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LOW
COUNTRY LOWDOWN: In sharing her grandmother’s
party ledgers, Forrester helps perpetuate Charleston’s local cuisine.
Tom McWilliams/Courtesy of Traditional Home |
When Cathy Forrester sat
down six years ago to update the family cookbook, she
had planned to make a few changes and give copies to
friends. “I was just going to correct an error
here and there and then get the whole thing bound at
Kinko’s.” But as she sifted through generations
of recipes, Forrester realized she possessed something
with broader appeal: a familial account of elegant entertaining
in Charleston, S.C.
At Home~Charleston: Traditions and Entertaining
in a Charleston Home combines recipes, photographs
of her family’s 18th-century Charleston mansion
and a biography of society maven Juliette Wiles Staats,
Forrester’s maternal grandmother. The book is
organized according to the events that fall within the
traditional Charleston social season—October to
May—and includes menus for debutante dinner parties,
Sea Island picnics, and Thanksgiving and Christmas banquets.
Staats kept party ledgers in which she painstakingly
recorded the food, guest lists, seating arrangements
and table decorations for events she hosted between
1955 and 1987. Forrester quotes from the notebooks as
well as from her grandmother’s personal correspondence:
“Yesterday, as I told you, was a gorgeous day.
The luncheon ended up sixteen, so I used the two marbleized
tabletops. . . . After the luncheon there was a party
up the street, then I had a quiet hour and off to the
North Carolina ballet.”
The photographs that accompany the text showcase the
furniture, fine linens, and silver table settings as
Staats would have arranged them for her guests.
“This is a slower, more genteel way of life. .
. . [This is] a culture where family is everything and
gatherings have a larger importance,” says Forrester.
She goes on to say that while professional chefs keep
local cuisine alive, it is the home chef who is responsible
for passing down the culture and traditions of the family.
“There’s a very real risk of losing this
lifestyle, even in a town like Charleston,” she
says. “My grandmother thought it was so important
to pass these things on to the next generation, and
now I’m trying to do the same.”
Or as Staats wrote: “No one ever drops by or
has time to visit with each other unless some special
occasion is set up. So I shall keep at it as long as
able.”
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