Cooking
with Bubba Rice
Hello, friends, Creekites, and fellow diners!
I’m Win Allen, aka “Bubba Rice,” owner and head chef
(well, okay, the only chef) of Bubba Rice Lunch and Catering. My
diner is located just off the square, behind Mossy Creek Drugs
and Sundries. Drop by for a meal any time you’re in town, and
don’t forget to catch my TV show, Cooking With Bubba Rice,
produced by Bert Lymon at WMOS Media, (“The Voice of the Creek”)
on local cable access channel 22.
I’ve personally tested all the recipes that appear
in the Mossy Creek Hometown Series, and I guarantee them with
the Bubba Rice Seal of Approval. I take good food – and the
philosophy behind good food – very seriously. When you visit the
diner you’ll see my rules of cooking on the placemats and wall
plaques. I’ve included some of them on the next page, for your
reading enjoyment.
Happy Cooking!
Win Allen, aka Bubba Rice
Bubba's Motto: "Never waste good brain power inventing
something when you can reinvent something."
All I Ever Need
To Know About Life
I Learned From
Cooking With Bubba Rice
- Starch is the glue that holds a family reunion together.
- Measuring takes all the fun out of cooking.
- Always write down Mama’s recipes so you can sell them
later.
- A pinch of this and a pinch of that will get your face
slapped.
- Barbeque is pork. Always. Beef is a steak.
- Never insult the people who handle your food.
- Never be afraid to eat the last piece of cake.
- Don’t plant a garden unless you have lots of friends
who’ll take tomatoes.
- f you need friends, plant a garden. Everyone wants fresh
tomatoes.
- A slow, promising simmer never hurt any relationship.
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Julie's Applesauce Engagement Cookies
1 box spice cake mix
1 cup raisins
½ cup vegetable oil
½ cup applesauce
1 egg
Combine ingredients and mix. Evenly space tablespoons of dough
on a cookie sheet. Bake at 350 degrees, 12 to 15 minutes. For
added spice, sprinkle with cinnamon and powdered sugar.
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Eula Mae's Pound Cake
Eula Mae Whit, Mossy Creek's oldest resident, says this pound
cake recipe has been in the Whit family as long as she has.
About 100 years!
1/2 tsp baking powder
1 cup milk
1 tsp vanilla
1 tsp almond flavoring
3 cups sugar
2 sticks margarine, softened
1/2 cup Crisco
5 large eggs
3 1/2 cups sifted Swansdown cake flour
Preheat oven to 325 degrees. Mix sugar with margarine
and Crisco. Slowly add eggs, beating with an electric
mixer. Mix flour and baking powder in separate bowl.
Add mix to sugar/margarine/Crisco, along with milk. Add
vanilla and almond flavorings. Pour into cake pan that has
been sprayed with no-stick spray. Bake approximately one
hour.
Icing
1 tsp vanilla
1/4 cup water
1/2 cup Crisco
1 tsp liquid butter flavoring
1 box confectioner's sugar
Mix and spread over cake.
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Sandy's Pecan Pie
Mossy Creek police officer, Sandy Bottoms Crane, says this
recipe is her husband's favorite. It was created by her
daddy, Stony Bottoms.
2 cups pecans
2 tsp vanilla
2 unbaked pie crusts
2 1/2 cups sugar
1 cup light Karo syrup
6 eggs, lightly beaten
Mix butter, sugar and syrup in a stove pot. Bring to a
boil, stirring constantly. Add to eggs. Add pecans.
Place in crusts. Bake at 350 degrees for about 35 minutes.
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Auntie’s Beef
Stew
I got this
recipe from my great aunt. Of course, she NEVER measured
anything, unless “add until it looks right” counts as measuring.
A warning, this thing takes time (minimum 3 hours cooking time,
but 4 is better.) Don’t cut corners by using any canned/frozen
vegetables. The flavor won’t be the same.
Ingredients:
2 to 2 ½
pound roast. (Either chuck or rump)
4 cups diced
potatoes
2 cups
chopped celery
2 cups
sliced carrots
1 large
onion, diced
4 cloves
garlic, finely chopped
3 tbsp
canola oil
1 ½ cup
water
1 tsp salt
1 tsp pepper
Start by
searing the roast. In a large stockpot over medium-high heat,
heat the canola oil and then sear the roast about 2 minutes per
side. Add the garlic, cover and lower the heat to a simmer. Cook
the roast for 2 hours, turning it once. After 2 hours, the roast
should be tender enough to shred in the pot with a fork. Be sure
to remove any large pieces of fat that remain.
Add the
remaining ingredients, stirring thoroughly. Add salt and pepper.
Raise the heat to bring a low boil, then cover and lower the
heat to simmer, again. Simmer for 1 hour, stirring at least once
every 20 minutes. Check the “gravy” at about 45 minutes. If it
appears too thin or watery (you’ll get a lot of moisture out of
the celery and onions,) here’s a trick that I learned from that
“Bam!” guy on TV . . . remove about 2 cups of the stew (be sure
to get a little of all the ingredients,) put it in a blender or
food processor, and puree it. Stir it back into the stew.
Serves 4 to
6 people.
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Jasmine
Beleau’s New Orleans Crunch Cookies
aka
“Reindeer Poop Cookies” for kids
Ingredients:
2/3 cup
shortening
2 tsp baking
powder
1 cup sugar
1/3 cup
whole milk
2 eggs
½ tsp salt
3 cups
all-purpose flour
½ tsp
vanilla
Assorted
decorations – M & M’s, unroasted hazel nuts or almonds, a
dollop of jelly before baking, icing, etc.
Mix
shortening and sugar together until completely blended. Beat
eggs and add to shortening mixture. Sift together the flour,
baking powder and salt and add to mix, alternating with milk.
When thoroughly blended, roll out on floured board and cut
circles with biscuit cutter or the lid of a medium-sized jar.
Place chosen decorations in the center of each cookie. Sprinkle
with sugar and bake at 350-375 degrees for 10-13 minutes.
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Southern-Style Orange Fritters
Batter:
1 pint sweet milk (whole milk)
2 eggs, beaten
flour (enough to stiffen the mix)
Peel and de-seed 3 oranges, dip slices in batter, fry in hot
butter. Sprinkle with powdered sugar and serve hot.
Mary Harris Frazer, "Kentucky Receipt Book," 1903
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Old-Fashioned Soda Biscuits
2 cups flour (not self-rising)
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon cream of tartar
2 tablespoons lard
1 cup milk
Sift the dry items together, add the lard, then add the milk
while you slowly stir (a fork is good for stirring dough).
Roll the dough out on a floured board to about 1/2 inch thick,
cut into biscuits. Bake at 425 degrees for about 15
minutes.
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Old-Fashioned Beaten Biscuits
4 cups all-purpose flour (as always, this means not self-rising)
1 teaspoon baking powder
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon sugar
1/2 cup lard
1/3 cup milk mixed with 1/3 cup water
Mix the flour, baking powder, salt and sugar. Add the lard
and knead until you have a coarse, mealy consistency. Add
just enough milk/water to make a stiff dough. Knead the
dough then place it on a floured board.
Beat the dough for about 30 minutes. Turn it several
times. The end result should be dough that "pops," and
feels both smooth and elastic.
Pull off small chunks and shape into smooth balls by hand.
Place on a cookie sheet; then be sure to prick each biscuit with
a fork, making 3 rows of holes. Bake in a preheated oven
at 400 degrees for about 20 minutes. The biscuits should
be a light, golden brown.
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