Recipes

Recipes · Hillbilly Lunches

Southern Beans and Cornbread

The foundation of mountain survival — a perfect protein combination that sustained families through the leanest times. The magic: dried beans and cornmeal together create a complete protein that rivals expensive meat in nutritional value. Slow-cooked pinto or navy beans with fatback or ham hock until creamy and rich, served with cast iron cornbread. This was more than food — it was the backbone of Appalachian and Southern rural life for generations.

Hillbilly Lunches

Prep 15 min (plus overnight soak)
Cook 4 hours
Serves 8
Level Easy

The foundation of mountain survival — a perfect protein combination that sustained families through the leanest times. The magic: dried beans and cornmeal together create a complete protein that rivals expensive meat in nutritional value. Slow-cooked pinto or navy beans with fatback or ham hock until creamy and rich, served with cast iron cornbread. This was more than food — it was the backbone of Appalachian and Southern rural life for generations.

Ingredients

  • 1 lb dried pinto or navy beans
  • 1 piece fatback (about 3 oz) or 1 small ham hock
  • 1 large onion, halved
  • 2 cloves garlic
  • Water to cover generously

Salt and pepper to taste

  • Cornbread: 2 cups stone-ground cornmeal, 1 cup buttermilk, 1 egg, 2 tbsp bacon grease, 1 tsp baking soda, 1 tsp salt

Directions

  1. Sort and rinse beans. Soak overnight in cold water. Drain.
  2. Place beans in a heavy pot. Cover with fresh cold water by 3 inches. Add fatback, onion, and garlic.
  3. Bring to a boil. Skim any foam. Reduce to a very low simmer.
  4. Cook uncovered or partially covered for 3–4 hours, stirring occasionally, until beans are completely soft and creamy. The broth should be thick and starchy.
  5. Season generously with salt and pepper. Remove fatback, shred any meat from it, return to pot.
  6. While beans finish, make cornbread: preheat oven to 450°F with a cast iron skillet inside.
  7. Mix cornmeal, salt, baking soda. Stir in buttermilk, egg, and 1 tbsp melted bacon grease.
  8. Grease hot skillet with remaining bacon grease. Pour in batter. Bake 20–22 minutes until golden.
  9. Serve beans in deep bowls with a wedge of cornbread for soaking up the bean pot liquor.

Notes

The ‘pot liquor’ — the thick broth the beans cook in — was considered as valuable as the beans themselves, full of nutrients leached from the beans and pork. Children drank it as medicine. The bean-cornbread combination creates a complete amino acid profile equivalent to meat. Simple, cheap, and nutritionally sophisticated.