17 June 2011

Grits & Soul on Fox 40 and Friends in Jackson

Hey friends -

Hope you are doing well and having a great Friday.

This week, me and The Grits & Soul Band were Fox 40 and Friends featured artist.  We went into the studio, played a couple of tunes for them and had a blast!

What a ride we've had lately.  Doors of opportunity just keep opening for us and it's a great feeling when all the hard work pays off!  Looks like our fall will be heating up with visits across the state to play for folks from DeSoto County to the Coast.  We're STOKED!
If you missed the performances (and I'll admit I did because of work) then you can see them ri'chere!  We have two more besides these that we'll get copies of soon so's we can share with ya.

Visit this link to watch/listen to "Shame On Me" and "Flood Waters."

Have a great weekend!

01 June 2011

What I Miss Most About Memphis

Yesterday, not only did the Grits & Soul Band get some press in the DeSoto Times-Tribune and in the Jackson Free Press, but I had my first ever post as a guest blogger, too!


I Love Memphis Blog is written by a terrific gal named Kerri Crawford who works for the Memphis Convention and Visitors Bureau.  We have been twitter friends for some time but it took us both flying into Austin for SXSW in March that we actually got a chance to meet up and talk.

Kerri is super cool and I absolutely love reading her blog.  She's officially on vacation this week and about a month ago, asked me to write a guest post for her while she is out. 

Here comes my disclaimer:  I post this  link a little sheepishly because I know my Jackson, MS peeps might get up in arms about my love of one city over the other.  Those who know me well already know this, but I have to admit that I didn't immediately fall in love with Jackson when I moved here in 2004.  There were several reasons for that.  (Ask me in person and I'll be glad to fill you in.) 

I guess the need to explain myself comes from the fact that I don't want my folks to get offended - because I love Mississippi and have a terrific life in my new hometown. 

So many opportunities have come my way since I moved here.  Hands down, it was the best decision of my life and it dramatically rocked my world.  I want you to know I have become quite smitten with Jackson; but you also have to realize the torch I'll always carry for Memphis.  After all, there's no place like home!

Read my blog post here.

23 May 2011

Wish List: Chalkboard State Map

Y'all!!


I saw this on Etsy and thought this was SO COOL!


What originally caught my eye from seller ShopDirtSA was the scrabble letter pillows (that I have to say are freakin' pricey, but if money were no object..........)
But then I saw the custom-made map of your state!!! OH my stars I want one sooooo badly!!  Wouldn't this be the best EVER?!
Of course you know I want a Mississippi one.  They're $45. Not bad, I'm thinkin'.
You (and/or kids) could color in spots where you've traveled, where you want to go, make notes - whatever!  I'm in serious love.

21 May 2011

Flood Waters: TV Debut


Last Thursday I wrote a song about the Mississippi River flooding, not realizing that a mere week later, it would be on the news. 

My sweet friend, Ginger, who is the proprietor of grand-central-station-of-all-things-Southern posted about us (thanks!)  There were also lots of tweets and emails and messages.  So, thanks everyone - we are over the moon!!

For whatever reason, the interview is not embedding in this blog post causing me to, yet again, curse Blogger.  But you can access it here.




So, this is how it all happened.  Obviously, inspired by watching the events unfolding across states and cities worth of devastation from this enormous act of God and hard-headed will of the river, I wrote "Flood Waters."

John, who plays mandolin came over a couple of days later and we worked on the chorus melody together. Then I set the song down to mull how I wanted the rest of it to sound.  I was a little nervous because I really wanted to make sure we have a couple of news songs for our recording session next week.  But honestly, I like to give myself the time and space to let a song take its course, simmer a little and not rush it.

The verse melody came to me Tuesday afternoon during a few quiet moments I sat at my desk at work, as a matter of fact.  And it just stuck with me.  At the time no one was around and I sang it really low into my phone's audio recorder.  That felt so silly at the time!  I worked a little longer on it that night when I got home and knew I'd run Scott, John and Travis through it the next day at practice.

The guys came over Wednesday night and we started learning it together - and they filled in the gaps with their insight and input and it all came together. So I thought, I'll record this so that if they to listen to it later, they'll have it.  

The next morning (Thursday), I listened to a few of the takes and we had one really good one.  I sent it to the guys and also to a few others, including my mom.  She called me immediately and encouraged me to send it around to a local news station because she because not only was it powerful song for what was going on and people needed to hear it.

So, I contacted my friend, Susan (bless her!), who knows the folks at WLBT and then I turned around and called the news director.  He was interested in hearing the song, so I sent that email on over and within 30 minutes got a call from Mike McDaniel, who said they wanted to be the first to break the story.  And it just went from there!  

I called the band, found out when the soonest was they could get over for the interview and we met that night with Mike.  All in a matter of 24 hours since they'd first laid ears on the tune, 6 days after writing it...and we were playing it with conviction with a camera in our face.  We were a bundle of nerves.

We got so nervous before it aired and texted each other. The thing that made me laugh the most was a comment Scott had about the interview.  He texted, "I have been trying to spend the past 24 hrs trying to remember what it was I really said."  That summed things up perfectly!



Lyrics are below if you would like to read along while it plays.

Have you seen that gal o' mine
Been lookin' since the river hit 'yea' high
This thing looks like it's 9 yrs wide
Never seen this in my life

Little dove perched way up there
Sittin' on a limb without a care
Will your feet touch the earth again?
What sign bring you from the skies?

Chorus:

Ebb and flow
Them flood waters creep up slow
The tide it turns but this got nowhere to go
Two feet left of saving grace
Fly me to those pearly gates
My heart can't take no more
My heart can't take no more

My sin's buried 'neath the mud
Scared to death it'll float back up
What you tryin' to do, Old Man?
Guess our lives are yours for to cleanse

Chorus

(c) 2011 Grits & Soul Music
Lyrics by Anna Kline
Music by Anna Kline, Scott Anderson, John Looney, Travis Pinkston

Visit our ReverbNation page if you would like to download the rough draft of the song we sent in to the station that you heard above.  Also, do us a favor and "LIKE" us on Facebook!  You can hear other songs there and on MySpace.  Those are also the best places to find out where we're playing next.    


Thanks for your shared excitement...we've been in shell shock but it's the good kind!  Music is the love of our lives.  We can't wait to do more of it!

Hope you enjoy the song.  We'll be recording a cleaner version of it next week and will let you know when it's available for download or if you'd like a physical copy, we'll have those, too!  See you soon! 

03 May 2011

Oh, hello there!

Remember me? 

Well, good.  And, yes, I know. 

First things first. There's a lot to catch up on and so little time to make that happen.


I have to tell you about my trip to Cleveland and Clarksdale, my whirlwind week in Austin for South by Southwest (and trying the best cake pops in the free world), the time I hung out with Ginger from Deep Fried Kudzu AND last but not least about the time I pulled my back out = major pain. 


Also, there's good stuff to tell about my new band comprising of three incredible musicians and how our dance card is filling up fast with gigs.  It's been quite the springtime rush, duck and cover as you can see.


Looking at Mississippi Magazine's website (I have a little story about Sea Camp that is in the May/June issue), I noticed there's a list for Mississippi's "Best Of," featuring some restaurants that I haven't heard of and, hands down, am dying to try.  Where have you been lately and can vouch for?  What's more, where haven't you been that's a must try for you?


You will hear from me very soon.     ~ Anna

03 February 2011

Let Them Eat Cake

This afternoon, my coworkers and I wandered up (aka road up the elevator) to a Mississippi Arts Commission staff reception, which we know is a sure thing:  good company, good food and great art. 

The MAC not only supports talented artists, but they have on staff many talented artists who create textiles, mosaic designs, paintings, music and more.  

My friend Mary Margaret is the Heritage Director there.  She and I (along with our co-workers) attended the Barefoot workshop session last summer, got to know each other better and had such a great time making our foodie films.

Her corn hole sets were on display and they are fabulous!
As she describes it, "...It's a backyard game much like horseshoes, only safer. The point is to toss a bean bag across the yard and into the hole on the board. Most often folks play in teams of two."  

But I digress, because the purpose of this particular post is not about playin' corn hole, it's about filling your pie hole.  (I'm still not sure that sounds very nice)

Long story sorta short, this afternoon's reception had a food theme and to our delight, there were two very particular homemade food items on the table:  a sweet potato pie and a lovely King Cake.  The King Cake has a special place in my heart because it's just that time of year AND it had cream cheese in the middle, my personal fav.  We were also excited because recipes accompanied the treats on the table, and Mary Margaret said I could share her recipe with y'all.  You are going to love it!

She and her mother adapted this from a cinnamon roll recipe they have in the family vault...which makes it even more special when someone shares!  And I have to add, there wasn't much left by the time I headed back to my office.
photo courtesy of Mary Margaret Miller

Sunflower County King Cake
by Sandra and Mary Margaret Miller

(makes 2-3 cakes: more the better!)

Dough:
1 C shortening
¾ C sugar (heaping)
1 C boiling water
2 pkg yeast dissolved in lukewarm water (115-120 degrees)
2 eggs beaten + 1 t. salt
6 C flour

Cream Cheese Filling:
2 8 oz. blocks cream cheese, softened
1 t. vanilla flavoring
1 t. almond flavoring
½ t. salt
1 egg beaten
¾ C sugar

In a mixer, combine shortening and sugar until dissolved. Add boiling water and beat until cool. Add yeast and eggs. Beat until combined. Stir in flour. Beat until combined. Spray dough with butter flavored spray and cover with a damp cloth. Refrigerate overnight to rise.

Place half of the dough mixture on a floured surface. Knead and roll into a rectangle, about ¼ inch thick. Ice with a thin layer of cream cheese filling and roll, jelly-roll style, into a long tube. Place on a buttered pan in an oval shape, connecting the ends.

Bake at 350 degrees for 15-20 minutes, until cake is golden. Remove from oven and cool completely. Before icing, cut a small slit in the bottom of the cake and insert a plastic baby or other festive trinket. Make sure to use an object that is easily noticeable and not too small.

Icing:
2-3 C sifted powdered sugar
1 t. vanilla flavoring
1 t. almond flavoring
3-4 T milk

Combine all ingredients with a hand mixer until smooth and glossy. Divide icing into three cups and color with green, purple and yellow/gold food coloring. Decorate cake with the icing in any fashion you see fit! Green, gold and purple sprinkles are a nice addition.
  
This will be your new favorite King Cake recipe during Mardi Gras.  Enjoy!  And most of all, thank you Mary Margaret :)

So, have you found any good King Cake Recipes out there or do you leave it to the professionals?

21 January 2011

Two Party-time Recipes For Your Mouth

I love throwing a good party. The most important “part” of the “party” equation is tasty snacks. You know they talk about you otherwise, right? Yes, well, they do

The first recipe became a standard just a couple of years ago. My husband is a book editor for The University Press of Mississippi and we went to a Book Friends party launching You Are Where You Eat: Stories and Recipes from the Neighborhoods of New Orleans by Elsa Hahne. This is a lovely book combining heartfelt stories, history, photographs and recipes from several New Orleans neighborhoods.
So imagine our joy when we arrived to find the hostesses serving a slew of the recipes from the book!  (FAB idea by the way for all you future/current cookbookers.)

We had Alligator Shooters (it was really just made from avocado), Sour Cream and Onion Pie, Mother-in-Law Meatballs, desserts and more. One menu item really stuck out to me, though, and that was the Pecan Tapas. Part of the attraction was the name and the other part was the sweet and spicy flavor coating the roasted pecans. They will be a favorite at your house, too, if you allow them space in your little heart.


This is, of course, meant as a teaser because you really do need this cookbook in your collection. You can buy it through the Press or at Amazon. Trust me.

Pecan Tapas is a fun recipe to play with because you can add spices to suit your palate, experiment with flavored honeys and/or syrups or choose a different kind of nut altogether.


*Please note I don't have accompanying photos with my recipes (shameful, I know- but I will make more soon and post them)


Pecan Tapas

1 lb. pecan halves (or nuts of your choosing)
2 Tablespoons vegetable oil
1 teaspoon of salt

1 teaspoon of cayenne (red) pepper

1 teaspoon of black pepper

1 teaspoon oregano or thyme (or both)
1/3 cup of honey or honey/syrup combination

In a large skillet, heat oil over medium heat, add spices and then honey. (Turn the eye on AFTER you have added your spices to the oil. Don’t add the red and black pepper spice mixture to the hot oil. It will run you – and your significant other – out of the kitchen coughing and hacking!! Not that I would know from personal experience but a friend of mine told me that it happened to her……..)



Stir and simmer over low heat for a few minutes. You are trying to get rid of some of the water in the honey but not cook it so much that it will clump instead of coat the pecans. (If you choose to use syrup, it doesn’t need to cook as long. That same friend of mine ran into this problem when she used Delta Cane syrup.)


Fold pecans into mixture, coating well. Transfer pecans to oiled cookie sheet and bake at 300 degrees for 15 – 20 minutes until darker, reddish brown. Take out and leave them on stovetop or heat-safe surface while they cool.

 Stir pecans periodically until they cool, or they will cling to each other and the cookie sheet. (Sometimes, that’s not always a bad thing in this case because you can break them apart later)

For those of us who live in humid locales, don’t despair if your Pecan Tapas is a little sticky or slick to the touch once you set them out at your party. That’s what happened to me – I mean – my friend on our unseasonably warm New Years Eve.

These are a great and healthy go-to snack in the party off-season, too!


As in every situation, there must be a balance. Good outweighs the bad, pecans going head to head with Hot Cheese Puffs. Oh yes, we have a winner.


This recipe came to me from a bridal shower eons ago and it’s only just now that I took the plunge. Let’s just say, it was a hit. Nary a cheese puff left at the end of the night. That’s when you know you’ve hit the nail on the head. I would label this one…a party saver. If you have a faltering shindig, bring these out for an immediate shot in the arm result.

When I looked at the recipe, it seemed a little complicated – I used a make-shift double boiler and I was wary about the end result. Oh, me of little faith!


This is a recipe I promised to post for The Runaway Spoon. So here goes!


Again, this is another recipe you can play with for varied taste results. In my case, I used sharp cheddar and not Monterey Jack, and also added red pepper to it for a little zing. Internally, I balked at the use of cream cheese but it wasn’t as overwhelming as I imaged – it just heightened the cheese intensity.  By the end of the night, these were gone!

Hot Cheese Puffs


(Makes 5 – 6 dozen puffs)


1 Loaf of French bread (you won’t use all of it)
8 oz. of Monterey Jack Cheese
½ cup of butter
3 oz. of Cream Cheese
2 egg whites, room temperature

Cube bread into 1-inch cubes. Melt cheese, butter, and cream cheese in double boiler (in my case I used a metal bowl over water boiling in a saucepan. Worked like a charm).

Beat egg whites until stiff and fold into cheese mixture. Dip bread cubes into cheese mixture and place on cookie sheets.


At this point you can either:


1. Freeze them. Place in plastic bags and store up to 3 months.


Or


2. Preheat oven to 400 degrees and bake for 10 minutes. Serve immediately.


Let me know how it turns out and if you tinker with the recipes, what you did! Have fun wowing the crowds!


p.s. *My “To be Continued: Cleveland” post will be here before you know it. *

p.p.s. Can you believe I was asked this week to be involved in another chicken cook-off after my last experience?! haha Guess how long it took me to say, "I will NOT eat any chicken!!"



10 January 2011

Calling All Bookworms!

Doing a google search, I ran across Homegirl Quel in Austin's blog - it's a fashion and life blog, so, if that's your thing then by all means click the link.  Otherwise, keep reading (or not)!

A post from May 2010 is called  "Wear a book.  Look Awesome! Do Good."  
She says, "Out of Print is an awesome little company on a mission. Buy one of their comfy tee shirts featuring your favorite book cover from their collection and a book will be donated to a community in need through their partnership with Books For Africa. How cool is that?!"
I saw some Southern author t-shirts there so I thought, why not share it with you?

F. Scott Fitzgerald's Tales of the Jazz Age.  Since I'm an old art deco-phile, it immediately sucked me in!  He's got Alabama connections, of course. Zelda was from Montgomery.
Here's "A Streetcar Named Desire" (Tennessee Williams):
For Harper Lee fans:
Not Southern, but just plain cool.
For Jane Austen fans
It'd be great if they had some Faulkner, Welty or Wright, although the selection they have is a lot of fun regardless.

More on the Cleveland trip to come................

07 January 2011

I Never Did Tell You

Nope, I never did tell you about my visit to Cleveland at the first of December. 

We caught wind that a group of European journalists were going to be in the area on a media familiarization tour.  They arrive here and are promptly whisked through various points around the South including Mississippi, Tennessee and if I'm not mistaken (but I could be) Alabama to write various articles and to get a taste of what the region is like.  So my colleague and I made tracks into the Delta to meet up with the group, film a few things and take some photographs.
Our trip took us to Dockery Plantation, the fabled location where historians say the Blues began (with Charley Patton), a place that we visited last year (wow - has it been that long??) and where the group was going to have an authentic Southern dinner in the refurbished gas station that sits in front of those old buildings above, off of Highway 8.


A lot has happened over the past year.  The Dockery family established the Dockery Farms Foundation to help renovate and preserve the plantation.  Bill Lester is a family friend, next door neighbor, local historian and all-around good guy. He is Executive Director of the Foundation, told us stories, filled us in on the history and then pulled out a coin from his wallet.  I got an up-close look at the Dockery Farms currency that used to be good in Cleveland, Ruleville and Merigold (if I'm not mistaken).


With grant money the Foundation was able to renovate the gas station, which will be turned into a multi-use building for visitors.  They still had the old Coca Cola signs (there was an RC Cola mirror in the bathroom) and were able to put everything back just like it was.  It always warms my little heart when families don't throw things like that out - just like the old cash register and scales above and the old butcher block nearby.

Here are a few other things still sitting around:

  


You can imagine my excitement when we showed up and I saw someone unloading dinner.  It wasn't just anybody:  it was Chef David Crews. I'd read about him before while researching the Culinary Trail because he got his start at the restaurant Crawdad's, in Merigold - most widely known as the location for McCarty's Pottery and The Gallery Restaurant.  David now serves as Chef Instructor at Mississippi Delta Community College in the Culinary Arts Program as well as working at Stafford's on Main in Drew. (Drew is known as "duck hunting central").

The man is a culinary mastermind - just trust what my stomach is saying, ok? 

Please take note his menu for the evening:
He has a post on his blog about the evening as well.  It was quite the spread and an absolutely, hands down, terrific dinner.
I have to tell you about this.  David let me try a little bit as he was setting up - he would have to explain it to you himself (because my description won't do it justice). Look at the circular white dish right in front of the napkins with a knife sticking out of it.  That would be because he and I dug into it.  For good reason.  Think of it as something akin to duck paté.   Except it isn't duck - it's pork.  More specifically it is "pork shoulder rillettes."  A mixture of the deepest, smokiest pork reduction spread over crackers that will ever hit your mouth - sounds a little reckless, doesn't it?  I swear, it's a wonder I stopped myself from smuggling the dish home.  It was unlike anything I have ever tasted which translated into the unbelievable.  A bite was good on its own or just as fine when topped with the pickled green tomato chow chow.  It is the epitome of hog heaven. (sorry for the pun but it's the truth)
*Update on the rillettes*: I asked David to explain a little of the process of how he made the spread and this is what he shared with me:

"The Rillettes is an "old School" way of preserving meat.  Typically it is pork shoulder or belly that has been cured in salt then slow cooked in pork fat until tender, it is the pork equivalent to Duck Confit.  The one thing that I do different is that I dry cure mine in both salt and ground dried peppers, then as opposed to cooking it in the oven, I render it in a smoker that is burning sweet pecan wood...then let cool to room temp before going in farther. I think that this step not only gives it that "southern" smokey flavor it also give the meat time to release it's water and began to absorb some of the pork fat.  Also this step will add some time to it's shelf life because smoke has an antimicrobial effect on the surface of the meat.. Then remove the meat from the fat and grind to a paste. Finish by adding paste to a mason jar and cover with warm pork fat as a "lid". I cover mine with an actual lid but saran wrap will work, then refrigerate (for optimal storage) or leave on the counter covered..." 
There you have it folks. The answer to a question of pure divinity. Thanks, David!

A view from the other side:
Because you can never have too many action shots of the Southern Pecan Braised St Louis Style Ribs, Southern Slaw, Southern Pecan BBQ Sauce:
Leaning in for the close up.
And, we score!!
A lovely view of the chicken leg quarters, or rather Fig and Muscadine Compote glazed Slow Roasted Poussin with the Delta grind grits.
You didn't think I'd leave you hanging without a close-up of the grits soaking in thyme-infused poussin stock?!  
My personal favorite was the pork belly tamales, smothered in caramelized onions and drizzled with Tabasco Comeback Sauce.  I unabashedly went back for seconds on that. 
Below is the fresh greens with cherry tomatoes, avocado, Lauren Farms freshwater prawns (there's nothing like them), fresh cilantro and as you can see below, he tossed the salad in freshly squeezed lime juice and (the pièce de résistance) Tequila.  This garnered major applause as Chef Crews described it to the hungry crowd gathering impatiently around.
For dessert, we had banana pudding cheesecake.  I must figure out a way to make this at home.  I shared a piece with my coworker, Mary Straton and I am not ashamed to say, I distracted her while I ate a major portion of it.

You thought we were done with dessert?!  The night isn't over yet!
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