Skip to main content

Cornbread Supper, the Valentine's Day Edition, February 14, 2011

So that answers that question: Will people come to Cornbread Supper on Valentine's Day? Yes, they will, and they did, and they brought Kale Crisps that drew rave reviews, along with other good things, some listed below.

One other notable fact for February 14, 2011: The gardening season officially began. We found two tiny sprigs of fresh Wayne County mint in the Campsie garden, and it went into a salad a Cornbreadian brought. So we are now officially eating from our own place again, eating fresh food. Pretty good for Valentine's Day.
  • Organic Broccoli & Butter, Iodized Salt
  • Gumbo
  • Great Harvest Sundried Tomato Pesto [Bread]
  • Split Pea Soup (Vegetarian)
  • Local Cream Biscuits
  • Scandinavian Winter Fruit Soup - vegan; Dried Fruits, Fruit Juices, Brown Sugar; Cinnamon; good with ice cream...
  • Carrot Hummus
  • Zucchini Bread
  • Red Cabbage Noodles
  • Homemade Hummus
  • Sextuple Almond cherry Cornmeal Muffins (Safe for Children, though) Contain gluten and nuts
  • Chocolate Walnut Cookies
  • Almond Biscotti/Almond Toffee
  • Cinnamon Ice Cream, homemade, w/unpasteurized milk; good in the hot Scandi soup. Not nuts in ice cream (almond flavoring)
Oh yes, and one more notable thing: One Cornbreadian brought a bottle of Jean Farris Rosé, a local wine - and it was delicious, as well as lovely.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Boone Tavern Spoon Bread, the 1950s recipe

We have tried spoonbreads (soft, luscious, buttery—described by James Beard as a "heavy, dense soufflé") as Cornbread Supper mainstays before, and used great recipes, but the spoonbreads always did what spoonbreads (and soufflés) do: deflate. Through serendipity, and thanks to a Cornbread Supperian, I lucked into the old Boone Tavern (Berea College) recipe for spoonbread, and it is far less droopy. Perhaps Boone Tavern developed an approach to spoonbread that preserves all its goodness while still working for a busy restaurant. In any case, with thanks to Kentucky food and foodways author and guru John van Willigen, here's an excellent recipe for that can be doubled, tripled, and quadrupled to feed spoonbread to a crowd. It did just that on Monday, February 25, 2013. From Richard T. Hougen. Look No Further: A cookbook of favorite recipes from Boone Tavern Hotel, Berea College, Kentucky. New York: Abingdon Press. 1955. Southern Spoon Bread 1955 Ingredients 3 c...

We remember Vicky Schankula, 1947–2016

Vicky Schankula, at right, in purple One of life's most gracious and delightful people, Victoria Fairbanks Schankula, found Cornbread Suppers early on, and took joy in the weekly gatherings. She came to Cornbread Supper faithfully, bringing beautiful food, laughter, a camera for her "picture of the day," a lovely British accent, a commitment to helping clean up, and a constant interest in each other person in the room. When Vicky entered the house on Monday nights carrying a particular large round plate, children (and a few adults) trailed her to the dessert table to see what she had brought. The favorites: lemon bars, brownies and her mother's most unusual, delicious carrot cake. Vicky graciously shared and allowed us to publish recipes for Lemon Bars and Isabel Fairbairns's (Gangy's) Carrot Cake on this site. Gangy's Carrot Cake on Vicky Schankula's special dessert plate When illness prevented Vicky from returning to Cornbread Supper...

Cornbread Supper now is resting

 For all the Cornbreadians and would-be Cornbreadians -- it was a good run. A bit more than nine years.  You came on Mondays. Conviviality ensued. You made community. Gratitude to all. It was a gift to us.