Smokehouse Ham, Spoon Bread, and Scuppernong Wine, 10th Anniversary Edition: The Folklore and Art of Appalachian Cooking by Joseph Earl Dabney and Joseph Dabney

Notes about this book

  • ellabee on September 19, 2013

    James Beard Cookbook of the Year award 1999

Notes about Recipes in this book

  • Lyn's no-mix blackberry cobbler

    • Baxter850 on May 18, 2025

      Didn’t make to spec. More than 2x sugar to flour ratio is crazy. Changed specs to 1:1:1 based on my mom’s recipe and then reduced sugar by 25%. Perfect.

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  • ISBN 10 1581826672
  • ISBN 13 9781581826678
  • Published Nov 20 2008
  • Format Hardcover
  • Language English
  • Edition 10th
  • Countries United States
  • Publisher Cumberland House Publishing,US
  • Imprint Cumberland House Publishing,US

Publishers Text

Winner of the James Beard Cookbook of the Year Award

Smokehouse Ham, Spoon Bread & Scuppernong Wine is a scrumptious slice of Smoky Mountain and Blue Ridge Hill country foodlore handed down from Scotland, England, Wales, Ireland, Germany, and the Cherokee Nation. In addition to generous helpings of folklore, the text highlights and embraces the art of Appalachian cuisine from pioneer days to the present, providing insights that will fascinate readers everywhere.

Divided into four sections--the folklore, the art, the food, the blessings--the book is packed with authoritative folklore and authentic Appalachian recipes, as well as old-timey photographs: fireplace and wood-stove cooking, hog killing, bear hunting, shuck-bean stringing, apple-butter partying, dinner on the groups, and much more.

The Folklore includes chapters on the people, seasons, and social life as it pertains to the food. The Art includes chapters on growing, gardening, farming by the signs, food preparation, and food preservation. The more than 200 recipes are accompanied with stories of how the foods have been passed from generation to generation. And the Blessings include numerous hill country invocations.

All in all, the book contains sixty-one fascinating chapters and almost one hundred sidebars on special topics. Among the twenty-three chapters of recipes are subjects such as: Corn Bread, Mountain Staff of Life; From Catheads to Angel Biscuits; Moonshine: Mountain Water of Life; Hog-Killing Day: Mountain Celebration; Smokehouse Ham and Red-Eye Gravy. The result of years of research and interviews, Smokehouse Ham, Spoon Bread & Scuppernong Wine will remind readers of the Foxfire series of an earlier generation.



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