ^ Cooks Illustrated Magazine, Baking Illustrated. Brookline, MA: America's Test Kitchen, 2004, ISBN 0-936184-75-2.
  14. ^ "Mark Twain: Corn-pone Opinions". www.paulgraham.com. Retrieved November 7, 2013.
  15. ^ The Passage of Power: The Years of Lyndon Johnson, pub. Deckle Edge, ISBN 0679405070, ISBN 978-0679405078.
  16. ^ Burkette, Allison (Fall 2011). ""Stamped Indian": Finding History and Culture in Terms for American 'Cornbread'". American Speech. 86 (3): 321. doi:10.1215/00031283-1503919.
  17. ^ Gordon, Steve (January 7, 2013). "Collard Sandwich Recipe". Taste of Southern.
  18. ^ a b c Lowery, Malinda Maynor; Wood, Sara (Spring 2015). "As We Cooked, We Lived: Lumbee Foodways". Southern Cultures. University of North Carolina Press. 21 (1): 84–91. doi:10.1353/scu.2015.0001. JSTOR 26220215. S2CID 145813061 – via JSTOR.

External links edit

  • Indians.org History of cornbread

cornbread, other, uses, disambiguation, quick, bread, made, with, cornmeal, associated, with, cuisine, southern, united, states, with, origins, native, american, cuisine, example, batter, bread, dumplings, pancakes, made, with, finely, ground, cornmeal, staple. For other uses see Cornbread disambiguation Cornbread is a quick bread made with cornmeal associated with the cuisine of the Southern United States with origins in Native American cuisine It is an example of batter bread Dumplings and pancakes made with finely ground cornmeal are staple foods of the Hopi people in Arizona 1 The Hidatsa people of the Upper Midwest call baked cornbread naktsi Cherokee and Seneca tribes enrich the basic batter adding chestnuts sunflower seeds apples or berries and sometimes combine it with beans or potatoes 2 Modern versions of cornbread are usually leavened by baking powder 3 CornbreadSkillet cornbreadTypeQuick breadCreated byNative AmericansMain ingredientsCornmeal baking powderVariationsBaked cornbread Cracklin bread Corn pone Hot water cornbread Johnnycakes HushpuppiesCookbook Cornbread Media Cornbread Contents 1 History 2 Debate 3 Types of cornbread 3 1 Baked cornbread 3 2 Crackling bread 3 3 Corn pone 3 4 Hot water cornbread 3 5 Johnnycakes 3 6 Hushpuppies 3 7 Fried cornbread 4 See also 5 Notes and references 6 External linksHistory edit nbsp Cornbread prepared as a muffinNative people in the Americas began using corn maize and ground corn as food thousands of years 4 before Europeans arrived in the New World 5 First domesticated in Mexico around six thousand years ago corn was introduced to what is now the United States between three thousand and one thousand years ago 6 Native cooks developed a number of recipes based on corn including cornbread that were later adopted by European settlers and enslaved African people especially those who lived in Southern colonies Aside from eating corn on the cob Native people also mixed corn kernels with lye to produce hominy through an ancient process called nixtamalization 7 Both hominy and unprocessed corn were then ground up to varying degrees to make dishes like sofkee a corn based soup or drink and grits or to make cornflour Frequently cornflour was and continues to be used to make various cornbreads like corn or ash pone tamales arepas and tortillas In contrast cornmeal tends to be coarser than cornflour and is produced by grinding dry raw corn grains Besides cornbread Native people also used cornmeal and hominy to make grits and alcoholic beverages such as the Andean chicha Although Native people in the Americas first cultivated corn it was introduced in West Africa by European traders shortly after contact through the Atlantic slave trade and quickly became a major staple in African cooking 6 Cornbread dishes like kush for example in Senegambia and the Sahel represent the transference of cuisine and culture that occurred across the Atlantic Ocean 8 Cornbread has become a cornerstone of cuisine within the southeastern United States as well as being featured on the plates of African Americans European Americans and Native people alike 9 In its earliest developments in the American colonies cornbread was a simple combination of ground cornmeal and water that was then stirred together and baked over an open fire or in a hearth 10 At this point in its history cornbread s role in Southern cuisine emerged out of necessity Although white farmers in the Northeast and Midwest could grow wheat and rye the heat and humidity of the South made European wheat wither and turn rancid 11 Debate editIn the 1800s the addition of other ingredients such as buttermilk eggs baking soda baking powder and pig products rendered bacon and ham hog fat greatly changed the texture and flavor of earlier iterations of cornbread making it much more similar to the version that is eaten today 10 Although those ingredients were introduced in the 1800s to improve the texture and taste of cornbread there are two other common ingredients that were excluded from most recipes until the 1900s sugar and wheat flour 12 As traditional stone mills were replaced with more efficient steel roller mills in the 20th century the quality of cornmeal was degraded The heat from the steel rollers detracted from the corn kernel s natural sweetness and flavor and reduced the particle size of the cornmeal produced 12 As a result newer cornbread recipes adapted adding sugar and wheat flour to compensate for the reduced sweetness and structural integrity of the cornmeal In addition the introduction of steel roller mills ushered in a new look to cornmeal the new cornmeal tended to be yellow whereas the old fashioned stone ground cornmeal in the coastal South had been traditionally white Following the proliferation of the more finely ground yellow cornmeal debates arose surrounding sweet vs savory cornbread and white vs yellow cornmeal debates which still occur among cornbread eaters and cookers today The importance of these differences for some cooks and eaters cannot be overstated in 1950 for example Francine J Parr of Houma Louisiana posted a desperate headline in the Times Picayune Who s Got Coarse Grits further explaining The only grits we can get is very fine and no better than mush In short I m advertising for some grocer or other individual selling coarse grits to drop me a line 12 Like Parr some Southerners still prefer the traditional white cornmeal Types of cornbread editCornbread is a popular item in Southern cooking and is enjoyed by many people for its texture and aroma Cornbread can be baked fried or rarely steamed Steamed cornbread is mushy chewier and more like cornmeal pudding than what most consider to be traditional cornbread Cornbread can also be baked into corn cakes Baked cornbread edit nbsp Home baked cornbread made with blue cornmealCornbread is a common bread in United States cuisine particularly associated with the South and Southwest as well as being a traditional staple for populations where wheat flour was more expensive Cornbread especially leftovers can be eaten as a breakfast It is also widely eaten with barbecue and chili con carne In parts of the Southern and Southwestern United States cornbread accompanied by pinto beans has been a common lunch for many people It is still a common side dish for many suppers often served with butter Cornbread crumbs are also used in some poultry stuffings or dressing as it is called cornbread stuffing is particularly associated with Thanksgiving turkeys In the United States northern and southern cornbread are different because they generally use different types of corn meal and varying degrees of sugar and eggs 13 Southern cornbread has traditionally been made with little or no sugar and smaller amounts of flour or no flour with northern cornbread being sweeter and more cake like Southern cornbread traditionally used white cornmeal and buttermilk Other ingredients such as pork rinds are sometimes used Cornbread is occasionally crumbled and served with cold milk or clabber buttermilk similar to cold cereal In Texas Mexican influence has spawned a hearty cornbread made with fresh or creamed corn kernels and jalapeno peppers and topped with shredded cheese Cornbread is typically eaten with molasses in the southern states and with butter and honey in the northern states of America nbsp Pan baked Southern style cornbread made with yellow cornmeal Skillet fried or skillet baked cornbread often simplified to cornbread or skillet bread is a traditional staple in the rural United States especially in the South This involves heating bacon drippings lard or other oil in a heavy well seasoned cast iron skillet in an oven and then pouring a batter made from cornmeal egg and milk directly into the hot grease The mixture is returned to the oven to bake into a large crumbly and sometimes very moist cake with a crunchy crust This bread tends to be dense and is usually served as an accompaniment rather than as a bread served as a regular course In addition to the skillet method such cornbread also may be made in sticks muffins loaves or baking pans A slightly different variety cooked in a simple baking dish is associated with northern U S cuisine The batter for northern style cornbread is very similar to and sometimes interchangeable with that of a corn muffin A typical contemporary northern U S cornbread recipe contains half wheat flour half cornmeal milk or buttermilk eggs leavening agent salt and usually sugar resulting in a bread that is somewhat lighter and sweeter than the traditional southern version Unlike fried variants of cornbread baked cornbread is a quick bread that is dependent on an egg based protein matrix for its structure though the addition of wheat flour adds gluten to increase its cohesiveness The baking process gelatinizes the starch clarification needed in the cornmeal but still often leaves some hard starch to give the finished product a distinctive sandiness not typical of breads made from other grains citation needed Crackling bread edit Main article Crackling bread A primarily Southern dish consisting of cornbread with pork cracklings inside It can be prepared with any method but a skillet is most common as it allows for making the cornbread crispier Corn pone edit Further information Pone food Corn pone sometimes referred to as Indian pone is a type of cornbread made from a thick malleable cornmeal dough which is usually egg less and milk less and cooked in a specific type of iron pan over an open fire such as a frontiersman would use using mostly bacon grease but later butter margarine shortening or cooking oil Corn pones are a staple of Southern U S cuisine and have been discussed or referenced by many American writers including Mark Twain 14 In the Appalachian Mountains cornbread baked in a round iron skillet or in a cake pan of any shape is still referred to as a pone of cornbread as opposed to hoe cakes the term for cornbread fried in pancake style and when biscuit dough i e biscuits in the American sense of the word is occasionally baked in one large cake rather than as separate biscuits this is called a biscuit pone The term corn pone is sometimes used derogatorily to refer to one who possesses certain rural unsophisticated peculiarities he s a corn pone or as an adjective to describe particular rural folksy or hick characteristics e g corn pone humor This pejorative term often is directed at persons from rural areas of the Southern and Midwestern United States A character in the Li l Abner comic strip General Jubilation T Cornpone was a mythical Civil War general from Dogpatch known for his retreats and imputed cowardice President John F Kennedy s staffers who were mostly Northeastern Ivy League elites openly mocked Texan Vice President Lyndon B Johnson s rural speech patterns referring to Johnson behind his back as Uncle Cornpone or Rufus Cornpone 15 Hot water cornbread edit nbsp Johnnycakes on a plateCooked on a rangetop one frying method involves pouring a small amount of liquid batter made with boiling water and self rising cornmeal cornmeal with soda or some other chemical leavener added into a skillet of hot oil and allowing the crust to turn golden and crunchy while the center of the batter cooks into a crumbly mushy bread These fried breads are typically 3 4 inches 8 10 cm in diameter and soft and very rich Sometimes to ensure the consistency of the bread a small amount of wheat flour is added to the batter This type of cornbread is often known as hot water or scald meal cornbread and is unique to the American South Johnnycakes edit Main article Johnnycake Pouring a batter similar to that of skillet fried cornbread but slightly thinner into hot grease atop a griddle or a skillet produces a pancake like bread called a johnnycake While johnnycake often denotes this pancake like cornbread it is also used in a scattered sense as a more general term for cornbread chiefly in the North 16 Hushpuppies edit Main article HushpuppyA thicker buttermilk based batter that is deep fried rather than pan fried forms the hushpuppy a common accompaniment to fried fish and other seafood in the South Hushpuppy recipes vary from state to state some including onion seasoning chopped onions beer or jalapenos Fried properly the hushpuppy will be moist and yellow or white on the inside while crunchy and light to medium dark golden brown on the outside Although Native people ushered corn and cornmeal into African people s diets African cooks are generally credited with introducing the frying of foods in fats The combination of Native cornmeal and the African technique of frying therefore led to the creation of hushpuppies 6 Fried cornbread edit nbsp Collard sandwich with fried cornbread collard greens and fatbackAlongside other iterations of Native cornbread the Lumbee people in southeastern North Carolina have a unique method of cooking their cornbread The fried cornbread or frybread that most Lumbee families serve with meals differs from both hushpuppies and johnnycakes Prepared with yellow cornmeal egg buttermilk and salt the cornbread batter is thinly poured into a cast iron skillet to fry 17 As Eric Locklear a member of the Lumbee tribe and owner of Fuller s Old Fashioned BBQ notes It s got a crunch around it I mean it ain t thick it don t look like pancakes It s real thin and crunchy 18 After the fried cornbread is made it is typically served with slices of cheese or collard greens Glen Hunt owner of Lumbee Homemade Ice Cream in North Carolina states You know how the old folks like to eat collards They like to get a piece of cornbread and dip it in those collards and eat it with their fingers 18 In the article As We Cooked We Lived Lumbee Foodways Malinda Maynor Lowery goes on to track the creation of the collard sandwich a Lumbee special which features two pieces of fried cornbread with collard greens and fatback meat Dorsey Hunt co owner of Lumbee Homemade Ice Cream notes that Lumbee people just started putting fried cornbread and collards together and made a sandwich out of it We made the cornmeal fritters and just put the collards in between it Put your fatback meat and chow chow 18 See also edit nbsp Food portalAsh cake Bread buried in hot ashes and cinders Broa Type of bread Corn dog Deep fried corn battered hot dog on a stick Corn pudding Thick stewed corn dish from the Southern United States Cornmeal mush Boiled cornmeal pudding Jiffy mix Brand of baking mixes List of American breads List of maize dishes List of quick breads Makki di roti North Indian cornmeal flatbreadPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Mămăligă Porridge made out of yellow maize flour traditional in Romania Mchadi Georgian breadPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback National Cornbread Festival Annual festival in South Pittsburg Tennessee United States Polenta Italian porridge usually of cornmeal Proja Balkan variant Soul food American style of cooking Spoonbread Cornmeal pudding from the Southern United StatesNotes and references edit Cumo Christopher 2021 Ancestral Diets and Nutrition Taylor amp Francis ISBN 9781000176094 New York State Museum Annual Report 1910 p 70 Wilson C R 2007 Cornbread In J T Edge ed The New Encyclopedia of Southern Culture Vol 7 Foodways pp 152 154 The University of North Carolina Press Teosinte was known in Rio Balsas Mexico valley from 9000 BP and was introduced in what is now the United States by the Anasazis circa 1000 AD Corn Bread Indians org Retrieved May 14 2012 a b c Gilmer Robert A 2015 Wallach Jennifer Jensen ed Native American Contributions to African American Foodways Slavery Colonialism and Cuisine Dethroning the Deceitful Pork Chop Rethinking African American Foodways from Slavery to Obama 17 29 doi 10 2307 j ctt1ffjdh9 8 Dragonwagon Crescent 2007 The Cornbread Gospels Workman Publishing ISBN 978 0 7611 1916 6 Twitty Michael November 20 2015 A People s History of Cornbread Stuffing VICE A Southern Commandment PineStraw Magazine October 28 2016 Retrieved November 4 2019 a b Melvin Robby December 9 2016 The Southern History of Cornbread Southern Living Lee Carissa November 18 2021 The A Maize ing History of Cornbread The Stanford Daily a b c Moss Robert June 5 2019 The Real Reason Sugar Has No Place in Cornbread Serious Eats Cooks Illustrated Magazine Baking Illustrated Brookline MA America s Test Kitchen 2004 ISBN 0 936184 75 2 Mark Twain Corn pone Opinions www paulgraham com Retrieved November 7 2013 The Passage of Power The Years of Lyndon Johnson pub Deckle Edge ISBN 0679405070 ISBN 978 0679405078 Burkette Allison Fall 2011 Stamped Indian Finding History and Culture in Terms for American Cornbread American Speech 86 3 321 doi 10 1215 00031283 1503919 Gordon Steve January 7 2013 Collard Sandwich Recipe Taste of Southern a b c Lowery Malinda Maynor Wood Sara Spring 2015 As We Cooked We Lived Lumbee Foodways Southern Cultures University of North Carolina Press 21 1 84 91 doi 10 1353 scu 2015 0001 JSTOR 26220215 S2CID 145813061 via JSTOR External links editIndians org History of cornbread Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cornbread amp oldid 1200738557, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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