A Southern Delicacy 

This year has turned us all upside down for myriad reasons. As winter approaches, restaurants are yet again negotiating the daunting task of changing service models to stay open for business with the impending cold. I lay at night thinking about what I serve at Stomping Ground – a biscuit topped with simple ingredients, now served exclusively in a takeout window – and wonder if it is enough? I’m republishing an article I wrote in 2017 as a reminder to all of us to never take for granted the “magic” of hospitality, which is often the deepest complexity of making a food item, a feeling, or an experience look simple:

…At Stomping Ground, I have challenged myself and my guests to rally behind a simple and classic fare — the humble biscuit. Biscuits are extremely personal in how they are enjoyed and prepared. If you grew up with biscuits as a staple on the table like I did, eating one brings a rush of immediate, almost visceral childhood memories. Biscuits are challenging to serve because there isn’t an authentic standard, but everyone has a pretty strong mandate about what makes a biscuit “the one.” They should be dropped. Or rolled. Or beaten. They should be served with cheese. Or black pepper. The outside must be crispy. They should be baked in a cast iron skillet. This list is only the start. Believe me; I’ve heard every opinion.

 

 

Biscuits became fundamental in the American South where the core ingredients of buttermilk, lard, and low-protein, softer wheat flours were readily available. This made them cheaper and more tender than their northern counterparts. I read somewhere that pre-Civil War biscuits were considered a delicacy reserved only for Sundays, usually at lunch. There was usually one person in the home responsible for making them. That individual passed down his or her technique and it traveled through generations of the family. These traditions fuel the feelings of proper biscuit etiquette.

The thing about simple is that it can take a lifetime to master. Some days the biscuits rise beautifully. The tall, layered, crispy exterior encasing a buttery, pillowy center. Some days they are flat, dense, or crumbly. The weather, the temperature of your hands and butter, the fat content of the buttermilk, the way you turn them in the bowl all affect the end result.

In our restaurant, just like a traditional Southern family, the person that makes the biscuits is held in the highest esteem. Each pair of hands that touches the dough leaves a small signature.

We all laugh in our kitchen because my biscuits, without a doubt, are the ugliest, albeit the tastiest. They stale quickly and are best enjoyed fresh, so we make them throughout the day in small batches of forty. It takes tremendous effort and we work to perfect our process daily. Despite your biscuit preference — cathead, rolled, beaten — there is one thing upon which we must all agree. Biscuits, dressed up with country ham or dressed down with gravy, are timeless. Like all classics, they never go out of style. And in the end, I’ll always crave authenticity.

 

  • The latest from Nicole
Head Janitor, Chef, and Proprietor | Stomping Ground
Nicole’s cooking style is rooted in, but not limited to, her love of southern biscuits and her diverse culinary upbringing. A military brat, she spent her childhood in the Chicago suburbs enjoying her great-grandmother Mae’s Lithuanian cooking. As a tween, she moved to Paulding County, Ga. where she begrudgingly fell in love with the charmingly perplex small towns of the Deep South. She fondly remembers grubbing on Martin’s biscuits, late-night Waffle House debauchery and cooking with her family. After graduating from the University of Georgia, Nicole started a marketing career at an art nonprofit in Atlanta. At 25 years old, she became the youngest executive at the local Atlanta NPR affiliate. Chasing her dreams, she moved to Alexandria, Va. where she took a short post in the Whole Foods marketing department. Realizing that cooking had been her true love all along, she began night courses at L’Academie de Cuisine. She completed her apprenticeship at Blue Duck Tavern where she was promoted to a line cook after graduation. From there, Nicole worked as a private chef for busy Washington D.C. executives and their families. As grown-ups tend to do, Nicole realized something about her childhood — the best parts were enjoying small town communities, cooking with her great-grandmother and sharing meals with family and friends. She opened Stomping Ground to build a safe and welcoming community around yummy, handmade food from local sources. As her first foray running her own kitchen, she has shamelessly hired better, smarter cooks to fill her kitchen and your bellies. Her great-grandmother’s recipes often appear on the Stomping Ground menu without advertisement and, no, she won’t tell you the secret ingredients. Nicole lives in Del Ray and won’t shut up about how much she loves living there.

If you wander down Del Ray’s, “The Avenue,” you won’t miss the farm-red building with a rustic fence bordering the patio. Stomping Ground opened two years ago and quickly became popular for its made-from-scratch biscuits and its neighborhood vibe. On weekends, excited guests line up before Stomping Ground opens hoping to be the first to get a just-out-of-the-oven biscuit or a fresh salad. Stomping Ground is mostly known for its fast casual breakfast and lunch but on Thursdays and Fridays they provide a full dinner service after 5:00pm. All meals are built from local, seasonal food that is organic whenever possible.

www.stompdelray.com

2309 Mt Vernon Avenue
Alexandria, VA 22301

703.567.6616

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