Kentucky's Regional Cuisines
Have y'all read your July issue of
Southern Living yet?
I just loved the Letter from the Editor this month. Lindsay Bierman, who has done a great job with giving the magazine a hip and relevant edge, addresses the big issue of Southern food. It seems a small-town newspaper criticized the venerable publication for using "exotic" ingredients like fennel, and claimed they should get back to the basics by including more traditional Southern recipes like fried chicken, grits, and so on. Mr. Bierman does a lovely job of countering those complaints. He notes that Southern food is an inclusive cuisine, encompassing styles from Cajun to Lowcountry to Appalachian. I loved this manifesto so much that I mentioned it on Twitter. And, no big deal, the editor of Southern Living tweeted us back.
Now, if you write about Southern lifestyles, there are three gospels to which you adhere:
Southern Living,
Garden and Gun, and the
Oxford American. Getting a tweet from the editor of one of these publications... Well, it's like one of those Belieber kids hearing back from The Biebs. It made my day:
Lindsay Bierman liked what we had to say!
Mr. Bierman's manifesto also got me thinking about the foods that define Kentucky. There's
Western Kentucky's mutton barbecue. There's
Central Kentucky's beer cheese and burgoo. There are the Louisville foods I traditionally think of as "Derby Recipes" --
benedictine and
hot browns. As the holy trinity of Southern lifestyle magazines
are starting to tell us, there's the stack cakes and soup beans of my youth, now re-branded as Appalachian cuisine. There are country hams and
tomatoes. And that doesn't even count all the ways we can cook with bourbon. There are so many tastes that are unique to the Commonwealth. As Mr. Bierman articulated in his "manifesto", there are new tastes and old tastes and room for inclusion. And they all taste pretty darn good.
We'd love to hear from y'all. What foods are your idea of "Kentucky Cuisine"?