This week’s recipe comes from the pages of our current issue of New Orleans Magazine. It is a perfect dish for the dog days of August.
It was awhile before air-conditioning saved us, but the townspeople had their August routine down pat. Men were up at five in the morning to prepare for their early shifts, while women not only cooked breakfast but put on their pots of beans, roasts, chicken stew or gumbo that would be done before the heat became unbearable around nine o’clock. As the pots rolled and the rice bubbled, the women cleaned their houses to a polished sheen. Way before noon, you could’ve eaten off their front porches, and inside, the colored flowers in the linoleum floors were sparkling.
I liked to sleep late as a child, but there was none of that. By eight o’clock, the humidity was so high, the sheets stuck to your legs and even the table fans couldn’t keep you cool enough to sleep. Some of the men came home for lunch and the big meal of the day was usually served around noon, with leftovers held for supper. But there was no more cooking, cleaning or work of any kind in the houses at Good Hope after noon. It was too darn hot.
Everyone sat on their porches swinging, fanning, drinking lemonade and chatting with anyone strolling down the street. For several years, my grandmother had a snowball stand in her front yard and I got to help out. No one in Memphis had ever eaten the likes of a Louisiana snowball and I felt superior, eating at least three a day during those wonderful summers. My favorites were spearmint, nectar and coconut. Even now, snowballs are the highlight of my Augusts.
While technology has cooled our homes, offices and automobiles, the dog days of August are still time for the elderly to stay indoors, children and athletes to beware of sunstrokes and outdoor workers to drink plenty of water and use lots of sunscreen.
August is the perfect month to vacation in the mountains or, if budget allows, somewhere like Antartica. But if you’re stuck, you can at least take a break from the stove. The following menu is one designed to use the succulent seafood of summer without ever lighting a fire. The secret? Buy crabs and shrimp already cooked from your favorite seafood store.
This marinated crabs recipe is a takeoff from the famous dish served at Mosca’s. Shrimp salad stands alone, but how much better to stuff it into creamy avocados? I had never heard of this beet salad in Memphis, so I know it is another little Louisiana neighborhood restaurant, and home cook, secret. Because of it, I learned to love beets. And, where the lemonade pie recipe came from, I have no idea. I just know that I have been making it, as well as lemon ice, for years and years in August. For my taste, the month is even too hot for chocolate. Lemon takes over. Along with spearmint, nectar and coconut snowballs.


