Cornbread
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cornbread is a generic name for any number of quick breads
containing cornmeal and leavened
by baking powder.[1]
History
Native Americans
were using ground corn (maize) for food thousands of years before European explorers
arrived in the New World.[2]
European settlers, especially those who resided in the southern English
colonies, learned the original recipes and processes for corn dishes
from the Cherokee,
Chickasaw,
Choctaw,
and Creek, and soon they devised recipes for using cornmeal in breads
similar to those made of grains available in Europe. Cornbread has been called
a "cornerstone" of Southern United States cuisine. Cornmeal is
produced by grinding dry raw corn grains. A coarser meal (compare flour) made from corn is grits. Grits are produced by soaking raw
corn grains in hot water containing calcium hydroxide (the alkaline salt), which loosens the grain hulls (bran) and increases the nutritional
value of the product (by increasing available niacin and available amino acids). These
are separated by washing and flotation in water, and the now softened slightly
swelled grains are called hominy. Hominy, posole
in Spanish, also is ground into masa harina
for tamales
and tortillas).
This ancient Native American technology has been named nixtamalization.[3]
Besides cornbread, Native Americans used corn to make numerous other dishes
from the familiar hominy grits to alcoholic beverages (such as Andean chicha).
Cornbread was popular during the American Civil War because it was very cheap and could be made in many
different forms—high-rising, fluffy loaves or simply fried (as unleavened pone, corn fritters,
hoecakes,
etc.)[1]
“
|
To a far greater degree than
anyone realizes, several of the most important food dishes that the
Southeastern Indians live on today is the "soul food" eaten by both
black and white Southerners. Hominy, for example, is still eaten ... Sofkee
live on as grits ... cornbread [is] used by Southern cooks ... Indian fritters
... variously known as "hoe cake",
... or "Johnny cake". ... Indian boiled cornbread is present in
Southern cuisine as "corn meal dumplings", ... and as "hush puppies",
... Southerners cook their beans and field peas
by boiling them, as did the Indians ... like the Indians they cure their meat and smoke it over hickory
coals.
|
”
|
Types
of cornbread
Cornbread is a popular item in soul food
enjoyed by many people for its texture and aroma. Cornbread can be baked, fried
or, rarely, steamed. Steamed cornbread is mushy, chewier and more like cornmeal
pudding
than what most consider to be traditional cornbread. Cornbread can also be
baked into corn cakes.
Baked
cornbread
Cornbread is a common bread in
United States cuisine, particularly associated with the South and Southwest, as
well as being a traditional staple for populations where wheat flour was more expensive. In some
parts of the South it is crumbled into a glass of cold milk or buttermilk and
eaten with a spoon,
and it is also widely eaten with barbecue
and chili con carne. In rural areas of the southern United States in the mid
20th century cornbread, accompanied by pinto beans
(often called soup beans in this context) or honey, was a common lunch for poor
children. It is still a common side dish, often served with homemade butter, chunks of onion or scallions.
Cornbread crumbs are also used in some poultry stuffings; cornbread stuffing is
particularly associated with Thanksgiving
turkeys.
In the United States,
Northern and Southern cornbread are different because they generally use
different types of corn meal and varying degrees of sugar and eggs.[5]
A preference for sweetness and adding sugar or molasses
can be found in both regions, but salty or savory tastes are sometimes more
common in the South, and thus favor using buttermilk in the batter or such
additions as cracklins. Cornbread is occasionally crumbled and served with cold
milk similar to cold cereal. In Texas, the Mexican influence has spawned a hearty
cornbread made with fresh or creamed corn kernels, jalapeño
peppers and topped with shredded cheese.
Skillet-fried or skillet-baked
cornbread (often simply called skillet bread or hoecake
depending on the container in which it is cooked) is a traditional staple in
the rural United States, especially in the South. This involves heating bacon drippings, lard or other oil in a heavy, well-seasoned
cast iron skillet in an oven, and then pouring a batter made from cornmeal, egg,
and milk directly into the hot grease. The mixture is returned to the oven to
bake into a large, crumbly and sometimes very moist cake with a crunchy crust.
This bread tends to be dense and usually served as an accompaniment rather than
as a bread served as a regular course. In addition to the skillet method, such
cornbread also may be made in sticks, muffins, or loaves.
A slightly different variety, cooked
in a simple baking dish, is associated with northern US cuisine; it tends to be
sweeter and lighter than southern-style cornbread; the batter for northern-style
cornbread is very similar to and sometimes interchangeable with that of a corn muffin. A typical contemporary northern
U.S. cornbread recipe contains half wheat flour, half cornmeal, milk or buttermilk,
eggs,
leavening agent, salt, and usually sugar, resulting in a bread that is
somewhat lighter and sweeter than the traditional southern version. In the border
states and parts of the Upper South,
a cross between the two traditions is known as "light cornbread."
Unlike fried variants of cornbread,
baked cornbread is a quick bread that is dependent on an egg-based protein matrix for its
structure (though the addition of wheat flour adds gluten to increase its
cohesiveness). The baking process gelatinizes the starch in the cornmeal, but still often leaves some hard starch to
give the finished product a distinctive sandiness not typical of breads made
from other grains.
Corn
pone
Corn pone (sometimes referred to as
"Indian pone") is a type of cornbread made from a thick, malleable
cornmeal dough (which is usually egg-less and milk-less) and baked in a
specific type of iron pan over an open fire (such as a frontiersman would use),
using butter,
margarine,
Crisco or cooking oil. Corn pones have been a staple of Southern U.S. cuisine, and have been discussed by many American writers,
including Mark Twain.
In the Appalachian Mountains, cornbread baked in a round iron skillet,
or in a cake pan of any shape, is still referred to as a "pone" of
cornbread (as opposed to "hoe cakes," the term for cornbread fried in
pancake style); and when biscuit dough (i.e., "biscuits" in the
American sense of the word) is occasionally baked in one large cake rather than
as separate biscuits, this is called a "biscuit pone."
The term "corn pone" is
sometimes used derogatorily to refer to one who possesses certain rural,
unsophisticated peculiarities ("he's a corn pone"), or as an
adjective to describe particular rural, folksy or "hick" characteristics
(e.g., "corn pone" humor). This pejorative term often is directed at
persons from rural areas of the southern and midwestern US. A character in the Lil' Abner
comic strip, General Jubilation T Cornpone, was a mythical Civil War general
from Dogpatch
known for his retreats and imputed cowardice. President John F. Kennedy's staffers, who despised Texan Vice-President Lyndon B.
Johnson, used to refer to him behind his back as 'Uncle Cornpone' or 'Rufus
Cornpone'.[6]
Hot
water cornbread
Cooked on a rangetop, one frying
method involves pouring a small amount of liquid batter made with boiling water and self-rising cornmeal (cornmeal
with soda or some other chemical leavener added) into a skillet of
hot oil, and allowing the crust to turn golden and crunchy while the center of
the batter cooks into a crumbly, mushy bread. These small (3-4" diameter)
fried breads are soft and very rich. Sometimes, to ensure the consistency of
the bread, a small amount of wheat flour is added to the batter. This type of cornbread is often
known as "hot water" or "scald meal" cornbread and is
unique to the American South.
Johnnycakes
Pouring a batter similar to that of
skillet-fried cornbread, but slightly thinner, into hot grease atop a griddle
or a skillet produces a pancake-like bread called a johnnycake.
This type of cornbread is prevalent in New England, particularly in Rhode
Island, and also in the American Midwest and the American South. It is
reminiscent of the term hoecake, used in the American South for fried cornbread pancakes,
which may date back to stories about some people on the frontier making
cornbread patties on the blade of a hoe.
Hushpuppies
A thicker buttermilk-based batter
which is deep-fried rather than pan-fried, forms the hushpuppy,
a common accompaniment to fried fish and other seafood
in the South. Hushpuppy recipes vary from state to state, some including onion
seasoning, chopped onions, beer, or jalapeños.
Fried properly, the hushpuppy will be moist and yellow or white on the inside,
while crunchy and light to medium-dark golden brown on the outside.
The entire wiki article can be found at: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cornbread
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