Recently my longtime friend, Alice, and I shared cooking a
meal. She brought a beautiful but also
healthy desert—melons. They are in
season and she said the local ones were so good. The recipe came from Lee Bailey’s Southern Food & Plantation Houses. It is a pretty coffee-table book with lovely
pictures of homes in Natchez with recipes for luncheons, elegant dinners,
Sunday suppers, fish fries, barbecues, buffets, etc. Despite it being a pretty book the recipes
are simple and tasty. Lee Bailey is dead
now but long before Martha Stewart produced attractive books about how to
entertain he showed us glamorous cooking and beautiful presentations accessible
to the uninitiated. Bailey was born in
Bunkie, Louisiana (where I also have a friend) but lived and worked in
Manhattan and Long Island. But he didn’t
forget his Southern roots. He had an
Aunt who lived in Natchez and visited her often. On a trip in the late 80’s he teamed up with
the Pilgrimage Garden Club of Natchez to produce his Southern Food book. The
melon recipe was for a lunch under the trees at Edgewood, an 1850’s home in
Natchez. Use it for a family desert, for
a buffet luncheon or dinner….or breakfast.
Melon with Blueberry Sauce
Serves 8
2 cups fresh blueberries
½ cup sugar
2 tablespoons freshly squeezed lemon juice
1 tablespoon vodka
Dash of ground cinnamon (optional)
1 very large honeydew melon or any other good melon, peeled,
seeded, and cut into medium-thin slices
Place the berries, sugar, lemon juice, vodka, and cinnamon
in a small saucepan. Bring to a simmer over medium heat, and cook slowly for 20
minutes. Cool, cover, and refrigerate until ready to use.
Arrange melon slices on individual plates and put a line of
sauce down the middle of each.
(Alice used both honeydew and cantaloupe slices and added
some sliced strawberries and decorated with mint.)
The July issue of ‘bon appétit’ had a great melon dessert
with lime. Other ripe fruit can be used such as pineapple, peaches, or plums.
You can chill any leftover syrup for sweetening iced tea or cocktails.
Melon Carpaccio with Lime
Serves 6
½ cup sugar
4 sprigs mint plus small leaves for garnish
½ t. thinly sliced fresh red chili (such as jalapeño
or Fresno)
½ vanilla bean, split lengthwise
½ cup fresh lime juice
½ 5-lb. melon (such as honeydew), peeled, halved, seeded,
cut crosswise into ¼ “slices
Coconut, mango, or lemon sorbet (optional)
½ tsp. lime zest
Bring sugar and ¼ cup water to a boil in a small saucepan
over medium heat, stirring to dissolve sugar. Add mint sprigs and chili. Scrape
in seeds from vanilla bean; add bean. Remove syrup from heat; cover and let
steep for 15 minutes for flavors to infuse.
Strain syrup through a fine-mesh sieve into a small bowl;
stir in lime juice.
Do Ahead: Syrup can be made 1 week ahead. Keep chilled.
Arrange melon slices in a 13x9x2” glass baking dish. Pour
syrup over melon in baking dish. Cover with plastic wrap and chill for 2 hours
to allow flavors to meld.
Divide melon slices among plates, overlapping them
decoratively. Pour remaining syrup in dish into a small pitcher.
Do Ahead: Melon carpaccio can be made up to 5 hours ahead.
Cover and chill melon and remaining syrup separately.
Drizzle some of syrup over melon. Place a scoop of sorbet in
center of each plate, is using garnish with mint leaves and lime zest.
See what melons are in the market. Melons love heat and we have a lot of
that. You might want to think of growing
your own next year. I have planted Edisto Mystery (seed from Southern Exposure
Seed Exchange) this year, said to do well in the hot humid conditions which
prevail in my garden. It should be
coming in soon.
Recently my longtime friend, Alice, and I shared cooking a
meal. She brought a beautiful but also
healthy desert—melons. They are in
season and she said the local ones were so good. The recipe came from Lee Bailey’s Southern Food & Plantation Houses. It is a pretty coffee-table book with lovely
pictures of homes in Natchez with recipes for luncheons, elegant dinners,
Sunday suppers, fish fries, barbecues, buffets, etc. Despite it being a pretty book the recipes
are simple and tasty. Lee Bailey is dead
now but long before Martha Stewart produced attractive books about how to
entertain he showed us glamorous cooking and beautiful presentations accessible
to the uninitiated. Bailey was born in
Bunkie, Louisiana (where I also have a friend) but lived and worked in
Manhattan and Long Island. But he didn’t
forget his Southern roots. He had an
Aunt who lived in Natchez and visited her often. On a trip in the late 80’s he teamed up with
the Pilgrimage Garden Club of Natchez to produce his Southern Food book. The
melon recipe was for a lunch under the trees at Edgewood, an 1850’s home in
Natchez. Use it for a family desert, for
a buffet luncheon or dinner….or breakfast.
Melon with Blueberry Sauce
Serves 8
2 cups fresh blueberries
½ cup sugar
2 tablespoons freshly squeezed lemon juice
1 tablespoon vodka
Dash of ground cinnamon (optional)
1 very large honeydew melon or any other good melon, peeled,
seeded, and cut into medium-thin slices
Place the berries, sugar, lemon juice, vodka, and cinnamon
in a small saucepan. Bring to a simmer over medium heat, and cook slowly for 20
minutes. Cool, cover, and refrigerate until ready to use.
Arrange melon slices on individual plates and put a line of
sauce down the middle of each.
(Alice used both honeydew and cantaloupe slices and added
some sliced strawberries and decorated with mint.)
The July issue of ‘bon appétit’ had a great melon dessert
with lime. Other ripe fruit can be used such as pineapple, peaches, or plums.
You can chill any leftover syrup for sweetening iced tea or cocktails.
Melon Carpaccio with Lime
Serves 6
½ cup sugar
4 sprigs mint plus small leaves for garnish
½ t. thinly sliced fresh red chili (such as jalapeño
or Fresno)
½ vanilla bean, split lengthwise
½ cup fresh lime juice
½ 5-lb. melon (such as honeydew), peeled, halved, seeded,
cut crosswise into ¼ “slices
Coconut, mango, or lemon sorbet (optional)
½ tsp. lime zest
Bring sugar and ¼ cup water to a boil in a small saucepan
over medium heat, stirring to dissolve sugar. Add mint sprigs and chili. Scrape
in seeds from vanilla bean; add bean. Remove syrup from heat; cover and let
steep for 15 minutes for flavors to infuse.
Strain syrup through a fine-mesh sieve into a small bowl;
stir in lime juice.
Do Ahead: Syrup can be made 1 week ahead. Keep chilled.
Arrange melon slices in a 13x9x2” glass baking dish. Pour
syrup over melon in baking dish. Cover with plastic wrap and chill for 2 hours
to allow flavors to meld.
Divide melon slices among plates, overlapping them
decoratively. Pour remaining syrup in dish into a small pitcher.
Do Ahead: Melon carpaccio can be made up to 5 hours ahead.
Cover and chill melon and remaining syrup separately.
Drizzle some of syrup over melon. Place a scoop of sorbet in
center of each plate, is using garnish with mint leaves and lime zest.
See what melons are in the market. Melons love heat and we have a lot of
that. You might want to think of growing
your own next year. I have planted Edisto Mystery (seed from Southern Exposure
Seed Exchange) this year, said to do well in the hot humid conditions which
prevail in my garden. It should be
coming in soon.
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