The Tammy Wynette Southern Cookbook
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About this ebook
Nearly 300 hearty Southern recipes, and personal reminiscences, from the country music legend.
Tammy Wynette, the “First Lady of Country Music,” collected some 279 recipes for her favorite down-home foods including such flavorful dishes as Mississippi-Style Stuffed Bell Pepper, Cornmeal-Fried Potatoes, Pineapple-Banana Pudding, and Sour Cream Pound Cake.
Tammy loved the simple goodness of home cooking, and once declared that her favorite food was a hot dog—she would have chosen that over a steak any day! For her cookbook, she chose a unique selection of Southern dishes sure to please hearty appetites everywhere—and just as enticing as the dishes are the personal anecdotes and history revealed alongside many of the recipes.
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Reviews for The Tammy Wynette Southern Cookbook
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Book preview
The Tammy Wynette Southern Cookbook - Tammy Wynette
Introduction
Dear Reader and Fellow Cook,
Thank you for buying my first-ever cookbook.
In these pages you will find many delicious, down-home country recipes unique to our Southern way of life. I hope that you will enjoy preparing and eating these dishes as much as I've enjoyed preparing them and presenting them in this book.
As many of you know already, I was born on a sharecropper farm in Itawamba County, Mississippi. We had no running water, no indoor plumbing, and no stove. We cooked over an open fireplace with water drawn and handcarried from a nearby spring. It was hard work and we worked hard - from the crack of dawn till the sun went down.
But, though we didn't have much of anything, one thing we did have a lot of was love. We were one big extended family, with my mother, my stepfather, my aunts, uncles, cousins, grandparents, and even a great grandparent. We didn't have anything but we had each other. Despite our hard times and struggles we had a lot of happy moments and laughs. I have wonderful memories of those days and I wouldn't have traded them for the world.
In the years that have passed since then, I've performed on every continent, in hundreds of cities, and in nearly every state in the us. I've won many prestigious awards and have enjoyed great international acclaim. I've entertained in the White House numerous times, and before other heads of state, in addition to performing in some of the most famous concert halls in the world. Yet, despite all these honors, my roots are pure rural Mississippi. That was my home, my background, my upbringing, and my life. It still is.
For it was down on that farm that I learned the values and virtues I would carry throughout my life and my performing career: love of God, country, family, and the simple pleasures that make life so joyously worth living. Today I have a wonderful husband, five beautiful daughters, one wonderful son, and four grandchildren. To them I try to impart the same love I knew as a child, growing up on the farm. Although times have changed drastically and my children are scattered around, no longer living with us, we are still a close family. That, of all the things I've ever done in my life, is what I consider to be my greatest accomplishment.
But, just as music has always been a part of my life and an expression of my love for life, so has food. Growing up under the conditions we lived in, food was an important part of the love we shared for one another. I learned to cook at an early age from people like my mother, my grandmother, my great-grandmother, my aunts, and my cousins. In those days, with as little money as we had, we didn't enjoy the luxury and convenience of driving over to the supermarket and loading up the station wagon with everything we needed. Nearly everything we had to eat was prepared from scratch - using fresh, natural ingredients we either picked or slaughtered the same day. That was the basis of our existence.
To this day, I can still smell the wonderful aromas that drifted from the open windows and chimney of our little cabin as we picked cotton in the fields outside. I can close my eyes and remember sitting on the kitchen table watching my grandma and great-grandma laboring with love over a boiling kettle in the open fireplace. In the evenings, after it got too dark to work in the fields, our family would gather around the table, bow our heads, and thank God for what we had. Then we would eat. And chat. And trade stories of things that happened that day. And laugh. For as long as I live, I will treasure those precious moments shared around the dinner table eating simple but delicious food prepared with the most precious ingredient of all - love.
Many of the recipes in this book are from that time. I am especially grateful to my mother, Mildred Lee, for teaching them to me, and you will notice her name many times in these pages. Other recipes were taught to me by my grandmother, my great-grandmother, and several of my aunts and cousins. And, of course, I am indebted to many other people I have known since then for their recipes, and I have credited them accordingly as well.
Every time you try a new recipe it is like a new discovery, with all the adventure and excitement that goes along with that discovery. It may not always come out the way it should the first time, but you keep trying until you succeed in getting it right. The smiles and compliments are rewards that make it all worthwhile. I've burned my share of roasts and overcooked my share of vegetables (who hasn't?) but I've learned from those experiences. Cooking is something I've always loved to do and, when you love something, you always want to give it your best effort. When I was a little girl, cooking was what I did to escape the rigors of picking cotton. Today I do it to relax and express my love for others.
My husband, George Richey (a wonderful cook himself, by the way), and I have entertained hundreds of people in our Nashville home. When these people, who have come to us in friendship drop by, I wouldn't dream of sending out for pizza or popping something pre-cooked into the microwave. I cook for them and then we sit down to enjoy it. That's the way it was in Itawamba County way back when; that's the way it is today. I wouldn't have it any other way.
As you read through these recipes and prepare the dishes contained here, don't be afraid to experiment. Ingredients, in most cases, are flexible and you can add more or less of something to suit your own tastes. I have listed the recipes in nine food categories and with them you can prepare a complete meal - from appetizers, to side dishes, to main courses, to desserts. Take my word for it, they're all delicious!
In closing, I have only one final word as you take The Tammy Wynette Southern Cookbook into the kitchen with you and open its pages next to your stove. Thank you!!
Love,
[graphic]Tammy Wynette
Image for page 12Appetizers
MEXICAN EGGS A-LA-RICHEY
6 eggs
3 garden onions, diced
3 tablespoons Worcestershire sauce
2 slices American cheese
1 /4 cup salsa sauce
1/2 cup milk
Mix ingredients together and scramble in large skillet with 1/2 stick of butter.
This was taught to me by my husband, George Richey, and is a special treat in our home. Everything goes in this except the kitchen sink. It's a wonderful way to fix eggs.
BREAKFAST MAIN DISH
1 lb. sausage, cooked & crumbled
1 cup grated cheddar cheese
1 cup sweet milk
1/2 teaspoon salt
3 slices of bread, cubed
4 eggs, beaten
1/2 teaspoon milk
Mix altogether. Put in greased 9x13 pan. Refrigerate overnight. Bake at 350 degrees for 35 minutes. Cut into squares and serve hot. (May be frozen until ready to cook but thaw in refrigerator overnight before baking.)
Taught to me by Sandra and Gerald Jetton.
FARMERS VEGETABLE SOUP
5 fresh tomatoes, diced or quartered
(or 2 small cans of stewed
tomatoes)
1/2 cup lima beans