As reported in the Washington Post, "Hoppin’ John, a New Year’s tradition born from slavery," by Tim Carman, on 27 December 2011-- The hoppin’ John cassoulet on his New Year’s Eve menu at the Tabard Inn might give you the wrong impression about chef Paul Pelt. It might lead you to think that Pelt believes in random, mercurial luck. He doesn’t. The unusually taciturn cook — I’d call him shy if it weren’t for his occasional bursts of pointed humor — believes in divine providence over luck.
“I’ve bought lottery tickets and never won anything,” says the dreadlocked chef. “Last night we had our employee Christmas party. I’ve never won anything at the raffle.”
No, Pelt’s interest in one of the American South’s great superstitions — that annual ritual of eating black-eyed peas to bring good fortune for the new year — is purely culinary. “I don’t really believe in luck,” he deadpans. “I just like eating pork and beans.”
If you took a poll, many eaters would probably fall into Pelt’s camp. Few, I trust, expect to win the Powerball after devouring a dish of hoppin’ John swollen with slow-cooked black-eyed peas. I suspect any fascination over the dish is 1 part camp, 2 parts gustatory pleasure and 97 parts tradition. A desire for black-eyed peas around New Year’s does not automatically assume you believe in the Deep South version of Jack’s magic beans.
The good-luck tradition tied to black-eyed peas is a curious one, given the bean’s history. Like the people who first loved the legume, black-eyed peas were a product of the slave trade. The men and women of West Africa, who were dragged involuntarily to the United States, were sought for their knowledge of rice cultivation.
In their search for a profitable crop, Southern plantation owners “tried everything they could,” says food historian and cookbook author John Martin Taylor (a.k.a. “Hoppin’ John”), during a phone interview from his new home in Bulgaria. “Rice happened to do really well there. That’s what then effected the slave trade. They specifically brought West Africans from rice-growing regions.”
And those West Africans, the literature so often notes, brought their food with them — except they didn’t, as food writer John Thorne so eloquently points out in his now-classic essay on hoppin’ John in the “Serious Pig” collection (North Point Press, 1996): “The only thing Africans brought with them was their memories. If they were fortunate enough to have been taken along with other members of their own community and to stay with them (which rarely happened) — there was also the possibility of reestablishing out of these memories some truncated resemblance of former rituals and customs.”
It was in all likelihood the slave traders who started to import black-eyed peas to the United States as some sort of backhanded charitable act to appease their unhappy charges during the long and often deadly journeys across the Atlantic. In the American South, with both rice and black-eyed peas available, the natives of West Africa could prepare a dish that reminded them of home: a humble combination of rice and beans that eventually became known as hoppin’ John.
Much has been written about the origin of the name. Most of the theories, as Taylor wrote in a recent essay about the dish for Gastronomica, are merely “fakelore,” because “they are based on neither fact nor historical record.” One such theory supposes the dish earned its name from children hopping around the table before they could eat their beans and rice. (Please.) Another describes a hobbled man by the name of Hoppin’ John who sold the dish on the streets of Charleston, S.C. Thorne believes the name is a corruption of the French term for pigeon peas, “pois a pigeon,” while the late food historian Karen Hess thought the name derived from “the old Persian bahatta kachang, meaning cooked rice and beans,” Taylor wrote in his essay.
If writers and scholars disagree on the origin of the name, at least they have something to argue about. There are virtually no established theories about how hoppin’ John came to symbolize good luck, or how eating it would provide good luck for the coming year. Some point to the notion that the peas resemble coins, which would be true if our pocket change looked like jellybeans. Others note that hoppin’ John typically is served with braised collard greens, which popularly symbolize paper money.
Taylor suggests that the tradition might (emphasis on “might”) have started during that fallow period between Christmas and New Year’s Day, when slaves were given time off. The harvest season was essentially over, the planting season yet to come. It was a good time to give thanks for past crops, Taylor says, and raise expectations for the coming season. Such a ritual could have developed into a good-luck tradition, with the slaves’ favorite dish of hoppin’ John as the centerpiece.
Then again, as Taylor notes, “a historian of belief systems, superstitions and traditions I’m not.”
“I’ve bought lottery tickets and never won anything,” says the dreadlocked chef. “Last night we had our employee Christmas party. I’ve never won anything at the raffle.”
No, Pelt’s interest in one of the American South’s great superstitions — that annual ritual of eating black-eyed peas to bring good fortune for the new year — is purely culinary. “I don’t really believe in luck,” he deadpans. “I just like eating pork and beans.”
If you took a poll, many eaters would probably fall into Pelt’s camp. Few, I trust, expect to win the Powerball after devouring a dish of hoppin’ John swollen with slow-cooked black-eyed peas. I suspect any fascination over the dish is 1 part camp, 2 parts gustatory pleasure and 97 parts tradition. A desire for black-eyed peas around New Year’s does not automatically assume you believe in the Deep South version of Jack’s magic beans.
The good-luck tradition tied to black-eyed peas is a curious one, given the bean’s history. Like the people who first loved the legume, black-eyed peas were a product of the slave trade. The men and women of West Africa, who were dragged involuntarily to the United States, were sought for their knowledge of rice cultivation.
In their search for a profitable crop, Southern plantation owners “tried everything they could,” says food historian and cookbook author John Martin Taylor (a.k.a. “Hoppin’ John”), during a phone interview from his new home in Bulgaria. “Rice happened to do really well there. That’s what then effected the slave trade. They specifically brought West Africans from rice-growing regions.”
And those West Africans, the literature so often notes, brought their food with them — except they didn’t, as food writer John Thorne so eloquently points out in his now-classic essay on hoppin’ John in the “Serious Pig” collection (North Point Press, 1996): “The only thing Africans brought with them was their memories. If they were fortunate enough to have been taken along with other members of their own community and to stay with them (which rarely happened) — there was also the possibility of reestablishing out of these memories some truncated resemblance of former rituals and customs.”
Much has been written about the origin of the name. Most of the theories, as Taylor wrote in a recent essay about the dish for Gastronomica, are merely “fakelore,” because “they are based on neither fact nor historical record.” One such theory supposes the dish earned its name from children hopping around the table before they could eat their beans and rice. (Please.) Another describes a hobbled man by the name of Hoppin’ John who sold the dish on the streets of Charleston, S.C. Thorne believes the name is a corruption of the French term for pigeon peas, “pois a pigeon,” while the late food historian Karen Hess thought the name derived from “the old Persian bahatta kachang, meaning cooked rice and beans,” Taylor wrote in his essay.
If writers and scholars disagree on the origin of the name, at least they have something to argue about. There are virtually no established theories about how hoppin’ John came to symbolize good luck, or how eating it would provide good luck for the coming year. Some point to the notion that the peas resemble coins, which would be true if our pocket change looked like jellybeans. Others note that hoppin’ John typically is served with braised collard greens, which popularly symbolize paper money.
Taylor suggests that the tradition might (emphasis on “might”) have started during that fallow period between Christmas and New Year’s Day, when slaves were given time off. The harvest season was essentially over, the planting season yet to come. It was a good time to give thanks for past crops, Taylor says, and raise expectations for the coming season. Such a ritual could have developed into a good-luck tradition, with the slaves’ favorite dish of hoppin’ John as the centerpiece.
Then again, as Taylor notes, “a historian of belief systems, superstitions and traditions I’m not.”
The historian stands on firmer ground when discussing what, to me, is the most fascinating part of the hoppin’ John story: the dish’s migration from slave table to slave owner table. Taylor believes it was a natural evolution, given that slaves often served as cooks to the plantation owners. “These wealthy families, they weren’t eating the grand food” every night, the historian says. “They would have been eating hoppin’ John and corn pone and grains.”
Hoppin’ John has that ability to worm its way into your life, even if it wasn’t part of your family’s tradition. Perhaps the combination of rice and beans is so universal, so nutritious and so satisfying that, on some level, the human body just craves it. In one form or another, rice and beans can be found on tables from Africa and India (try the black-eyed peas and pumpkin dish at Passage to India in Bethesda) to the Caribbean and the American South.
Tabard Inn’s Pelt, 52, didn’t grow up eating hoppin’ John. He’s a Chicago native whose parents were born in the Second City. Southern cooking was not a regular part of his diet, even though Pelt’s grandparents, on both sides of the family, were from the South. Pelt moved to the District in 1973 to live with his father, who had a healthy appreciation for food and was known to prepare a plate of collard greens from time to time. Pelt fell into the restaurant business along Pennsylvania Avenue SE, busing tables, washing dishes and doing prep. Like so many in the industry back then, he worked his way onto the kitchen line.
Pelt eventually landed a cooking job in the 1990s at the Tabard Inn (the first of two runs for him there), where chefs Stacy Cosor and David Craig took the untrained cook under their wing. They encouraged him to read as many cookbooks as he could get his hands on. “I always liked cooking, but reading made me start thinking how American food got to be what it is — all the different influences on what we cook.”
The book that really deepened Pelt’s appreciation for Southern food was Heidi Haughy Cusick’s “Soul and Spice” (Chronicle Books, 1995). “It’s about the cooking of Africans in the Americas,” he says. “Around the same time I got that book, I went to Nigeria for the first time, for like three weeks. . . . That was really an eye-opener for me: just the history of how the slave trade affected what we eat and what people eat in the Caribbean, what people eat in Brazil and the American South.”
Many years later, Pelt is creating his own fusion of cultures with his hoppin’ John cassoulet, which combines African and American traditions with the classic French stew. Aside from substituting black-eyed peas for the more traditional cannelloni or flageolet beans in cassoulet, Pelt also puts a Southern twist on the proteins in the dish. He retains the Toulouse sausage and duck confit but replaces the lamb and roast pork with ham hocks and pork shanks. The result is a deep, smoky, satisfying winter dish: perfect, I’d say, for many other occasions besides New Year’s.
There’s just one ingredient missing from Pelt’s chef-driven hoppin’ John: the rice. He says the grains are a casualty of his multi-course New Year’s Eve meal. “Because it’s an appetizer,” he says about his cassoulet, “I don’t want to make it too filling.”
So given Pelt’s feelings about luck, will he include a mention of the hoppin’ John tradition on his New Year’s Eve menu at the Tabard Inn?
“I’ll tell the waiters the story: that people believe, or that people used to believe . . . that it’s good luck,” Pelt says. “But I won’t say, ‘Hey, it really is. You guys should eat some before you go out there tonight. You’ll make a lot of tips.’ ” (source: Washington Post)
WOW just what I was looking for. Came here by searching for
ReplyDeletehair loss
Here is my web-site ... http://hemorrhoidtreatmentreviews.webs.com/apps/blog/show/3388226-zenmed-ziro-review-for-easing-hemorrhoids
I used to be able to find good information from your articles.
ReplyDeleteAlso visit my web site : http://jacquesschneider.webs.com/apps/blog/show/20963602-top-3-advantages-of-chi-ceramic-flat-irons
Good info. Lucky me I discovered your website by
ReplyDeleteaccident (stumbleupon). I have book-marked it for later!
Also visit my website - http://hoidtreatment.webs.com/apps/blog/show/13931969-procerin-meh-it-s-ok-
When some one searches for his necessary thing, therefore he/she wishes to be available that
ReplyDeletein detail, thus that thing is maintained over here.
Also visit my homepage ... Dani
I like what you guys tend to be up too. This sort of
ReplyDeleteclever work and exposure! Keep up the very good works guys I've included you guys to blogroll.
Also visit my weblog - http://coloncleanserreviews.typepad.com/colon-cleanse/2012/04/procerin-or-profollica-reversing-hair-loss.html
What's up, everything is going sound here and ofcourse every one is sharing information, that's actually good, keep
ReplyDeleteup writing.
Look into my weblog Gertrude
Awesome blog you have here but I was curious about if you knew of any community forums
ReplyDeletethat cover the same topics talked about in this article?
I'd really love to be a part of group where I can get suggestions from other knowledgeable people that share the same interest. If you have any suggestions, please let me know. Thanks a lot!
My web site : http://lucila13.wetpaint.com/page/Provillus
Hello! I just wanted to ask if you ever have any
ReplyDeleteissues with hackers? My last blog (wordpress) was hacked and I ended up losing several
weeks of hard work due to no back up. Do you have any solutions to protect against hackers?
My site ; Angela
Very rapidly this website will be famous among all blog visitors,
ReplyDeletedue to it's fastidious articles
Feel free to visit my blog :: Provillus side Effects
Very great post. I simply stumbled upon your weblog and wanted to say that I've really enjoyed browsing your weblog posts. In any case I will be subscribing on your rss feed and I hope you write again very soon!
ReplyDeleteCheck out my web page profollica in uk
You could definitely see your enthusiasm within the work
ReplyDeleteyou write. The world hopes for more passionate writers such as you who are not afraid to say how they believe.
At all times follow your heart.
My site :: profollica south africa
Nice response in return of this query with genuine arguments and telling all regarding that.
ReplyDeleteFeel free to visit my web blog ; http://blogtext.org/jamenolan/article/1172058.html
Hi! I simply want to offer you a huge thumbs up for the excellent information you have got right here
ReplyDeleteon this post. I'll be coming back to your blog for more soon.
My web-site :: http://jacquesschneide.blog.com/2010/04/18/rogaine-review/
Hi there, just became aware of your blog through Google, and
ReplyDeletefound that it is really informative. I'm gonna watch out for brussels. I will appreciate if you continue this in future. A lot of people will be benefited from your writing. Cheers!
Also visit my blog post ... Provillus Minoxidil
Wow! In the end I got a web site from where I know how
ReplyDeleteto actually obtain useful information concerning my study and knowledge.
Feel free to surf my blog - Chara
Quality articles or reviews is the secret to attract
ReplyDeletethe viewers to pay a visit the web page, that's what this web page is providing.
Also visit my web blog :: http://blogtext.org/jamenolan/article/1289983.html
Admiring the time and energy you put into your
ReplyDeleteblog and in depth information you provide. It's nice to come across a blog every once in a while that isn't the
same outdated rehashed information. Fantastic read!
I've bookmarked your site and I'm including your RSS feeds
to my Google account.
Also visit my page ... provillus ebay
Awesome blog! Is your theme custom made or did you download it from somewhere?
ReplyDeleteA design like yours with a few simple tweeks would really make my blog stand
out. Please let me know where you got your theme. Thanks a lot
Feel free to surf my blog ... http://refrigeratorwaterfilters.webs.com/apps/blog/show/20856925-generic-refrigerator-water-filters-for-safe-water
Fastidious answer back in return of this query with genuine arguments and telling all
ReplyDeleteregarding that.
Also visit my weblog Refrigerator Water Filters
Whoa! This blog looks just like my old one! It's on a completely different topic but it has pretty much the same page layout and design. Great choice of colors!
ReplyDeleteAlso visit my page :: http://hoidtreatment.webs.com/apps/blog/show/13932365-interesting-facts-about-scalp-med
Hi there friends, its wonderful post concerning cultureand entirely defined,
ReplyDeletekeep it up all the time.
My blog post refrigeratorwaterfilters.webs.com
Great blog here! Also your site rather a lot up fast!
ReplyDeleteWhat web host are you the use of? Can I get your associate hyperlink on your host?
I wish my website loaded up as quickly as yours lol
Also visit my web site : Hemorrhoid Dx
What's up to every single one, it's in fact a good for me to pay a quick visit this website, it consists of precious Information.
ReplyDeleteAlso visit my web page ; procerin vs provillus ingredients
Awesome blog! Do you have any suggestions for aspiring writers?
ReplyDeleteI'm hoping to start my own blog soon but I'm a little lost on
everything. Would you advise starting with a free platform
like Wordpress or go for a paid option? There are so many options
out there that I'm totally confused .. Any ideas? Kudos!
Also visit my web-site :: http://www.gather.com/viewArticle.action?articleId=281474981739106
whoah this weblog is great i love reading your articles.
ReplyDeleteStay up the good work! You know, lots of people are searching round for
this information, you can aid them greatly.
Take a look at my website :: http://jacquesschneide.blog.com/2011/12/15/provillusreview/
This paragraph will help the internet visitors for creating new webpage or even a blog from start to end.
ReplyDeleteHere is my blog post : http://coloncleanserreviews.typepad.com/colon-cleanse/2012/04/more-on-scalp-med.html
I enjoy what you guys are usually up too. Such clever
ReplyDeletework and exposure! Keep up the excellent works guys I've added you guys to blogroll.
My webpage ... Carex Sitzbath
Hi! Do you use Twitter? I'd like to follow you if that would be ok. I'm absolutely enjoying your blog and
ReplyDeletelook forward to new updates.
My web site :: Darnell
I've been surfing online greater than 3 hours nowadays, but I by no means found any interesting article like yours. It's
ReplyDeletebeautiful worth sufficient for me. In my opinion, if all webmasters and bloggers made good content material
as you probably did, the web will be a lot more
useful than ever before.
Check out my website ... http://benbergerhealth.blog.com/2012/12/13/hemorr-ice/
Hey! I could have sworn I've been to this website before but after browsing through some of the post I realized it's new to me.
ReplyDeleteAnyways, I'm definitely glad I found it and I'll be book-marking and checking back
frequently!
Review my blog http://benbergerhealth.blog.com/2012/12/13/natural-hemorrhoid-relief/
Hey therе! I've been reading your blog for a while now and finally got the bravery to go ahead and give you a shout out from New Caney Tx! Just wanted to tell you keep up the good job!
ReplyDeleteAlso visit my blog post ... planetside 2 cheats
What's up it's me, I am also visiting this site on a regular basis,
ReplyDeletethis web page is in fact pleasant and the visitors are really sharing
pleasant thoughts.
My homepage ... http://benbergerhealth.blog.com/2012/12/13/external-hemorrhoids-thrombosed/
If some one wishes expert view concerning running a blog
ReplyDeletethen i recommend him/her to visit this website,
Keep up the pleasant job.
Take a look at my website - Lloyd
This is really interesting, You're an excessively professional blogger. I have joined your feed and look forward to looking for extra of your excellent post. Also, I have shared your web site in my social networks
ReplyDeleteCheck out my blog : http://coloncleanserreviews.typepad.com
Hi Dear, are you actually visiting this website regularly, if so afterward you will definitely get nice experience.
ReplyDeleteHere is my blog ; http://www.blogtext.org/jamenolan/article/1289994.html?Provillus+FDA+%96+The+Truth+About+Provillus
Hello, all the time i used to check blog posts here early in the daylight, since i
ReplyDeletelove to learn more and more.
Here is my page ... Http://Refrigeratorwaterfilters.Webs.Com/
I do not even know how I finished up here, but I thought this put up was great.
ReplyDeleteI do not understand who you might be however certainly you're going to a well-known blogger if you happen to aren't already.
Cheers!
Here is my site ... Provillus
This design is wicked! You definitely know how
ReplyDeleteto keep a reader entertained. Between your wit and your videos, I was almost moved to start my own blog (well,
almost...HaHa!) Fantastic job. I really loved what you had to say, and more than that, how you presented it.
Too cool!
Visit my webpage ... http://benbergerhealth.blog.com/2012/12/13/tucks-medicated-hemorrhoids-pads/
I appreciate it. Thanks for sharing this informative post. Keep posting updates.
ReplyDeleteOrder Food Online
Τhere aгe a lаrge degree thiѕ criticism is unfounded, as you anԁ
ReplyDeleteyοur lifestylе and inсome, what
you like. But nοw that online free dating serviсe
abovе, asking them to take a woman in the U. How dοes thіs
οn a free fгee dating ѕite for single girls аs you might want to gеt
youг ex boyfrіend in public well lit setting is not an іssue in
genеral. Αs attractiνe аѕ
confidеnce, оr profile that reаds," no thanks.
Here is my web page: online dating
Your style is so unique compared to other folks I've read stuff from. I appreciate you for posting when you've got the opportunity, Guess I will just
ReplyDeletebookmark this web site.
Here is my homepage Http://Spiritbody.Blogspot.Com
I'm really enjoying the design and layout of your site. It's a very easy on the eyes which mаkes іt
ReplyDeletemuch more pleaѕant foг me to comе herе and visit more often.
Did уоu hirе out a dеsigner to create уour theme?
Excеllent ωorκ!
My page :: vipshoppingalert.com
bpj40lpuc
ReplyDeletemy website ... uk Fast payday loans
ReplyDeleteHave a look at my hοmepage :: green coffee bean extract reviews
If you get a chance, you can order restaurant food online using ChefOnline website. It will save your time and you will get food from the restaurants you want from your city.
ReplyDeleteHealthy eating is crucial to a person's quality of health life. Avoidance of comfort foods, baked comfort food frequent heavy snacking etc., are important factors in cultivating healthy eating habits.
ReplyDeleteHealthy eating is crucial to a person's quality of health life. Avoidance of comfort foods, baked comfort food frequent heavy snacking etc., are important factors in cultivating healthy eating habits.
ReplyDeleteIf you are a dog lover or Baked comfort food mom and are thinking about setting up a low cost business venture, then a home based gourmet dog bakery might be a good option for you. Aside from the fact that you can start your operations almost immediately, you can create your products right out of your kitchen too, certified or otherwise.
ReplyDelete