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INTERVIEWS André
Jeffries - E. W. Mayo
- Hap Townes
- --- Interviews conducted by John Egerton, Mary Beth Lasseter, and Joe York. This project sponsored by TABASCO.
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On August 11, 2006, the SFA awarded Guardians of the Tradition Awards to Andre Jeffries, E. W. Mayo, David Swett, and Hap Townes. And, of course, we collected their stories. --- Mystery of the Meat-and-Three Mecca For years I have tried to make sense of why
Nashville is so blessed with great plate lunch places, why this middle
Tennessee town is a meat ‘n’ three mecca, with more than a
half-dozen great restaurants to choose from, while cities of equal or
larger size—say Atlanta or Birmingham or Charlotte—can claim
only a couple or three truly great lunch spots. It was a good theory, or so I thought until I tried it out on my friend John Egerton, author of the wonderful book, Southern Food: At Home, On the Road, In History. Back in 1987 he had pondered the same question and come up wanting. Kind man that he is, John let me down gently. “I like the theory,” he said. “But it just won’t hold water, especially when you think about a town like Birmingham that drew people from the surrounding rural areas to work in the steel mills and coal fields. Why don’t they have the same tradition of meat ’n’ three restaurants? No, I think this is the kind of thing you just thank your lucky stars for, the kind of blessing you chalk up to unearned grace.” And as for hot chicken, here’s a primer: Nashville is the only American city where an appreciation for hot fried chicken can reach fullest flower. Here, devotees take pride in the fact that, while Buffalo wings owe their piquancy to a toss in sauce, the fire in local chicken comes at you from any number of sources, including one or more of the following: a dose of cayenne in the frying oil, a splash of Tabasco in the batter, a dash of powdered habanero in the breading, a sprinkle of dried and powdered pepper atop the finished bird, even a sluice of pepper-infused oil on the pickles that crown that same bird. In Nashville, at least among the drinking class, folks appreciate the kind of heat that compels you to grab the Physician’s Desk Reference, thumbing wildly for a passage that differentiates between second and third degree burns. Prince’s Hot Chicken is the local fave for their four-in-the-morning weekend closing times; for their devotion to gargantuan iron skillets from which emerge some of the crispest, savoriest chicken around; for the architectural precision with which they stack a quarter-chicken atop two slices of white bread, crowning the whole affair with a couple or three pickle slices; and for their heavy hand with the pepper wand, their tendency to swab a thigh with enough hot stuff to prod a drunken patron into a stunned semblance of sobriety. --- JOHN T. SCOTT 1940-2007 It is with great sadness that we note the passing of artist John T. Scott. Mr. Scott, a native of New Orleans and recipient of a prestigious McArthur "Genius" Fellowship, created the print we use to celebrate the life and work of our Tabasco Guardians of the Tradition. --- Use the seach function below to browse the Southern Foodways site for oral history topics, people or places we've featured, or general information about your favorite foods and foodways.
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