61 SOUTHERN CAST IRON
“I think our area was
probably one of the last that
got away from growing their
own food,” says Susi. “We’re
in such a closed county that
it’s hard to travel anywhere.
I live 25 miles away from
the nearest one-stoplight
town and 50 miles from the
nearest town where you
could get anything that’s
considered upscale. Most
people did have to grow
their own food because that
was the only option.”
Hailing from North
Carolina’s Madison County,
Susi’s family lived this
home-grown life.
“We had a garden that was
about a quarter of an acre
for a family of four back at
that time,” she remembers.
“We had all of the animals—
cows, pigs, chickens, geese,
rabbits, honey bees, ducks.
Just about everything you
would need to survive.”
In Appalachia, living off
the land meant adapting
recipes and fi nding inventive
ways to utilize food.
Early settlers ate what
they grew, so it was these
easily found ingredients
that became foundational
foods of the area.
“A lot of the dishes were
born out of what was at
hand, and a lot of others
were born out of necessity,” says Susi. “You couldn’t just go out to
the supermarket to fi nd what you needed. You had to survive on
what you had. For example, bread recipes that may call for fl our
could be made with cornmeal because that’s what they had more
frequently than wheat. Things like drying leather britches, salting
pork, and pickling were ways of preserving without refrigeration.”
Simple, rustic dishes like cornbread, soup beans, and burgoo
(a hearty, empty-the-fridge-style stew of assorted meat and
vegetables) became menu mainstays. Just as
important as living off the land, though, was
sharing.
Growing up in Bristol, Tennessee, Karl
remembers fondly the camaraderie shared
between neighbors, friends, and even strangers.
“We tended to trade around a lot and always
had bacon or country ham,” he recalls. “Every
Saturday morning, my mom would cook a big
country breakfast, and even if it was just four
people there, there was enough food for 15. It was
community at its essence. If someone had more
than they could eat, they would share it around.”
Perhaps the most noteworthy example of
culinary sharing, though, has to do with the
Appalachian Apple Stack Cake. Originally, each
layer of the cake was baked in a cast-iron skillet
by a diff erent member of the community. For
supper or gatherings, everyone would arrive
with their layer of the cake, and together build a
beautiful and delicious autumnal dessert. Early
fall also signals the harvesting and extraction
of thick, sweet sorghum syrup that still graces
so many of our favorite Southern recipes today.
From chopping the stalks and milling the cane
to cooking the sweet green juice into syrup,
sorghum making is an annual communal event
in many towns across the region.
“The South in general has a gift for that kind
of inclusiveness and sharing,” says Susi. “I don’t
know what it is about Southern culture. Perhaps
it’s the warmth that comes with more Southern
climates that makes life a little friendlier.”
While Appalachia’s close-knit, self-suffi cient
community is impressive, many have a skewed
view of the people who live there today thanks to
television and other media. Though Appalachia
is the same in many ways, it has also evolved with
time. The cliché of a coonskin-capped hillbilly or
a moonshiner who lives in the backwoods is an
inaccurate and unrealistic stereotype. Envision, rather, a mother
teaching her children how to grow their own vegetables or passing
down the secrets of making a comforting dinner of soup beans and
skillet cornbread. View Appalachians as those who have learned
to utilize their resources to the fullest extent.
Try your hand at traditional Appalachian cuisine with our
classic takes on burgoo and apple stack cake.
Vintage photography for this article was provided by The Foxfi re Institute, a nationally recognized organization dedicated to preserving the
traditions of Southern Appalachia. Find more recipes and information on Appalachian foodways in their newest revised edition of The Foxfi re Book of
Appalachian Cookery or visit their website at foxfi re.org.