I happened to watch a PBS program called The Chef’s Life,
about Vivian Howard who is a chef in Kinston, North Carolina. I rarely watch
cooking shows, but she just seemed fresh and interesting and since I have lived
in North Carolina most of my life I was interested. She and her husband came
back to Eastern North Carolina (even though they did not wish too) because
Vivian’s parents gave them the money to open a restaurant, but it had to be in
Kinston. She and her husband opened The Chef and The Farmer and have been
running it successfully for 8 years. She is also building a house beside her
parents and has twins. The show is about her struggles with all this.
I like her use of local farmers and their local ingredients.
She does a lot with pork and sweet potatoes, very typical produce in Eastern
North Carolina (and the South in general). I watched some of her videos on
cooking sweet potatoes and got some great ideas on new uses with them. She
incorporates pork with the sweet potatoes and it is a great combination. These
two recipes below are my favorite. They are attractive to serve and interesting
to cook. Your family and friends should like these.
Citrus Sweet Potatoes with Pork Cracklins
Serves 4
4 large roasted sweet potatoes
½ cup butter
1 orange
1 lime
½ cup brown sugar
1 tsp. kosher salt
Peel the sweet potatoes in a food processor. Melt butter and
sugar until they come together as a liquid. Zest the orange and lime into the
processor and add the juice as well. Begin processing and stream in the hot
butter and sugar mixture and salt. Taste and adjust seasonings. Serve with
maple vinegar sauce and top with cracklins. I bought some cracklins in the
grocery and they were a bit hard. See if you can find some local vendors with
fresh cracklins—or make your own with some pork fat rendered. As I am learning
lard is not such a bad oil if it is from pastured pork.
Maple Vinegar Sauce (This sauce would be terrific over any
pork dish)
½ cup butter
¼ cup chopped shallots
½ cup maple syrup
¼ cup apple cider vinegar
Black pepper
Nutmeg
Melt the butter and sweat the shallots. Add the maple syrup
and cider vinegar. Reduce for about 5 minutes. Add the black pepper and nutmeg
Place some sweet potato puree on the place and add a
tablespoon of maple vinegar sauce on top of this and top with cracklins.
Candied Yams with Bacon Pecan Syrup (Yes, I know that yams
are technically different but sometimes the names are used interchangeably and
cooking is much the same for both.)
Serves 4-6
3 sweet potatoes, peeled and sliced in 1 ½-inch-thick rounds
Canola oil for frying
Salt
In a large pot, boil sweet potatoes until tender. Allow
slices to cool completely. Press them between 2 pieces of parchment paper or
oil, working in batches, so the slices flatten slightly and the edges spread.
This can be done 2 days ahead. To finish, fill a deep skillet with an inch of
canola oil and heat until simmering. Fry sweet potatoes for about 4 minutes on
each side, or until browned and crispy. Drain on paper towels, and season
generously with salt. To serve, stack sweet potatoes, top with syrup, and
garnish with sliced scallions.
Pecan Bacon Syrup
2 cups bacon, cut into small dice
2 cups pecans, chopped
2/3 cups sliced scallions (white part primarily; plus more
for garnish)
2/3 cups lemon juice
¼ cup molasses
2 1/3 cups maple syrup
¼ teaspoon chili flakes
1 teaspoon salt
¼ teaspoon nutmeg
½ teaspoon cinnamon
2 tablespoons, plus 2 teaspoon butter
Heat skillet over medium heat and render bacon until almost
crisp. Add pecans and scallions, and toast for 1 minute. Add remaining
ingredients. Simmer until mixture has reduced by almost one-third. Whisk in
butter just before serving.
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