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Friday, December 23, 2011

Madeline’s Spinach

You know, it's funny how things come full circle, one day, just out of the blue. I was perusing the internet earlier this week and came across this article on http://225batonrouge.com . There it was! The origins of Spinach Madeline, a beloved South Louisiana recipe that I posted here on the blog last year for Thanksgiving and again last Christmas. I never knew the exact origin of the recipe or who made it up but here it is! I found it very interesting especially since I've been making it for the last 25 years!


Madeline’s Spinach

By Maggie Heyn Richardson

Thursday, December 1, 2011


Local retiree Madeline Wright caused a sensation and a renowned regional dish with her creation of Spinach Madeleine in 1956.



In 1956, St. Francisville native Madeline Wright was mulling over what to prepare for a bridge luncheon for friends when she spotted a six-ounce roll of Kraft jalapeño cheese in her refrigerator. She had picked up the new product from the supermarket a few days earlier with no specific plans for using it.

Maybe it would enhance creamed spinach, she thought. Despite her lack of cooking experience, she proceeded to toss together what seemed right: chopped spinach, diced onion, butter, flour, vegetable liquor, a few shakes of celery salt and garlic salt, chunks of the jalapeño cheese roll and Worcestershire sauce. Wright stirred the concoction until it was thick and creamy, placed it in a casserole and topped it with breadcrumbs. She plated it on good china and served it to her friends.

It was creamy, salty and spiked with unexpected spiciness. Her friends’ rave reviews inspired her to keep serving the dish at dinner parties and family events. Two years later, the Junior League of Baton Rouge asked its members to submit recipes for its first cookbook, and Wright handed over instructions for her go-to spicy creamed spinach.

She named it Spinach Madeleine, using the French spelling of her first name for extra flourish.

River Road Recipes was published in 1959 and quickly became a regional hit. Its success led to three subsequent volumes, which together form the best-selling community cookbook series in the nation. Generations of readers have discovered and cooked Wright’s recipe, and it has long been a standard item on local holiday tables. Spinach Madeleine became so popular regionally that when Kraft Foods discontinued its jalapeño cheese roll in 1999, fans of the dish showered the company with complaints. Kraft maintained its decision, forcing local cooks to turn to other jalapeño cheeses for the recipe.



Today, Wright still marvels at the unexpected attention earned by her bout of kitchen spontaneity.

“It’s really sort of funny and a little bit embarrassing, but it’s nice to be known for something,” says Wright, now 82 and still living in St. Francisville.

Cooking had not been one of Wright’s favorite activities. When many of her peers were learning to cook, she was earning dual bachelor’s degrees from LSU in psychology and sociology. As she approached her marriage to William Reymond shortly after graduation, her mother had a suggestion.

“She told me I ought to take a home economics class to learn how to cook,” Wright says. “My mother-in-law was also a well-known cook and hostess, so I had a lot of standards to measure up to.”

Wright and her first husband and their children eventually moved to Houston. She later created a company that leased plants to corporate offices.

She returned home to St. Francisville years later, and in 1992, she opened a bed and breakfast on family property called the Green Springs Inn. She closed it in 2005 to spend more time with family.

As for her famed dish, Wright says she has made it occasionally over the years, but not as often as its fans might think.

“Our B&B guests expected me to serve it for breakfast,” she says. “I’d do it only periodically. Usually we’d do a typical Southern breakfast of scrambled eggs, grits, biscuits and fresh fruit.”

Wright also laments the loss of the cornerstone ingredient, the jalapeño cheese log.

“It’s been a pain in the neck ever since,” she admits. “Now the dish has an entirely different texture. I’ve tried various things, but I find Velveeta too soupy. None of it is really satisfactory.”

Wright says she never benefitted financially from the recipe, and she says she still marvels at the enthusiasm with which people have embraced it.

“It was just a set of circumstances that fell together,” she says. “It’s been a lot of fun, and nobody is more surprised about it than I am.”

Friday, December 9, 2011

New Orleans Beignets


Beignet (pronounced "ben-yay" in French) literally means "bump". Beignets were brought to Louisiana by the Acadians from Canada who arrived there from France. These were fried fritters, sometimes filled with fruit. Today, they are a pastry made from deep-fried dough like a doughnut only square and sprinkled with confectioner's sugar.

Shhhhhh! I'll share a little secret with you. Shhhhhh! You don't need beignet mix or make a dough from scratch to make beignets! All you need is a can of basic biscuits, nothing fancy just plain old generic biscuits.

You can leave them round, cut them to form squares or into rectangular "fingers" which are easier to eat. Using the leftover dough, form another square or finger biscuit; then deep fry them in hot oil. Remove from the oil and place on a plate covered with paper towels to absorb the excess oil, then sprinkle confectioner's sugar over them. That's it!!! Now you can have your own Cafe du Monde experience at home!

Serve them with ice cold milk or cafe au Lait (which is coffee with lots of milk in it). Community Coffee can be found in most grocery stores around the nation. The New Orleans Blend with Chickory is what is served at Cafe du Monde in New Orleans. My favorite is the Cafe Special.

Turn on some New Orleans jazz, make some Cafe au Lait and Beignets, transport yourself back to New Orleans and have a nice relaxing breakfast! Enjoy and you're welcome!!!