Southern
Apple Jack Stack Cake
Appalachian apple stack cake is communal cooking at its finest. Originally, each layer was baked at home by individual cooks, likely in cast-iron skillets, then brought together and assembled for church suppers and gatherings. Instead of the spongy cakes we're used to today, these layers are more like cookies—firmer, so they slowly soften beneath liberal applications of apple butter and cooked apples. This recipe stays mostly true to those principles.
Instead of individually baking the layers one skillet at a time, though, use a cake pan to trace a pattern on parchment paper and trim circles of rolled dough to fit it. Bake two layers simultaneously (more if you have a convection oven). The edges of the cake layers won't be as perfectly neat as if you'd baked them in skillets or cake pans, but that's all right. This is a rustic cake.
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It's Fried Chicken Time
Break your fear of frying at home with these 31 recipes for the quintessential Southern staple.
Sour Cream Biscuits With Sausage Gravy
Repeatedly folding and rolling the biscuit dough yields lots of flaky, individuated layers that pull apart neatly when you eat them.
Sazerac
This potent New Orleans nightcap is as much about the aromatic absinthe rinse as it is the Cognac and rye.
Roasted-Jalapeno Pimiento Cheese Toasts
Pretty much everyone in the South fights about who's got the best pimiento cheese recipe. Make these if you want to put the debate to rest.
The All-Time Best Restaurant Pasta Tricks
Making better pasta isn't all that difficult when you enlist a few pros to show you how it's done.
Cheesy Crab Nachos
Now you have an even better reason to watch the New Orleans Saints play the Carolina Panthers on this week's Monday Night Football.
Chicken Thigh Potpie
Chicken potpie is a dish many of us crave when we want to conjure up the warmth of home and hearth, and chef Ashley Christensen, owner of Poole's Diner in Raleigh, North Carolina, is no different. "This potpie is inspired by my mother's kind of cooking: dishes that shout out the classics, but with clean flavors and crisp textures," she says. Christensen grounds the pie in colder-month offerings of sweet potatoes and rutabagas and tender leaves of kale instead of the usual carrot and celery combo. Adding another bit of Southern flair, the chef uses a small amount of cornmeal in the crust, which provides a nutty, toasty flavor with an echo of sweetness to match the filling. "Though some potpies are encased in crust, I like the "island" approach, letting the gravy bubble up around the pillow of crust," Christensen says. "Crust is potpie's defining moment, no matter how delicious the filling."
Bourbon Balls
Bourbon Balls function as the ultimate easy dessert for Southern cocktail parties, and they put a sweet, slightly boozy finish on any get-together. Think of them as an edible digestif. Crushed vanilla wafers hold all the chocolatey goodness together. Buy an 11-ounce box and remove two dozen wafers to save for another use, like Banana Pudding.
8 Tips for Mastering Buttermilk Biscuits
Buttermilk biscuits used to elude—haunt, even—our writer. But the perfect recipe brought her to biscuit heaven.
This is How Southerners Eat Their Tomatoes
Southern cooks agree that tomatoes should be made into pie. Just how to go about doing that, though, is a matter of debate.
All-Purpose Barbecue Ribs
Turn your favorite ribs into the ultimate barbecue dinner with this all-purpose recipe.
Fette Sau Dry Rub
We use this rub on just about everything that we smoke at the restaurant, but you needn't follow the recipe exactly. Feel free to improvise on the ingredients and amounts, reducing the sugar for a less-sweet "bark" (crust), increasing the cayenne for a spicier one, and so on.
The New Cookbooks You Need This July
Tons (and tons) of cookbooks come out every year. Don't get overwhelmed! These are the books I'm excited about this month—you should be, too.
When Did the Food of the Gods Get So Hellish?
Somehow, the food of the gods became seriously hellish. But now a few recipes are making an attempt to salvage it.
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Our Best Cajun and Creole Recipes
Satisfy a big appetite the easy way with these Cajun and Creole classics.
Garlic-Curry Chicken Thighs With Yogurt Sauce
Yogurt gets used two ways in this simple dinner party–worthy dish: first it provides a tenderizing marinade for the chicken, then more yogurt is mixed with the pan juices to create a rich sauce for serving.
Glazed Fried Chicken With Old Bay and Cayenne
Once cooked, slick fried chicken with a potent spiced-chile oil, for an extra punch of heat and flavor.
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One-Pot Southern Wonders
From creoles to jambalayas, these are the greatest hits of one-pot Southern cooking.