What is DelMarVa cuisine?
#1
Posted 08 November 2005 - 09:14 PM
#2
Posted 08 November 2005 - 09:40 PM
When I think of the local food I think simple, southern-inflected stuff. The grits line is somewhere in between Arlington and Richmond, don't even think of asking for hash browns once you cross it (except at Waffle House). Fish fries, especially in the African American community. Corn, corn bread cole slaw, watermelon. The products of all those orchards that dot Appalachian hillsides, especially the peaches. There's some decent barbecue around, too.
Thinking about the government.
#3
Posted 09 November 2005 - 09:43 AM
Right now, it is sour beef and dumplings season. Go to a church dinner and give it a try. An old but fading tradition.
There is Maryland fried chicken but, mostly, there is seafood. Blue crabs prepared in every conceivable way (but never, ever, boiled)—steamed crabs, crabcakes, crab fluffs, crab soup and soft shell crabs, which probably deserve a category all their own. Rockfish—baked, broiled, fried. Oysters—raw, baked, broiled, fried, frittered and in stew. Shrimp – steamed with onions and old bay.
There are dishes that add crab to everything, like Chicken Chesapeake – a chicken breast with crab meat on top, “surf and turf”- steak and a crabcake - is still common in old fashioned restaurants here as is rockfish with crab on top.
Coddies (salt cod and mashed potato cakes) are a very old Baltimore tradition. At one time there were sold on the counter of nearly every corner store in town. They still are but to a lesser extent. Faidley’s in Lexington Market makes a good one and for my money, they also make the best crabcake in town.
Black walnuts are a Maryland tradition—they are in season right now and are all over the ground in many neighborhoods. I’ve seen overflowing baskets of them are at the farmer’s market for the past few weeks.
Silver queen corn in the summer.
And, we can’t forget Berger cookies—a Baltimore tradition since the 1830’s. They can be found at Lexington Market, as well as grocery stores and delis all over town.
Last but not least, with Thanksgiving right around the corner, sauerkraut on the Thanksgiving table is a long standing Baltimore tradition.
I know I’m leaving lots of things out but this is a start.
#4
Posted 10 November 2005 - 01:29 PM
-- A.B.
#5
Posted 10 November 2005 - 02:03 PM
#6
Posted 11 November 2005 - 08:57 AM
a friend of mine was in town and i had told him about muskrat. we were never able to find out a place that sold it.Anyone for muskrat? I had it once down in Princess Ann MD, just south of Salisbury where I used to live. It was godawful.
what about scrapple?
there was a baltimore sun (?) article a few years ago that went over like 5 baltimore food specialites. . other than muskrat, the only other one i remember is a queen charlotte cake (i think that's the right name).
#7
Posted 11 November 2005 - 11:49 AM
Did you eat muskrat at The Washington Hotel in Princess Anne? My old college roommate's parents owned that place, and once ever other year or so, some regional newspaper or magazine would bill it the authentic destination to taste muskrat at its best... which is still pretty awful in my opinion. Greenish, slimy meat and infinite bones. No thanks.
I am also no fan of Maryland Beaten Biscuits. Eat one of those dense, dry flour baseballs and you feel like you've ingested lead fishing weights.
I do like a good, homemade vegetable crab soup.
#8
Posted 14 November 2005 - 03:34 AM
That's the place! Out of the hundreds of restaurants in Princess Anne, you picked the right one!Did you eat muskrat at The Washington Hotel in Princess Anne? My old college roommate's parents owned that place, and once ever other year or so, some regional newspaper or magazine would bill it the authentic destination to taste muskrat at its best... which is still pretty awful in my opinion. Greenish, slimy meat and infinite bones. No thanks.
-- A.B.
#9
Posted 14 November 2005 - 05:30 AM
I am also no fan of Maryland Beaten Biscuits. Eat one of those dense, dry flour baseballs and you feel like you've ingested lead fishing weights.
Hmm, maybe you should try DELAWARE beaten biscuits.
I think of beaten biscuits when I think of "DelMarVa" food as my great-grandmother's people were oystermen out of Franklin City, Virginia on the DelMarVa penninsula. Other things that jump out at me are: oysters(duh) in every imaginable manner, chow-chow, sourmilk pancakes, clams(see oysters), flakey biscuits, greens, scrapple..probably more, but I cannot think of them right off.
This is fun, although it would amuse my great-grandmother that the foods she and her friends made is even remotely considered "cuisine".
#10
Posted 14 November 2005 - 08:02 AM
As stated above, good seafood. Crab, oyster (I prefer Chincoteague to Chesapeake Bay), rockfish, bluefish, clams.
Great produce in season: Asparagus, tomatoes, cantalope, cucumber, string beans.
Regional favorites: Crab cakes and pit beef in Baltimore, Italian subs in Wilmington.
#11
Posted 14 November 2005 - 09:52 PM
#12
Posted 15 November 2005 - 03:19 PM
Crab, oyster (I prefer Chincoteague to Chesapeake Bay), rockfish, bluefish, clams.
You do know that most Chincoteague oysters are Bay oysters that have been barged south and submerged for a period of time to allow them to develop a briny flavor in the salty ocean water.
Another Delmarva country tradition I am not fond of is adding sugar to all sorts of overcooked vegetables. A pinch in stewed tomatoes I can understand, but lima beans? I like mine simple, not overcooked, with butter, salt and peper.
Maybe this would have been a better forum to post my thread on
Muskrapple.
#13
Posted 28 January 2006 - 02:03 PM
I can't help you on the tax-free state, but Chesapeake Bay Cooking is one of my staples...
I just picked up another book by the same author, John Shields, a Baltimore native, "The Chesapeake Bay Cookbook". I haven't seen his other books to compare but this looks very good. I think it would be a good resource for getting an overview of traditional foods and dishes of the area.
-- Gabriel Garcia Marquez, 1962 "Big Mama's Funeral"
#14
Posted 30 January 2006 - 11:09 AM
http://www.smithisla...cakerecipe.html
Domaine Hudson wine bar & eatery
www.domainehudson.com
#15
Posted 30 January 2006 - 11:19 AM
#16
Posted 30 January 2006 - 11:40 AM
Of course, the seafood is what I think of when asked about local cuisine...I dream of my aunt's crab cakes and oyster fritters. Has anyone ever had a Smith Island Cake? I am originally from Salisbury, MD, but my father's family is from Deal Island and Smith Island. It's generally an 8 - 10 layer cake made from very thin layers with icing in between each layer. I have seen any number of different icings and toppings used. Here's a link to a recipe.
http://www.smithisla...cakerecipe.html
Interesting first post, Domaine! The cake reminds of an Austrian/Hungarian cake, Dobos Torte. (The Dobos torte has many thin layers of cake filled with a rich chocolate butter cream. The top cake layer is covered with a crunchy caramel.)
Speaking of cakes from the region and looking through my new cookbook mentioned above, I also got reminded of "Lady Baltimore Cake". A white cake filled and iced with a cooked meringue aumented with dried fruit like raisins and/or figs, walnuts or pecans, and cognac.
The author has another recipe that I hadn't heard of called "Lord Baltimore Cake". The story told along side is that as the "Lady Baltimore Cake" used all egg whites, another recipe was developed for a yellow cake that uses the yolks. The recipe in that book uses a cooked meringue frosting and filling that has macaroon crumbs, black walnuts, almonds, candied cherries, lemon juice and sherry.
The history of the cake is mentioned here. From that and other things I've read I think the cake originated in Charleston, SC and was then popularized throughout the South.
Since these cakes are mentioned in the Chesapeake Cookbook I'm wondering if it is or was also popular around Baltimore and the area?
Edited by ludja, 30 January 2006 - 11:41 AM.
-- Gabriel Garcia Marquez, 1962 "Big Mama's Funeral"
#17
Posted 07 March 2007 - 05:50 PM
For our wedding, instead of a big fondant-covered, frilly decorated cake, we served 12 Smith Island cakes in seven different flavors. They all but disappeared.
#19
Posted 08 March 2007 - 12:21 PM
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#20
Posted 08 March 2007 - 10:07 PM
Can't leave out half smokes!
#21
Posted 08 March 2007 - 10:57 PM
#22
Posted 09 March 2007 - 11:33 AM
Half smokes are a D.C. staple I've never seen on the Delmarva Peninsula.
Can't leave out half smokes!
This brings up an important point. Are you looking only at the Delmarva peninsula or Delaware, Maryland and Virginia?
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#23
Posted 09 March 2007 - 03:21 PM
This brings up an important point. Are you looking only at the Delmarva peninsula or Delaware, Maryland and Virginia?
I would think the thread meant the Delmarva Peninsula. Because there are regions of Virginia that are definitely barbecue country, and D.C. doesn't have too much in common with the Eastern Shore, etc.
But whatever, I guess. (Although, even if one is reading it to mean the three states, technically that excludes D.C.)
As for shad roe, that's definitely Delmarva food. Mmmmm.










