Cheese Dip Road Trip - A Brief History of Cheese Dip in the Modern South STORY AND PHOTOS BY JUSTIN FOX BURKS
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Cheese Dip Road Trip A Brief History of Cheese Dip in the Modern South STORY AND PHOTOS BY JUSTIN FOX BURKS 16 EDIBLE MEMPHIS | WINTER 2012
P eppered throughout my mother’s cookbooks, among the heard it, but I wasn’t completely sold on the idea. I still need to piece handwritten recipes for Southern classics such as oyster the cheesy puzzle together in order to better understand why this dressing and family favorites such as Linda Sue’s Cheese comfort food has always been in my life. Grit Shrimp Sauce, amidst yellowed newspaper clippings for things like Mud Island Pie and Moist Zucchini Bread, are no less You see, most Memphians, myself included, were introduced to the than three recipes for what we all refer to around these parts as cheese ubiquitous gooey dip by Pancho’s restaurant. The original Pancho’s dip. (The number of cheese dip recipes is only outnumbered by the opened in West Memphis, Arkansas, in 1956. Like the first Mexican sheer glut of chess pie variations, my mom’s absolute favorite dessert.) Chiquito, Pancho’s had dirt floors and boasted a killer cheese dip. I’m Though the recipes are nearly identical, each 3 x 5 index card for the starting to see a connection. The two restaurants were in the same cheese dip recipe is labeled differently: Pancho Dip, Pancho Cheese, state and a mere 150 miles or so away. Okay, I’m convinced of the and Pancho’s Cheese Dip. presence of cheese dip in the South, but not the invention. There had to be melted cheese in a bowl well before these two places made it In our family, as with so many families in Memphis and the Mid- onto the scene, right? South, we never celebrated anything — birthdays, homecomings, and even Christmas — without the omnipresent bowl of cheese dip and I definitely need to figure out the difference between the Southern corn chips. I’m pretty sure everyone in my family would choose American cheese dip we know and anything resembling it in Mexico, cheese dip over turkey on Thanksgiving if it ever came down to that. so I turned to my friend Jonathan Magallanes, owner of Las Tortugas There was always worry that dip after dip, after dip, would ruin our in Germantown. Jonathan and I grew up together here in town, but dinner, but it never did. So, I can’t help but ask the question: where does this quasi-Mexican dish fit on the Southern table, and how did it make its way to Memphis? First, let’s be clear about what we are talking about here. I’d like to es- tablish exactly what cheese dip is as a favor to any of you Yankees, Midwesterners, or Pacific North-Westerners who may have wandered into our neck of the woods. If you’ve been here long enough, you’re bound to have run across and possibly fallen in love with the stuff. Article two of the rules of the World Cheese Dip Championship (yes, that’s a real thing), held for the past two years in Little Rock, Arkansas, clearly states: “Cheese dip is defined by the WCDC as a dip made of primarily cheese(s) or processed cheese product, with or without additional ingredients, not limited to meats, vegetables, or dairy additives, served warm or hot and eaten primarily by dipping a hard tortilla or chip into said product.” Allow me to translate: it’s creamy, melted cheese with stuff in it, and you eat it using a corn chip. According to In Queso Fever: A Movie About Cheese Dip, cheese dip as we know it was invented in central Arkansas in the 1930s by an Irishman known as “Blackie” Donnelly, a guy who owned a restaurant called Mexico Chiquito. Wait...what? Cheese dip was in- vented in Arkansas! This is all starting to make sense. So that makes cheese dip a Southern classic suitable to be served alongside my grandaddy’s cornbread and grandma’s dumplings. The fact that cheese dip originated so close to home blew my mind when I first Right: Large-scale cheese dip production at St. Clair Foods. EDIBLE MEMPHIS | WINTER 2012 17
his family is from Mexico, which makes him uniquely qualified to Fever: A Movie About Cheese Dip, as well as the creator of the make this cheese dip distinction for me. Southern Cheese Dip Academy, the non-profit agency that puts on the World Cheese Dip Competition each year. Of course, I’m talking “I’ve heard of queso Chihuahua, a name which brings to mind some about Nick Rogers. I’ll bet this guy has pure cheese dip running strange imagery for sure. Is that considered cheese dip?” I asked. through his veins. He broke it down for me very quickly. Johnathan explained, “In Mexico, the closest thing to cheese dip is Oaxaca or Chihuahua cheese melted in a skillet over fire or baked in “It seems that cheese dip was born of Mexican ingredients and the oven. It’s then garnished with cilantro, avocado, crema, and any Southern sensibilities,” he explains. number of salsas. It’s spooned into corn tortillas fresh from the comal.” And just like that, it’s all so clear now. That, of course, is the answer Oh, my goodness, that sounds good! I thought to myself. for which I’ve been searching. Cheese dip is Mexican-ish, but it’s not Mexican. It’s, well, a deliciously inauthentic Southern translation of a He continued, “You are in essence making melted cheese tacos.” Mexican dish. Yeah! “So...?” I asked. Cheese dip has certainly found a permanent home here as evidenced “It’s not a dip, but it is a cheese-based starter that is typically shared,” by the number of fierce devotees. Wayward Memphians often find he said. themselves in a cruel and cheese-dip-less world when living outside of the Southern United States. While researching for this story, I’ve Good enough for me. Cheese dip is not Mexican. It’s official. “How heard tales of paying an exorbitant price for the last, dusty can of do you feel about the Southern American version of cheese dip?” I Ro*tel in a bodega in Brooklyn, gotten sage advice on the best way to asked. ship the dip, and horror stories about cheese dip-covered clothes as a result of if it not being packed properly. I’ve been warned not to even “I love it. I’ll eat it all night,” he replied. attempt to order cheese dip in Sun Valley, Idaho — or even as close as It’s time to get serious! I decided to call on the man who has devoted St. Louis. If you do, you are quite likely to end up with a bowl of so much of his life to the beloved dip. He’s the director of In Queso bean dip with a dab of melted cheese on top. There are a few dedicated folks trying to break through the cheese dip ceiling. While Pancho’s dip is only available in Alabama, Arkansas, Kentucky, and select parts of Tennessee and Missouri, Brian Ed- munds is spreading the cheese dip gospel far and wide in the form of the El Terrifico brand that his Memphis-based company, St. Clair Foods, produces for Memphis-based BBQ giant Corky’s. According to Andy Woodman, one of the owners of Corky’s BBQ, El Terrifico cheese dip is available coast-to-coast and nationwide. That’s terrific-o news for people living above the Mason-Dixon. While he admits the strongest sales are in the Southern states, he tells me that the growth of cheese dip sales over the past 12 years has been amazing, and it’s all been due to word of mouth. How popular is it? “We make El Terrifico in 3,000-pound batches.” Edmunds told me on a recent visit to St. Clair Foods. I was even lucky enough to witness the process. It was like the cheese-dip version of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, and I was a willing Augustus Gloop. All in all, I’m so happy to have my mother’s cookbooks. I can look through them anytime and discover something new about who we are as a family and, in turn, who I am as a person, as a cook, and as a Southerner. I love to think back to all of the laughs I’ve had with family and friends around a warm bowl of cheese dip. Many times, I’ve been asked what’s so great about cheese dip. I have a million an- swers now that I know its history, but the best thing about it is that it’s not something you ever eat alone. eM El Terrifico Cheese Dip at St. Clair Foods 18 EDIBLE MEMPHIS | WINTER 2012
— COVER RECIPE — CHEESE DIP Recipe by Justin Fox Burks 3 small poblano peppers 1 jalapeño pepper 3 small-to-medium tomatoes ¾ teaspoon ground cumin 1 teaspoon garlic powder 2 tablespoons butter 2 tablespoons all-purpose flour 1 cup buttermilk ¼ teaspoon salt Scant 1⁄8 teaspoon cayenne ¼ pound Bonnie Blue cave-aged goat milk cheddar (rind removed, shredded) ½ pound sharp cheddar cheese, shredded 1 bag of corn chips (Brimm’s, made in Bartlett, TN) Roast peppers and tomatoes until blackened over a high flame on your outdoor grill. This should take 5–8 minutes. Place peppers and tomatoes in a covered container and allow to cool completely. Remove stems and seeds from the peppers. Remove the core from the tomato using a paring knife. Slip the vegetables out of their charred skins. Place roasted vegetables, cumin, and garlic powder into the work bowl of your food processor. Pulse until mixture is well incor- porated. This process should yield about a cup of homemade Ro*tel. In a 3-quart sauce pan over medium heat, melt butter and then whisk in the flour. Allow the flour and butter mixture to cook for about two minutes (until nutty and fragrant) before whisking in the buttermilk. After about 2 minutes the mixture will thicken. Add the salt and cayenne. Add the cheese in batches while stirring the mixture so that the cheese melts. Once all the cheese is incorporated, add a cup of the homemade Ro*tel mixture and heat the mixture through. Place everything back into the food processor and process for 3–4 minutes or until smooth. Pour warm cheese dip into a serving bowl, garnish with chopped cilantro and diced roasted jalapeño. Serve warm alongside crunchy corn tortilla chips. Refrigerate unused portion (as if there will be any left over). Reheat in the microwave for 90 seconds or in a saucepan over a low flame. Makes about a 1½ pints. BEER PAIRING courtesy of Boscos Brewing Co. Growlers available at 827 S Main St. and 2120 Madison Ave. — Pick up a growler of Boscos Famous Flaming Stone Beer, add a little beer to the cheese dip then share the rest with your friends while enjoying the dip. The sweet maltiness of this beer will complement the cheeses while quenching the spiciness. 20 EDIBLE MEMPHIS | WINTER 2012
Q&A with Nick Rogers Justin chips away on the migration of cheese dip Justin Fox Burks: This whole thing came state’s famous tamales. Part of the inspiration NR: Yeah, we’re actually planning to bring about after flipping through my mother’s for my movie was discovering just how narrow some kind of regional cook-off to Memphis cookbooks and finding no less than three that band of popularity is. Just five hours and Dallas in the next year or two. The winner recipes for cheese dip. A lifelong Memphian, north of Little Rock, I ate at a St. Louis gets free travel and entry into the WCDC in I grew up on the stuff. Pancho’s cheese dip is Mexican restaurant where the staff had no Little Rock. Stay tuned! eM the overwhelming favorite around here. No idea what cheese dip was. So you don’t have need for a contest; they would win. to drive very far for it to start disappearing from menus. Nick Rogers: Pancho’s actually entered the World Cheese Dip Competition WCDC in 2010, its first year. They didn’t win a JFB: It looks to me like the main difference www.cheesedip.net prize and didn’t return for 2011, so maybe between Little Rock cheese dip and the Click on “how it all began” to watch they were a bit spooked by our fanaticism Memphis version is butter. Would you ad- In Queso Fever: A Movie About Cheese Dip down here. But I’m not surprised that vocate for the use of butter in the dip? Memphis is rabid for the place. I tell people NR: I start my own recipe with a butter/flour that a favorite cheese dip is like politics or re- roux. It’s mainly for consistency, but butter ligion — you’re almost certain to stick with flavor improves almost any dish. We’re what you were raised with, for the rest of your Southern, right? life. In Arkansas, where several different towns had their own recipe in the 40s and 50s, you JFB: With Mexico Chiquito and Pancho’s only can guess where someone grew up by which 150 miles apart in the same state I have my dip they name as their favorite in 2011. own theories on how cheese dip migrated from Central Arkansas to Memphis from the JFB: I discovered your passion for cheese dip mid 30s to the mid 50s. How do you think the when I saw cheese dip listed as one of the 50 good news spread? best Southern foods in Garden & Gun mag- azine. I watched your movie, which I loved, NR: I’ve heard several anecdotes of cross- and discovered the NCDC only too late to country road trippers routinely stopping in attend. I mention both the movie and the central Arkansas for the cheese dip in the championship in the story, so I’m glad you are 50s and 60s. I guess it spread through word- willing to answer a few questions. of-mouth. The first national mention of cheese dip that I could find was in a I know you get some crazy looks if you order cookbook put together by wives of U.S. Con- cheese dip in Seattle, Washington. What gressmen in the 60s. One of Arkansas’s es- would you say are the cheese dip parameters teemed legislative spouses shared her geographically? How would you explain the cheese dip recipe for the book, and it was pockets of cheese-dip ignorance in certain apparently a hit in Washington social circles. parts of the country? But the question is something I’ve thought a NR: It seems that cheese dip was born of lot about in general: How did ANYTHING Mexican ingredients and Southern sensibil- spread before the internet? ities. So its “cradle” rocks from the Southwest JFB: Are you looking forward to next year’s to the Delta. In Texas it is called “chili con competition? Any plans to try to have one in queso” (even when containing no meat), and Memphis? in Mississippi it goes hand-in-hand with that EDIBLE MEMPHIS | WINTER 2012 21
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