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The Day-Old Bread Store, Dandelion Wine & Dad's BBQ Chicken | The Appalachian Tale Podcast Ep. 4
In this episode of The Appalachian Tale Podcast: Deeper In The Holler, host Jimmy Proffitt gets real and conversational — just him, a few notes, and a whole lot of Appalachian memory. Jimmy kicks things off with a laugh about the "used bread store" — what Appalachians know as the day-old bread store — and what it meant to stretch a dollar growing up in the mountains. He goes deeper in the holler with more stories about his beloved neighbors Mary and Charlie: dandelion wine fermenting on the back porch, the cool earthy smell of a root cellar on a summer afternoon, geraniums by the front door, and sweet iced tea in nubby green glasses. Jimmy also introduces the Screen Porch Supper — his favorite warm-weather tradition — and teases his most-requested recipe: Dad's BBQ Chicken, the legendary Shenandoah Valley pit-style chicken that defined every church fundraiser and fire hall cookout in the Valley. Plus the Appalachian Word of the Week: cattle bat. You'll never look at a moth the same way again.
Topics covered: Appalachian food memories, day-old bread stores, dandelion wine, root cellars, Shenandoah Valley BBQ chicken, screen porch suppers, gardening updates, Appalachian dialect, and growing up in the mountains of Virginia.
By Jimmy Proffitt, The Appalachian TaleThe Day-Old Bread Store, Dandelion Wine & Dad's BBQ Chicken | The Appalachian Tale Podcast Ep. 4
In this episode of The Appalachian Tale Podcast: Deeper In The Holler, host Jimmy Proffitt gets real and conversational — just him, a few notes, and a whole lot of Appalachian memory. Jimmy kicks things off with a laugh about the "used bread store" — what Appalachians know as the day-old bread store — and what it meant to stretch a dollar growing up in the mountains. He goes deeper in the holler with more stories about his beloved neighbors Mary and Charlie: dandelion wine fermenting on the back porch, the cool earthy smell of a root cellar on a summer afternoon, geraniums by the front door, and sweet iced tea in nubby green glasses. Jimmy also introduces the Screen Porch Supper — his favorite warm-weather tradition — and teases his most-requested recipe: Dad's BBQ Chicken, the legendary Shenandoah Valley pit-style chicken that defined every church fundraiser and fire hall cookout in the Valley. Plus the Appalachian Word of the Week: cattle bat. You'll never look at a moth the same way again.
Topics covered: Appalachian food memories, day-old bread stores, dandelion wine, root cellars, Shenandoah Valley BBQ chicken, screen porch suppers, gardening updates, Appalachian dialect, and growing up in the mountains of Virginia.