Stuffed Eggplant, Gerald W. Johnson

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To say that [Baltimore] is an ugly city is to give an altogether false impression, for ugliness ordinarily is construed as a negative quality, the absence of beauty. The astounding, the incredible, the downright fabulous ugliness of Baltimore, on the other hand, is distinctively a positive quality. The amazed newcomer to the city is almost persuaded that she studied ugliness, practiced it long and toilsomely, made a philosophy of ugliness and raised it to a fine art, so that in the end it has become a work of genius more fascinating than spick-and-span tidiness could ever be.” –  Gerald W. Johnson, Century Magazine, 1928

Gerald W. Johnson has a brief biography written before the first of his two recipe contributions to “Eat Drink and Be Merry in Maryland,” in which he is noted as a biographer of Andrew Jackson and John Randolph of Roanoke. Nearly 100 years later, Johnson is more remembered for his outspoken liberal (for the time) opinions than by these works.

Born in North Carolina in 1890, he moved to Baltimore in 1926 and remained here for the rest of his life, writing for the Evening Sun in addition to many national publications. Johnson reflected on national politics from a Southern perspective, but also on Maryland issues – upon his arrival, he wrote, he was surprised to see the Taney statue; “in a respectable city I should as soon expected to find a statue of Beelzebub.” Johnson spent many of his years in Maryland at a home on 1310 Bolton Street. He had more recently been living in Towson when he died in 1980.

From the vantage of this Union state just below the Mason-Dixon line, Johnson famously criticized the South and the glorification of a war that had been lost because “God Almighty had decreed that slavery had to go.” 

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According to biographer Vincent Fitzpatrick:

In Johnson’s published assessments, the Agrarians had a flawed vision of Southern history; they gloried in a storybook past that existed only in their own minds. Moreover, he thought them sheltered from the more unattractive aspects of contemporary Southern life. He recognized that they were highly literate, patriotic, and well-intentioned, but he found them a dangerous foe that needed to be vanquished. The Agrarians, in turn, saw Johnson as a flaming liberal, a Menckenite, and a turncoat, now living with the enemy, whose criticism profaned his native land.” – Gerald W. Johnson: From Southern Liberal to National Conscience, Vincent Fitzpatrick

Frederick Phillip Steiff promoted this romanticized view of Southern sensibility in “Eat, Drink & Be Merry in Maryland.” Nonetheless, he proudly included Johnson’s recipes for “Stuffed Eggplant” and “Artichokes from Armenia” along with the short bio of Johnson. The two men possibly met through connections at the Hamilton Street Club, which is said to have been the nexus of Johnson’s Baltimore social life.

Gerald W. Johnson’s writings stand in contrast to his friend and Sun paper colleague H.L. Mencken. Johnson wrote with a fair share of outrage, but a sense of optimism in a time when social change appeared to be underway. In 1965, he wrote:

The historical significance of this republic is simply that it affords men an opportunity to learn how to be free, unhampered by the bonds that Church and State have laid upon the generations of the past; but every rational man knows that the heaviest bonds of Church and State were not as weighty as the gyves locked upon our wrists by passion, prejudice, ignorance, and superstition.

Despite Gerald W. Johnson’s tirades against inequality, Fitzpatrick points out that Johnson still paradoxically defended segregation and was known as a “liberal segregationist.” Again: there are no heroes in history. Johnson’s writing attempted to turn an eye on the contradictions of society – many of which we are still grappling with today.

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Recipe:

  • eggplant
  • salt
  • Ground meat (esp lamb)
  • small amount cooked rice
  • Seeded raisins
  • Black pepper
  • breadcrumbs
  • butter

Remove the stem from the eggplant and cut it in half lengthwise. Boil in salted water until the meaty inside of the eggplant is tender enough to be scooped out with a spoon, (about fifteen minutes). Mix the scooped out eggplant with ground meat, preferably lamb (*I seasoned my lamb with ras el hanout and it was great), a small amount of cooked rice, some seeded raisins and salt and pepper to taste. Pack the mixture back into the shell, and place in a greased baking dish. Sprinkle with breadcrumbs and dot with butter, and bake at 375° for fifteen minutes, or until the top is lightly browned. (Maybe stick it under the broiler for a few seconds for a more dramatic effect.)

Recipe Adapted from “Eat, Drink & Be Merry in Maryland”

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Scalloped Potatoes, Julia Courtney

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Cooking from “300 Years of Black Cooking in St. Mary’s County” always provides an opportunity for excursions into some neglected aspects of Maryland cuisine (both regionally and racially). This week I made a simple recipe for a scalloped potato dish, a comforting winter side. The recipe author: Julia Courtney? I’ve tried my best. As I’ve mentioned before, St. Mary’s County has a web of surnames linking Black and White families to the region’s plantation past.

While there is a relative wealth of resources for learning about the families who contributed to “300 Years of Black Cooking in St. Mary’s County,” it’s not always so easy to connect the dots definitively.

As best as I can tell, Julia Courtney may be Julia Dorothy Courtney, born in 1905, and married to James Cornelius Courtney. Julia Dorothy and James Cornelius’ son Joseph married a woman named Julia Haskell, a woman from South Carolina. She too may be the originator of the recipe. To further confuse me, one of the interviewees in the Slackwater Archive oral histories, named Dorothy Courtney, ultimately appeared to be from a White watermen family, despite being right about the same age.

So I can’t turn up too much about Julia Courtney herself.

Nonetheless, I always welcome an excuse to revisit the oral histories and photos documenting the life of St. Mary’s county farming communities.

Julia Dorothy and James Cornelius Courtney are listed as a family of farmers in the St. Mary’s county censuses of the early decades of the 20th century.

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Canned Vegetables in home of FSA borrower, 1941 photo John Collier, loc.gov

Farming was the primary listed trade at the time – especially for Black residents. Flipping through the pages of the 1930 census reveals farming families with all of the names found in “300 Years of Black Cooking…”; Dotson, Briscoe, Dyson, Dove, Courtney… While most heads of families are listed as farmers or farm laborers, and a few are listed as watermen, it is likely that many citizens labored in both industries to make ends meet.

In addition to the oral history transcriptions I found two books in the Pratt Library that put some of the oral histories and photo-documentation together. Andrea Hammer, the founder of the St. Mary’s County Documentation Project, edited two books documenting St. Mary’s County. “In My Time” focuses on the work of Black and White women including farming, seafood and midwifery. “But Now When I Look Back” showcases some Farm Security Administration photographs (as seen in the Edith Dyson’s crab-cakes entry.)

The photos reveal a farming community working together – sharing resources, building infrastructure, raising families.

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James Bush with horse which is owned cooperatively by three farmers, 1940, photo John Vachon, loc.gov

Modern stereotypes all but erase the existence and history of Black farmers but there is patent absurdity to this. First and foremost is the fact that ancestors of many African Americans were captured and enslaved for the sole purpose of farming. In many cases, the enslaved were allotted gardens to grow food in their own time, essentially necessitating a life of farming upon farming.

In general, it makes little sense to presume that any one race or culture is more inclined to farming than another. The food we all eat comes from farms and this is the case in most of the world.

Industrial agriculture has made little room for small farmers in general, and as usual there are are historical barriers preventing Black Americans from getting a foothold in an already-challenging industry.

For decades, the U.S. Department of Agriculture discriminated against Black farmers, excluding them from farm loans and assistance. Meanwhile, racist violence in the South targeted land-owning Black farmers, whose very existence threatened the sharecropping system. These factors led to the loss of about 14 million acres of Black-owned rural land—an area nearly the size of West Virginia.” – After a Century In Decline, Black Farmers Are Back And On the Rise, Leah Penniman

It takes a concerted effort to recover from such obstacles but there is movement in Maryland and beyond. In addition to the many urban farms and community gardens that aim to reconnect citizens with their food supply, more concerted efforts like the Black Dirt Farm Collective (Preston, MD) are working with churches and Public Health groups to address food deserts and revive Black agrarian culture.

That spirit of co-operation is not unlike that seen in some of the Farm Security Administration photographs. Sadly, many of the photos are lacking complete captions naming the participants.

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Well installation in Ridge, MD 1941, photo John Collier, loc.gov

Many Farm Security Administration photos and oral histories depict crushing poverty that Saint Mary’s County residents faced amidst a life of grueling work on land and in water. Many families, according to “But Now When I Look Back,” eventually moved to Baltimore and elsewhere to seek a better life:

Not many people now have gardens like they used to because they’re working… different jobs, and they don’t have time to work the gardens. Not as many people can things now. Most everything gets frozen. Not as many people put up jellies as they used to. But I still feel that if there was a need, everybody would rally around and help the person. The only difference is , now it seems to be if there’s a need. At that time, it wasn’t because there was a need. It was because “I want to.” People just went out spontaneously and did it. But it seems now the sharing and caring is there but is sort of dwindled down to, “If you need me I’ll be there and I’ll share.

Most of my generation moved away, because of getting jobs… But I believe that wherever they are they’re still probably sharing cause I don’t think they could get too far away from it, having been brought up that way.” – Elvare Gaskin, “But Now when I Look Back: Remembering St. Mary’s County Through Farm Security Administration Photographs

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  • as many potatoes as you need
  • 1 small onion, chopped
  • salt
  • pepper, black
  • milk enough to cover the potatoes 
  • 2 Tablespoon butter

Peel and slice the potatoes thinly. Place in a greased casserole dish, mixing with onions, and season with salt and pepper. Dot the potatoes with butter, and pour the milk over them. Bake very slowly in a 200° oven until brown and crispy on top, about 1 ½ hours.

Recipe adapted from “300 Years of Black Cooking in St. Mary’s County“

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String Bean Casserole with Black Walnuts

This unusual casserole is one of the less notable recipes from Mrs. J. Millard Tawes’ “Favorite Maryland Recipes.” I love her little book for easy weeknight dinners but this recipe may have confirmed my suspicion that her book contains a lot of filler between the classics.

It’s fitting then for me to post it today because it is essentially filler on my own site. I have some great interviews and research-heavy posts coming up but it’s just not happening this week.

I thought I might write some fun facts about American Cheese but you can just head on over to Wikipedia for that.

In conclusion, try this recipe if you looooove black walnuts and have a lot to spare, but don’t try to swap this one out for the Thanksgiving mainstay or your family will disown you.

Recipe:

  • 4 Tablespoons butter
  • 6 Tablespoon flour
  • 1 bay leaf
  • 2 Cups  chicken stock
  • 3 Cups cooked string beans
  • .25 Lb  American cheese
  • .25 Cup chopped black walnuts

If using fresh green beans, trim, halve and blanch or steam them until cooked but crisp. Brown butter in sauce pan over low heat with bay leaf. Add flour and stir until blended. Gradually add stock. Cook until smooth and thickened. Fold in cheese and stir until melted. Arrange beans in casserole dish. Pour the sauce over the beans and top with walnuts. Bake for 20 minutes at 350°

Recipe adapted from “My Favorite Maryland Recipes”

Gross’ Coate Stewed Mushrooms

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My uncle found a gigantic lion’s mane mushroom and gave me a piece. It was slightly browning, and compounded with the fact that these mushrooms are not exactly beauty queens, the photos are not appetizing. You’ve been warned – scroll down at your own risk.

This recipe was contributed to Eat, Drink & Be Merry in Maryland by Mrs. Charles H. Tilghman of Gross’ Coate. The recipe includes a peculiar instruction:

“Cook a silver spoon in [the mushrooms]. If the spoon becomes black [they] must not be eaten.“

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Gross’ Coate, Maryland Historical Trust

I thought I should heed this advice, considering the sad state of my
mushroom. I used a necklace from my jewelry-making days, as I am not in
possession of any silver spoon. The silver remained untarnished, thank
goodness. I later looked into this and found that this advice is a
completely bogus way to detect poisonous mushrooms. Lucky for me, lion’s manes don’t really have a poisonous counterpart.

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Gross’ Coate is a historical estate on the Wye River in Talbot County. Built in 1760, the property remained in the Tilghman family until 1983.

The tract of land had been patented by Roger Gross in 1658. Through a sale to Henrietta Maria Lloyd, the widow of Philemon Lloyd, and a subsequent marriage of her daughter, the Tilghman family ownership of Gross’ Coate began.

With additions spanning through 1914, the house once boasted a dairy, a meat house, large kitchen wing, and a new dining room that was built in 1815.

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Gross’ Coate outbuilding, Maryland Historical Trust

In Eat, Drink & Be Merry in Maryland, Frederick Phillip Stieff wrote:

“Situated overlooking the beautiful Wye River it requires but little to imagine oneself on the banks of the Thames, excepting that there is not the turbulent river life of the latter although in the humble opinion of the writer far more beauty.”

Stieff may be downplaying the turbulence just a tad.

In 1790, famed American painter and recent widower Charles Wilson Peale paid a visit to Gross’ Coate to paint the Tilghman family, then under the charge of Richard Tilghman. It seems that Peale fell in love with Richard’s sister Mary (aka Molly). Richard forbade such a marriage and locked Molly away.

Peale resorted to taking laudanum to help himself sleep during this stressful ordeal, to no avail. Some say that he spitefully painted a scowl upon Richard’s face in his portrait of the man. As for Molly, she later went on to marry Edward Roberts, allegedly  the “scapegrace of the county.”  According to “The Big Book of Maryland Ghost Stories,” scapegrace means LOSER.

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Molly Tilghman, & ole scowl-face Richard Tilghman, MDHS Museum Dept. 1973.13.3 & 1973.13.2

As for recipe contributor Mrs. Charles H. Tilghman, wife of Robert’s great-grandson, I couldn’t find out much about her except newspaper ads revealing that she’d lost a cow, was selling wheat, and an announcement forbidding trespassing on her property. Because everyone checks the classifieds before trespassing…

I had some extra cheddar-cheese pie crust, so I baked that into little crusts and put the mushrooms in there. Along with those raw carrots [seen in photos], which I did indeed eat, it made a nice lunch.

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Recipe:

  • ½ cup mushrooms
  • 1.5 tb butter
  • ½ tb or less white flour
  • black pepper
  • salt, ½ tsp

Peel & wash mushroom(s).  Heat butter in a skillet or pot, on medium-low heat. Add mushrooms plus dusts of white flour. Season with black pepper and salt. Stir  to prevent burning until water from mushrooms begins to collect. Cook for 45 minutes or until tender.

Recipe adapted from “Eat, Drink & Be Merry in Maryland”

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Broccoli Crab Soup

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Published in 2003, “I Can Cook You Can Cook” may not be the most historic in my collection, but it does offer a snapshot of a Maryland food personality and a time and place from whence it came. (Most cookbooks do, which is why I love them.)

The book itself hearkens to a less “sophisticated” era in cookbooks, in contrast to modern photo-laden coffee-table cookbooks. The recipes are mostly simple weeknight fare.

More importantly, the book serves as a record of its character of an author, Wayne Brokke. While you may not find artfully-composed photos accompanying each recipe, instead the book is peppered with Brokke’s stories and humor.

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Beginning in 1978 Brokke operated a restaurant in Federal Hill called.. “The Soup Kitchen” (I know). He later opened a second location in the exciting new 1980 Harborplace development and later branched out into barbeque.

Following the trajectory of Brokke’s restaurants (and eventual advisable name changes) leads to documentation of the vicissitudes of Harborplace since its opening in 1980. Baltimore was abuzz with high hopes for this pocket of commerce. The press followed up occasionally as it experienced seasonal slumps in winter, business turnover and eventual stability.

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1980, Baltimore Sun

Wayne Brokke, proprietor of Wayne’s Bar- B-Que and one of the harbor’s original merchants, told me that Harborplace had experienced ups and downs over the past two decades. After an initial surge of success there was a period, about 10 years ago, when restaurants were closing and things were looking sketchy, he said. But in the past three years business has been on an upswing, he said, and now the harbor is booming – literally. As Brokke spoke, the Pride of Baltimore II fired its cannon, its way of saying good- bye to the crowd on the docks. “ – Rob Kasper, Baltimore Sun, 2000

Most Baltimoreans don’t spend much time in the Harbor, and I don’t actually remember Wayne’s Bar-B-Que. Sun reviews range from considering Wayne Brokke to be a fixture and a culinary master, to dismissing his restaurants for being too “trendy” and his cooking “a joke.” After reading these reviews plus stories about the various lean times and rent hikes, I shared in Brokke’s relief at leaving the industry.

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Harborplace ad featuring Wayne Brokke front left

In a Baltimore magazine article he lamented the high rents and unoriginal shopping options left at Harborplace.

Over the years, what was Baltimore’s main street got turned into just another mall,” says Wayne Brokke, who ran Harborplace eateries, like Wayne’s Bar-B-Que, for 23 years

“In the early going, the Rouse company celebrated the tenants and appreciated how we all put our blood, sweat, and tears in there,” Brokke says. “After a while, they shifted focus more to the bottom line.” – Brennen Jensen, Baltimore Magazine, 2010

According to a 2007 article updating his whereabouts, he was dabbling in commercial acting, real-estate and earning a philosophy degree from UMBC. During the 1990s, Brokke had also done a cooking segment on WBAL-TV. Readers, if you have recordings of this please do share.

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Since Wayne Brokke is most famous for his soups – award winning crab soup being foremost- I made a soup recipe that he declared to be a “favorite of Mayor Schafer.” We had some broccoli from the CSA so “Broccoli Crab Soup” seemed as good as any.

I felt some reservation buying crabmeat, considering that I could have simply made this recipe without but I must say that the addition was DELICIOUS. This soup was so good, so wonderfully rich, and the crab flavor spread throughout to really enhance the dish.

As soups often do, it improved the next day. There was no day after that because we ate it all.

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Recipe:

  • 1 lb crab meat
  • 4 cups stock
  • 2 Cups half-and-half
  • 1 lb chopped broccoli
  • 1 cup chopped onion
  • 1 tablespoon curry powder
  • 2 teaspoons chopped garlic
  • 1 stick of butter
  • 4 oz flour
  • 1 Teaspoon hot sauce
  • a few drops of Maggi (my addition – optional)
  • salt
  • black pepper

Sauté chopped onion in butter with Maggi (if using) until onions are translucent. Add curry powder and garlic and stir to combine. On medium heat, add flour and stir a few minutes until smooth. Gradually add stock, whisking to combine. Bring almost to a boil and stir in broccoli. Cook for 15 minutes. Add half-and-half and bring to a simmer. Stir in hot sauce and add salt and pepper to taste before gently folding in crab meat. Allow to simmer for about 5-10 minutes. Serve hot.

Recipe adapted from “I Can Cook, You Can Cook!” by Wayne Brokke

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