This Week’s Southernism, Monday, December 13, 2021

“Let’s put just a few more

strings of lights on

Daddy’s bass boat and call

it Christmas.”

 

 

 

Photo: Deborah Fagan Carpenter

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This Week’s Southernism, Monday, December 6, 2021

“The earliest memories I have of my mother must have been when I was around five. One was baking cakes, which she loved to do. I can see them now ready in the pantry for Christmas; there was fruit cake, both the dark and the light, for which the citron and raisins, currants and spices, had been set out in little piles; there was rosie cake, tinted with cochineal; marble cake, with streaking of chocolate and white; spice cake, angel cake; coconut cake; sponge cake; pound cake, and others; one Christmas there were seventeen of them.”

 

—Stark Young from his memoir The Pavilion: of People and Times Remembered, of Stories and Places

Photo: Deborah Fagan Carpenter

 

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This Week’s Southernism, Monday, November 22, 2021

“A lively day, that Thanksgiving. Lively with on and off showers and abrupt sky clearings accompanied by thoughts of raw sun and sudden bandit winds snatching autumn’s leftover leaves.”

―Truman Capote, The Thanksgiving Visitor

 

Photo: Deborah Fagan Carpenter

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This Week’s Southernism, Monday, November 15, 2021

“The question is: how to account for man’s wickedness? Biologists, for some reason, find it natural to look for a wicked monkey in the family tree. I find it more reasonable to suppose that monkeys are blameless and that something went wrong with man.”

 

 

—Walker Percy “Love in the Ruins”

 

 

Photo: Deborah Fagan Carpenter

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GREEK OREGANO & LEMON ROASTED CHICKEN

GREEK OREGANO & LEMON ROASTED CHICKEN

By Patsy R. Brumfield

The Southfacin’ Cook

The Pandemic has brought me to more cooking shows on TV, especially how-to shows like Cook’s Country and America’s Test Kitchen. One episode showed a tantalizing entrée of chicken parts marinaded in a spicy blend of garlic, lemon and Greek oregano. So, I ordered a quantity of the oregano, which is somewhat more flavorful than regular oregano. Back from my trip to Brazil, and serving my time in quarantine, I bought a whole chicken and decided to apply the Greek oregano flavors for an oven roast. Here’s how it turned out. I hope you’ll try it – it looks like you went to a lot of trouble, but you didn’t!!

Let’s get started.

INGREDIENTS

1 (3-5 lb.) whole chicken

Brine: In large container, dissolve ½ cup table salt into about a quart of water. After you’ve rinsed the whole chicken, inside and out, place it in the brine and more add water, if needed, just enough to cover the bird. Press down on the bird a few times to push out air. Refrigerate 1 hour.

Spice rub: Mix in a cereal bowl (Let this meld while your chicken brines.)

1 lemon, using veg peeler, trim strips of zest. Then chop finely.

4 garlic cloves, pressed or finely chopped

3 Tablespoons Greek oregano

½ cup extra-virgin olive oil

1 teaspoon salt

 

Oven: Move rack to lower middle. Preheat 375.

Remove chicken from fridge/brine. Rinse and pat dry with paper towels, cavity too.

Using your roaster pan with a V-shaped roasting rack (or a deep baking sheet with wire rack):

Spray cooking oil across center of V-rack to help avoid sticking.

Place dried chicken atop rack, breast-side down and cut a few 1/4-inch deep slits a few inches long where you can. Spread 1 Tablespoon of spice rub across and make sure you get rub into the slits.

Flip chicken to breast-side up. Cut ½-inch deep slits across breasts, drum sticks, thighs. Rub remainder of spice-rub onto the breast side, pushing it into the slits. Make sure all parts of the chicken, wings too, are coated.

Lemon – cut into quarters and insert 2 into cavity with 2 cloves of garlic. Using twine, bring chicken legs together for even cooking.

Allow coated chicken to rest 15-20 minutes on the countertop.

Bake 40 minutes. Remove from oven and add 2 cups chicken broth to the roasting pan to make sauce after everything’s done. Turn heat up to 450 and bake chicken again another 45-60 minutes or until the thickest part of the breast registers 160-165 degrees and thickest part of the thigh registers 175 on an instant-read thermometer.

Remove the roasting pan from the oven. Tip the pan V-rack to let the juices run from the cavity into the roasting pan. Transfer chicken to carving board (set inside a baking sheet, to catch wandering juices) and let rest, uncovered while making the sauce. Remove V-rack from roasting pan.

Adjust the oven rack to the upper-middle position and heat the broiler. Skim the fat from the drippings and add another 2 cups chicken broth. (I’m also adding some halved mushrooms. If you’ve got sliced or baby carrots, that also would be good.) Set roasting pan on a stove burner on high heat. Simmer the liquid and use a wooden spoon to loosen the browned bits until it’s reduced to about a cup. Set aside off heat.

Chicken: Remove lemons and garlic from cavity and cut chicken into quarters. Pour whatever juices have accumulated on the cutting board/baking sheet back into the sauce. Place the chicken pieces into the sauce, skin-side up and broil the chicken until the skin is crisp and golden brown, about 4-5 minutes. Transfer chicken to serving platter.

Taste the sauce and add more lemon juice, if you prefer. Whisk 2 Tablespoons butter into the sauce. Season with salt and pepper to taste. Serve chicken with pan sauce and lemon wedges.

 

Photo: Patsy R. Brumfield

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This Week’s Southernism, Monday, November 8, 2021

“All human nature vigorously resists grace because grace changes us and the change is painful.”

—Flannery O’Conner

Photo: Deborah Fagan Carpenter

 

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This Week’s Southernism, Monday, November 1, 2021

“…When my brain begins to reel from my literary labors, I make an occasional cheese dip.”

— John Kennedy Toole, A Confederacy of Dunces

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This Week’s Southernism, Monday, October 18, 2021

My wish for you is that you continue. Continue to be who and how you are, to astonish a mean world with your acts of kindness.

Maya Angelou

Photo: Deborah Fagan Carpenter

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Pumpkin Lasagna from the Southfacin’ Cook, Patsy R. Brumfield

Welcome to Fall — A New

Slice of an Old Favorite, Lasagna

By Patsy R. Brumfield

The Southfacin’ Cook

I was down South in Brazil the other day, visiting family on a four-year work exchange program — daring to hold hostage two of my four grandsons (the others safely within reach in my neighborhood). Yet, armed with three Covid-19 shots, I packed my face masks, braved the obvious and an overnight flight across 5,000 miles, and here I was. Knowing that making something yummy for them was important. You may not know this, but Rio de Janeiro is a tough place to find food with a yum unless it’s a foreign-flavored restaurant. Go figure.

 

So, this is my answer, a winter squash (and other suggested vegs) that’s got a hint of Fall and lots of warmth. Oddly, it’s heading for Fall in the U.S. but moving toward Spring here. Of course, I have stories to tell about Brazil and about how my height-phobia kicked in observing the classic, mountaintop 90-foot-tall Jesus. But that’s for another day.

 

Pumpkin Lasagna from South America

Preheat oven to 400 F

Pumpkin or Butternut squash

Lasagna noodles

Cooking spray

 

In large saucepan, combine and cook on medium:

Olive oil

1 chopped onion

1 clove finely minced or pressed garlic

1 teaspoon each dried basil, oregano and thyme

1 cup mushrooms (or more)

1 teaspoon ground cinnamon

 

After these cook down about 5-7 minutes, add:

1 large bottle tomato-pasta sauce

1/2 cup water (don’t worry if it’s a bit runny because the water helps steam the noodles and vegs)

¼ cup maple syrup

Simmer about 10 minutes

 

Prepare cheese sauce:

8 ounce container Ricotta cheese

16 ounces grated Mozzarella

16 ounces grated Parmesan

Grate 2 cheeses, if necessary (whole cheese is recommended). Combine in large bowl with Ricotta, 1/2 grated Parmesan, 1 egg and 1/2 bunch chopped parsley or 1 Tablespoon dried parsley.

Set aside cheese sauce and rest of Parmesan.

Butternut squash or equivalent-sized small pumpkin (eggplant or canned halved artichokes also are good):

Peel veg and de-seed. (Eggplant or artichokes don’t need this step)

Slice veg into 1/4-inch slabs (If you’re slicing pumpkin, think that you’ll need about as many slabs as the squash would have produced.)

 

In large, deep baking dish or medium roasting pan:

Ladle thin layer of sauce into bottom

Add layer of Lasagna noodles (go ahead and break some to fit)

Dollop scattered Tablespoons of cheese sauce atop uncooked noodles (I usually put a couple of dollops at top and bottom of noodles then space out more across the vacant middle area – you’ve got plenty in the bowl, so don’t be shy with it!)

Cover/arrange next layer with whatever veg slices you’ve selected.

Ladle enough tomato sauce to thinly cover that vegged layer

Repeat – noodles, cheese sauce, veg slices, tomato sauce (You’ll probably get 3-4 layers in most baking dishes. When you get to the top layer, use the ladle or large cooking spoon to gently press down on the layers.)

For the top layer, add one more pasta layer with any veg slices left, then use any remaining cheese sauce bits. Cover the whole thing with the rest of the grated Parmesan

 

(This whole casserole can now go into the fridge or freezer to bake later, if you like.)

 

Place filled baking vessel onto a foil-lined baking sheet (casserole likely will boil over). Pull out enough aluminum foil to tightly cover dish, but first spray the side “facing” the casserole with cooking spray (this helps keep the foil from sticking to your luscious cheese topping.) Cover casserole tightly. Place in hot oven and bake 45 minutes (If the casserole is cold, allow another 5-7 minutes in the oven). Then, remove foil and bake another 15 minutes or so until top is golden and bubbling. Remove from oven and allow to cool at least 10-15 minutes before eating. A side salad and crusty bread are also good accompaniments.

 

Feeds a bunch of people or lasts for days in the fridge. Freezes well, too. Enjoy!

Photos: Patsy R. Brumfield

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This Week’s Southernism, Monday, October 11, 2021

“Life starts all over again when it gets crisp in the fall.”

—F. Scott Fitzgerald, The Great Gatsby

Photo: Deborah Fagan Carpenter

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