The Recipe with Kenji and Deb - The Colberts Find Love in the Lowcountry [Your Mama's Kitchen]
Episode Date: February 10, 2025Sharing another podcast we can’t get enough of: Your Mama’s Kitchen. It’s a show about cuisine and culture, ingredients and identities, and the meals and memories that make us who we ar...e. Host Michele Norris talks to Michelle Obama, Glennon Doyle, José Andrés and so many other guests about the complexities of family life and how their earliest culinary experiences helped shape their personal and professional lives. And of course, each guest shares a recipe for a favorite dish from their youth so you can taste a bit of their story. In this episode, Late Show host Stephen Colbert and his wife Evie reminisce on their romcom-worthy meet cute, they share the food they ate growing up in Charleston, North Carolina (hint: lots of seafood), and some of the cooking hiccups they faced as a new couple in their first kitchen. Plus, Stephen teaches us how to make his version of his mama’s fudge – a recipe none of his siblings can agree on.You can find more Your Mama’s Kitchen at https://lnk.to/yourmamaskitchenTR Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices
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Hi everyone. This week I wanted to share something special, another podcast I can't get enough
of called Your Mama's Kitchen. It's a show about cuisine and culture, ingredients and
identities, and the meals and memories that make us who we are. Host Michelle Norris talks
to Michelle Obama, Glennon Doyle, Jose Andres, and so many other guests about the complexities of family life and
how their earliest culinary experiences helped shape their personal and professional lives.
And of course, each guest shares a recipe for a favorite dish from their youth so you
can taste a bit of their story.
In this episode, Late Show host Stephen Colbert and his wife Evy reminisce on their rom-com
worthy meat-. They share the food they ate growing up in Charleston, North Carolina
hint lots of seafood and some of the cooking hiccups they faced as a new
couple in their first kitchen. Plus Stephen teaches us how to make his
version of his mama's fudge, a recipe none of his siblings can agree on. Okay, here
comes the episode. You can find more Your Mom's Kitchen anywhere you listen.
You both cook a lot and you cook together.
We do now.
We did in the third year.
What's the story there? Because your kitchen personalities collide?
I think that's a good one.
One of us does.
One of our personalities collides.
I think, Stephen, that's a lovely way to put it.
I'm going to steal that, Michelle, and I'm just going to say our kitchen personalities
collide.
Okay, who's the bossy one?
That sounds like a demolition derby over the stove.
Listen, Stephen is a bit...
Who's the bossy one?
That's very nice of you to not leap to conclusions, Michel.
Hello, hello.
Welcome back to Your Mama's Kitchen.
This is a place where we explore how we are all shaped as adults by the kitchens we grew
up in as kids.
And not just the food and the meals, but all the things that happen in that magical space,
the homework, the arguments, the laughter, and the silly stuff.
I'm Michelle Norris, and I am so glad you're here.
We're joined today by two people, husband and wife,
who have the kind of meek, cute story
that's the stuff of rom-com movies.
-♪
Stephen Colbert and his wife Evelyn McGee Colbert.
Everyone calls her Evy.
She, too, is in the entertainment business.
She's an actress and a producer.
Stephen, of course, is the king of late night television.
He makes us laugh.
He makes us think.
He introduces us to interesting people night after night.
He leans into prickly political commentary and tells it like he sees it with humor that's
always steeped in wisdom.
And if you watch the show, as I do regularly, you know that he adores his wife, Evy.
She talks about her all the time. She shows up as a guest. And I'm so glad that
both of you are guests with me today on Your Mama's Kitchen.
Hello, hello to both of you.
Hello. Thank you, Michelle. Thank you so much.
Hi, Michelle. Happy to be on.
Now before we jump into our chat, a quick word on that meet cute story because it's important to this conversation.
Stephen spotted Eby at an event, the Spoleto Festival.
She was grabbing a nibble at a food table.
She spotted him walking into the event looking very handsome with his mother on his arm.
They discovered that their families were friends going back to their childhood growing up in
South Carolina's Lowcountry.
They connected over their shared love of everything about the Lowcountry, especially their shared
love of South Carolina cuisine.
Now, after three decades of marriage, three kids, successful careers, they're sharing
that love of the Lowcountry with all of us in a new cookbook called, Does This Taste
Funny?
I love this cookbook called, Does This Taste Funny? I love this cookbook. It reads like a book,
like a novel of your life, and it includes all these wonderful recipes. I am so glad
that you're with me today.
Oh, thanks so much.
Thank you. Thank you.
Now, we always begin this episode with a simple six-word question. Tell me about your mama's
kitchen. I would like to hear from both of you. If you could close your eyes and go down
memory lane.
And I know it might be a little melancholy because I know that both your mothers have
gone to glory.
But if you could kind of go back to that space for us and describe what it was like, what
did it smell like?
What did it feel like?
What did it taste like?
Who goes first?
You go first.
Ladies first.
The kitchen I picture was that 1970s mustard yellow on the walls.
Remember that very popular color?
Harvest gold.
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
And that was after the big fancy renovation that my family did.
So that was the fancy version.
And one of the things, the kitchen always had a pot of boiling water, usually with hominy
or grits going almost always in the morning
anyway. And generally smelled like cheese because my mother was always making those
cheese biscuits, which are in the cookbook. So it always smelled like melting cheese and
baking and just a homey feel. It wasn't a big, we didn't have a eat-in kitchen. So there
weren't like sofas and tables and things.
We had just a tiny table my sister and I would eat at, but it led to another room. And so
it just kind of, we just overflowed from the kitchen into the other room. But it was, it
was always comfort, right? That's what I think of when I think of my mom's kitchen, comfort.
I'm one of 11 children and I'm the youngest of 11 children. So when I think of my mom's kitchen, I think of it's like a rail station.
There are people coming and going all the time.
Like so many people, the house just turned around the kitchen and, you know, 11 hungry
mouths to feed plus my dad.
There's really never a lot of food because we were always hoovering it up the moment
it arrived.
My mom was not, and she would be the first to admit this, she was not a great cook because
cooking for 11 people was about volume, not about finesse or style. She had a couple of things that
she did all the time that she was terrible at because you had to time it like pork chops
were always hockey pucks. They were always just little kind of curled cups with like
a little floating little well of fat in the middle where the-
I think that's why they put applesauce on them, trying to reintroduce some moisture.
That's exactly it. You had to drown that stuff in applesauce just to be able to bite it when
I was a kid. Big pots of spaghetti. We're Catholic, so a lot of fish sticks on Friday.
And my mom, like Mrs. Paul's fish sticks or Gorton's or whatever, probably Mrs. Paul's
fish sticks. And then my mom had so many of her recipes, especially when we were going
through her recipe box, working on this book, because we wanted so many family recipes in
there.
My mom's recipes were often cut like off the back of a box of some other ingredient.
My mom's idea of a sauce for the fish sticks was you took a can of tomato soup, Campbell's
tomato soup, and did not dilute it, just heated it up and spooned that over the condensed
tomato sauce, tomato soup, over the fish sticks.
And I'm pretty sure she saw a photo of that in a magazine or on the back of a box of Mrs. Paul's because
she never, her mom never taught her to cook. She didn't have a time to learn to cook, again,
just volume. And she, she became a mother in 1945 as a first child and I'm 1964. So
we're exactly the baby boom. And that's when the, the, the, the, like the explosion of
processed foods and frozen foods and all that. So that's what we lived on that. And that's when the explosion of processed foods and frozen foods and all that. So that's
what we lived on, that and just unlimited helpings of television. And so when I think
of my mom's kitchen, I think of someplace very warm and loving and fun and active, but
I don't think about the food that much.
I grew up in a very Catholic community in Minneapolis, and there were a lot of huge
families, the Mahonies, the Woolseys.
And they fell into two categories, the kind of, I was going to say feral, but I'm going
to be careful.
Feral?
Free-range children.
I was the feral version of that.
I was the youngest.
And so I was kind of was off the leash.
And so it was come one, come on, come on.
We're feeding 13 kids.
So, you know, who cares if it's 18 or 21 or, you know, their kitchen was always open.
At five o'clock, which was about a half an hour before my dad came home, my dad was home
by six to have his bourbon and branch and get angry at Walter Cronkite.
And he was, he'd bite through his pipe stem going,
oh, he was subversive.
And by the time my dad came home,
half an hour before my dad came home,
everybody had to be out of the house.
Only children, no friends.
Everybody got out.
And my mom would brush out her hair
and make sure she was looking her best when my dad came home.
Oh, okay.
All right.
So very, very sorry.
I really don't do that, do I?
But you always look your best.
You don't have to do that, darling.
I'm actually not even sure.
You're most glamorous.
So are you waiting with a bourbon and branch and a pipe?
I'm usually not even home.
But I was going to say the other version of that family were the kids who ate in shifts.
And if you missed your shift, you missed dinner.
We didn't eat in shifts, but we did eat fast.
That was one of the things that like, one of the things that Evi noticed about me when
we first started going out is that I would inhale the plate at the restaurant.
She's like, what's happening over there?
I'm like, if you didn't eat fast, you wouldn't get seconds.
I also think it's funny, your family does not even acknowledge or know what family hold
back means.
If you go to a party and you want to say, don't eat everything, family hold back because
let our guests have...
That just doesn't work with your family.
Everybody's like, no, I'm going now to get what I want to eat now. family hold back because, you know, let our guests have, that just doesn't work with your family.
But he's like, no, I'm going now to get what I want to eat now.
Okay.
So it's elbows out.
Everyone's like, exactly.
Elbows out.
And keep your eye on your glass of milk.
When I was a kid, you'd keep your eye on it because if you didn't keep an eye on it, somebody
would have balled up their paper napkin and thrown it, had basketball shoot
it into your milk and it would go in there and you wouldn't see it because the napkin
was white and the milk was white, but it would just swell up and you'd go to drink and you'd
get a mouthful of napkin.
It was fantastic.
Oh, that is crazy.
Okay.
Were you on the receiving end or were you throwing those little napkin balls?
No, I was the youngest.
I was on the receiving end all the time.
Oh, okay.
Poor little Stevie.
You both grew up in the same area of coastal South Carolina.
Your families were friends, but you didn't know each other.
Well, we sort of met.
We met, I don't know honey, a couple of times.
One of us is a year older and I'm not supposed to say who.
And she went to the all-girls school and I went to a school that had been for until shortly before I got there all boys
So they kind of mixed on grades like mm-hmm eighth grade dance ninth grade dance that sort of thing
So we different we didn't meet that way and our parents knew each other but it's not like our families did things together
No, but we we had a friend who so funny at our rehearsal dinner
We were yesterday was our 31st wedding anniversary by the way. Oh, congratulations
Yeah, so 31 years ago or he stood up and he said, I tried to...
Is this Scott?
Yeah, he said, I tried to introduce these two, what, like four times, honey? I think it was.
Yes. And when I finally told him that I'd asked Evie McGee out, he goes,
I'm glad to hear you finally got your ducks in a row, Colbert.
I've been waiting for years to realize that I've been right this whole time about her.
That's fate though, because you had to meet sometimes when it's right, it's right on time
and you had to meet at the right time.
So you were...
That is totally right.
I've been telling our kids, don't rule out someone you know now.
You never know, they might become more interesting when you're older.
I think I would always have been interested in you.
I'm definitely on the getting the dirty end of that stick in this conversation.
That's the right thing to say.
I wasn't ready to-
That's like a Jerry Maguire line.
I would always have been interested in you.
Exactly.
But that's not true.
I was not nearly hip enough for you with your cool music and all that stuff.
Anyway, we won't get into it.
But the first time we did, the first time we actually met though, you were very frosty
and distant.
I attempted to be interested in you and you wanted nothing to do with me.
She was a frost queen on a glacial mountaintop at a distance.
I could not have reached her with a grappling hook.
She was so distant.
So the same friend Scott we were talking about and tried to introduce us during a college
party and we were both there.
I was about to go study abroad for a year in England.
I didn't want anything to do with a guy from my hometown.
Maybe I was just too obnoxious.
I was like, oh, come on.
Boring.
And I had been enjoying the party very much before she got there.
So I probably wasn't looking my best.
So you were a little loose.
He was a little loose.
I was dancing in a dance called The Worm.
Yes, he wormed his way over to me.
I was like, you just keep worming on by, buddy.
All right.
That's a...
I'm picturing that in my mind.
Quite graceful.
So when you finally met, one of the things you connected over was just your memories
of South Carolina.
And one of those things was the food.
Food in South Carolina is a very particular thing.
People may be kind of familiar with low country food.
They may see it on a menu and it's usually shrimp and grits. But could you sort of describe what low country
cuisine is and why it's so special to you? Well, I think like you said earlier, there's a lot of
seafood because we're on, you know, at least at Charleston, we're on the coast and, you know,
that's what low country means, right? Right up against the coast. And so a lot of fresh seafood, a lot of shrimp, a lot of flounder.
When we were younger, I mean, no one would have anything besides grouper or flounder
or things that they caught right here off the island.
Tuna or salmon wasn't really a thing back then.
And crabs, lots of crabs.
And then lots of rice.
Rice is, you know, Charleston's staple and you just have rice with everything.
There's a major, obviously because of the Atlantic slave trade, there's a major West African
influence. My favorite thing in the cookbook is something that I had, I mean, almost on a daily
basis as a kid, which is red rice. And a lot of different parts of the country do red rice and we do our red
rice in a particular way.
And it's very much like Jollof rice from West Africa.
Um, okra, West Africa, sesame, peanuts, all of that highly, highly influenced.
And also pretty simple.
It's not, that's not, it's not a very complex or like sauce based cuisine.
It's fresh foods, local ingredients done in in a simple way, not a lot of spices.
Matter of fact, when we have Hoppin' John every New Year's Day for good luck, which
is beans and rice, and then we have collards with it together, and Evie insists that we
have it no matter where we are in the world if we're on a trip.
So we have to get beans and rice someplace and some sort of greens to have it.
We can have good luck. I always say like, I'll put a little hot sauce on there. And she's like, Steven, we're on a trip. So we have to get beans and rice someplace and some sort of greens to have. That'd have good luck.
I always say like, I'll put a little hot sauce on there. And she's like, Steven, we're not
from New Orleans. We're from Charleston. What are you doing? I'm like, I'm allowed to add.
I know it's not part of the cuisine because there's really nothing spicy. Not a lot of
garlic?
I was about to say, not a lot of garlic. It sounds bland, but it's not bland. It's just,
I think it's because the ingredients are often so fresh and fresh produce.
Take everything beautiful about West African cooking and then tone it down with an English
palate.
That sounds awful though, actually.
I don't know if I'd describe it quite that way.
No, I'm just shooting you straight, Michelle.
No, it's better than that.
It's better than that.
But it just, I think it was just what you had, right?
And so people would season with, you know, whatever herbs or the kind of things they had, but for not a lot of garlic.
It's interesting. Not a lot of garlic.
You know, I often think of America's gonna find each other. It's gonna be through food.
Oh.
I read this cookbook and I thought, is this my mama's cookbook? Because I am from Minnesota, but my father's from Birmingham.
And so my mother fixed a very Southern palette.
And everybody of color up North usually is from the South.
Right.
Where was your mother from?
My mother is a fourth generation Minnesotan, which is unusual.
But if you go back far enough, it goes back to Chicago and then Kentucky and then New Orleans.
So everybody moved north.
But when I read Collard Greens, Hominy, I was like, wait a minute, we grew up eating
the same food, not as much seafood, but it's just really interesting.
Yeah.
Well, and I think what we found when we're working on the cookbook is, and when we want
to sort of find recipes we wanted to share, it's all wrapped in memories and they're happy memories, right?
So you want to find, you want to sort of share the food that we grew up with, that was in
the kitchen as we're talking about, right?
And so there are recipes, a lot of recipes in the cookbook that we made for our own children
and we raised our children in New Jersey.
So there were different kinds of things that we also added.
But I think what was really fun for me as we started this process was going back and
thinking just about that.
What was the palette?
What made it my mom's kitchen?
What made my youth when it was local food and it was easy recipes?
Half of everything we ate was
out of the Charleston Receipts cookbook, which was a junior league cookbook at the time that
my mother just cooked everything out of.
So I have to ask you about that. The Charleston Receipts cookbook.
Receipts, yeah.
Because when I first got a copy of the cookbook, you never read a cookbook start to finish.
You just open up to a page. And I opened up a page and it said, receipt instead of recipe.
And I thought, is there a typo?
You know, I had somebody text me that.
I had a good friend of mine say, you're not going to believe it.
They didn't catch this.
And I said, go back and read the introduction.
It's true.
I just say receipts and Stephen says recipes.
You know, we just figured we'd stick with what we know.
Charleston loves their old-fashioned nomenclature.
You know, it's not a portrait, it's a piazza.
It's not a terrace, it's a loggia.
It's not a recipe, it's a receipt.
It's not lima beans, it's civvy beans.
It's not black-eyed peas, it's field peas.
You know, all those
very specific things because Charleston has to be different. Charleston like almost wants
to be its own country and it tried once.
Just not bring that up.
No, what are you talking about? But I love those old recipes or those old receipts, especially
like in the original versions, like in the first printings of Charleston receipts, the ingredients are so vague at
times. It's like a good amount of butter, you know, add salt as you wish.
A heaping spoon. A heaping spoon. You don't know what size.
Exactly. My mom, there's one recipe in the book, which is this fudge recipe, and she
didn't have any recipes that didn't come from the back of a bottle of chili sauce or something. But fudge, she learned from her mother. I don't know why,
but her mother who did not know how to cook knew how to make fudge. It's a very particular type
of fudge. It's not that kind of that gluey stuff that you get at some vacation destination. And
I don't know why fudge is associated with vacations, but it is. Her fudge was very specific,
but she never wrote it down. She just told it to us and showed us. So everybody in the family's got a different recipe, a
slightly different version of it. And my mom's ingredient, when you have to add butter at
the last minute, right before you whip it and get it shiny. And she said, oh, about
the size of, she said to me at least, oh, about the size of a medium egg. That's how
much butter you're supposed to use. I'm like, what's eggs come in medium? I just didn't
realize that was a weird term until I was an adult.
Literally until I went to go write down the recipe for this book, I went, what does medium
egg mean?
Well, I love the fudge in the book because several of your siblings have their own version
of the recipe.
It's almost like a Rashomon exercise.
There are four of us.
There are four and they're all definitive.
Four definitive fudge recipes.
And the funny thing is, I think just the other day, so as Stephen says, he has a lot of siblings
and I forget which one, but someone whose fudge is not in there was like, how come my
recipe is not in there?
Oh no.
Oh no.
That's for the website.
That's right.
That's right.
But as I keep saying, I think it says so much about Stephen's mother and the wonderful way
she raised her children that every single one thinks they're right.
I have the definitive version.
Is that good?
My sister Mary says that we have double dominant pride genes.
Yeah, she might be right about that.
But in a good way, not in a bad way, not in an obnoxious
way, in a self-confident way.
So I wonder if your siblings' personalities are evident in their interpretation of the
recipe.
So Ed says that the granulated sugar has to be extra fine if you can get it.
Is he particular about that?
Wow, like caster sugar.
That is such an interesting question. You speak, Stephen, but I think the answer is yes.
What does that say about Ed, you mean? Well, Ed's a lawyer. He's very detail-oriented.
Yes, he is. He's very attentive to getting things right.
Yeah, and he's so specific that it'd be like him to have an ingredient that is hard to get.
so specific that it'd be like him to have an ingredient that is hard to get. See, I knew there was something there. And now Margot uses much more butter than anybody
else.
That is Margot. I think Margot is, I think that's, you know, on the food pyramid, that's
her vegetable.
Yeah. She'd be the first to admit, you know, why do we need vegetables? We were having
dinner the other day and she turned to me, literally we're at a restaurant.
She said, I'm just going to give you my broccoli.
I mean, she's not too funny.
I'm not going to pretend I'm going to eat this.
That's been her entire life.
I love Michelle that you're asking this question.
I think it's so funny.
I've never thought about it that way.
What does it say about them? Yeah.
And your recipe is somewhere in between Mary and Ed's, the one that you cook in your family.
Right.
That you make in your family.
Like being the youngest, you borrow from everybody else.
Yeah.
When do you make this fudge?
Is it a holiday treat?
Yeah, it's more of a wintertime thing.
You just made it, didn't you?
Yeah.
Do you make it together as a family?
We used to.
We did with the kids.
I've taught the kids how to do it.
I don't know if they remember.
The other thing we make at holiday time with the kids is the candied orange rinds that
are in there. They are so funny. They hardly ever throw away the peel of a tangerine if
they eat it in our house. They just stick it in the freezer.
We always have a plastic bag riding it out in the freezer filled with tangerine rinds
as the year goes on. That's the other thing my mom did. That's another thing that she learned from her mom.
And it can very old fashioned.
No, candied orange rinds is like a candy treat from the 18th century.
The ship would come in from old cafe with oranges and lemons and stuff like that.
And you wouldn't throw anything away because you wouldn't see it again for another year.
Citrus was such a treat.
Exactly. So you would just keep the peel,
lose all the pith and then you would boil it in sugar.
And that's basically all it is.
You're boiling it in sugar water and then letting it dry and then tossing it with some
and like this, castor sugar, some super fine sugar.
And it's like you're making a little lemon drops and orange drops.
I love it.
My mom always did that at Christmas time, sometimes dipping it in dark chocolate. And I helped her when I was a boy. And then when she passed, I took
that over as my contribution to the family. And I tried to put together little kits of
it at Christmas time and send it to my brothers and sisters in my mom's memory.
You package it up and everything.
Yeah. I sent a cocktail to my brothers and sisters every year. And it started the year
after my mother died, which was, what is it, 11 years ago now, hon? 12, I think. 12 years ago now. And my mom's drink was an old fashioned. And
that's sort of the family drink. And an old fashioned with a slice of candied orange rind
in there. That is it on a stick, baby. All right. And so that year, I made a lot of candied
orange rinds and I sent out an old fashioned kit. And so that year, I made a lot of candied orange rinds, and I sent out an old-fashioned kit.
And every Christmas, I send them a different cocktail
with some candied orange rinds.
You both cook a lot, and you cook together. We do now.
We did in the first 30 years.
What's the story there?
Because your kitchen personalities collide?
One of us does.
One of our personalities collides.
I think, Stephen, that's a lovely way to put it.
I'm going to steal that, Michelle, and I'm just going to say our kitchen personalities
collide.
Okay, who's the bossy one?
That sounds like a demolition derby.
Who's the bossy one?
Over the stove.
Listen, Steven is a bit-
Who's the bossy one?
That's very nice of you to not leap to conclusions, Michelle.
Well, that's usually what happens in the kitchen.
Yes, yes.
Some people take on a bit of a commander personality when they
pick up a spatula.
That's exactly right. Yeah. So this is kind of the spoon story that we refer to in the
cookbook. So years when we were first married, I was in the kitchen and...
I mean, first married, like, I mean, we were literally just back from our honeymoon, I
think.
And we had been given nonstick pans for our wedding gift and I was scraping the bottom of a nonstick
pan with a metal spoon.
Stephen walked in and looked at me like I had grown two heads and said, what about a wooden
spoon?
As he says, a gentle way, as I heard it in an aggressive and horrible way.
I like to say that I put my metal spoon down
and I walked out of the kitchen for 30 years.
When he was in it, when he was in it.
Exactly. When I was in the kitchen,
when I had something I was working on,
he's like, I'm just gonna let you do that.
I'm not even gonna try to help you
because you're not gonna like how I'm chiffonading the basil.
And I don't even think that chiffonade is a real word, Steve.
But I will say this, I will give myself this much credit.
Now that I've heard you tell this story recently, and I want to defend myself and say that maybe
I shouldn't have done that.
But when you put down the spoon and walked out of the kitchen, I didn't pursue you and say, why are you being like this? I just watched you leave. And I went, okay.
So this is part of being married too. What just happened? Well, we've got to that quickly.
Well, I mean, honestly, we're sort of being funny because the truth is, you know, for
so long, our schedules were very different. Stephen worked nights, I worked days. We didn't
really cook together
because we weren't ever really able to.
And then we had three very young children
and Stephen would still work late nights.
So even when we had young children,
I'd be cooking the chicken nuggets
and the mac and cheese kind of thing.
And Stephen, you're much better
and more adventurous cook than I am.
So you said-
I don't know about better,
but I think I enjoy like the adventure of it.
Right.
So you would make ambitious things
and I would be intimidated by that.
And at the same time I'd say,
but we have three little mouths over here.
So I'll just whip up some mac and cheese
while you go make some gorgeous something.
So we made it work.
I don't think the kids really want
the port wine reduction on the chicken nuggets.
I'm like, okay, more for me then.
Rumelad?
What's that?
What?
Exactly.
Exactly.
So you have three kids, Peter, John, and Madeline.
Madeline, I assume, named for your sister, Eby?
Yes.
Yes, who was named for my grandmother actually.
And by the way, there's a great recipe for Madeline's in the cookbook that I planned
to tackle also.
But when you worked on the cookbook, I wonder if there was a bit of a sandwich thing going
on.
You were honoring your mother's and in your case, Evi, your mother was ailing as you were
working on the cookbook.
Correct.
And at the same time giving a gift to your children so they would always have these memories
and these recipes going forward.
Right.
It was emotional.
It became more emotional because mom died in November of 2022 and we weren't finished
with the cookbook.
So everything took on a different meaning for me.
And then my father, who just passed this past April,
he was excited about it.
And so now that I don't have either one of them,
it's such a treasure for me because I know they both knew about it.
And it became very much something, as you said, a way to honor them,
but also a way for our children to wrap in food all their memories
of their grandparents and of Stephen's mother
and of their aunts and uncles and all the life that we've had with them up to now.
I think it's a mark in time for them.
They're funny.
They look at it and think, well, you never made some of these things for us because we
didn't have fancy meals.
We did sometimes, but a lot of it was basic food
that we would cook.
I mean, a lot of the recipes in there I made for them
so often they didn't want them anymore.
I made the swordfish recipe, which I love.
After a while they were like,
I don't want that anymore.
Or the lemon chicken, I'm tired of that.
No more pork loin.
No more pork loin.
We're good with the lentil soup for now, mom.
Yeah, exactly.
All those things, we cooked a lot for them.
And I think when they're our age, they might open up this cookbook and say, wow, remember
Mom's lentil soup, you know?
So you're right.
It is a wonderful way to capture that for them that maybe they don't know now.
They might appreciate later.
For me, one of the most beautiful aspects of it was the time that you spent with your
mother because your mother more than knew about the book.
She was very influential.
And she was excited about it. Very excited about it.
It was so endearing, so moving, so heart touching to see the two of you have that time together
to go through these recipes. She could talk about her mother and what she learned from
her. She was passing down a tradition to you and the stories and what foods went
with what party, you know?
Right, right, right.
My mom did not have much of a card catalog, but one of the things she had in her card
catalog was a layout.
She was, you know, my father was an academician and an administrator at various universities
and she would have to throw faculty parties.
And so she'd have a list
and these some of these were back to St. Louis in the 1950s and it would say how
much does it like how much is a handle of scotch how much is a handle of bourbon
of a vodka gin almost no wine there was like almost no wine ever on the list
back then it was just hard liquor mostly brown liquor and not a lot of mixers
either and then you know,
jello mold salads and stuff like that. And she would, and she would, she had to do a budget.
And I remember like a party for 150 people was like $300 or something, something crazy like that,
like from 1954. But I loved that image of her as a young wife, having to throw the party for the
other faculty members of the other administrators, and her having a plan wife having to throw the party for the other faculty members of
the other administrators and her having a plan. She had the sheets of paper and we had
like five or six different parties planned out on pieces of paper in her recipe box that
she kept into her 90s. I'm sure she didn't look at that after the Kennedy administration.
Can we just say a word about those recipe boxes? I lost my mother too this year.
Oh, I'm sorry.
Going through those boxes, they are archaeological treasure.
Totally.
They're more than recipes inside there. There are commentaries and dreams.
My mom had a recipe where she wrote, Nailed It.
Oh, cute.
That's so cute.
Wow.
Which is such a...
Which means that it must have been recent because that's not something...
She would have heard my kids say that, right?
Right.
Because that's not something that she was 93 that she would have said.
But I wondered, who was at the? Like who was she trying to impress? So when you went through
your mom's boxes or files, because Stephen, that sounds like she had a whole like treatise on how
to throw a faculty dinner. Where did they keep those little boxes or those folders? And what
did you learn when you went through them? Where'd you find yours, Hon?
My mom didn't keep filing cat, you know, she didn't have things on index cards.
She had dog-eared cookbooks. So that was another thing I did with her.
We pulled out all the old cookbooks and she would say, you know, this is how,
this is the recipe, but then I adapted it. And then we'd have to try to figure out how she, because she didn't write it
down. So she, like her pickled shrimp, I think we made it 10 times before she said, you've got it,
that's right. Because she couldn't really remember how she would do it. She just knew it wasn't
quite that, it was different. But in some ways, I think what she kept notes of, which were really
fun to look at, were who came
to her parties, the names of the people, you know? And sometimes she'd have the menu written
out what she was going to serve and the names of the people invited. And that was her sort
of documentation of that event. And as we say-
I lived with her family's post mortems where they would take out the list afterwards. They're
like, all right, who showed up and who did what? And they would go down.
And what did they say and what did they do?
Really doing a postmortem is a really interesting exercise.
Isn't it?
It's funny.
And then your family looked forward to it.
They were there.
They definitely looked forward to it.
They would sit down.
They'd finally get people out of there.
And then they would, generally speaking, your mom and dad would refresh their drinks one
last time and then sit down in an easy chair and go, all right, let's go over the list.
Well, the funny thing too. Who showed, who didn't show, you know.
The funny thing I remember about them, again, it's a small community.
My father was born and raised here. My mother moved here.
She was from Marion, South Carolina, but she'd been here since she'd gotten out of college.
So they knew a lot of the same people and they all moved in the same social circle.
So they always had the list of people that they owed.
In other words, someone invited them, they had to invite those people.
And they categorize it with like, okay, so they didn't come, we invited them, maybe we
don't have to invite them next time.
It was like a real balance sheet of who's up, who's next.
So do you two do this now? And would you admit it in front of a microphone?
That's funny.
We haven't actually had a planned party in a while.
We used to have big Christmas parties, which were so much fun.
They were sort of multi-generational, where we'd have families,
so people would bring all their kids, and we did a lot of singing around the piano.
But, you know, we raised our kids in Montclair, New Jersey,
which is a lovely suburb outside
of New York, but it's a wonderful community.
And we made so many friends there over the years that it was, it's just been wonderful
to have a whole group of our own, like my parents had here, of people that helped raise
your children.
They'll always be friends, you know, no matter where they move.
And we do a massive Thanksgiving every year.
Yeah, we have a big, huge Thanksgiving. We have like our family, a whole other family, stragglers, friends, you know, people who
are like, don't have family in town at the time.
And it's usually 25, 26 people every Thanksgiving.
And do you cook or cater?
We cook.
We cook.
We cook.
And what's funny is because it's two families and sometimes more, you end up with two, sometimes
three turkeys.
Cause everybody was, no, I have to make it my way.
We don't really plan.
We just go like, what are you guys doing?
What are you guys doing?
And then nobody stretches anything off their list.
Everybody just does what they want to do
because your turkey is not going to be as good as our turkey.
You're not going to make the stuffing right.
You're not going to make the,
you can have the wrong cranberry sauce.
What are you doing?
That's not how you do Brussels sprouts.
Okay, the post-partum after this sounds like it would be really interesting.
Exactly.
You see, we're all very competitive.
So it definitely is to sit down and say, all right, maybe their stuffing was dry this year.
Maybe our stuffing was dry this year.
Our stuffing's never dry because we actually stuff it.
It's not dressing.
Oh, you're in the bird.
We put it in the bird.
Salmonella be damned.
Don't say that. I have never met a salmonella I couldn't handle. Oh, God.
Everybody just grow up and put it in the bird. That's just tempting fate. Don't say that.
All right. So there is that whole debate over stuffing versus dressing. Yeah. Yeah. It's
not a debate. Someone's wrong. It's stuffing. You're a person. It's stuffing. Okay. See,
we do both. At least that's what my family did. And we
do it too, where you stuff it, but then you also make more dressing, like a casserole,
right? Because you don't often have enough in the bird when you have that many people.
And also you have people who might not want it with sort of in the turkey. They might
want more of the casserole dressing.
Some people don't eat turkey, like Ebi. And so we make a little tray on the side and she
has her sad little dry bread.
I just recently maybe five years ago or something I don't know I stopped meat so I eat a lot of seafood
but I don't eat meat. So do you do what is Christmas sort of a feast of the seven fishes?
Do you do very heavy seafood for the Christmas holiday? No because I'm the only one like that and I
you know I'm a real joiner, I guess.
I don't know.
So I just fill up on sweet potato and rice and vegetables.
And we have turkey and we have beef tenderloin and I don't eat it.
But everybody else does.
And we have an oyster pie.
We have an oyster pie if it's ready, which it never is.
It's always too wet and it takes forever to set up.
Oyster pie is complicated and it's not familiar to people in many parts of the country.
Can you just talk a minute, Stephen, about oyster pie?
Oyster pie, at least the low country oyster pie that we grew up with, it's pretty simple.
It's oysters with their liquor and milk.
So you're not shucking them?
Well, at least we usually get them already shucked, so they're in a container with liquid.
In like a mason jar?
Makes it faster.
They were recently shucked, I mean they're local oysters, but local oysters shucked with
the liquor from the oyster shell in there.
And then whole milk, cream, mace, butter, salt and pepper.
Sherry, and a little sherry.
A little sherry, and then a cracker crumb top.
Ritz or do we do saltine?
Saltine.
Plain old sass, crumbled saltine cracker crumb top.
And then you put it in the oven and I don't know why, but this always ends up being the
last thing that goes into the oven every year.
And it's the thing that takes almost as long as the damn turkey because it's so wet that
it really needs over
an hour to cook and it's never ready on time and it ends up being essentially an oyster
dessert pie.
So we always have plenty left over and I'll send you some this year.
Oysters in the mail.
So this year in the cookbook, we decided to abandon the oyster pie altogether and we just
took the oyster pie recipe and just put it in the shell.
So it's like individual little oyster, like little oyster tarts.
Oh, okay. That probably cooks much faster that way also.
Yes, you can broil it.
It's like little oyster Rockefeller. It's really good.
That actually sounds great. And you can almost pass them if you do them earlier.
Right, right.
There aren't any recipes that call for mace.
No, there aren't.
Oh, I know.
There aren't. And we all know what mace is, right?
I'm not sure that many people do. It's the shell of the nutmeg. Oh, I know. There aren't. And we all know what mace is, right? I'm not sure that many people do.
It's the shell of the nutmeg.
Oh, I didn't know that.
The shell of nutmeg, yeah.
And that's ground specifically.
Yeah, you just grind that separately and that's mace.
And it has a different taste, almost like chicory, like more of a bite to it than the
nutmeg.
What is on the Christmas table in your home that people might find surprising or that
you might not see in other people's homes other than that oyster pie?
Well now our beef Wellington has been for the past five or six years.
I don't know if that's, maybe that's kind of traditional.
Wild rice.
Steve, did you make that?
He makes that.
I make the beef wellington, yes.
He made it, my mother asked for it.
Patty, for many years, for many years, she was like, I wish we could have a beef wellington.
So one year, I mean, it's probably seven years ago now, I said, okay, I'll do it.
I'll make a beef wellington.
And I was nervous about it, but it worked out pretty well.
It worked out pretty well.
So we've been doing it every year since then. Now one of the first people we meet in this cookbook, Evy is your mother, and it begins the first recipe of these cheese biscuits.
Right. Which you deliver on Christmas morning. Right. And the picture is just so beautiful with that single pecan
on top. Yeah. Is that a tradition that you still carry on? Yes.
Yes.
I do it sometimes in New Jersey, but we spend every Christmas back down here in Charleston.
So even after my mother was gone, my father, my sister and I would make them with my father
and still take them around and deliver them to people on Christmas Eve.
And the funny thing is, people want, they call them Patty's Cheese Biscuits. Are we going we going to get Patty's cheese biscuits? Are you still going to do it?
So I don't know. Now that dad's gone, this Christmas, my sister and I will have to decide
what to do. But last Christmas, we definitely did it with dad. So I think he got to do it.
You got to do it. You just can't stop. Because it's interesting, right? Food holds so many
memories and mom's close
friends and so many people who love both my parents, they take a bite of that and they
think about my family and my parents and I don't want them to lose that and I don't want
to lose that.
That's the first thing I had to eat in your family's house was a cheese biscuit. The night
I came to pick up Evy for our first date on December 26th, 1990. And I showed up to the
door and I rang the doorbell and I heard these wingtip
shoes come to the door and I went, oh my gosh, it's your father. Oh my gosh, I haven't dealt
with a father in a long, since high school. Oh boy, I got to change my, got to change gears here.
He opened the door and he goes, she's not ready, son, come on in. And so he takes me back and he
goes, can I get you a drink? And I said, sure, what do you got?
And he said, I've got bourbon and I've got vodka.
And I knew, I knew, cause he's-
He by the way probably had way more than that.
He just probably was like,
I'm just not going to mess with anything else.
And he said, I'll take a bourbon.
And he goes, and bourbon in what?
And I, you know, I was a 26 year old man or boy really kind of at the time.
And I wanted a bourbon and ginger ale, but I knew that you couldn't say giving my bourbon
was something sweet to a middle-aged Southern man because he would judge me.
And so I said, bourbon in something.
And he goes, I have water and soda water.
I said, okay, I'll take soda water.
And so when Evie walked in the room, when my wife walked in the room, I was drinking bourbon and soda
and I was having a cheese biscuit and that'll always be their home to me. That'll always
be a happy thing. And at Christmas time, I have to have a bourbon and soda and I have
to have a cheese biscuit. And I'm right back there in the room with Peter McGee and Patti
McGee who also came down before Evy did. Your mother beat you into the room too.
Well, you know, maybe I was just sitting up there twiddling my fingers.
You'll never know, will you?
No.
You know, just making you wait a little bit.
Sure, sure.
I have loved talking to both of you.
I think this year on the holidays, I think I am going to pour myself a bourbon.
I'm definitely going to be making these cheese biscuits.
And I will raise a toast to both of you.
Oh, thank you.
In terms of from our home in Washington, DC.
We always gift our listeners with a recipe, so we'll have the fudge recipe.
I think we have to post all four versions of it.
But only make mine.
But just make mine.
And people can decide which one they want to do.
And I think we also have to share a few of the other things we mentioned, the cheese
biscuits maybe, and also the candied orange rinds, the tangerine rinds.
Lovely.
Lovely.
Now the thing about the cheese biscuits.
In fact, I might throw one of those in a little bit of that orange rind in my bourbon and soda.
Highly recommend it.
Yeah, very good.
And the thing about the cheese biscuits?
The thing about the cheese biscuits, mom was a woman who was brand loyal, very brand loyal.
And she swore by land of lakes and she felt that one stick of butter and one stick of
margarine, both land of lakes, gave you the right sort of butter to saturated
fat kind of like that, the right balance.
Because the thing about these is sometimes they can taste too short, like a buttery biscuit,
or sometimes they taste too cheesy and don't set up enough.
So that was her big, and then she was always about King Arthur self-rising flour.
Now, again, when you write a cookbook, they don't want you to say it has to be those ingredients. But you did mention Land O'Lakes and you're talking to a
gal from the Land O'Lakes. So there you go. There you go. She had been Mozzola. Mom was Mozzola
forever. And then Mozzola, I guess, either went out of business or you can't get Mozzola margarine.
I don't know. But I do find now that Land O'Lakes margarine is also hard to find. So really? Yeah,
I don't know why. I don't know why. but I think it really has to do with the level of saturated fat in the
margarine.
Because if it's not, if you don't have the right consistency, it just, I mean, it'll
be good, it just won't be perfect.
Well, and some of these new Kerrygold and these new sort of fancy butters are taking
up shelf space.
Correct.
And they're really not the same for baking.
That's so true.
They're much better sliced on a piece of bread than they are for baking.
Yeah, that's right.
So hopefully your listeners can try to find Land O'Lakes margarine somewhere.
I have faith in them.
They will find it.
I do too.
Or we just have to write Land O'Lakes and make sure that it stays on the shelves.
Exactly.
I have loved talking to both of you.
I hope that your holidays are bountiful in all of the best ways.
Thank you.
Merry happy everything.
You too.
Thank you so much for this.
Thank you, Michelle.
It's been really fun.
I loved that conversation.
And am I the only one who's starving right now after listening to that conversation about
all that good food?
Well, if you want to make some of that food, make sure to head to our website, yourmommaskitchen.com,
because we are going to post the recipe for the cheese biscuits.
We'll have the recipe for those candied tangerine rinds, those sound delicious.
And we will post all four versions of the Colbert family fudge recipe.
You can decide which one you want to make.
Maybe you want to make all four. Again, you can find that at our website yourmommaskitchen.com.
Now, as always, we're opening up our inbox so you can share stories about your
mama's kitchen. Memories from your kitchen growing up, your thoughts on some
of the stories you've heard on the show. We want to hear all of it. Make sure to
send us a voice memo at ymk at highergroundproductions.com
for a chance for your voice and your story to be featured on a future episode.
Thanks for joining us for this special edition of Your Mama's Kitchen.
I hope the holidays are bountiful for you as well in all the best ways.
Merry happy everything.
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