List of soul foods and dishes

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Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. This is a list of soul foods and dishes. Soul food is an African-American cuisine that primarily originated in the Southern United States and is very similar to the cuisine of the Southern United States.[1] It uses a variety of ingredients, some of which are indigenous to Africa and were brought over by slaves, and others which are indigenous to the Americas and borrowed from Native American cuisine.[1][2]

Meat dishes

Some meat soul foods and dishes include:

Name Image Description
Chicken fried steak [3] Flickr kb35 1644526369--Chicken fried steak.jpg A breaded cutlet dish consisting of a piece of steak (tenderized cube steak) coated with seasoned flour and pan-fried. It is associated with Southern cuisine.
Fatback Fatback.jpg Fatty, cured, salted pork, especially the first layers of the back of the pig primarily used in slow-cooking as a seasoning. Pictured is breaded and fried fatback.
Fried chicken 125px A dish consisting of chicken pieces usually from broiler chickens which have been floured or battered and then pan-fried, deep fried, or pressure fried. The seasoned breading adds a crisp coating or crust to the exterior.

Chicken and waffles, in particular, is a soul food dish associated with special occasions.[4]

Fried fish [1] Fried Fish and French Fries.jpg Any of several varieties of fish, including catfish, whiting,[5] porgies, bluegill, sometimes battered in seasoned cornmeal
Ham hocks [6][7] Ham hock and black-eyed peas (cropped).jpg Typically smoked or boiled, ham hocks generally consist of much skin, tendons and ligaments, and require long cooking through stewing, smoking or braising to be made palatable. The cut of meat can be cooked with greens and other vegetables or in flavorful sauces.
Hog Jowl Fried pork jowl.jpg Cured and smoked cheeks of pork. It is not actually a form of bacon, but is associated with the cut due to the streaky nature of the meat and the similar flavor. Hog jowl is a staple of soul food,[8] but is also used outside the United States, for example in the Italian dish guanciale.[9][10]
Hog maw Hog maw (cropped).jpg The stomach lining of a pig; it is very muscular and contains no fat. As a soul food dish, hog maw has often been coupled with chitterlings, which are pig intestines. In the book Plantation Row Slave Cabin Cooking: The Roots of Soul Food hog maw is used in the Hog Maw Salad recipe. [11]
Offal Empal gentong boiled cow intestine.JPG Such as chitterlings or "chitlins" (the cleaned and prepared intestines of pigs, slow cooked and also often eaten with a vinegar-based sauce or sometimes parboiled, then battered and fried) or hog maws[1] (the muscular lining of the pig's stomach, sliced and often cooked with chitterlings).[1]
Ox tails [1] Raw oxtail-01.jpg The tail of cattle, oxtail is a bony, gelatin-rich meat, which is usually slow-cooked as a stew[12] or braised.
Pickled pigs feet [6] Pickled pigs feet.JPG Slow cooked, sometimes pickled or often eaten with a vinegar based sauce.
Pigs feet Tonight's stew thickener - a pig's trotter (as recommended by Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall).jpg The feet of pigs: the cuts are used in various dishes around the world, and a claim that their popularity increased in popularity since the late-2000s financial crisis[13] has been made by various sources, despite the fact that for each pig butchered, a constant of four pig's feet may be consumed.[14]
Pork Roast Pig 1.JPG As a meat dish, such as ham and bacon, and for the flavoring of vegetables and legumes, gravys and sauces.
Pork ribs Smoked country style pork ribs.jpg The ribcage of a domestic pig, meat and bones together, is cut into usable pieces, prepared by smoking, grilling, or baking – usually with a sauce, often barbecue – and then served.
Poultry Gulai ampela.JPG giblet, such as chicken liver and gizzards.[6][7] Pictured is a chicken gizzard dish.
Turkey Neck bones

Vegetables and legumes

Beans, greens and other vegetables are often cooked with ham[citation needed] or pork parts to add flavor.

Name Image Description
Black-eyed peas [6] Mmm... black eyed peas with smoked hocks and corn bread (7046315845) (2).jpg Often mixed into Hoppin' John and other types of rice and beans dishes.[1] Pictured are black-eyed peas with smoked hocks and corn bread.
Collard greens Collard-Greens-Bundle.jpg A staple vegetable of Southern U.S. cuisine, they are often prepared with other similar green leaf vegetables, such as kale, turnip greens, spinach, and mustard greens in "mixed greens".[15] They are generally eaten year-round in the South, often with a pickled pepper vinegar sauce. Typical seasonings when cooking collards can consist of smoked and salted meats (ham hocks, smoked turkey drumsticks, pork neckbones, fatback or other fatty meat), diced onions and seasonings.
Hoppin' John [16] 125px A dish served in the Southern United States consisting of black-eyed peas (or field peas) and rice, with chopped onion and sliced bacon, seasoned with a bit of salt.[17] Some people substitute ham hock, fatback, or country sausage for the conventional bacon; a few use green peppers or vinegar and spices. Smaller than black-eyed peas, field peas are used in the Low Country of South Carolina and Georgia; black-eyed peas are the norm elsewhere.
Mustard greens Mustardgreensraw.jpg A species of mustard plant. Subvarieties include southern giant curled mustard, which resembles a headless cabbage such as kale, but with a distinct horseradish-mustard flavor. It is also known as green mustard cabbage.
Okra [18] Okrajf.JPG A vegetable that is native to West Africa, and is eaten fried or stewed and is a traditional ingredient of gumbo. It is sometimes cooked with tomatoes, corn, onions and hot peppers
Sweet potatoes 5aday sweet potato.jpg Often parboiled, sliced, then adorned with butter, sugar, cinnamon, nutmeg, vanilla or other spices, and baked; commonly called "candied sweets" or "candied yams"[6]
Turnip greens Stielmus.jpg Turnip leaves are sometimes eaten as "turnip greens", and they resemble mustard greens in flavor. Turnip greens are a common side dish in southeastern US cooking, primarily during late fall and winter. Smaller leaves are preferred; however, any bitter taste of larger leaves can be reduced by pouring off the water from initial boiling and replacing it with fresh water. Varieties specifically grown for the leaves resemble mustard greens more than those grown for the roots, with small or no storage roots.

Breads and grains

Name Image Description
Cornbread [19] Skillet cornbread (cropped).jpg A quickbread often baked or made in a skillet, commonly made with buttermilk and seasoned with bacon fat; inspired by the great availability of corn in the Americas and by Native American cultures. Pictured is skillet cornbread.
Grits [20] Gritsonly.jpg A cooked coarsely ground cornmeal of Native American origin
Hoecake [1] Jonnycakes 01.jpg Also known as Johnnycake, it's a type of cornbread which is very thin in texture, and fried in cooking oil in a skillet, whose name is derived from field hands' often cooking it on a shovel or hoe held to an open flame
Hushpuppies [1] Hushpuppies 5stack.jpg Balls of deep-fried cornmeal, usually with salt and diced onions. Typical hushpuppy ingredients include cornmeal, wheat flour, eggs, salt, baking soda, milk or buttermilk, and water, and may include onion, spring onion (scallion), garlic, whole kernel corn, and peppers.

Desserts

Name Image Description
Cobbler Peach cobbler (cropped).jpg Made of fruits typically found in the southern U.S., especially peach [5]
Pie Pecan pie, November 2010.jpg Pictured is pecan pie
Sweet potato pie [1][5] SweetPotatoPie.jpg Parboiled sweet potatoes, then pureed, spiced, and baked in a pie crust, similar in texture to pumpkin pie

See also

References

A traditional New Year's Day meal:[citation needed] black-eyed peas, ham hock, and pepper sauce
  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 1.8 1.9 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  2. Ferguson 1993
  3. Hopson, Kimball (2008). Soul Food Recipes: From the Dirty South. Kimball Hopson. ISBN 1438283520
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  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 6.4 Timothy Williams In Changing Harlem, Soul Food Struggles 5, 2008 New York Times
  7. 7.0 7.1 Mike Royko FOOD NAGS CAN KILL ANYONE'S APPETITE July 20, 1994 Page: 3 Chicago Tribune
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  16. "On New Year's Day, it gets the full Southern treatment, which usually means Hoppin' John – a traditional Soul Food fixin' consisting of F peas cooked with ham hocks and spices, served over rice. In the South, eating field-peas on New Year's is thought to bring prosperity" Celebrate New Year's with Field- peas by Rachel Ellner December 31, 2008 Nashua Telegraph
  17. Hoppin John What's cooking America.Another name for it is Stew Peas
  18. Marcus, Jacqueline B. (2013). Culinary Nutrition: The Science and Practice of Healthy Cooking. Academic Press. Page 547. ISBN 0123918839
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  20. Ferguson 1993, pp. 25-26.

Bibliography

Further reading