Southern Recipes
376 recipes found

Tennessee Onions
The humble onion is the star ingredient in this simple Southern casserole — already sweet Vidalias are thinly sliced into rings and baked for over an hour, making them even sweeter. Sharp Cheddar, Swiss and Parmesan bring a salty richness to the three pounds of caramelized vegetables (much like their juxtaposition in French onion soup but with far less hands-on work). A mix of pantry spices creates a barbecue-inspired blend, but this lineup can be swapped with a number of seasonings, including Cajun. While lemon is not traditional, an optional squeeze of juice can add a welcome acidity to the rich, sweet casserole. Despite its name, Tennessee onions are popular beyond the state’s borders. Its origin is fuzzy, but some sources trace this thrifty dish as far back as the Great Depression. Serve Tennessee onions alongside pork chops, at the Thanksgiving table or mounded on a burger.

Gâteau Nana
Fashioned after a traditional French gâteau Breton, the gâteau Basque and even (and maybe especially) the galette des rois — all cakes made of sweet or quick puff dough doubled up and filled with fruit or cream or nuts — this inspired version, uniquely Louisianan and lovingly called gâteau nana, takes inspiration from each. Filled with a pecan cream, this beautiful, simple yet rustic cake was adapted from one developed by Melissa Martin, who was inspired by Nancy Brewer’s version at The Kitchen Shop in Grand Coteau, La. Melissa M. Martin touches upon recipe inspiration in “Bayou” (Artisan, 2024): “Nostalgia drives those of us chasing a specific flavor. Nancy and I both believe in these little things that are so important to a season and a community and how to bake them into dough for celebration.”

Buttermilk Pie
Buttermilk pie is one of those desserts that can be made with pantry staples whenever the fancy strikes: a make-do pie, if you will. It belongs to a category of pies, also called desperation pies, that home cooks turned to when ingredients were scarce. Start with a store-bought crust or your favorite pastry and then fill it with a deliciously simple custard flavored with the appealing tang of buttermilk and lemon and the creamy richness of butter. Blind baking, or baking an empty crust with pie weights, is an important step for many custard pies. The baked custard slightly softens the underlying crust, but blind-baking sets the crust and gives it a head start towards crispness. Be sure to fill the empty, chilled crust with enough pie weights, beans, or rice to come all the way up to the top so that the edges don’t slump down while it bakes.

Slow-Cooker Chicken and Dumplings
Chicken and dumplings are a mainstay of the American South—though similar dishes exist worldwide—where there are generally two versions: stewed chicken with unleavened, chewy, noodle-like dumplings that are rolled out before being dropped into the broth; and fluffy leavened dumplings that are much like drop biscuits, which get dolloped on top of the stew, where they puff up as they poach. The dish works beautifully translated to the slow cooker because the chicken and vegetables can braise slowly, intensifying the flavor of the chicken broth. This variation uses leavened drop-dumplings with a touch of cornmeal for sweet-earthy flavor and buttermilk for tenderness and tanginess. This dish is traditionally made with a whole chicken cut up into parts, but this streamlined adaptation uses boneless, skinless chicken thighs.

Junkberry Pie
Underneath a firm, thick layer of sweet and tart cream lies a deep sea of berries, a combination known as “Junkberry” at Royers Round Top Cafe in Round Top, Texas. Husband and wife owners JB and Jamie Royer added the fruit pie to the menu in 2011 after Mr. Royer’s father’s 60th birthday, when the cafe’s baker at the time brought a pie with a similar topping to the party. That dessert inspired the junkberry version — a mix of berries, peaches and apple — which became one of the top sellers at the small town restaurant, located about 90 minutes east of Austin. Utilizing frozen berries and peaches makes this pie accessible year-round, but fresh fruit can be used in their places. Follow the cafe’s lead and serve it with a big scoop of vanilla ice cream.

Jalapeño-Corn Dip
This much-loved and often devoured rich and spicy molten dip can be found at parties and potlucks across the Midwest and South. The heat from the jalapeños is present but tamed by sweet corn kernels, cream cheese, sour cream and melty Monterey Jack. While two jalapeños might seem like a lot, keep in mind that they’re seeded (feel free to leave the seeds in one or both if your palate favors spice — after all, the chiles are part of the dip’s draw). Frozen corn makes this a year-round dish, but of course, fresh kernels work just as well if the vegetable happens to be in season. Bacon can be omitted for a vegetarian version; in this case, skip to step 2, adding an extra tablespoon of oil and stirring in a teaspoon of smoked paprika for a hint of smoke.

Oven-Fried Hot Wings
Unlike Buffalo wings up north, Atlanta-style hot wings are sharp and salty, with undeniable savoriness (and little or no butter). One whiff of the sharp red hot sauce, unbridled with cayenne flavor and vinegary tang, should instantly make you drool. Serve these oven-fried wings with ranch or blue cheese dressing as a dipping sauce, as they do in Atlanta, along with celery and carrot sticks to help offset the heat. They’re also fun to eat between bites of crispy chicken.

Tea Cakes
A beloved treat in Southern baking, these simple, dense, slightly sweet cakes moved to the North during the Great Migration, becoming part of the culinary traditions of northern Black communities like Weeksville in Brooklyn. Similar in texture to a British scone, and the perfect accompaniment to tea or coffee, tea cakes were made by enslaved Africans on plantations using easily accessible ingredients like eggs, baking powder, flour and sugar. Endlessly adaptable, the dough can be modified by adding more baking spices, such as clove or allspice. You also can use your preferred sweetener, whether it’s molasses or honey, in place of white sugar; just reduce the amount to 3/4 cup.
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These Super-Crunchy Fried Green Tomatoes Bring Me Back to My Southern Childhood
Dipped in rémoulade or slathered with pimento cheese, these crispy Southern fried green tomatoes are the perfect use for unripe tomatoes.

Roasted Shrimp With Okra and Tomatoes
In the South, okra and tomatoes are the crown jewels of the summer. Frying is the most common preparation for okra but roasting also brings the best out of these two favorites; tomatoes become sweeter and okra softens, developing a deeper savoriness brought forward by a simple seasoning of salt and pepper. Shrimp brings the dish to a new level: The smoked paprika and oregano are a perfect foil to the shrimp's own natural, delicate flavor, and, swirled together with the olive oil and tomato juice in the pan, the result is a meal with the makings of a stew with a fraction of the time and effort. It truly tastes like a warm, summer, Sunday evening. When choosing okra, go for the smaller to medium sized pods. The bigger the okra, the more likely it is to be stringy and tough. Serve with cooked rice or atop angel hair pasta.

Pimento Cheese and Tomato Sandwiches
Every summer, Southerners await the arrival of juicy, ripe tomatoes to make a classic tomato sandwich. This version of the beloved staple swaps in pimento cheese as the creamy companion instead of the typical mayonnaise. The pimento cheese is studded with sharp Cheddar and jalapeño, giving it just enough kick without completely overshadowing the tomato. Choose tomatoes that are ripe but still somewhat firm: You want them to have the structural integrity that prevents a soggy sandwich. While many Southerners prefer plain white bread, you could opt for sourdough or brioche. This recipe is great for parties and group picnics, but don’t feel pressured to only make these for a crowd — the recipe can be easily halved. You could also use the extra to spread on crackers or add to biscuit dough. You’ll end up with four cups of pimento cheese, which will keep in the refrigerator for up to a week. However, the sandwiches are best eaten as soon as they’re assembled.

Buttermilk Chess Pie
The category of chess pie is expansive. By definition, a chess pie is any sweet custard pie made up of eggs, butter and sugar, with something to set it, like flour or cornmeal. This runs the gamut from transparent pie to pies that even include nuts like Kentucky Derby pie. These “sugar pies,” with their basic ingredients, might otherwise fall flat without a bit of finesse. This version, beautifully balanced with buttermilk and a touch of lemon and vanilla to cut the characteristic sweetness, elevates the minimalism in an elegant and well-rounded way. It’s chess pie in its highest form. Some tips for success: Cooling your buttermilk chess pie for several hours is just as important as baking until set with the right jiggle. Baking it in a frozen, homemade pie shell helps create a crust that is both crisp on the bottom and soft against the filling.

Deviled Crab Backs
Originating in the Lowcountry of South Carolina, deviled crab is a cousin to crab cakes, making use of the stringier bits mixed with spices, mayonnaise and egg to create a filling appetizer or entree. This recipe is from Andrew Carmines, the second-generation owner of Hudson’s Seafood House on the Docks, Hilton Head Island’s perpetually busy seafood restaurant specializing in local fare including the prized blue crab. These relatively small crabs (ranging from about 5 to 7 inches wide) are native to the Atlantic Coast and are typically in season from around April to November. You can ask your local fishmonger to order them for you when they're in season. Traditionally served stuffed into a blue crab back, it’s not uncommon to see faux-crab backs made of aluminum foil or crab-shaped tins. Whether it’s baked in tin, foil or crab, it’s an impressive dish that pairs well with rice or salad and a sunny seaside day.

Baked Summer Tomatoes
In her cookbook, “The Taste of Country Cooking,” Edna Lewis includes this homey dish of baked tomatoes in her menu for a summer wheat-harvesting dinner. Sweetened with sugar and thickened with pieces of buttered bread, it’s an unusual side dish that’s just as good when made with soft, overripe tomatoes as it is with perfect ones. Using a mix of different size and color tomatoes makes this both visually and texturally appealing. But feel free to use whatever ripe tomatoes you have.

Strawberry Pretzel Bars
Old-fashioned strawberry pretzel salad, topped with gelatin, gets a modern makeover. Here, pretzels are tossed with graham cracker crumbs, then topped with a light cream-cheese mixture and finished off with strawberry jam and fresh strawberries, for a delicate sweetness. Cut the bars into bite-size pieces or bigger slabs. Either way, this old-new dish is sure to be a favorite.

Smoked Prime Rib
Smoked prime rib is a staple in barbecue joints across Texas and is one of the premium cuts of beef you’ll find at the legendary Kreuz Market restaurant in Lockhart. Cooked low and slow for several hours then finished with a scorching sear, the result is a tender and juicy cut of beef, rich with a sweet, peppery taste signature to Texas Hill Country. This variation was developed by Dennis Sanchez, a former employee of Kreuz Market (and my father), and makes use of molasses to trap in moisture during the smoking processes. A liberal coating of coarse salt and cracked pepper is used to season the molasses, which caramelizes with the rendered collagen to form a thick, smoky bark not unlike a barbecue brisket. Because this cut of the beef is naturally tender, smoking a prime rib requires only a fraction of the time to cook than tougher cuts like brisket. One single prime rib bone will typically yield enough meat for two people, but you'll find that these portions are far more than enough for additional plates at your cookout.
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Air-Fryer Southern Fried Chicken
A buttermilk-pickle brine and a well seasoned dredge work together with the air fryer for this quick, easy, and fantastically juicy and crispy "fried" chicken.

Hot Slaw
With a heat that comes from spice, not temperature, this crunchy cabbage slaw is all but guaranteed to be at any barbecue, potluck or Fourth of July meal in Cleveland, Tennessee. But it didn’t get much attention statewide until 2024, when lawmakers agreed to make hot slaw the state’s first official food and crown this eastern Tennessee city the hot slaw capital. While there are many tightly guarded variations, hot slaw in Cleveland is widely viewed as beginning at the Star Vue Drive-In Theater’s concession stand. This recipe is adapted from a version held onto by Brad H. Benton, whose father owned the 1950s-era theater. Serve it on a hot dog or with pulled pork or barbecue — or just grab a heaping spoonful.

Strawberry Layer Cake
Summer is a soft, or strong, hue of pink in the South, depending on who is making the strawberry cake. When strawberries come alive, anywhere from early March down in Louisiana to as late as June as far up as East Tennessee, Southerners take to their strawberry cakes for as many celebrations as they can. Often referred to as church cakes in the South, layer cakes reign supreme. And strawberry layer cakes take the cake as the most sought-after style for many bakers. This recipe, with a soft and moist but sturdy crumb, uses store-bought preserves, but if you can roast your own high season strawberries, it is recommended you do so. The frosting is light and ethereal. And the color? That is all up to you and how heavy you pour the red food coloring. No matter the shade of pink you aspire to, you’ll get a regal and splendid cake worthy of any high celebration or common weekday luncheon.
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Red-Eye Gravy
Perfect for spooning over biscuits, grits, and eggs, this classic Southern breakfast gravy is made by mixing the drippings of pan-fried country ham with black coffee.

Turnip Greens
Braised until soft and yielding, with a mild sweetness stemming from long cooking and a hit of balsamic vinegar, these turnip greens — more tender than collards with a slight pepperiness, similar to mustard greens — become flavorful and savory. Many recipes for turnip greens use smoked meats or ham, but here they get a wonderful smokiness from smoked paprika. Though you can certainly find them attached to their root, turnips, these tasty greens are so popular that they are also sold on their own.

Chew Bread
For many families growing up in North Carolina, chew bread was commonly served as dessert or a snack, especially after a Sunday church service. This recipe is from Doretha Mitchell, the mother of Ed Mitchell and grandmother of Ryan Mitchell, longtime pitmasters in Wilson, N.C., who now help run True Made Foods, a food company making barbecue sauce and other condiments. She sold the chew bread, along with other desserts, in the 1980s at a supermarket she owned with her husband. Adapted from “Ed Mitchell’s Barbeque” by Ed Mitchell and Ryan Mitchell (Ecco, 2023), this recipe is significantly chewier, denser and less sweet than a blondie. The snack likely originated from sharecroppers who made it with leftovers they received from white families. It also has different names throughout the South, like cornbread cake, or chewies in South Carolina.

Chicken Perloo
The supremely comforting one-pot rice dish, perloo (pronounced every which way, including PER-low, PER-la and per-LOO), is a Lowcountry staple with roots in West Africa. This Charleston version from “Rodney Scott’s World of BBQ” by Rodney Scott and Lolis Eric Elie (Clarkson Potter, 2021) calls for two key ingredients: Charleston Gold rice, an heirloom grain, and leftover smoked chicken. Feel free to use arborio rice or another short-grain variety if you can’t get Charleston Gold; and you can buy the smoked chicken from your local smoke shop or BBQ restaurant, or in a pinch, use grocery store rotisserie chicken. You’ll just want to compensate for the absence of smokiness by adding a pinch of smoked paprika, a whisper of fire.

Chicken Spaghetti
This comforting casserole is a staple at picnics and potlucks across the American South, and it’s no wonder why. Creamy, cheesy noodles are tossed with tender bits of chicken, tomatoes and chiles, then topped with even more cheese and baked until bubbly. There have been many iterations of this dish over the years: Some recipes call for Velveeta and condensed cream of mushroom soup, while Craig Claiborne’s childhood recipe calls for a quarter pound of ground beef and pork in addition to a whole chicken. In this version, a flavorful combination of Cheddar and Parmesan are used, and milk and chicken stock thickened with a roux stand in for the canned soup. Feel free to use whatever kind of cooked chicken you like — leftover roast chicken, rotisserie chicken or a couple chicken breasts you baked just for the occasion. Chicken spaghetti is the perfect casserole to prepare ahead of time and freeze, making it ideal for large gatherings or for stocking a loved one’s freezer (see Tip).