Summer 2016 | Sea Island Life Magazine Spring/Summer 2016 | Page 29

OPPOSITE PAGE: ADAM LERNER; THIS PAGE: COURTESY OF SUCCOTASH W hile each area of the country is known for its own distinctive flavors, recently, the Southern culinary culture has become increasingly prevalent in areas far beyond the Mason-Dixon line. Waffle House, the iconic diner chain founded in Atlanta more than 60 years ago, has expanded to over 1,500 locations across the country, including states ranging from Pennsylvania to Illinois in the north and from Oklahoma to Arizona out west. Cracker Barrel Old Country Store, which started in Lebanon, Tenn., in 1969, now has 630-plus restaurants in 42 states. Along with the explosive success of these popular chains, Dixieland-style dining is making its way into upscale restaurants from coast to coast. Critically acclaimed chefs such as Edward Lee of Succotash in National Harbor, Md., Jean-Paul Bourgeois of Blue Smoke in New York City and Tanya Holland of Brown Sugar Kitchen and B-Side BBQ in Oakland, Calif., have emerged as trailblazers, taking what was once a regional culinary style and introducing it to new audiences. Southern Roots The cuisine’s unique history provides one explanation for why people from the Northeast, Midwest and West Coast are now taking an active interest in this style of cooking. Southern food encompasses an array of cultural influences as diverse as the people who inhabit the region. For example, the popularity of corn, squash, tomatoes and the pit-barbecue cooking style originated with local Native American tribes. In Louisiana, Cajun cuisine is deeply rooted in culinary Clockwise from top left: Edward Lee, pimento fundito and the dining room at Succotash in Maryland traditions from rural France and the Southern love of a full breakfast can be traced back to the traditional English “fry-up.” “The South is very much regionalized, much like Provence, Paris, Lyon and Normandy, which all have different variations and interpretations of French food,” says Louisiana native Bourgeois, who took over as executive chef at Blue Smoke in 2014. “People are now discovering that there’s a whole world of cuisine that has been evolving for over a century within their own country that they may not have been aware of. My hope is that people are seeing that the South is so much more than just fried chicken, barbecue and biscuits and gravy.” As people raised in the South migrate across the country, they take their culinary traditions with them, often passing recipes down from generation to generation. Holland, the Bay Area chef and entrepreneur known for her inventive take on modern soul food, was born in Connecticut and raised in New York. But her early interest in cooking came from her Southern-born parents, who founded a gourmet cooking club for couples from different ethnic and professional backgrounds when she was a child. “They were wonderful home cooks, and genuinely enjoyed bringing people together for entertaining,” she says. “Having both grown up in the South—my father in Virginia and my mother in Louisiana—each brought with them influences from other countries and regions that inspired me to learn and cook as much as possible.” SPRING/SUMMER 2016 | SEA ISL AND LIFE 29