BOILED PEANUTS IT’S ALL ABOUT LOVE STORY AND PHOTO BY AMBER NIMOCKS
Transcription
BOILED PEANUTS IT’S ALL ABOUT LOVE STORY AND PHOTO BY AMBER NIMOCKS
BOILED PEANUTS IT’S ALL ABOUT LOVE STORY AND PHOTO BY AMBER NIMOCKS 18 EDIBLE PIEDMONT | SUMMER 2009 B oiled peanuts demand a level of commitment that most other foods do not. They belong to the classification “total-immersion cuisine,” along with blue crabs, watermelon slices, oysters on the half-shell and corn on the cob. To eat these foods is to wrest your prey from its natural protection, to sully hands, face and quite often, your shirt. The boiled peanut is perhaps the least widely loved of its classification, and it tends to stir passionate levels of either ardor or disgust. To the uninitiated, a plastic bag full of damp peanuts can seem like a mistake. Once they crush that still-crunchy shell between the thumb and forefinger and fish out the soft, juicy bean inside, they find themselves firmly on one side of the boiled peanut divide. For fans, eating a boiled peanut after a long time going without, is to scratch a culinary itch that nothing else can reach. The combination of the mild, salty juice and the almost chewy bean with its muted nuttiness, released from damp confinement, is incomparable. To share this love is to enjoy a true kinship, especially if you live outside the coastal plain where peanuts grow and boiled peanut stands thrive. At least once in our 12 years together my converted-Southerner husband’s affinity for the soft legume has helped smooth the sometimes-bumpy road of matrimony. This bond between peanut lovers helps drive sales for Jack and Nancy Huestess, who sell green boiled peanuts from July to October at their stand in the Bladen County crossroads of Abbotsburg. “When it’s peanut season, you start thinking about your friends,” says Huestess. “If you’ve got a friend who likes boiled peanuts you can’t do nothing better for them.” I spent an afternoon at the Huestess’ peanut stand in October last year, listening as every driver who followed the sandy, semi-circular path drive to their wooden stand swore by their wares. What makes fresh boiled peanuts from a roadside stand like Jack’s better than those you scoop out of a convenience store crock in the winter or, if you must, eat from a can, is that Jack’s peanuts have never been dried. Peanuts bound for storage or processing must be dried to keep from spoiling. Jack’s peanuts go almost directly from the fields to a salty simmer. “The secret to a great boiled peanut is not here,” Jack says, pointing to a simmering tank the size of pig cooker. “It’s out there.” Out there, about 100 feet away, a half-dozen women sit on metal folding chairs pulling the peanuts by hand from piles of dirty, twisted vines. Hand picking ensures that the legumes are not torn, bruised or dirtied in their shells. This makes for more edible peanuts and less waste. The pickers can toss out bad nuts before they make it into the pot. “It would be cheaper to do it by machine,” Jack says. “But it’s worth it to have people come in and buy and come back.” Those who live in peanut country know that the peanuts change with the season. In midsummer, smaller, more tender beans that have plenty of room in their shells prevail. Just an hour or two of simmering turns them silky soft inside their pods. Salty juice accumulates inside the shell, and you can eat the little legumes as if they were tiny oysters. By fall, the fields offer more mature peanuts that retain a toothsome texture reminiscent of a cooked garbanzo bean even after cooking overnight. The other secret to a tasty boiled peanut is a great deal of salt. Jack says he uses no recipe, and he won’t hazard a guess at his peanuts’ sodium content. “I wouldn’t want to say how much salt I use,” he says. veloped a taste for boiled peanuts almost as soon as he moved to North Carolina. His affinity was a blessing to us one gray Sunday afternoon while we were on our way to a job interview. The job was for me and it would require us to move from our home in downtown Wilmington, a prospect I did not relish. But it was in Raleigh, where he was working, and moving would mean an end to his brutal commute. I was stewing. Heading west on Interstate 40 through Pender County, he stopped at a convenience store and returned to the car with a warm Styrofoam cup full of boiled peanuts. It was winter, so the peanuts weren’t fresh. Nonetheless, they were salty and soft and reminiscent of long drives in the country I used to take with my mother. We rode in silence for a while, and I pondered my luck at finding a California-born, Maryland-raised man who fell in love not only with me and the South and Tar Heel basketball but also with peanuts cooked to a near mush. Needless to say we moved to Raleigh. eP Amber Nimocks is the former food editor of The News & Observer, where her monthly wine column “Let It Pour” appears, and currently works as a producer on WUNC-FM’s “The State of Things.” Most of the traffic on that late October day is local—a deer hunter who has been in the woods all morning, the mailman coming by for a gallon of peanuts for his pastor. One exception is the driver of an SUV with Virginia plates that pulls up and buys several gallons. He’s been coming to this stand for years, on his way between Virginia and Bald Head Island, he says. It’s worth the detour to take them back home and share, he says. On occasion, I’ve tried to persuade those raised solely on roasted peanuts to open their minds. I point out that they eat corn in more than one incarnation—fresh and gently cooked or dried and heated in oil as popcorn. Fortunately, my husband didn’t take much persuading. He deEDIBLE PIEDMONT | SUMMER 2009 19