Deal Saver - brought to you by the Charlotte Observer

0 comments
  • Print
  • Reprint or License
  • Share Share

Our slice of the pie

Don't you think the sweet potato deserves our thanks?

By Kathleen Purvis
kpurvis@charlotteobserver.com
  • http://media.charlotteobserver.com/smedia/2011/10/25/16/57/8Em46.Em.138.jpg|362

    McDermott

  • http://media.charlotteobserver.com/smedia/2011/10/25/16/57/1nZU5X.Em.138.jpg|221

  • http://media.charlotteobserver.com/smedia/2011/10/25/16/57/CWC19.Em.138.jpg|428

    For an extra treat, top your sweet potato pie with whipped cream and a sprinkle of cinnamon. Todd Sumlin - tsumlin@charlotteobserver.com

  • http://media.charlotteobserver.com/smedia/2011/10/25/14/06/QAxcL.Em.138.jpg|463

    Sweet potato pie is made from the state vegetable. Why isn't it the state pie? Todd Sumlin - OBSERVER STAFF

  • http://media.charlotteobserver.com/smedia/2011/10/25/14/06/OiMl7.Em.138.jpg|499

    Jones

More Information

  • A 9-inch sweet potato pie from Honey Butter Bakery is $15 at

    honeybutterbakery.com.


  • Official state pies (sometimes they're labeled state dessert or state treat):

    Delaware: Peach.

    Florida: Key Lime.

    Indiana: Sugar Cream (AKA Hoosier Pie).

    Louisiana: Natchitoches meat pie.

    Maine: Blueberry (state dessert) and whoopie pie (state treat).

    Massachusetts: Boston cream pie.

    Oklahoma: Pecan pie (part of the official state meal).

    Vermont: Apple.



It's not hard to love sweet potato pie.

Richer than pumpkin, not as cloying as pecan, it's a better delivery system for whipped cream than apple pie.

So it pains us to suggest that we, the people of North Carolina, may have done a disservice to sweet potato pie.

We are the nation's No. 1 grower of sweet potatoes. Our sweet potato harvest brought in $176 million last year. Sweet potatoes are a replacement for some of that tobacco we used to grow.

So why haven't we named it the official state pie? Shouldn't we give sweet potatoes their just desserts?

Ask Sonya Stead, the leader singer of the Cary-based bluegrass harmony group Sweet Potato Pie.

"I'd sing my way across the state for that," she declares. "I think we should start a campaign."

A Southern favorite

Throughout 2011, as part of the Carolina Classic series, we have brought you the stories of some iconic state foods. We have chewed over pimento cheese, stewed over fried pies and waded into chow-chow.

To wrap it up, we thought seriously about sweet potato pie. Truthfully, sweet potato pie is not just a classic in North Carolina. It has a long history all over the South.

"It goes way, way back," says culinary historian and cookbook author Nancie McDermott of Chapel Hill. Both sweet potato and pumpkin are versions of custard pies.

McDermott dug into the sweet potato pie genre in her 2010 book "Southern Pies" (Chronicle, $22.95). Although she won't name a favorite pie - "It's like people talking about their kids, you can't name a favorite" - she is partial to sweet potato.

"It's Southern and it's easy and it's good," she says.

Although people sometimes think sweet potatoes came from Africa with the slave trade, they're actually native to America. The Cherokee Indians farmed sweet potatoes.

Sweet potatoes were an early export to Europe from the New World. They're mentioned in Shakespeare, and Henry VIII ate them as an aphrodisiac. (It didn't work any more than his marriages.)

Because sweet potatoes grow so well here, they turn up all over the state. Sonker, a cross between a pie and a cobbler that's a tradition in Surry County, is often made with sweet potatoes, and fried pies have a sweet potato variation called jacks.

People used to make pie out of anything they had on hand. McDermott has found recipes for pies made from soda crackers, bread crumbs, even Irish potatoes. Once people had access to more ingredients, those pies disappeared. But sweet potato stayed on, too good to be forgotten.

Sweet soul food

Brandi Jones of Honey Butter Bakery, a wholesale baking company, makes up to six dozen sweet potato pies a week for several Charlotte soul-food restaurants, including La'Wan's.

Jones won't share her recipe, but she prefers evaporated milk instead of whole or sweetened condensed milk, and she only uses N.C.-grown sweet potatoes.

She purees cooked sweet potatoes in a blender to break up the sweet potato fibers. A customer once accused her of using canned sweet potatoes because her pie wasn't stringy.

"Trust me," Jones says, laughing. "I peel those things. It's all fresh."

At performances by the all-female band Sweet Potato Pie, they sell single-serving pies made by Sweet Cheeks Bakery in Holly Springs.

Although they aren't the only state music connection - Chapel Hill native James Taylor wrote the song "Sweet Potato Pie" - the band's name got them a bonus. They're the official band of the N.C. Sweet Potato Commission and sing the commission's jingle at many performances.

A state pie

Now, about that state pie thing. It's not so far-fetched. Eight states have an official state pie. And while North Carolina grows a lot of blueberries and apples, those have been claimed by Maine and Vermont, respectively.

But no state has a better claim to sweet potatoes than we do. Although sweet potatoes grow all over the state, the real concentration is along the I-95 corridor, particularly in Nash and Johnston counties.

Besides the heat and sandy soil, the other reason North Carolina grows so many is tobacco. Since both crops favor the same conditions, many tobacco farms grew sweet potatoes, too. It kept their farmhands busy all year and yielded an extra crop. When tobacco subsidies ended, some farms used the buyouts to enlarge their sweet potato operations.

The sweet potato already is the official state vegetable. But John Kimber, project director with the N.C. Sweet Potato Commission, is game for pie.

"You're on to something," he said when we asked. "It's a grand idea."

What would it take to do it? State designations often begin as school projects, says Gerry Cohen, the director of bill-drafting for the N.C. General Assembly. Since anyone can file a bill, it's a good way for kids to experience the state legislature.

Chapter 145 of the N.C. Statutes, "State Symbols and Other Official Adoptions," currently lists 32 official state things, including fruit (scuppernong), berry, red (strawberry) and berry, blue (blueberry), as well as a state beverage (milk), dog (Plott hound) and horse (Colonial Spanish mustang).

(Although the statutes list 32 designations, there actually are 38, because of multiple choices. It is state government, after all.)

Cohen encourages anyone who would like to put it before the legislature.

So is anyone opposed to the idea of sweet potato as the state pie? Everyone we asked was in favor. Even though Nancie McDermott won't name a favorite pie, she's willing to support sweet potato.

"That should be it," she declared. "I'm completely on board. It's like barbecue - East or West, I don't care. I think they're both good.

"State pie? You bet. We could sure use some pie."


Hide Comments

This affects comments on all stories.

Cancel OK

The Charlotte Observer welcomes your comments on news of the day. The more voices engaged in conversation, the better for us all, but do keep it civil. Please refrain from profanity, obscenity, spam, name-calling or attacking others for their views.   Read more

Quick Job Search
Salary Databases