White Trash Cooking: I’m in love!
December 17, 2008 By: almostgotit Category: Ernest Matthew Mickler, Uncategorized, White Trash, White Trash Cooking, cookbooks, humor, photography, recipes, sweet potato, sweet potato pone, writers

While trolling for spiral-bound cookbooks in my favorite section of McKay’s Used Books, I found Ernest Mickler’s White Trash Cooking II: Recipes for Gatherins, and had to find Volume I. Had to order it from Amazon, in fact.
It arrived two days ago. And what a gorgeous thing it is.
So gorgeous that the author of To Kill A Mockingbird, no less, wrote of it:
I have never seen a sociological document of such beauty — the photographs are shattering. I shall treasure it always… Now that it’s harder than ever to identify the genuine article on sight — with two generations of prosperity white trash looks like gentry — we’ve long needed something other than the ballot box to remind us of their presence: White Trash Cooking is a beautiful testament to a stubborn people of proud and poignant heritage. - Harper Lee
It is funny, oh yes: Mock Cooter Stew. Russian Communist Tea Cakes. Mama Leila’s Hand-Me-Down Oven-Baked Possum. But the humor is the best kind of all, stemming from a deep and genuine affection — and yes, even respect — for the mamas and aunties who did the best they could, mostly with very little indeed.
Never in my whole put-together life, writes the author,
Could I write down on paper a hard, fast definition of White Trash… But the first thing you’ve got to understand is that there’s white trash and there’s White Trash. Manners and pride separate the two. Common white trash has very little in the way of pride, and manners to speak of, and hardly any respect for anybody or anything. But where I come from, you never failed to say “yes ma’m” and “no sir,” never sat on a made-up bed (or put your hat on it), never opened someone else’s icebox, never left food on your plate, never left the table without permission, and never forgot to say “thank you” for the teeniest favor. That’s the way the ones before us were raised and that’s the way they raised us in the South.
… But rather than runnin’ around willy-nilly telling stories (which I could do all day long), it might be quicker to get to what I mean by White Trash cooking if, as Betty Sue says, we go straight to the kitchen and “get it did.”

While the Almostgotits aint got much call for fried squirrel in our own Southern household, here’s a coupla good recipes from the book, just in time for the holidays. If you want more recipes than these, though, you’ll have to order your own copy of White Trash: Amazon sells ‘em used, too!
Plain Ol’ Potato Pone
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1 cup milk
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3 medium-size sweet potatoes
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1 cup of molasses
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2 teaspoons cinnamon
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3 eggs
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1/4 stick of oleo
First bake your sweet potatoes, or use some left from supper. Take off the skins and mash them up. To the potatoes, add all other ingredients. Mix well and put in an iron skillet and bake at 350 degrees for 25-30 minutes. Now this is a real pone. Dig in and make yourself at home — if you ain’t, you oughta be. This is another one of Betty Sue’s favorites. (from White Trash Cooking)
Fancy Sweet Potato Pone
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4 cups raw sweet potatoes (grated)
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1 cup syrup
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1/2 cup sugar
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1 cup milk
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1/2 cup butter
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1/2 cup chopped nuts
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1 cup raisins
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3 eggs, well-beaten
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1 teaspoon allspice
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1 teaspoon cinnamon
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1/2 teaspoon cloves
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1/4 teaspoon salt
Add well beaten eggs, sugar, spices, and nuts to grated sweet potato.
Melt butter in heavy iron frying pan; add potato mixture; Stir all on top of stove until very hot. Cook in same pan in moderate oven for 45 minutes, stirring from bottom several times. Serve with whipped cream.
Raenelle said: ‘This is my recipe but Betty Sue added all the extras, so it’s hard to tell it’s the one I gave her. She’s always changin’ things.’ (also from White Trash Cooking)



December 17th, 2008 at 6:01 pm
Oh yeah, excellent timing….I’m short one Christmas gift and am on my way to Amazon!
December 17th, 2008 at 9:32 pm
I love the White Trash Cooking book. One of my favorite pics is of the interior of the Frigidaire with all its food store and Tab sodas.
We also have another favorite (local to Knoxville) cookbook put out by the Pioneers of America in the early 80s called “Dining with Pioneers.” I used a lot of the recipes in this book when I was living in L.A. and feeling nostalgic for the South, but my favorite section is the “salad” section. By my account Southern “salads” should only be explored for entertainment value as I will NEVER EVER make any concoction for consumption that combines crushed pineapple, jello, cool whip, marshmallows, mayonnaise, cottage cheese, pecans, apples and Sprite… but the recipes abound for those who might be so inclined to such dangerous experimentation. Adventures in cooking…
December 17th, 2008 at 11:50 pm
A CUP of molasses?
Oh.
My.
God.
December 18th, 2008 at 7:27 am
My first reaction to the “plain ol’ pone” recipe was pretty much like Working Girl’s, but then I remembered Edna Staebler’s lovely, folksy recipe books Food that Really Schmecks and More Schmecks. They focused on Mennonite cooking and the dishes of Edna’s mother and non-chef friends, and I was quite happy using the recipes as long as I cut every amount of sweetener by half.
December 18th, 2008 at 10:54 am
Oooh, thanks for reminding me about Staebler’s beautious books, Lavenderbay! I fell in love with *them*, too, while living in Toronto, but couldn’t afford them at the time. Hmm, Amazon has them used, as well. . .
December 18th, 2008 at 11:28 am
So that’s “pone”! The only other time I heard that term was when my uncle (who lives in Arkansas) named his cat “Corn Pone” …
December 18th, 2008 at 12:24 pm
Well now, Dennis, technically that there is a SWEET pone. Corn Pone is this un:
December 23rd, 2008 at 7:07 pm
I have owned a copy of the first edition for many years now. It’s been a while since I’ve looked it over. Now I’ll have to get it out and try something again.