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Authors: Crescent Dragonwagon

The Cornbread Gospels (38 page)

BOOK: The Cornbread Gospels
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5.
Serve immediately, hot from the griddle, with any or all of the accompaniments, if desired.

N
OTE
:
Leftover batter for these cakes thickens more than usual when refrigerated overnight. Simply add buttermilk, or yogurt thinned with water, to the batter, stirring until it is of about the same consistency as the original batter. Don’t be surprised if it takes quite a bit of additional liquid to get it just right. The buttermilked déjà batter is, if anything, even better than the first day’s batch—and for some reason you do get more of the indicative flip-me-now pancake holes.

V
ARIATIONS
:
B
LUEBERRY
B
LINTZ
–S
TYLE
C
ORN
C
OTTAGE
C
AKES

This is the same wonderful cottage cheese–based pancake batter given above, but minus the corn kernels and seasoned like the filling of a cheese blintz. To make them, add the following seasonings to the batter, along with the eggs and cottage cheese: finely grated zest of 1 lemon, preferably organic; ⅛ teaspoon ground cinnamon; several gratings of whole nutmeg; 2 tablespoons sugar, preferably unrefined (see Pantry,
page 356
), or brown sugar; and ½ teaspoon pure vanilla extract. Then, when it comes time to add the corn, stir in ½ to ¾ cup blueberries instead. There you have it; and invite me to breakfast!

A
PPLE
-G
INGER
C
ORN
C
OTTAGE
C
AKES

Follow the basic recipe, but omit the corn kernels. Use, instead, 1 flavorful, crisp but not too hard apple—a Fuji, Braeburn, Pink Lady, or even Golden Delicious, for instance—peeled, cored, and finely diced. Stir this in along with
2 to 3 teaspoons very, very finely minced or grated fresh gingerroot (you need not peel it). Although a little cinnamon and a tablespoon of sugar are classic additions here and certainly are tasty, I like the freshness of the straight apple-ginger combo. Excellent served with applesauce or apple butter, butter, and plain yogurt.

“Oh, I have walked in Kansas
Through many a harvest field,
And piled the sheaves of glory there
And down the wild rows reeled:

“Each sheaf a little yellow sun,
A heap of hot-rayed gold;
Each binder like Creation’s hand
To mold suns, as of old.”

—V
ACHEL
L
INDSAY
,
“Kansas”

T
OASTED
S
ESAME
M
ULTIGRAIN
W
AFFLES

S
ERVES
4
TO
6,
DEPENDING ON ACCOMPANIMENTS

So very, very good. The sesame makes for an extra bit of crunch, which enhances the pocketed waffle surface. I like separating the eggs for the light, airy quality it gives, but if that’s too fussy for you, just leave them whole.

Please note the Waffle World menu that follows; it is suitable for a big congenial holiday or family reunion or for breakfast after a weekend party. Almost everything can be made in advance. All you do is put the waffle batter together and cook it, as guests and family wait eagerly.

2 eggs, separated

1 cup water (or for extra-light waffles, use club soda or a naturally carbonated water, such as San Pellegrino)

2 cups Toasted Sesame Multigrain Pancake Mix (
page 212
)

1 tablespoon mild vegetable oil

2 tablespoons toasted sesame oil

Optional accompaniments: butter or Better (see Pantry,
page 346
), pure maple syrup, fresh fruit, and/or sautéed fruit

1.
Whisk together the egg yolks and water in a large bowl, then whisk in the mix and the oils just until well combined. Heat up your waffle iron.

2.
Using clean beaters and a high-sided bowl, beat the egg whites until stiff (see Beating Egg Whites,
pages 186

187
), then gently fold them into the batter.

3.
When the iron is good and hot and ready to waffle, pour in the batter, following your waffle maker’s directions. Let the waffles bake in the griddle until done, 4 to 6 minutes. How can you tell when they’re done? Less steam is emitted from the waffle iron and they will smell done. Some waffle irons have an indicator light, gauge, or even a beeper that tips you off.

4.
Serve, hot from the waffle iron, with any or all of the accompaniments, if you like.

C
HOOSING
G
OOD
C
OTTAGE
C
HEESE

The Double-Corn Cottage Pancakes on
page 218
are only as good as the cottage cheese that forms their base, and finding a good cottage cheese might take a little doing. But it’s worthwhile, for, like the girl with the curl in the middle of her forehead, when cottage cheese is good, it’s very, very good (clean, fresh-and light-tasting, with a bouncy texture), and when it’s bad, it’s horrid (as if it had been sitting around too long, and a bit chemical-y).

Start with the label. Read it. Avoid any cottage cheese with a long list of ingredients; basically, you want milk, cream, salt; perhaps dry milk, perhaps acidophilus and/or bifidus cultures, perhaps lactic acid. Steer clear of gums, stabilizers, and preservatives. You want certified organic milk that is free of bovine growth hormone; that is, produced by cows that have been raised without antibiotics or hormones added to their feed, which in turn is without pesticides. (As a vegetarian, I also try to avoid rennet on the ingredient list, sometimes listed as simply “enzymes.” Rennet, one substance used to coagulate milk into cheese, is derived from an enzyme in calves’ stomachs. However, it is not needed to make cottage cheese, and brands without it are available.)

My favorite nationally distributed brand is Nancy’s, simply delicious rennetless organic low-fat cottage cheese. It is so good, it could make you entirely rethink your views of cottage cheese. A second good nationally distributed brand is Alta-Dena, and sometimes you can find excellent regional brands. Experiment until you find the ones you like best.

·M·E·N·U·

W
AFFLE
W
ORLD
E
XTRAVAGANZA

A
T THE
B
UFFET
:

Quartered Ripe Strawberries Tossed with Blueberries

*

Mixture of ⅓ Unsweetened Yogurt, ⅓ Cottage Cheese & ⅓ Sour Cream

*

Lightly Sweetened Whipped Cream

*

Platter of Oven-Baked Crisp Bacon and Sausage or Soysage

F
RESH FROM THE
W
AFFLE
I
RON
:

Toasted Sesame Multigrain Waffles

A
T THE
B
EVERAGE
T
ABLE
:

Pitcher of Freshly Squeezed Juice

*

Hot Colombian Coffee, Regular and/or Decaf

*

Basket of Tea Bags: Herbal, Black, and Green • Thermos of Very Hot Water

*

Honey, Sugar, Milk, Soy Milk

“L
AST
R
OWS OF
S
UMMER
” W
AFFLES

S
ERVES
4
TO
6,
DEPENDING ON ACCOMPANIMENTS

These are so good that two people can polish off one recipe’s worth—yep, two people, twelve waffles. Don’t ask me how I know this, but it has been done.

When made with frozen corn in the winter, this is a terrific Sunday morning breakfast. Try it with a compote of cranberries, cooked just until they pop, with diced pears and brown sugar or an alternative sweetener to taste, and good-quality plain yogurt on the side.
Major
yum. But the waffles are at their best when you are scarfing up the very last of the late-summer local corn, knowing you won’t see it again until the next July.

½ to 1 cup corn kernels, cut from 1 or 2 ears of fresh corn (see Shuck and Jive,
page 49
), frozen corn kernels, measured and thawed, or well-drained canned corn

2 eggs

2 cups plain yogurt or buttermilk, or a combination

1 teaspoon sugar

1 tablespoon melted butter

¾ cup whole-grain yellow corn flour (see Pantry,
page 353
)

¾ cup whole wheat pastry flour

1 teaspoon baking powder

¼ teaspoon baking soda

¼ teaspoon salt

Optional accompaniments: butter or Better (see Pantry,
page 346
), pure maple syrup, and/or plain yogurt

1.
In a food processor, combine the corn kernels, eggs, yogurt and/or buttermilk, sugar, and butter. Buzz until the corn is a fine purée and the ingredients are thoroughly blended.

2.
Combine the corn flour, whole wheat pastry flour, baking powder, baking soda, and salt in a medium-large bowl. Stir well.

3.
Heat up your waffle iron.

4.
When the iron is good and hot and waffle-ready, pour in the batter according to the waffle maker’s directions. Let the waffles bake in the griddle until done, 4 to 6 minutes. How can you tell when they’re done? Less steam is emitted from the waffle iron, and they will smell done. Some waffle irons have an indicator light, gauge, or even a beeper that tips you off.

5.
Remove, preferably to warmed plates, and serve with your favorite accompaniments, if desired.

N
EWPORT
C
OUNTY
–S
TYLE
T
HIN AND
L
ACY
J
ONNYCAKES

S
ERVES
2
AS AN ENTRÉE
, 4
AS AN APPETIZER

These thin, crisp, lacy, shatteringly elegant, utterly addictive jonnycakes were, to me,
the
surprise hit of the book. Wholly unlike any other pancake or corn cake I have ever tasted, these are in a class by themselves. A bit on the buttery side, they are so perfect as is that serving them with additional butter would subtract from their delicacy.

I came to them late in life, but I guarantee you, I will be making this style of jonnycake for the rest of my life. Look at all the possibilities that follow in One Cake, Many Uses (
following
): These can serve as the base for a starter, accompany an entrée, or act as the beginning for dessert. The numbers of suggestions I’ve offered are but a small measure of my huge regard for these crisp cakes.

Vegetable oil cooking spray

1½ cups cold 2% milk or water

1 cup finely ground white cornmeal, preferably whitecap flint (see Pantry,
page 350
)

½ teaspoon salt

3 tablespoons butter, melted

1.
Spray your largest cast-iron skillet with the oil, and set it over medium-low heat to preheat it.

2.
Put the cold milk into a medium bowl and pour in the cornmeal and salt, whisking vigorously. Add the butter. The batter will be suspiciously thin, but don’t worry.

3.
Raise the heat under the skillet. You want that skillet good and hot, enough so that the batter will sizzle when you drop it in. When it is ready, drop the batter onto the skillet, using a tablespoon to make 3-inch-wide jonnycakes, or a teaspoon to make adorable petite ones, and tilting the skillet as needed to make them round. Each and
every
time you spoon up batter,
always
stir or whisk it like the dickens, otherwise the cornmeal will settle on the bottom. Please note: At first the cakes will look so filled with holes that they will appear impossible to flip, and you’ll think something’s wrong. It isn’t.

4.
These cakes take a little longer to cook than usual—4 to 5 minutes for the first side. It’s time to flip when all the little holes except those at the edge have filled in, and the top is almost dry. Turn one cake, using the thinnest spatula you own, and if it holds together neatly and is nicely golden brown, you’re there. Allow 3 to 4 minutes for side two.

O
NE
C
AKE
, M
ANY
U
SES

Use Newport County–Style Thin and Lacy Jonnycakes as follows:

F
OR HORS D

OEUVRES
(
IN SMALL SIZE
):

• With low-fat sour cream or tofu sour cream and chives (optional caviar for those who like it)

• With a spoonful of peeled, seeded, chopped tomatoes (preferably a mix of red, yellow, and green assorted heirlooms, at high summer) with a little shredded basil and a grinding of coarse salt

• With a dab of not-too-oily basil pesto

• With finely minced pitted kalamata olives, a small cube or crumble of feta cheese, and a dill sprig

W
ITH A MAIN COURSE
(
IN LARGER SIZE
):

• Chili of any kind, or any spicy bean ragout

• Corn chowder, particularly a spicy one

• Chilled red pepper soup or Golden Gazpacho (
page 266
)

• Large mesclun salad with avocado, fresh corn kernels, scallions, crumbled goat cheese or tofu, fresh tomatoes, well-drained black-eyed peas, a cilantro vinaigrette

• Pork loin or tempeh glazed with apple cider and maple syrup, with steamed green beans and baked winter squash

F
OR DESSERT
:

• With height-of-season, fresh, local strawberries and a drizzle of lavender honey (this, to me, beats strawberry shortcake—no whipped cream needed)

• With peach ice cream topped with raspberries and puréed fresh peaches

• With bananas sautéed in butter and brown sugar, flamed with rum, served with pineapple-coconut sorbet

BOOK: The Cornbread Gospels
8.87Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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