FOOD

Succotash like your grandma never knew it

Bill Daley
Chicago Tribune

CHICAGO — Succotash may be a Southern favorite and be named after the word “msickquatash” of the Narragansett in New England, but this dish, most famously made with corn and lima beans, has deep roots in the Midwest. You can taste that story at various restaurants around Chicago where chefs are adding seasonal, Midwest touches to their succotash.

The succotash recipe from Publican Anker is made with fresh cranberry beans, shelled and cooked until tender, and is dressed with a salsa verde.  (Abel Uribe/Chicago Tribune/TNS)

“I grew up with it. I’m from Ohio,” said A.J. Walker, chef de cuisine at Publican Anker in Chicago’s Wicker Park neighborhood. “I think it’s the quintessential Midwest side dish. Yeah, you just have it at a lot of family get-togethers and stuff like that.”

“The Midwest is a melting pot of all the different parts of the country,” said Tom Carlin, chef de cuisine at Dove’s Luncheonette around the corner. “And being able to bring our ingredients and our history we’ve gotten from the South and the Northeast together is what makes it specifically a Midwestern dish.”

 

In Chicago today, you can find string beans in the succotash at Dove’s Luncheonette, but they’re fresh. It’s a reflection of the desire of a number of Chicago chefs to create succotash using seasonal ingredients according to personal taste and the restaurant’s overall theme. Carlin is a Kansas City native whose family put green beans in the succotash. That’s why you find them in his, which is used as a filling for vegetarian enchiladas topped with a sauce of pureed chiles and tomatoes.

“Succotash is more of a theory than it is an actual dish,” explained Jimmy Papadopoulos, chef/partner of Bellemore on the Near West Side. “It’s more an idea of using a variety of ingredients and showcasing what’s beautiful at that time of year.”

He’s currently making a succotash featuring okra, cubed zucchini, zucchini flowers, corn and fava beans. Look for his dish to change with the seasons.

Succotash and cheese fill tortillas that are rolled and covered with a four-chile sauce for the enchiladas at Dove's Luncheonette.

 

Corn is the inspiration for Nick Dostal, executive chef at Terrace 16 at the Trump International Hotel & Tower in the Near North neighborhood. He isn’t a fan of lima beans, having ate canned ones as a kid. So, he uses fresh jicama instead in his succotash, which also features sweet peas, espelette pepper, tarragon and a citrus vinaigrette.

“Customers love it,” he said. “Midwesterners look at succotash and see something familiar.”

CRANBERRY BEAN SUCCOTASH

Prep: 3 hours

Cook: 1 hour

Makes: 8 servings

A recipe from Publican Anker. Dried or canned cranberry beans could be used in place of the fresh beans; prepare beans accordingly. A white wine vinegar can substitute for the muscatel and Champagne vinegars.

Cranberry beans:

1/4 cup olive oil

1 fresh bay leaf or 1/3 dried leaf

3 teaspoons chopped thyme leaves

1/2 of a white onion, finely diced

3 cloves garlic, slivered

3 cups fresh cranberry beans

4 cups water

Salt and pepper to taste

3 tablespoons muscatel vinegar or white wine vinegar

Salsa verde:

4 shallots, minced

2 tablespoons capers

5 anchovies, rinsed, chopped

1/4 cup each: Champagne vinegar, extra-virgin olive oil

1 tablespoon honey

1/2 of a jalapeno, seeds and ribs removed, minced

1 tablespoon lemon juice

1 teaspoon salt

Succotash:

1 tablespoon vegetable oil

3 cups corn kernels

2 cups diced celery

3 tablespoons each, finely chopped: chives, cilantro, mint

Salt

Lemon juice

1. For the cranberry beans, heat the olive oil in a large saucepan over medium heat. Add the bay leaf, thyme, onion and garlic. Cook, stirring, until the onion is tender and translucent, 5 minutes. Add cranberry beans and water. Bring to a simmer; cook until beans are tender, 30-45 minutes, being careful not to let the pot boil. Remove from heat; drain. Season with salt, pepper and vinegar. Cool and set aside.

2. For the salsa verde, stir the shallots, capers, anchovies, vinegar, olive oil, honey, jalapeno, lemon juice and salt together in a bowl. Set aside. Makes about 1 1/4 cups. You will have salsa leftover for another use.

3. For the succotash, heat a large skillet over medium-high heat. Add the oil and let heat until it is almost smoking. Add the corn; cook, stirring, until tender. Remove from heat and let cool to room temperature. In a large bowl, mix together the corn, raw celery, chives, cilantro, mint, reserved cranberry beans and 1 cup salsa verde. Season with salt and lemon juice.

Nutrition information per serving: 455 calories, 16 g fat, 2 g saturated fat, 2 mg cholesterol, 64 g carbohydrates, 3 g sugar, 20 g protein, 381 mg sodium, 21 g fiber

The succotash that fills the enchiladas is made up of corn, onions, garlic, green beans, mixed summer squash and tomatoes, and seasoned with pasilla chile flakes.

 

SUCCOTASH ENCHILADAS

Prep: 40 minutes

Cook: 45 minutes

Makes: 10 enchiladas

A recipe from Dove’s Luncheonette.

Enchilada sauce:

5 dried guajillo chiles

5 dried New Mexico chiles

1 dried ancho chile

1 dried pasilla chile

1 tablespoon olive oil

1 onion, sliced

4 cloves garlic, sliced

Pinch each: black pepper, cumin, coriander

1 can (14.5 ounces) chopped tomato

Sugar, salt

Succotash:

2 tablespoons vegetable oil

1/4 cup diced white onion

1 clove garlic, sliced

1 cup corn kernels

1 cup chopped blanched green beans

1 cup diced mixed summer squash

1 tablespoon pasilla chile flakes (grind your own from a pasilla chile)

1/2 cup diced tomato

2 tablespoons each, shredded: queso fresco, queso oaxaca

Corn tortillas

Chopped cilantro, chopped green onion, grated cheese, toasted pepitas

1. For the enchilada sauce, remove stems and seeds from the chiles; toast in a dry skillet over medium heat, until chiles turn shiny and you see a wisp of smoke. Transfer chiles to a bowl. Return skillet to heat; add 1 tablespoon oil and the onion and garlic. Cook until softened, 5 minutes. Add the chiles, black pepper, cumin and coriander. Stir in the tomatoes with their juice, adding water if needed to almost cover the chiles. Cook until chiles are soft, about 15 minutes. Strain, reserving the liquid; puree the chile mixture in a food processor, adding the liquid back in as needed to get a sauce consistency. Adjust flavor with sugar and salt as needed. Set aside.

2. For the succotash, heat oil in a skillet over medium-high heat. Cook the garlic and onion until softened, 5 minutes. Add the corn, green beans and summer squash. Season with chile flakes and salt; add the tomato. Cook until vegetables are crisp-tender, 5-10 minutes. Remove from heat; fold in grated cheeses.

3. Spoon the mixture into tortillas. Roll the tortillas around the filling; place seam-side down in a baking dish that fits them snuggly. Top tortillas with the enchilada sauce. Bake in a 375-degree oven until the sauce forms a little glaze on top, 10 to 15 minutes. Remove tortillas from the oven; serve with the cilantro, green onion, pepitas and more grated cheese.

Nutrition information per serving: 180 calories, 8 g fat, 1 g saturated fat, 2 mg cholesterol, 26 g carbohydrates, 2 g sugar, 4 g protein, 134 mg sodium, 6 g fiber

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