Southern Baptists never acknowledged Lent in the 1970s but they loved a tooth-grittin’ly sweet dessert anytime. Christians observing the Lenten season was as foreign to these parts as the Chinese language. It was planting time down here in the South, and you couldn’t plow a cornfield or plant a garden fasting on fish or giving up fried foods – that’s what they did up in the big cities and the North.
Girdle-Buster Pie
20 Oreo cookies, crushed
¼ cup melted butter
1 quart vanilla ice cream, softened
1 small can evaporated milk
2 TB butter
½ cup sugar
2 squares bitter chocolate
½ tsp vanilla
Whipped cream
Toasted slivered almonds
Combine cookie crumbs and melted butter; pack into pie pan
to make a crust, then freeze. Spoon in
vanilla ice cream; store in freezer.
Combine milk, butter, sugar, chocolate, and vanilla in a saucepan; cook
over low heat until sauce is smooth, stirring frequently. Let cool.
Serve pie topped with sauce, whipped cream, and slivered almonds.
(Source: New Holiday Cookbook: Favorite Recipes of Home
Economics Teachers, 1974, Mrs. Sara Martin Conkle, Chelsea HS, Chelsea,
Alabama)
I remember when I was young if there was a get-together
in the South, there was a three-congealed-salad minimum. During Easter, it sometimes went up to five or six. And our ladies in blue hair religiously
enforced it.
Sunshine Salad
1 3-oz. Package lemon gelatin
1 3-oz package orange gelatin
2 cups boiling water
1 ½ cups cold water
1 no.2 can crushed pineapple
2 bananas, diced
40 miniature marshmallows
2/3 cup sugar
2 TB flour
1 egg, beaten
1 cup whipped cream
Dissolve gelatins in boiling water; stir in cold water. Chill until thickened. Drain pineapple; reserve juice. Add pineapple, bananas, and marshmallows to
gelatin; mix well. Place in shallow,
oblong baking dish; chill until firm. Mix
sugar, flour, egg, and I cup reserved pineapple juice in double boiler; cook
until thickened, stirring constantly. Cool; fold in whipped cream.
Place on top of salad. Grate
cheese on top of dressing, if desired.
(Source: New Holiday Cookbook: Favorite Recipes of Home
Economics Teachers, 1974, Kathleen Burchett, Area Supvr of Home Economics,
Jonesville, Virginia)
Ham was the usual meat dish for Easter in our South. Some folks say that lamb is an alternative
Southern meat for Easter, but that has to be a recent thing. Lamb was a practically unknown dish in my
part of the rural South. As my Granny
would say, “Them’s what they eat up North, that’s why they wear them fleece
coats.” Ham was the traditional dish because hogs were killed in the fall; and by Easter, the hams were smoked and cured to perfection. Anyway, we farm folks would eat
plain ham, but some folks – those in the Southern part of the county, the descendants of the plantation people would sometimes serve ham with Jezebel
Sauce.
Jezebel Sauce
1/3 to ½ small box dry mustard
1 large glass apple jelly
1 large glass pineapple preserves
½ small jar horseradish
2 tsp coarsely ground pepper
Mix mustard and apple jelly well. Add remaining ingredients; mix thoroughly. Place in decorative jars; tie ribbons on
jars. Tie on recipe card and serving
suggestion for ham, roast pork or sausage.
Store in refridgerator; will keep indefinitely.
(Source: New Holiday Cookbook: Favorite Recipes of Home
Economics Teachers, 1974, Mrs. Emely Sundbeck, Manor HS, Manor, Texas)
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