Classic Southern Recipes (2024)

Southern Living Around the Southern Table

Classic Southern Recipes (1)

Credit: Oxmoor House

Rebecca Lang invites you to come home to comforting meals and treasured memories with these recipes from her book, Around the Southern Table. These old-fashioned Southern recipes are sure to become favorites at your table.

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Cat-head Biscuits with Tomato Gravy

Cat-head Biscuits with Tomato Gravy

Classic Southern Recipes (2)

Credit: Jennifer Davick

Cat-head Biscuits with Tomato Gravy Recipe

Cat-head biscuits are delightfully huge, crispy-on-the-outside, fluffy-on-the-inside homemade biscuits. Their size and crunch make them ideal to serve with a thick, hearty gravy. The name comes from their colossal size, about that of a cat’s head. They bake longer and at a lower temperature than their smaller cousins. If you don’t have bacon drippings on hand, cook a pound of bacon before you start this recipe, reserve the drippings, and serve the bacon with the biscuits and gravy.

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Scuppernong Jelly

Scuppernong Jelly

Classic Southern Recipes (3)

Credit: Jennifer Davick

Scuppernong Jelly Recipe

Scuppernongs are a green-gold variety of the sweet and fragrant muscadine grapes that grow in parts of the South. The house I called home until I was an adult had a glorious Scuppernong arbor in the backyard. Picking the thick-skinned, seed-laced grapes became a family affair each September. With a bowl in hand and my feet on a stool, even as a child, I treasured those grapes as much as gold. The sweet but slightly sour aroma that marked the beginning of fall will forever be in my memory.

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Country Ham with Redeye Gravy

Country Ham with Redeye Gravy

Classic Southern Recipes (4)

Credit: Jennifer Davick

Country Ham with Redeye Gravy Recipe

On breakfast tables in some parts of the South, country ham with redeye gravy is just about as common as bacon. The origin of the name is debated, but the most common belief is that the gravy—a very thin, salty sauce—takes on a reddish tone from the browned bits scraped from the bottom of the skillet. Some Southerners make their gravy with water, others with coffee or cola. I use a mixture of cola and water to balance the salt and add sweetness and caffeine. When it comes to waking up, I usually need all the help I can get.

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Lace Cornbread

Lace Cornbread

Classic Southern Recipes (5)

Credit: Jennifer Davick

Lace Cornbread Recipe

This old Southern take on cornbread is a crisp, lacy brown wafer best enjoyed a few seconds after it leaves the skillet. The thin batter spatters and sputters the second it hits the hot pan—that’s how the lace is formed. This pretty cornbread was popular in the early twentieth century. Southern kitchens had all the ingredients on hand, and the wafers were inexpensive to make. It’s worth the patience to cook them one at a time. Serve them with soup for lunch, with greens at supper, or with preserves as a sweet snack.

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Divine Pimiento Cheese

Divine Pimiento Cheese

Classic Southern Recipes (6)

Credit: Jennifer Davick

Divine Pimiento Cheese Recipe

If I could choose my last meal, it would have to include pimiento cheese. There are very few days when my fridge isn’t home to a batch of the famous spread. I make it often and love it best on soft white sandwich bread. You can also serve it with your favorite crackers.

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Real Buttermilk Fried Chicken

Credit: Jennifer Davick

Real Buttermilk Fried Chicken Recipe

To this day, fried chicken is my go-to lunch after church on Sundays. Keeping the shortening hot enough is the key to crisp chicken. Use a thermometer the first few times. After that, judging the heat becomes second nature.

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Old-Fashioned Collard Greens

Old-Fashioned Collard Greens

Classic Southern Recipes (8)

Credit: Jennifer Davick

Old-Fashioned Collard Greens Recipe

It’s not uncommon for Southerners to “put on a pot of collards” at lunchtime and cook them until supper. When shopping for collard greens, buy by the bunch. Avoid bunches with shriveled and yellowed leaves.

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Creamed Silver Queen Corn

Creamed Silver Queen Corn

Classic Southern Recipes (9)

Credit: Jennifer Davick

Creamed Silver Queen Corn Recipe

Silver Queen is a variety of white corn with milky, creamy kernels. It’s beloved for its lightly sweet flavor. Don’t be tempted to just cut the corn from the cob with a knife. A corn cutter or creamer creates much, much creamier corn. I use the same wooden corn cutter that my grandmother Sa used. It’s one of my prized possessions. Look for your own antique cutter at estate sales—or for brand-new ones made of wood or stainless steel at hardware and cookware stores. No matter the material, this Southern tool makes creamed corn like nothing else.

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Hummingbird Cake

Hummingbird Cake

Classic Southern Recipes (10)

Credit: Jennifer Davick

Hummingbird Cake Recipe

Exactly how this cake got its name isn’t clear, but it likely has to do with its flavor, sure to suit those nectar-loving hummingbirds and anyone with a love of dessert. The tropical fruit- and nut-studded cake first appeared in Southern Living magazine in 1978. It’s since become a signature cake of the South.

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Real Banana Pudding

mr - Real Banana Pudding Reshoot

Classic Southern Recipes (11)

Credit: Greg Dupree; Food Styling: Rishon Hanners; Prop Styling: Missie Crawford

Real Banana Pudding Recipe

You’ve never had homemade banana pudding like this before. It’s a simple, from-scratch dessert that’ll leave your guests speechless: homemade vanilla pudding layered with vanilla wafer cookies and banana slices and topped with a cloud of meringue. Some like it warm. Others prefer it nice and cold. The hardest part is waiting for it to fully chill.

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Around the Southern Table

Southern Living Around the Southern Table

Classic Southern Recipes (12)

Credit: Oxmoor House

If you love classic Southern recipes like these, you’ll love Rebecca Lang’s book, Around the Southern Table, featuring 150 fresh, from scratch recipes that you’ll want to serve at your table.

Click here to order the book.

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Classic Southern Recipes (2024)

FAQs

What is considered Southern Comfort food? ›

Some favorite Southern comfort recipes
  • Quick Hoppin' John Soup.
  • Brunswick Stew.
  • Ham with Redeye Gravy.
  • Great-Grandmother Steinbeck's Johnnycake (Cornbread)
  • Chicken and Dumplings IV.
  • Grandma Oma's Pickled Okra.
  • Southern Style Holiday Greens.
  • Oklahoma Cheese Grits.
May 20, 2021

What do Southerners eat that Northerners don t? ›

Fried foods. We fry things up North, but you'll find fried foods far more common in the South. Chicken, fish, shrimp, hush puppies, tomatoes, chicken fried steak and more. It's not that people don't eat fried foods in the North like chicken, it's that it's tradition in the South and a source of pride.

What is a Southern good luck dinner? ›

In the south your New Year meal must include collard greens, black-eyed peas, pork and cornbread. They're said to bring good health, wealth and good luck. Black-eyed peas in some form, always. They can be made in Hoppin' John, a salad, or just cooked like regular beans (some people add ham, bacon, or other pork.)

What are six popular Southern dishes? ›

10 iconic dishes to try in the Southern states
  • Shrimp po'boy, Louisiana.
  • Banana pudding, Tennessee.
  • Burgoo stew, Kentucky.
  • Fried green tomatoes, Alabama.
  • Fried catfish, Arkansas.
  • Biscuits, Tennessee.
  • Beignets, Louisiana.
Jul 18, 2023

What are the top five comfort foods? ›

Become a Jetsetter
  • 1 Chicken and Waffles.
  • 2 Spaghetti and Meatballs.
  • 3 Chicken Fried Steak.
  • 4 Mac and Cheese.
  • 5 Hotdish.
  • 6 Chicago Deep Dish Pizza.
  • 7 Grilled Cheese and Tomato Soup.
  • 8 Matzo Ball Soup.
Mar 1, 2020

What is the most Southern meal? ›

A traditional Southern meal may include pan-fried chicken, field peas (such as black-eyed peas), greens (such as collard greens, mustard greens, turnip greens, or poke sallet), mashed potatoes, cornbread or corn pone, sweet tea, and dessert—typically a pie (sweet potato, chess, shoofly, pecan, and peach are the most ...

What are the unhealthy Southern foods? ›

This eating style can raise your risk of heart disease and stroke. It often has foods like fried chicken, fried seafood, and country-fried steak, and processed meats like sausage, bacon, bologna, and lunchmeats. It may have organ meats like liver and chicken gizzards and eggs and egg dishes.

What did the southern colonies eat for breakfast? ›

For breakfast colonist might have eaten porridge or mush, which is a warm cereal and could have been made with cornmeal, oats or beans. They may have had bread with butter and jam, but one thing they would not have had was milk!

What is a traditional black Southern meal? ›

Particularly in rural areas, foods like fried chicken, fried fish, sweet potato pie, red drinks, black-eyed peas and others were served during Emancipation celebrations and church gatherings.

What is a famous Southern black food? ›

These include pigeon peas, black-eyed peas, okra, and sorghum. It has also been noted that a species of rice was domesticated in Africa, thus many Africans who were brought to the Americas kept their knowledge for rice cooking. Rice is a staple side dish in the Lowcountry region and in Southern Louisiana.

Is there a difference between soul food and Southern food? ›

Adrian Miller, author of Soul Food: The Surprising History of an American Cuisine, One Plate at a Time, told Epicurious that Southern food is the foundation, but “soul food tends to be more intense in terms of flavors and seasoning.”

What is the most popular food in the southern region? ›

Meats, especially chicken and pork, are central in southern cuisine. Many favorite dishes from this region include country hams, pulled pork, sausage, fried chicken, and bacon.

What were popular foods in the southern colonies? ›

Southern colonies

The rural poor often hunted and ate squirrel, opossum, rabbit, and other woodland animals. Salted or smoked pork often supplemented the vegetable diet. Those on the "rice coast" ate ample amounts of rice, while the southern poor and slaves used cornmeal in breads and porridges.

What did Southerners eat in the 1800s? ›

Meals often consisted of beef, eggs, hot biscuits, corn bread, hot cakes, porridge and seasonal vegetables and fruits. Coffee, tea, water or cocoa were consumed in “large quantities.” Whiskey, inexpensive and readily available, was the most popular alcoholic beverage, Cooper recorded, especially in the South and West.

What is a dish that originated in southern Louisiana? ›

Gumbo (guhm-boh)

An irresistible amalgamation dark roux (butter or oil mixed with flour), rice, seafood or chicken & sausage, "trinity" (a combination of onions, bell peppers and celery) and often okra. Fun fact: gumbo is the official dish of Louisiana.

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