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Traditional Southern New Year Meal

  • Posted on January 1, 2012 at 5:04 pm
This entry is part 1 of 6 in the series Good Luck Meals

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Collard greens. Black eyed peas. Cornbread. Bits of ham.

Dollar bills. Silver coins. Gold. Luck.

After the year I had, there was absolutely no way I was going to skip out on the traditional meal. The recipe post is here.

This year I had ham, so I chopped it up instead of the bacon. And I cooked the collards with a smoked turkey wing.

And I didn’t add the carrot slices (but after looking at the final picture from 2010, OH HOW I WISH I DID).

But other than that, everything else was the same.

LOL!

Here’s to Good Luck and Prosperity in 2012.

My take on New Year’s Dinner

  • Posted on January 2, 2010 at 3:11 pm

I cooked y’all (don’t have a heart attack!). Mama said she wasn’t going to, and I decided that I NEEEEED the traditional southern New Year’s dinner. Since I can’t make myself be “traditional”, I turned it into soup. Collards for folding money, blackeyed peas for coins, pork for luck, and I decided that in this recipe, the carrots would symbolize gold. I served it with cornbread sticks and doesn’t it all look yummy?

Featured but not pictured is the how-to for the cornbread sticks. (Or maybe I was just ashamed of my box-mix cornbread. I don’t really like the box mix but going back to the store? Was.not.happenin.)

Also: this was my first time shooting with my daughter’s camera since mine is broken. Take that for what it’s worth…


This is what it all looked like to start with. That’s a 16 oz box of reduced-sodium broth, a medium onion, one bunch of collards, a can of black-eyed peas, a carrot, and thick sliced bacon.

Oh my darling bacon, how I love you and the flavor you add. I used four slices, chopped.

Yes, jarred garlic is in the picture. No, you really don’t need it. I used it, but couldn’t taste it at all in the finished product so we’ll just pretend like it’s not there. Okay? The soup really doesn’t need it.

Not pictured: apple cider vinegar. I stirred a tablespoon into the soup and it tasted fine to me but Mama added a tablespoon to her bowl (without tasting it first). Your mileage may vary.


The first thing I did was to slice the carrot thinly. I also didn’t use the entire carrot. See that 3″ chunk in the corner? Joe snagged it while I was trying (and failing) to get a picture of the knife in my hand while cutting the carrot.

After I sliced the carrot, I tossed it in a pot with the broth and brought it up to a simmer. The carrot needs to cook a little longer than the rest of the veggies in my world.


Since the dutch oven is missing in action, the biggest cast iron pan we own was called into action. This was not necessarily a fantastic idea as the day went on.

There is no way to fix this small problem, and there’s absolutely nothing wrong with the pan OTHER than the handle. Guess how many times I grabbed for that?

Hello, gorgeous. Flavor is what I’m looking for and you’ve got plenty of it. Know what else I’m looking for?

Bacon grease.

Take four slices of thick-cut bacon, rough cut into chunks, and cook until crispy. Kinda like this:

You don’t want the bacon to be hard since we’re going to be adding it back into the soup and who likes hard bits of bacon in their soup??!!??

While the bacon is cooking, dice up your onion. We’re looking for flavor AND bits floating around in the soup so feel free to rough-chop it if that thrills your soul. I did a half dice and half slice. After you’ve pulled the baconbits out of the pan, toss the onion in and cook til they’re translucent and soft.

While the onions are cooking, run your knife down the spine of the collards to remove that tough stem. Like this:

(Pretend like you like that picture and then) Once the leaves are stem-free, chop ‘em down to bite-sized pieces. Yes, they’ll tenderize once they cook, but I’ve never liked long stringy greens that get stuck in my teeth. Cut ‘em into strips like this

and then run your knife through the other way to chunk ‘em.

Wait. Did you wash the collards? Wash ‘em before you chop ‘em, y’all. There’s no telling WHAT is coming home from the garden or store on those greens.

When you toss those greens in the pan, marvel at the pretty green against the translucent onion and black pan.

Isn’t that GORGEOUS?

Good lawd it’s making me hungry again and I just ate.

Stir the greens around to coat with the bacon grease and onions, then pour in the carrots and broth you’ve been simmering all this time.

Oh it just gets more and more pretty. I did end up adding a cup of water here though, because there just wasn’t enough broth to suit me. At this point, the greens need to simmer for about 20 minutes, so put the lid on and go make some cornbread.

If you REALLY want to thrill your soul, you could cook another two pieces of bacon in your other cast-iron frying pan and stir the resulting baconbits into the batter. I wish I had!

Now we’ve got the soup simmering, the cornbread (box mix) is baking – we need to attend to those bacon bits and the blackeyed peas (in a can).

I ran my knife through the bacon bits to make sure they were BITS and not CHUNKS.

That’s what about 2 1/2 – 3 slices of cooked bacon looks like getting chopped. I ate the other bits while doing the rest of the recipe.

Oh come ON like you wouldn’t do the exact same thing. At least I didn’t cook up the entire pound of bacon and eat it!

Open the can of black eyed peas, drain out the canning water and give ‘em a good rinse. Then mash up half to help thicken the soup a bit.

Once the cornbread is done, pull it out of the oven. While it’s cooling, take the lid off and add the bacon bits, mashed and whole black eyed peas.

Marvel at how pretty it looks, and at how hungry you are now.

Give it a stir, taste and adjust your salt and pepper to taste. (And in my case, make sure the collards were done – this is the first time I’ve cooked collards.)

Now if y’all will excuse me…