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One of the original Thirteen Colonies, South Carolina was named after England’s King Charles II (from the Latinate Carolus). Along its long border with the Atlantic lies a stretch of coastal plains, marshlands, swamps, and Sea Islands known as the Lowcountry. Here, French and West African culinary traditions came together to build a cuisine based on rice and the area's abundant seafood. Frogmore stew and shrimp-and-grits, for example, are culinary creations credited to African-Americans known as the Gullah. If you use words like "goober" (for peanut) and "gumbo," you're speaking a bit of Gullah. South Carolina’s Lowcountry also stands out as the first place where tea was successfully grown in the United States. Today, sweet tea is practically synonymous with South Carolina hospitality. Barbeque is big throughout the South, and in the Carolinas it often means pulled pork shoulder, cooked long and low over flavor-forging wood smoke. In South Carolina, mustard is a common base for tangy barbecue sauces. Georgia may be called the Peach State, but South Carolina actually produces more of these sweet, juicy stone fruits.
 

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Home Town: Barrie, Ontario, Canada
Living In: Columbia, South Carolina, USA
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Well, I was always told the way to a man's heart is through is stomach! Isn't that the truth! I enjoy cooking but my husband prefers to eat!

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jc

Cooking Level: Intermediate
Living In: Irmo, South Carolina, USA
About me: I like to cook when I have the time..Making and coming up with ideas interest me and getting in the kitchen with my girls is fun,too
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samandjosh

Cooking Level: Intermediate
Living In: Beaufort, South Carolina, USA
About me: hello! my name is Samantha. i am 20 years old. i am married to the love of my life, who just so happeneds to be a United States Marine. We have been married for alittle over two y…
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Cooking Level: Expert
About me: 50+ female transplanted now in the South and loving it.
 

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The reviewer gave this recipe 5 stars. This recipe averages a 4.82 star rating.
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Downeast Maine Pumpkin Bread

Reviewed on Oct. 12, 2008 by EMMA37
This is almost the exact recipe my mother passed down to me. She used to bake it in coffee cans. This bread is so moist and flavorful! I give it away this time of year as a fall treat.
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The reviewer gave this recipe 4 stars. This recipe averages a 4.68 star rating.
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Jay's Signature Pizza Crust

Reviewed on Oct. 11, 2008 by EMMA37
I liked this recipe. The dough was a bit hard to work with but the taste made up for it.
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The reviewer gave this recipe 4 stars. This recipe averages a 4.57 star rating.

Restaurant-Style Hashbrown Casserole

Reviewed on Oct. 11, 2008 by Chele Smith
I found this to be a fairly good recipe. After reading many of the other reviews already posted, I went ahead and cut back on the butter to 1/4 cup. Other changes I made were to add milk, sour cream, more onion, more cheese, garlic salt in place of regular salt, and parsley to mine. By using unsalted butter and fat free/low sodium soup I was able to keep the sodium content low even after adding the garlic salt. I would make this again, but will continue to experiment with it a bit - maybe change out the soup flavor, use a different cheese such as swiss or mexican blend. I am also going to try adding some vegetables and meat to the recipe to make it a full meal - such as bacon or ham or chicken and broccoli.
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