Check out the Comeback dressing recipe posted below.
All food is regional. Whether it is an entrée such as deep-dish pizza from Chicago, a lobster roll from Maine, or a plate of jambalaya from Louisiana. Soups are also regional— clam chowder, gumbo, cioppino, and Frogmore stew.
There are also
many regional condiments in America. Vermont lays claim to maple syrup, and it
has been my experience that true 100% pure Vermont maple syrup is worth every
penny and hard to top. Maryland has Old Bay seasoning. Up there they use it in
crab boil, and despite the plethora of Creole seasonings in this part of the world—
including my own— I prefer Old Bay when I am cooking shrimp.
Dukes
mayonnaise comes from South Carolina and is likely the main ingredient in
Alabama’s contribution to the regional condiment world— white barbeque sauce.
In Chicago sandwich shops pickled cauliflower, celery, carrots, and spices are
combined to create giardiniere which, to the Italian beef sandwich, is the same
as olive salad to the New Orleans muffuletta. Ranch dressing, the ketchup of
the 21st century, came from California.
Pennsylvania
has apple butter. Washington D.C. has mambo sauce, and in Hawaii they baste
their grilled chicken with huli huli sauce, which is a mixture of pineapple
juice, soy sauce, ginger, brown sugar, sesame oil, garlic, and Worcestershire.
In
Mississippi, the queen mother of all condiments is comeback sauce. We use it as
an accompaniment to onion rings and fried dill pickles, and dress simple
iceberg salads with it. Comeback is the offspring of the incestuous marriage of
thousand island dressing and remoulade sauce. It is the bastard child of the
Mississippi larder and it is awesome.
Comeback
sauce is Greek in origin, but it is 100% Mississippi. The versatile condiment
was born at the Greek-owned Rotisserie Restaurant in Jackson, Miss. in the middle
part of the previous century. From there it sprung up at all of the great
Jackson institutions run by hardworking Greek immigrant families— The
Mayflower, The Elite, Paul’s Westside, Crechale’s, and Bill’s. It is typically
served in a simple salad of iceberg lettuce, a sliced tomato and a few crumbles
of feta cheese.
Malcolm White
makes an excellent comeback at Hal and Mal’s and there are several other restaurants
in the Jackson area where comeback can be found. By the 1990s Mississippi’s
house dressing had spread all across the state.
I added
comeback sauce to the Crescent City Grill menu in the early 1990s. I tweaked a
couple of the traditional versions that were printed in various Jackson
cookbooks and have always been very happy with the results. It’s one of the
most requested recipes in my email inbox and one of the most downloaded recipes
on my website.
Last week
I was having lunch with a friend at The Mayflower in downtown Jackson. They are
the oldest surviving downtown Jackson restaurant, and almost the last man
standing when it comes to the oldline Greek joints. Over the past 40 years, I
have never eaten in the Mayflower and not gotten a salad with comeback sauce. I
almost always order onions rings. But what I end up doing is dipping saltine
crackers into the comeback sauce and eating that combination as an additional
appetizer.
I could
make a meal out of saltine crackers dipped in comeback sauce, but I would never
take up a table in such a small dining room and order a side of comeback and a
basket of crackers. So, I order something off of the menu— all of which is
excellent and has stood the test of time— and eat most of it while ordering
more crackers and comeback.
I do the
same in catfish houses (another Mississippi staple). Most of the good fish
houses place a bowl of sweet, mayonaisey Cole slaw next to a basket of Captain’s
Wafers at the table at the beginning of the meal. Cole slaw and Captain’s wafers
are the chips and salsa of the fish house world. I could make a meal of just Cole
slaw and Captain’s wafers, too, but I order fish and fries to be polite.
Crackers
before a meal are a classic old-line restaurant move. As a kid I ate at all of
the old seafood houses on the Mississippi Gulf Coast— The Friendship House, The
White Pillars, Mary Mahoney’s, Annie’s, and my favorite back then, Baricev’s. I
ate my first raw oyster at Bariceiv’s. I also usually made a meal out of the Captains
wafers and butter pats that were in a basket in the table and was rarely able
to eat the fried shrimp I ordered as an entrée.
Whether it’s used as a salad dressing, an accompaniment for onion rings, a condiment for cheeseburgers, a side sauce for fired pickles, or as a dip for saltine crackers, comeback sauce is a true Mississippi original.
Comeback Sauce
1 cup mayonnaise
1/ 2 cup ketchup
1/ 2 cup chili sauce
1/ 2 cup cottonseed oil
1/ 2 cup yellow onion, grated
3 Tbl lemon juice
2 Tbl garlic, minced
1 Tbl paprika
1 Tbl water
1 Tbl Worcestershire
1 tsp pepper
1/ 2 tsp dry mustard
1 tsp salt
Combine
all ingredients in a food processor and mix well.
Yield: 3 1/2 cups
8 comments:
Oh how I miss the comeback dressing at the Cherokee. Many a meals started off with an order of comeback and crackers.
How long will a batch last once it's put in refrigerated container?
I like comeback sauce on French fries and my fried catfish bites. Best fry sauce ever! And Hellmann's is vastly superior to Dukes Mayo, IMHO.
Everyone of those hard working Greek restaurant owners are as much a part of Jackson's history as
General Sherman with a box of matches.
Comeback sauce is one of many lasting legacies those Greek immigrants gave to Jackson and the rest of Mississippi.
A blop of mayo, ketchup and oil, served with deep fried crap - no wonder most Mississippians are morbidly obese and sport clogged arteries... yeah, now kill me with your pudgy greasy hands...
@3:09 PM
It will last until it is finished, which won't be long!
I've made a large batch before, kept it for a week are longer and it was still good.
I swear I'm going out to eat after reading that
I'd like to know if Robert has a recipe for Jezebel sauce. Delicious on crackers spread with cream cheese!
@5:32 - Not all of us are fat or have clogged arteries, and we are able to eat and enjoy anything we want to. The keys are moderation and exercise. Now go eat your tofu and lentils, and yes, we realize that your belly bloat is just gas.
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