Tuesday, April 13, 2010

“Sweet, cool, creamy - Pueblo Chieftain” plus 2 more

“Sweet, cool, creamy - Pueblo Chieftain” plus 2 more


Sweet, cool, creamy - Pueblo Chieftain

Posted: 13 Apr 2010 10:33 PM PDT

 CHARLOTTE, N.C. — A summer Sunday food memory, circa 1974: I'm sitting at the table watching while my mother makes banana pudding and my older sister discusses her latest date.

 One talks about the frustrations of romance. The other listens, nodding, while patiently, steadily, assembling dessert.

 Lining the casserole dish with vanilla wafers from a box. Slicing bananas and placing the circles just so. Spooning on a layer of vanilla-flavored pudding.

 Building the layers until the casserole is full, then covering it with a final layer of fluffy, white whipped topping.

 The whole thing goes in the refrigerator to wait until supper, while the wafers soften into cake-like layers and the banana flavor tinges both pudding and cookies, melding into something that will be cool and sweet on a hot night.

 Watching them, I absorb a little about dating and a little about listening, and a lot about taking time for both comfort and desserts.

Only in the South

 Recently, I set out to explore banana pudding. I looked into instant puddings vs. homemade custards, into vanilla wafers vs. fancier fillers like pound cake or ladyfingers.

 I tried meringue toppings, whipped toppings and simple sprinklings of crushed cookies.

 I fell in love with the banana pudding at Savor Cafe in Charlotte, N.C., where Lori Pearson's vanilla wafers are homemade and the perfectly browned meringue is an impossibly smooth marshmallow creme.

 Along the way, I wrestled with a mystery. Every source agrees that banana pudding is quintessentially Southern. It's so connected to this part of the world that if you join the Southern Foodways Alliance this year, you'll get a sticker declaring you a ''Proud Citizen of the Banana Pudding Republic.''

 At Carolinas barbecue restaurants, if dessert is offered at all, it is usually banana pudding. It can be made cheaply in big quantities and turned out in sheet pans or disposable aluminum trays at church potlucks.

 But why is banana pudding Southern? Bananas are everywhere. In the U.S., they're ahead of apples and oranges as the most consumed fruit. Nabisco's Nilla Wafers are sold nationally, with the recipe on the box.

 But banana pudding isn't everywhere. I took an informal poll, checking with food-writing colleagues in four Northern cities.

 In Milwaukee, banana pudding doesn't show up at all, just banana cream pie. I had to explain the difference to my source there. In Minneapolis and Pittsburgh, food editors had only seen it in African-American-owned restaurants.

 It is widespread in Chicago, where many Southern black families moved in search of work during the Depression. But it is still strongly connected to family events, particularly potlucks.

Tracing it back

 One piece of the puzzle is the bananas. Starting in the late 1800s, they were imported through Southern ports, particularly New Orleans. Before the late 1960s, when Standard Fruit moved to Gulfport, Miss., so many bananas came ashore in New Orleans that watching the unloading became a tourist attraction.

 Author Joe Dabney offers another Southern connection in his 1998 book ''Smokehouse Ham, Spoon Bread and Scuppernong Wine.'' Starting in 1880, bananas shipped from New Orleans by the Illinois Central Railroad were stored in Fulton, Ky., before they were dispersed across the country.

 The town used to celebrate its role as ''banana capital of the world'' with a yearly banana pudding festival, a tradition that continued into the 1990s.

 Stephen Criswell teaches folklore and English composition at the University of South Carolina Lancaster. A native of Gaston County, he likes to track the origins of things like fish camps and pimento-cheese burgers.

 He wrote the puddings entry for the ''Foodways'' edition of ''The New Encyclopedia of Southern Culture.'' He got the assignment after he and editor John T. Edge went to see Southern Culture on the Skids and heard their song ''Banana Puddin'.''

 ''I married my wife partly based on her ability to make banana pudding,'' Criswell says. ''A good Southern boy, I had to marry somebody who could cook like my mother.''

 Criswell couldn't say why banana pudding mostly stayed here. But he had theories on why it started here. He noted the strong resemblance between banana pudding and English puddings, which were generally anything that combined soft cake and custard.

 ''Technically, it's not a pudding, it's a trifle,'' Criswell says. ''And it's sweet. There's that Southern fondness for excessive sweetness.''

 The South has always had strong Anglo-Celtic ties that turn up in the origins of recipes — particularly desserts that don't call for long baking times in the sultry heat.

It's easy

 Criswell also noted how easy it is to make banana pudding if you take shortcuts. You can fall back on instant pudding and whipped topping instead custard and meringue. And mostly, people won't complain.

 But as I tested recipes, I noticed how my movements were so much like my mother's on that long-ago Sunday afternoon.

 Placing vanilla wafers in a pattern, slicing and arranging banana circles just so, I wondered if maybe that's why banana pudding stayed so much at home here. You can put it together in the morning, before you get too busy. It doesn't take a lot of fuss.

 And in the evening, you have something cool and sweet that almost everybody likes.

 Maybe that's explanation enough.

The schools of banana pudding

  Custard: It can be vanilla pudding from a box, but a simple custard is better. It's easy to make, and the texture is creamy, not gummy.

  Bananas: They have to be ripe, with brown spots speckling the peel. Don't use too many bananas or they get mushy. You want just enough to flavor the pudding and cake.

  Fillers: Vanilla wafers are traditional. As they soak in the pudding, they soften into cake-like layers. But cubed pound cake is good, and other cookies are possible. Paula Deen has a popular version made with Pepperidge Farms Chessman cookies. Ladyfingers also show up in recipes.

  Topping: Whipped topping is popular. Sweetened whipped cream is better. Best: Meringue, baked just until the fluffy top is browned but the pudding underneath is still chilled. At Savor Cafe in Charlotte, dessert maker Lori Pearson uses a marshmallow creme that's similar to Italian meringue, which is hot syrup beaten into egg whites.

 ''Unfortunately, we had to taste-test banana pudding for a couple of weeks,'' she jokes. ''We didn't want something we just scooped out of a sheet pan.''

BEST-EVER BANANA PUDDING

 Church and community cookbooks are a great source of banana pudding recipes. In this one, adapted from the 1990 ''Hopewell Heritage Cookbook'' from Hopewell Presbyterian Church in Charlotte, evaporated milk gives the pudding a light brown color and a rich flavor.

1 1/2 cups light brown sugar, packed

2 tablespoons all-purpose flour

1 (11- or 12-ounce) can evaporated milk, shaken well

3/4 cup water

3 eggs

1/8 teaspoon salt

1 teaspoon vanilla

1/4 cup butter

1 (12-ounce) box vanilla wafers

4 to 6 ripe bananas

Topping: Whipped topping, or 2 cups heavy cream beaten with 2 tablespoons powdered sugar, or about 1 cup vanilla wafer crumbs

 Whisk together brown sugar, flour, evaporated milk, water, eggs, salt and vanilla in a heavy saucepan or the top of a double boiler over a little simmering water. Add butter and cook over medium heat, stirring, until the butter melts.

 Reduce heat to low and cook slowly, stirring often, until the mixture thickens and just starts to look a little curdled. Remove from heat and cool slightly.

 Place a layer of vanilla wafers in the bottom of a 13-by-9-inch glass baking dish. Slice the bananas into rounds and place a layer of rounds on top of the wafers. Top with about half the pudding mixture, spreading to completely seal the wafers and bananas. Repeat layers, ending with pudding. Refrigerate until chilled.

 Top with whipped topping, sweetened whipped cream or cookie crumbs.

SIMPLE BANANA PUDDING

 Adapted from Samantha McCluney Criswell of Lancaster.

2 large boxes instant vanilla pudding

Milk to prepare pudding

About 1/2 cup sour cream

Frozen whipped topping, thawed, divided

6 ripe bananas

2 (12-ounce) boxes vanilla wafers

 Prepare the pudding in a large mixing bowl, using the amount of milk called for on the box. Using a wide rubber spatula, fold in the sour cream and 1/2 cup whipped topping until no traces of white remain.

 Peel bananas and slice in rounds. Gently stir banana rounds into the pudding.

 Place a layer of vanilla wafers on the bottom of a serving bowl. Top with about half the pudding and bananas. Top with another layer of vanilla wafers. Top with remaining pudding and bananas.

 Spread remaining whipped topping over the top. Refrigerate until chilled. Serve cold.

 

POUND CAKE BANANA PUDDING

 From ''Classic Southern Desserts,'' by the editors of Southern Living (Oxmoor, 2010). This version was inspired by one served at Mrs. Wilkes' Dining Room in Savannah, but it is classic. The yolks are used in the custard, while the egg whites are used for the meringue. In testing, we found the custard stays soft, but is soaked up by the pound cake.

4 eggs

4 cups half-and-half

1 cups sugar

cup cornstarch

teaspoon salt

3 tablespoons butter

2 teaspoons vanilla extract

1 (1-pound) all-butter pound cake, such as Sara Lee

4 large ripe bananas, peeled

Meringue:

cup sugar

teaspoon salt

teaspoon vanilla extract

 Separate the eggs. Cover the egg whites and refrigerate for the meringue. Whisk together the egg yolks with the half-and-half, sugar, cornstarch and salt in a medium saucepan and place over medium-low heat. Cook, whisking constantly, for 13 to 15 minutes. (Note: In testing, we had to start the pudding over medium heat and cook it longer, for closer to 25 minutes, before it thickened. Reduce the heat to low once it begins to thicken, so it doesn't scorch.)

 Remove from heat and add butter and vanilla, stirring until the butter melts.

 Cut the pound cake into 1-inch cubes. Lightly grease a 3-quart round baking dish.

 Place half the cake cubes in the bottom of the baking dish, pushing them together so they fit snugly. Slice 2 bananas and place the slices in a layer over the cake cubes. Pour half the pudding over the cake and bananas. Repeat with remaining cake, bananas and pudding. Cover and chill at least 6 hours. (The pudding needs to be cold before adding the meringue.)

 Preheat the oven to 375 degrees. Combine cup sugar and teaspoon salt in a small bowl and set aside. Beat the egg whites and vanilla at high speed with an electric mixer until foamy. Beat in sugar mixture 1 tablespoon at a time. Beat 2 to 3 minutes, until stiff peaks form. (When you lift the beaters, the meringue will form peaks that stand straight up. Don't overbeat, or the meringue will break down.)

 Spread the meringue over the chilled pudding, completely covering. Working all over the top, push a spoon into meringue and lift quickly, to form peaks.

 Bake 15 minutes, or until the meringue is golden brown on the peaks. Serve immediately.

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Wednesday's wild and weird - Oregon Daily Emerald

Posted: 13 Apr 2010 10:33 PM PDT

Soft proposal
This week, a varsity softball coach, Tim Gregory, pulled out a diamond against rival coach Christy Foster during a game between their two teams in Ohio, but it wasn't home plate, it was the real deal. Gregory pulled out the ring and proposed to Foster, who said yes. The couple had been dating for two years. The sweet proposal did nothing to stop Gregory's victory, however; Gregory's team won 1-0.

Piercing party
This week, a Wyoming man set out to beat the world record for most body piercings in one session, this week. He sat through 1,501 piercings in one session with 16 gauge needles, beating the original record by 304. He got pierced in the arms, back, and legs. Notaries were on hand and video was sent to the Guiness World Records. Comically, at the end of it all, he kept only a single piercing on the back of his neck.

Drunken irony?
This week, a Maryland man has been charged with drunken driving and colliding with the vehicle of the retired judge who spared him jail time for a similar previous offense. The judge, Edwin Collier, presided over a case in 1998 in which the man was charged with drunk driving while parked in an idling car, had let him off without serving a sentence. He and his wife, Ellen, were both injured in the crash. Nice guys finish last, it seems.

"Toke me" Elmo
This week, the father of a student at an elementary school in Pennsylvania called school officials and told them he needed to retrieve something from his son's Elmo backpack. This prompted officials to search the backpack where they found four ounces of marijuana. The police were waiting for the man by the time he arrived at the school. Another triumphant tale in stonerdom.

Lockjaw: worth it?
Last week, a man in Georgia dislocated his jaw while trying to eat a large sandwich. Having not eaten all day, the man a ordered double meat and double cheese sandwich from a restaurant called Which 'Wich. Ettmueller opened his mouth so wide, that the right side of his jaw dislocated before he could even indulge in the sandwich's deliciousness. His lockjaw lasted 14 hours and worst of all, his friend ended up eating his delectable sandwich. Proof that bigger isn't always better, and when it comes to sandwiches, one should divide before attempting to conquer.

Braille burlesque
This week, a Toronto-based photographer has taken it upon herself to create pornography for the blind in the form of a book. The book contains tactile erotic images with descriptions in Braille. The images are created with clay through a multidimensional modeling process and range from women disco dancing to men dressed up as lusty robots. A single page takes about 50 hours of labor, and the book itself, selling for $225, has been a big hit. She notes that people who aren't blind still like to close their eyes and touch her book. Perhaps, she will herald an entirely new pornography market.

opinion@dailyemerald.com

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Jodie Sweetin Has Not Married DJ Marty Coyle - OK! Magazine

Posted: 13 Apr 2010 06:37 PM PDT

Jodie Sweetin April 13 Despite recent Internet reports, Full House's Jodie Sweetin has not wed for the third time.

According to a source, her boyfriend Hollywood DJ Morty Coyle, "changed his status to "married" last week on Facebook, but just for fun and as to show how committed he is."

But they are only boyfriend and girlfriend, and have been dating for the past three months. Jodie is currently separated from her second husband, Cody Herpin.

OK! NEWS: JODIE SWEETIN ADMITS SHE LIED ABOUT SOBRIETY

Jodie's daughter Zoie Laurelmae Herpin - from her last marriage - turned 2 this Monday.

The 28-year-old has had her fair share of battles with drug addiction, but has been sober for over a year. Jodie has also penned her memoir, unSweetined, about her struggles and recovery.

OK! EXCLUSIVE: JODIE SWEETING OPENS UP ABOUT SPLIT

Five Filters featured article: Chilcot Inquiry. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction.

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