I am not easily offended, ergo, the word “moist” does not bother
me. I find that it is a necessary word to use when describing things such as
cake, for example. There are plenty of synonyms: clammy, cloudy, damp, dank,
dewy, drenched, drippy, dripping, drizzly, misty, muggy, oozy, saturated,
but I ask you, would you want a cake described by any of the words listed
previously? I don’t think so. Therefore, moist it is.
Personally, I find many other words far less tolerable than moist, yogurt is
one I don’t particularly care for, phlegm is yet another. In the case of the
latter, not only do I not like the sound of it, but the spelling is off-putting
as well. Why am I mentioning this? I’ll tell you why, because this cornbread is
moist, and deliciously so.
The recipe comes from Baking
of the American South, scheduled for
release next month (watch for my review), by way of the 1949 Key West Cookbook,
published by The Ladies’ Annex of the Civil Improvement Society. This recipe is
a keeper, my friends. You must try this cornbread. It is not overly
coconut-y, nor is it too sweet. It is just a lovely combination of ingredients
that creates a cornbread so tasty and deliciously moist that you won’t even
need butter.Key West Coconut Cornbread
1 c. finely
ground yellow cornmeal
¾ c. flour
¼ c. sugar
1 T. baking
powder
½ t. salt
¼ t. baking
soda
2 eggs
1¼ c. coconut
milk
5 T. unsalted butter
½ c. sweetened
shredded coconut
Heat the oven to 400° F with a rack in the middle.
In a large bowl, whisk together flour, sugar, baking powder, salt, and baking
soda, soda. Add the eggs and coconut milk, stirring with a fork just to break
up the eggs.
Place the butter in a 10-inch
cast-iron skillet. Add melt over
medium-low heat, 1-2 minutes. Pour the butter into the batter, and stir with
the fork just until combined. Scatter the coconut over the bottom of the
skillet. Pour the batter over the coconut and place the skillet in the oven.
Bake until the cornbread is golden brown and the top springs back when lightly
touched, 22 to 27 minutes.
Remove the skillet from the oven, let the cornbread rest in the skillet for
five minutes, then run a knife around the edge, flip out onto a cutting board,
and serve.
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It looks delicious, moist and all.
ReplyDeleteI love the flavor or sweet cornbread, which I imagine this to be like. I would be in big trouble, knowing it was in the kitchen, waiting for a pat of butter and a coffee refill.
ReplyDeleteI had to freeze most of it, it was just TOO tempting.
DeleteWow, it sounds delicious! Thanks Pattie, I'm looking forward to your cookbook review!
ReplyDeleteJenna
Yum I love any form of cornbread, this looks so good. I think the shredded coconut and coconut milk would just take it over the top. And I'm not ashamed to tell you, I'd eat it with butter no matter how moist!
ReplyDeleteI still remember how surprised I was when, years ago, my daughter said "ewwww Mom!" when I used the word moist. Sometimes this younger generation is just ridiculous. I think the controversy over the use of a perfectly good word is nuts. But I'm old, and IMO the world has gone mad!
The world has indeed gone mad.
DeleteWow! It looks amazing no matter how you choose to describe it : moist and delicious!
ReplyDeleteI know I would love this. It sounds so delicious.
ReplyDelete