Crab Cakes. (True History of)

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Here in Baltimore, the ever-booming crab cake trade is propping up more than just restaurants and tourism. Advertisers make embarrassing attempts to appeal to our obsession. There’s documentaries about the search for the best crab cake. And more and more, our local publications are fishing for clicks by urging people to vote for the region’s best crabcake.

Everyone is compelled to have a favorite. Some are loyal to tradition, standing by Faidley’s and accepting no imitators. Others take pride in preferring something newer and better – the old standard simply won’t do.

There’s an unspoken commonality to all contenders for ‘Baltimore’s Best Crab Cake’: they must be jumbo lump. Anything less is perceived as unworthy of consideration; a rip-off; an insult. The fact that this requirement elevates our most beloved food item to a luxury seems beside the point. The truly knowledgeable must be willing and able to indulge enough so as to actually have an opinion which is the best among them.

To be perfectly honest, I stopped taking this plunge years ago. I rarely had a crabcake worth the price of admission. The best crabcakes are made at home. And of those, the very very best… turned out to not be jumbo lump meat at all.

I’ve been wielding this contrarian opinion for awhile now, intending to eventually compose the rant you are reading now. But when I began to do a little background research into just when this jumbo lump madness began, I got more than I bargained for. I ended up back at the origin of the crab cake itself; sifting through legends and lies.

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Richard Q. Yardley from “Fun With Seafood”, Virginia Roeder, 1960

One oft-repeated yarn about the origin of the crabcake is that the Native Americans of the Chesapeake region made their crab cakes with cornmeal, and fried them in bear fat. This story comes from “Chesapeake” by James Michener, a fictional novel (redundancy intentional). Michener is remembered for his extensive research and attention to detail, but he’s no culinary historian.

I reviewed documents from Captain John Smith accounts and “A Briefe Relation of the Voyage unto Maryland” by Father Andrew White, to the works of anthropologist Helen Rountree and I found no accounts of foodways remotely resembling the method described in “Chesapeake.”

Finally, I reached out to folklorist Bernard Herman, who has made a study of Eastern Shore native and early settler foodways. He had a lot of input which I may as well quote verbatim:

Let’s start with fried foods. Frying requires both oil and a utensil that can withstand high heat. Skillets and frying pans appear in the earliest estate records on the Eastern Shore of Virginia with references dating to the 1630s (the public records here are the oldest continuous records in the US – unbroken from 1632). So we know that the capacity for frying foods dates to the earliest European and African presence. As far as I know, there is not a frying component to the cuisines of first peoples – the scant record suggesting that the armature of their foodways centered on “stews” (understood here as one-pot dishes), roasted, or dried/preserved preparations. Thus, my first reaction… is that the crab cake is something that is most likely not a product of indigenous foodways.

Now to the crab cake itself. The crabcake at its heart is a kind of fritter – and fritters have a very complex history. “Cake” in this case describes a pan-fried fritter – not unlike oyster cakes. The fritter traditions of the Chesapeake are the product of what the great food historian Jessica Harris terms a “braided tradition” a coming together of many cultural strands. Michael Twitty, for example, describes African fritter traditions in circulation in the 18th-c. Virginia and Maryland.

It seems that the notion that we are engaging in an eons-old tradition when we eat a crabcake may be a bit of romantic embellishment.

The labor-intensive step of picking crabs for crabcakes, like our beaten biscuits, recalls instead the other major injustice that our state was founded on, and the fact that, as Michael Twitty put it, in Fighting Old Nep: Foodways of Enslaved Afro-Marylanders, 1634-1864, “the plantation was a training ground for a future life of serving high society.”

Other accounts state that “it was not until 1930 in Crosby Gaige’s New York World’s Fair cook book that the term ‘crab cake’ appears in print, where it referred to the delicacy as ‘Baltimore crab cake.’”

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Cookery with a Chafing Dish”, 1891. Thomas J. Murrey

I am not sure how this demonstrable falsehood can continue to circulate in the google age, but so-named recipes appeared at least as early as 1891. That year, Thomas Jefferson Murrey included a recipe for “Crab Cakes” in his book “Cookery with a Chafing Dish.” Murrey was a New York caterer famous for seafood – his nickname was “Terrapin Tom” – and he had also worked in Washington, DC. It may be worth noting that eleven years earlier, his 1880 book “Valuable Cooking Receipts” contains a suggested menu provided by “a patriotic son of Maryland” in which crabcakes are notably absent. Murrey was a celebrity epicure whose influence spread not only through the books he wrote but through his catering. He died by mysterious and sudden suicide in 1900.

In 1894, a recipe appeared in “Mrs. Charles Gibson’s Maryland and Virginia Cook Book” for “Crab Cakes for Breakfast”:

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Even before the published recipes, crab cakes are mentioned in newspapers. An 1873 tidbit in the Harrisburg Telegraph raved excitedly that a new establishment, The Harris House, offered a bill of fare including “everything that can be desired” such as meats of all kinds, asparagus, stewed turtle, “ice cream of different flavors,” hard shell crabs, deviled crabs, and “crab cakes.”

To be fair, there is a possibility that the crab cakes in the Harris House might not have been like the crabcakes we eat today. In 1901, chef H. Fryankln Hall wrote a definitive seafood cookbook for the era, “300 Ways to Cook and Serve Shell Fish.” Born in Washington DC in 1853, Hall serves as a prime example of the fame and success that black chefs could hope to enjoy through the cooking and catering trades at the turn of the 20th century. At the time his book was published, he’d worked for some 30 years at hotels and restaurants in Rhode Island, New Jersey and Pennsylvania, and was currently working at the Boothby Hotel in Philadelphia.

300 Ways to Cook and Serve Shell Fish” contains a crab cake. Hall’s “Crab Cakes” were more like pancakes containing crabmeat:

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The Harris House may well have served this other form of ‘Crab Cake’ from Pennsylvania, or it could be that the crabcake recipe we know today traveled to Harrisburg from Maryland, shipped along with the crabs themselves, up the Susquehanna River.

H. Franklyn Hall’s book does contain a recipe for lobster or crab “cutlet”. As Bernard Herman mentioned, the true crabcake lineage likely belongs in the fritter family. These recipes tend to be called “cutlets” or “patties”. Lady Nugent, wife of a Governor of Jamaica (1801 to 1806) during the time when the island was under British rule and enslavement, wrote a diary in which she described the food of the colony. While she raved about a crab pepper-pot, she also passingly mentioned being served “flesh & fowl, crab patties &c &c” as part of a lavish dinner.

Across the seas in Edinburgh, a recipe appeared in Mrs. Williamson’s 1849 “The Practice of Cookery and Pastry” for crab or lobster cutlets, the meat mixed with pepper, lemon pickle and gravy, made “in the form of lamb cutlets”, breaded and fried, and served garnished with a crab claw.

In 1870, “Jennie June’s American Cookbook” offered up one of those “from one housewife to another” cookbooks that we know and love to this day. In it, Jennie June’s recipe for “Crab [or] Lobster Cutlets” stewed and seasoned crab meat in stock before mixing in flour and spices then breading and frying the cutlets.

These recipes appear to be bridging the divide between the modern form of crabcake and recipes dating back to Robert May’s 1660 “To Stew Crabs” and Hannah Glasse’s 1747 method “To Dress A Crab”.

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The Art of Cookery, Hannah Glasse, 1747

Still, the relationship remained fast and loose for decades to come, with deviled crabs served in the shell retaining their popularity (and eventual influence on the crabcake formula) up until the early 1900′s.

The Democratic Press in Columbus Ohio ran a lamentation about the popularity of deviled crab in 1883. “They are eaten by epicures, epicacs and other foreigners. They cost about fifty cents apiece, and are the least food for the most money extant,” the angry writer declared. “Devilled crabs are never eaten in private. What is the use of a man mortgaging all his real estate to buy devilled crabs to eat when no one is looking at him?”

As early as 1835, “crabs could be marketed much more readily in the form of crab meat than in the shell”. The demand for deviled crab still necessitated that the shells be sold in order to pack the meat back into.

The industry progressed slowly, especially with the much-more-economically-important oyster vying for resources. The Baltimore Sun reported that 1884 was a boom year for crab harvests – but that the crab picking business, which was “carried out in private residences” was “yet in its infancy.” Interestingly it is noted that “when prepared by the regular pickers the meat is in larger pieces than it is when picked by the old-fashioned restaurants, and to many it is not so pleasing to the taste.”

Over in Crisfield, the market for picked crab meat was still described as “of no importance” in 1891. Only two plants were hiring women to pick the meat, which was packed on ice in buckets and sent to hotels and restaurants. Crisfield was the number one source for blue crabs nationally at that time – with the trade occasionally escalating in violence to rival the oyster wars. In 1894 the Sun reported a rain of bullets “flying in every direction” at illegal crabbers in Dorchester County. The crabbers (plus a toddler they had sleeping onboard) made it out alive but were fined heavily and their boats confiscated.

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Advertisement, 1943

The crab dogma that is inescapable in Maryland nowadays began to set in at this time. One indignant woman wrote to the Baltimore Sun to express outrage upon learning that Philadelphians were boiling crabs.

I hardly have patience to tell those Philadelphians, but it may be good missionary work, that the way to get a dozen hard crabs ready for picking is to put them, alive, in a round pot over a good fire, pour half a pint of vinegar and a gill of water in the pot, cover up with wet seaweed if at hand, if not with ordinary fresh and green sod grass from the yards; if neither is accessible, with anything which will keep the steam in and let the vinegar steam cook the crabs. Boiled crab meat is not fit to be eaten. To use it in deviled crabs or croquettes spoils the whole dish.” – A Talbot Lady’s Indignation over a Philadelphia Recipe, Baltimore Sun, 1896

Mary Elizabeth Wilson Sherwood, who was born in New Hampshire but resided in Washington DC declared in “The Art of Entertaining” that “A devilled crab is considered good, but it should be cooked by a negro expert from Maryland.”

The urban preference for crabcakes and deviled crab prepared outside the home could explain why so few recipes for these items exist in the 19th century cooking manuscripts collection of the Maryland Historical Society.

In a previous post I began to explore the fraught history of the African Americans who achieved financial success while being pigeonholed and fetishized in the Maryland culinary culture of the late 19th and early 20th century. This took place in hotels, clubs, restaurants and private kitchens but also spilled out onto the streets of Baltimore as the “crab men” roamed the city with baskets of deviled crabs and crabcakes for sale. The Baltimore Sun lamented in 1905 that this tradition was dying out. The prices of supplies were rising, and white customers refused to pay the black vendors more than 5 cents for their wares.

The sale of crab meat was becoming increasingly industrialized, and its terms codified. A 1905 book, “The Crab Industry of Maryland” described the classes of crab meat: flakes, ordinary, and “fat meat”, “the flakes being considered much superior to the other because they are whiter and firmer.” This is today’s jumbo lump. All of this meat was still shipped with crab shells used in the serving of deviled crab.

Crabcakes had become a celebrated part of Maryland life, appearing in poetry in newspapers like the Frederick News and the Baltimore Sun. “Summertown,” a 1910 poem by “The Benztown Bard” Folger McKinsey made an explicit association between the appreciation of crabcakes and the ambiance of the street vendor:

Under an awning of canvas, striped, emerald, brown or red;
Watermelon, a cent a slice, cooling and tempting spread;
Mystical bell of the crabcake man wending his way along;
Chanting the lilt of the rhythmic rune borne of the crabcake song

Advertisements for “lump” crab meat were making an appearance, with “flake” now relegated to second-class status. “Back Fin” still served as an alternate term for the desirable large chunks of crab meat. By the late 1930s, restaurants were advertising crabcakes that were “all lump.”

In the early 1940′s, a Baltimore Sun Columnist named John O’ Ren got into a debate with a reader. The banter spanned over several columns. O’Ren considered whether ‘Deviled crab A’ la Maryland’ was more about the ingredients, or the culture and economy surrounding it. He created a hierarchy of ways to enjoy crab: steamed crabs, deviled crabs, crab soup. He conceded fourth place to the crab cake, while the reader “Crabtown Cook” asserted that crab cakes “properly prepared” could be just as good as deviled crab. Eventually another reader chimed in to lament how much of O’Ren’s column’s space was being wasted on the topic of crabs.

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A Guide to Maryland Seafood, mid 1990s

The confusion over the grades of crab continued for some time. Local food authority of the 50s and 60s Virginia Roeder listed the types as “claw or dark,” “regular white,” “special white” and “backfin or deluxe” while her nationally syndicated counterpart Clementine Paddleford explained the classes as “lump,” “flake” and “the brownish meat from the claws” which she said was preferred for cakes and to devil.

A later Baltimore Sun food writer, Rob Kasper, expressed dismay at the ongoing confusion in 1988. “As recently as five years ago, when you bought a package labeled ‘backfin lump,’ it was the king of the hill, top of line, the best meat the blue crab had to offer. Now instead of the top of the line, backfin is second, sometimes even third in line,” yielding to lump and jumbo lump. Competition was shifting the terms towards the more descriptive. To this day, the terms remain arbitrary but have become more generally accepted.

My own bias against the jumbo lump hegemony was first backed up in the Sun as early as 1948, when Eastern-shoreman W.C. Mills shared his crabcake recipe which follows my own preference: “All the meat goes into one pile – claw, lump and flake,” and with it the fat. “The fat makes all the difference in the world… packers can’t ship it; it spoils too quickly.” (Growing up, this is what we called the ‘mustard’.)

Woodberry Kitchen’s Spike Gjerde declared in 2011 that he “would love to be able to buy a whole-crab mix in a single container.” (”Crab lovers: Can you get over the lump?”, Baltimore Sun, 12/5/11) Having some celebrity chef plus food writer Richard Gorelick share my opinion made me feel credentialed, even if I’d been beaten to the punch.

Studying history is more like a day of snacking than a satisfying meal. Sure, I learned a lot of things were untrue, but what about truths? Where’s the zinger? Did Terrapin Tom popularize the crab-cake? Did the preference for lump stem from the suspicions of fish or other adulterants in crabcakes sold on the street? Was the crabcake ever truly democratic or just another of unequal Baltimore’s elitist traditions?

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“Indians of Early Maryland” Harold Randall Manakee , 1959

There was no definitive culinary moment happening as the white man stole the land, the water, and the crabcake too. No Worlds Fair bringing the crabcake into the spotlight.

Crab cakes were made in many forms, and many hands, in bondage, in fancy hotels, in make-do kitchens. They’ve been made from claw meat, jumbo lump, with bread, no bread, seasoned or plain. These options have been alternately guided by gourmet preference and everyday necessity.

The story of our favorite regional dish may not be exceptional, but it is emblematic.

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Recipe for four small crabcakes:

  • 6 steamed crabs
  • a slice of bread if you want, or:
  • cracker crumbs if you want
  • milk if you are using bread
  • mayonnaise if you are into mayonnaise
  • 1 egg if you like form and tidiness but hate mayonnaise or didn’t feel like using mayonnaise

Directions:
Pick all of the meat and fat out of your crabs. If you are using bread, tear up the bread and soak it in a little milk. (W.C. Mills did it that way so I did too.) I used half of a potato roll hot dog bun. Yeah, that’s right; come at me, bro.
Beat the egg or put some mayonnaise into a bowl, mix the crumbs or the wet bread or whatever… basically mix all the stuff that isn’t crab together really well. Then gently fold in the crab so it’s evenly coated.
Fry it or broil it if that’s your thing. Serve with home-made tartar sauce (if u want), a little bit of smugness and lots of love.

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Clam Fritters, Virginia Roeder

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Home Economics as a professional pursuit codified “women’s work” and amended school curricula, but it also opened doors for women professionally.

The name Virginia Roeder may ring a bell to longtime Baltimore recipe collectors. For 23 years she wrote for the “women’s pages” of the Baltimore Evening Sun, offering guidance on cooking and housekeeping. She penned three columns weekly, totaling around 3500 over the course of her career. The most enduring legacy of these columns is the “Fun with Food” and “Fun with Sea Food” cookbooks still serving many Baltimore kitchens today.

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Richard Q. Yardley illustration, “Fun With Sea Food”,1960

In 1953, the Sun profiled Roeder, who was then hosting a Television show called “Nancy Troy’s Food Show.” (I am not sure why she assumed the “role” of Nancy Troy on the show.) The Sun reported that Roeder’s days began at 5:30 a.m., preparing breakfast for her husband and three children before heading to work at the William S. Baer School where she taught home economics to disabled children. After a day’s work she prepared dinner for her family and then “[sat] down with her husband to bring his company’s books up to date” for his wholesale distribution business.

In 1961 the Sun ran a highly illustrated tour of the Roeder’s home on Meadowwood Road, asking “how does an advisor to housewives manage her own home?” They described the decor in the “immaculate” home, complete with pool table, children’s playroom, “roomy pink kitchen,” and a corner desk in the master bedroom where Roeder typed her columns on Saturdays.

Basically, Roeder was Baltimore’s own Martha Stewart. (Roeder served on the board of a bank – she did not get involved in any insider trading, however.)

Born Virginia Voigt in Oklahoma, Roeder followed in her mother’s footsteps to pursue a career in education, earning a bachelor’s degree from the University of Science and Arts at Oklahoma (formerly Oklahoma College for Women). She soon ended up in Baltimore, where she made her mark on the school system, the food culture, and even in banking.

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She’s been inducted to the Oklahoma College for Women hall of fame, where a biography of her achievements declares itself to be “simply a list of firsts.” In addition to earning a master’s and a doctoral degree at Johns Hopkins, Virginia Roeder became the “first female Deputy Superintendent Baltimore City Public Schools,” “first woman president Maryland Association of Secondary School Principals,” and “first woman board of directors Carrolton Bank.”

After retiring from education she continued to be a successful businesswoman in real estate and travel agencies.

Even while working towards all of these goals, Roeder maintained the refined image of an ideal mid-century “housewife.”

I got my copies of “Fun with Sea Food” from the Book Thing. The photo at the front shows a smiling Virginia Roeder. The author’s biography lists one accomplishment after another before declaring “Mrs. Roeder does all the cooking for her family.”

Two recipes for crab cakes are included, one of which has been marked “excellent” by my book’s previous owner. Other sections besides “The Delightful Crab” are adorably titled: “The Fascinating Fish,” “The Sophisticated Scallop,” “The Admirable Oyster.”

The recipe for Clam Fritters asks below the title, “Haven’t you ever made them?” I hadn’t so I took Virginia Roeder up on her challenge.

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Recipe:

  • .5 Pint clams, minced
  • .75 Cups flour
  • .5 Tablespoons baking powder
  • 1 teaspoon crab seasoning (adapted – Roeder used nutmeg and salt._
  • 1 beaten egg
  • .5 Cups milk
  • 2 Teaspoons grated onion
  • .5 Tablespoons melted butter
  • oil for frying

Sift dry ingredients together. Combine egg, milk, onion, butter and clams. Add to dry ingredients and stir until smooth. Drop batter by teaspoonfuls into hot oil, 350 degrees, and fry until golden brown on each side.

Recipe adapted from “Fun With Sea Food,” Virginia Roeder

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Smierkase Cake (Smearcase Cheesecake)

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While many Baltimoreans get excitable about the annual Peach Cake tradition, Peach Cake’s Plain Jane cousin Smearcase gets somewhat overlooked. I do mean that literally. With a similar German origin to Peach Cake, Smearcase cake can often be found in the same bakery cases, waiting to be noticed.

I first introduced this cake with Elizabeth Ellicott Lea’s smearcase recipe. In her case, she was referring to the cheese itself. It is a (dying) regional peculiarity that the name of the cottage cheese has lent itself to the cheesecake.

Recipes for the classic Baltimore dessert (named as such) are hard to come by. The only one that I know of comes from the same BGE Cookbook that I got my peach cake recipe from, “Maryland Classics.”

Online recipes vary – some use cream cheese or a combination for a more creamy effect. One recipe – purporting to be Hoehns’, combines the cheese with a custard-like filling. I wanted to follow in the tradition of the Elizabeth Ellicott Lea cheese cake that I made, so I started from scratch once again.

During my vacation travels, I had obtained some nigari from J.Q. Dickinson salt works. Nigari is typically used in the making of tofu but Nancy Bruns from Dickinson Salt Works successfully used it to make ricotta cheese. I was happy to find a cream-top milk to use, for some extra “authenticity”.

Even with that, this is a pretty light, and frankly bland little cake. I’m not giving up on this recipe, however. It provides a good canvas for trying out different cinnamons. It would be wonderful topped with some fruit preserves. Plus I have enough nigari to curdle 24 gallons of milk.

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Recipe:

Crust:

  • 1.25 Cups unsifted all-purpose flour
  • .25 Cups sugar
  • .25 Teaspoons salt
  • .5 Cups butter
  • 1 egg, beaten

Combine first 3 ingredients; mix well. Cut in butter or margarine until the mixture resembles coarse cornmeal. Add egg; mix well. Pat dough into a 13 x 9 x 2-inch pan, coming half way up the sides of the pan.

Filling:

  • 2 eggs, separated
  • 1 Lb small curd cottage cheese
  • .75 Cup sugar
  • 2 Tablespoons cornstarch
  • 1 Teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 1 Cup dairy sour cream

Beat egg whites until stiff but not dry; set aside. In large bowl of electric mixer, combine remaining ingredients; beat until smooth. Fold in egg whites; pour into crust. Bake at 375°F for 55 to 60 minutes*. Serves 12.

Recipe from BGE cookbook “Maryland Classics.” I baked it for about 45 minutes and it turned out quite dark so the recipe may need adjusting.

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Fresh cheese:

  • ½ gallon milk
  • 1 tsp nigari
  • salt to taste

Heat milk plus salt until milk is scalded. As it begins to cool, stir in 1 tsp nigari. Strain with cheesecloth, sprinkle with additional salt if desired and store until needed.

From J. Q. Dickinson Salt Works

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West Virginia Hot Dog Sauce

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This summer we took a vacation to Cincinnati (with many stops on the way). It seems very de rigeur these days for travelers through southwestern WV to sample their famous regional hot dog establishments, so that is what we did. With some guidance from the West Virginia Hot Dog Blog, we saw some sights, ate some slaw, consumed a lot of sweet tea, took mental notes.

For those not in the know, WV hot dogs consist of a steamed hot dog on a steamed bun, served with mustard, onions, “sauce” (a fine-ground chili variant), and a sweet, creamy slaw. The whole thing is a delicious squishy gooey mess meant to elevate the cheap hot dog with a contrast of the savory spice of chili and the crisp cool slaw.

Each dog was memorable in its own way – whether it was the experience of sitting at the King Tut Drive-In in Beckley reading their massive menu, the upside down chili-on-top dog at Toms (a greek style chili that was not unlike the Skyline Chili in Cincinnati), or the intriguing yellow slaw atop the Chums dog in Marmet (this was my personal favorite… I THINK).

You would think that this vacation would resolve with a bit of hot dog fatigue. Yet within a week of returning, Burgersub and I agreed that we could really go for another West Virginia dog.

The addictive nature of the combo might explain why, in its origin story, the chili-slaw-topped hot dog spread throughout the region after being popularized at the Stopette Drive In in Charleston.

The Hot Dog blog has laid down some basic rules and principles.  “If you have to ask for slaw on a hot dog, it’s not a true WVHD.” They’ve created a convenient little map to illustrate the culture of the WV Hot Dog.

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http://wvhotdogblog.blogspot.com/

Imagine my surprise when I encountered this recipe for “West Virginia Hot Dog Sauce” in the famous “What Is Cooking On Party Line” cookbook. The contributor of the recipe has too common a name to trace the lineage of this recipe, but it may be worth noting:

In most of the state people call it “chili”. In Huntington and Marion County it is most often called sauce. The difference is largely semantic although in areas where it is called sauce the substance is usually finer ground and more liquid in consistency.” –  The West Virginia Hot Dog Blog

This recipe, however, is not particularly liquid-y. Nor do they mention grinding the meat finer – a common step in recreating true WV Hot Dog Sauce. Ronni Lundy, author of “Victuals: An Appalachian Journey, with Recipes” mentions that a potato masher is sometimes used for this purpose.

I used Lundy’s formula for the slaw, substituting some whey for the buttermilk. I also used red cabbage, which I didn’t see anywhere in my WV hot dog travels. But as you know, my motto is that nothing is more “authentic” than to work with what you’ve got. Burgersub insisted the onions go under the hot dog. (The mustard gets spread on the bun.) For the record, our guests were all emphatic converts on chili-slaw dogs.

To further pervert these dogs, I used high-quality hot dogs, grilled them, and didn’t even steam the buns. What can I say? If you want something done right, don’t look at me.

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Recipe:

(Served on steamed buns with steamed hot dogs with chopped onions and/or slaw.)

  • 2 lbs. hamburger
  • 1.5 Cups chopped onion, chop fine
  • 3 small cloves garlic, chop fine
  • salt, pepper, hot sauce (your favorite)
  • 2 Tablespoons paprika
  • 4 Tablespoons chili powder
  • 2 small cans tomato soup
  • 2 Cups water

Fry onions, garlic, salt, pepper and hot sauce in a large Dutch oven, large heavy skillet or heavy-weight pot. When the mixture is brown add hamburger. Cook until well done, stirring and mixing often. Add chili powder and paprika. Mix well. Add tomato soup and simmer for 45 minutes. Stir often to prevent sticking. The above makes ½ gallon of sauce. This may be used right away or may be put in containers suitable to your family’s needs and freeze.

This recipe may be used for spaghetti sauce with the addition of the following:

  • 1 (15 oz.) can tomato sauce
  • 1 c. water

Anna Lee Johnson

Recipe from “What Is Cooking On Party Line”

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