I attended the 25th Southern Garden Symposium in
St. Francisville, Louisiana last week. I
had never attended before because my husband is primarily the gardener but I
decided to attend and had a great two days and got lots of ideas.
I spent two hours learning about flower arranging from John
Grady Burns, who has worked at the White House and has a design shop in
Atlanta. He said the work in arranging these days is “organic”. I guess organic
is not just for food! He means using anything in nature such as interesting
branches, fig vines, banana stalks, and logs with resurrection ferns growing on
them. In other words, you do not have to have anything perfect to make an
interesting arrangement! This lecture was outdoors in the fabulous Afton Villa
Gardens, a restored plantation garden augmented with plantings in the ruins of
the old villa. Mrs. Trimble, the owner, noted in her welcome that her gardener,
Ivy, came to help them for two weeks and has remained for 40 years.
The highlight was the afternoon speaker, James Farmer, whose
talk was farm to table. He has the perfect name, doesn’t he? He is one of the
three Editors-At-Large for ‘Southern Living’ along with Jenna Bush Hagar, and Kimberly
Whitman. He has written 5 books and has a design studio in Perry, Georgia where
he was born. He is an Auburn graduate and there he got his interest in farming
and food. When I got my November issue of ‘Southern Living’ there was an
article on a Georgia Christmas by James Farmer. He talked at the symposium and
in the article about his grandmother Mimi, and the influence she had on his
life. She passed away this year. He gives the recipes for his Thanksgiving meal
in honor of Mimi. I did her cornbread dressing in preparation for my Thanksgiving
feast. I wanted to do a trial run and I wanted a picture for my readers. It was
very good and easy and actually reminded me of my grandmother’s dressing which
was always done with simply cornbread (which she baked from scratch) and
vegetables. And its dressing here in the South, not stuffing.
Get the November 2013 issue of ‘Southern Living.’ It not
only has an article on a Georgia Thanksgiving but an Alabama one as well.
From the November 2013 issue of ‘Southern Living’ magazine.
Mimi’s Cornbread Dressing
Makes 8-10 servings
2 Tbsp. canola oil, divided
2 cups self-rising white cornmeal mix
1 1/3 cups buttermilk
1 cup self-rising flour
2 large eggs, slightly beaten
5 to 6 cups reduced sodium chicken broth
¾ cup butter, divided
3 cups chopped sweet onion (about 1 large)
2 cups chopped celery
4 large eggs, lightly beaten
2/3 cups chopped fresh flat-leafed parsley
1 Tbsp. chopped fresh sage
2 tsp. chopped fresh thyme
1 ½ tsp. freshly ground black pepper
½ tsp. kosher salt
Preheat oven to 400°. Coat bottom and sides of a 10-inch
cast iron skilled with 1 Tbsp. oil; heat on oven 10 minutes.
Meanwhile, stir together cornmeal mix, next three
ingredients, and remaining 1 Tbsp. oil. Pour batter into hot skillet.
Bake at 400° for 30 minutes or until golden. Remove from
oven to a wire rack; cool 15 minutes. Crumble cornbread into a large bowl. Stir
5 cups broth into crumbled cornbread until moistened, adding more broth, 1
Tbsp. at a time, if necessary. (Mixture should resemble wet sand.)
Melt ¼ cup butter in a large skillet over medium-high heat;
add onion and celery and sauté 8 to 10 minutes or until tender. Add onion
mixture to cornbread mixture.
Microwave remaining ½ cup butter in a small microwave safe
bowl at HIGH 1 minute or until melted. Stir melted butter, eggs, and remaining
ingredients into cornbread mixture; spoon into a lightly greased 13-x9-inch
baking dish.
Bake at 400° for 50 minutes to 1 hour or until golden brown.
Serve immediately.
We had this for lunch served over a slice of turkey and
added a little Tabasco.
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