Jim Sanders Georgia Brunswick Stew
By Doc Lawrence
Each
July 4, Sanders served his barbeque pork along with his treasured recipe
Georgia Brunswick Stew, something he learned during his childhood days in
Covington, Georgia. It is the traditional accompaniment to genuine Deep South
barbecue and his recipe is credible.
INGREDIENTS:
1
four-pound baking chicken
4
pounds ground pork
1/2
teaspoon ground black pepper
1
teaspoon Tabasco sauce
1-tablespoon
chili powder
1
tablespoon thyme
1
tablespoons cayenne pepper
2
cups chopped onions
1
cup red wine, preferably Rhone style
3
to 4 tablespoons bacon drippings
36
ounces tomato juice
4
ounce tomato catsup
Kosher
salt and black pepper
PREPARATION:
Boil the chicken until it is very tender, cool, de-bone
and chop the meat finely. Meanwhile, in a large pot over medium heat, braise
the pork until half done. Add half the chopped onions, one chopped garlic
clove, chili powder, thyme, cayenne pepper and a generous sprinkling of kosher
salt and black pepper. Continue to braise until the meat is well browned,
stirring every few minutes to break up any lumps and combine with chicken. Add
the tomato juice and catsup and simmer for 11/2 hours. Add the rest of the
chopped onions, another chopped garlic clove and simmer for another 30 minutes.
Taste for salt and spoon off the fat before serving.
WINES:
Beaujolais goes well with Brunswick stew. It does not
fight the spices and it has a lot of refreshment value. Otherwise, fairly heavy
red wines like Cotes du Rhone complement the spice and flavors nicely as do
several Italian reds like Chianti, Bardolino and Montepulciano.
NOTE:
Over
three decades, Jim Sanders taught thousands in his wine classes in Atlanta, a
rich mixture of governors, members of Congress, physicians, Georgia Supreme
Court Justices and regular men and women. Although a product of the Deep South,
Jim was more French than anything. After World War II-he was wounded five times
in the Pacific campaigns-he went to France, bicycled the countryside and found
his passion in wine and food. He learned to cook in Lyon and Paris and met
Armand Cottin, president of Labourie-Roi and through this brotherly friendship,
developed his own cuvee of 179 Burgundies garnering numerous awards. Each day,
in the rear of his retail wine shop in Atlanta’s Buckhead, Sanders served most
anyone who came in wonderful dishes he prepared along with pours from countless
bottles of perfectly paired wines. There was no charge.
Jim’s
wines, all under his JSANDERS label, are sold exclusively in Atlanta’s
Sherlock’s Wine Merchants.
On
the eve of his death in 1999, Jim Sanders entrusted me with his priceless wine
notes, lectures, stories and recipes.
I'm going to give this a go! Sounds yummy!
ReplyDeleteI like the wine pairings.
ReplyDelete