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My kitchen is a mystical place, a kind of temple for me. It is a place where the surfaces seem to have significance, where the sounds and odors carry meaning that transfers from the past and bridges to the future. — Pearl Bailey

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January 15, 2011

Collard greens have been a part of Southern foodways and folklore for centuries; collards were among the first crops brought to the South by the English. Native Americans called collards “Quelites” and adapted them to their agriculture, and enslaved Africans brought their tradition of simmering them slowly over low heat until the collards are tender and the water has boiled down to a nutrient-rich liquid called pot liquor.

Kay Moss and Kathryn Hoffman, authors of The Backcountry Housewife - A Study of Eighteenth-Century Foods maintained that one reason for the popularity of greens in the Carolina Backcountry (where there were initially few African Americans) was that the 17th century Scots were accustomed to eating greens or potherbs “from the yard” along with their oatcakes or oatmeal. The switch to corn cakes or mush along with their greens in the18th century Carolina backcountry probably wasn’t too difficult of a transition.

In an editorial in the Charlotte Observer in 1907, Joseph P. Caldwell extolled the virtues of pot liquor, writing, “The North Carolinian who is not familiar with pot liquor has suffered in his early education and needs to go back and begin it over again.”

The benefits of pot liquor consumption are even part of the Congressional Record. Huey P. Long, senator from Louisiana during the Great Depression, included a treatis on the benefits of sopping up pot liquor with cornbread in a 15 1/2 hour filabuster on the floor of the United States Senate.

“The North Carolinian who is not familiar with pot liquor has suffered in his early education and needs to go back and begin it over again.”

– Joseph P. Caldwell, editorial in the Charlotte Observer, 1907.

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5 Comments »

  1. Yea! A post! I love this blog. Thanks for sharing : )

    Comment by Kitchen Witch — January 16, 2011 @ 10:39 am

  2. Thanks for a yet another great post, I really enjoyed reading it - glad to call myself a fan.

    Thank you,
    Itai Matos (TFIM)

    Comment by Peanut butter and chocolate — January 30, 2011 @ 9:24 am

  3. I grew up in rural Arkansas, where turnip and mustard greens were king. I later moved to North Carolina, where I found that collard greens rule.

    I have to say that my mother-in-law does it right. The pot liquor may not be a low fat fare. But it is something to savor.

    Comment by Jack McCoy — February 18, 2011 @ 12:16 pm

  4. Just stumbled across this post, not being from your part of the world, can you expand on what collards are, version of the english cauliflower would be a guess.

    Comment by Al Wyles — April 16, 2011 @ 7:04 am

  5. Collards are actually a relative of cabbage that doesn’t form a head.

    Comment by chefrick — April 16, 2011 @ 9:01 am

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