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Lucy Mercer

Lucy Mercer
Location
Atlanta, Georgia, USA
Birthday
December 31
Bio
I cook, I write, I carpool. You may also find my words at A Cook and Her Books. Email acookandherbooks@gmail.com. Thanks for visiting!

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JUNE 4, 2010 12:55PM

The Laughing Girl Goes on a Picnic

Rate: 19 Flag

   girl in hat 1

The laughing girl, dressed in a fresh white linen dress, joins her friends for a picnic in the mountains. She puts on her favorite straw hat over her long brown braid. The terrain is rugged, especially for a lady outfitted as a lady. The men are willing to help a young lady across the stream.

girl in hat 2

girl in hat 2

 Part of being the only girl in a small family is inheriting the family history. These are pictures from my grandfather's photo album, snapshots from the 19-teens when he left Ohio and toured the West. The family thinks the pictures were made in Colorado.

 I wish I knew who the girl was - she has such a fresh face. White linen dress, big black bow, face framed by a floppy straw hat. I imagine she has a long brown braid under the hat. The pictures are from a picnic in the mountains and these are the most interesting - which gentleman will carry the pretty girl across the river?

Imagining this grand day, I realize the romance factor has dwindled from my picnics. These days, Clark's sandals and a clean t-shirt and shorts are the order of the day. I like my straw hat, but rely on sunscreen to shield my face because I don't like hat hair.

My Picnic Menu

 Pimento Cheese on Crackers

Ham Wraps with Spinach, Cream Cheese and Chives and Red Pepper Slices

Fresh Georgia Watermelon Slices
 

And brownies, always brownies. These are luscious, fudgy brownies, made rich with cream cheese. I intended to make a cream cheese ribbon through the chocolately cake, but ended up stirring the cream cheese into the batter for an extra-rich brownie. You need to walk an extra mile to burn off these calories, but it's well worth it. After all, you're in your Clark's and not high-button boots.

pimento cheese

 Pimento Cheese

This is a boilerplate pimento cheese. There are lots of uptown recipes, and I've bookmarked Bellwether Vance's pimento cheese to try (she also has the ultimate minner cheese story).

 8 ounces sharp Cheddar cheese

1 cup mayonnaise, approximately, (I've never bothered to measure)

Pinch of salt

2 tablespoons chopped pimentos

1. Shred Cheddar cheese on the coarse side of a hand grater or in a food processor.

2. In a bowl, stir together cheese and enough mayonnaise to bind. Add salt and pimentos. Serve with crackers or on squishy white bread.

 brownies

 Fudgy Icebox Brownies
 
These brownies came about from a failed attempt to make a cream cheese marble swirl in my regular brownie. I made both batters, swirled them to perfect marbling and placed the pan in the oven. Then I saw the bowl of three eggs, waiting to be used in the brownie batter. Ooops! Out of the oven, batter dumped in a bowl, eggs whisked in to the now-combined cream cheese and brownie batter. The resulting brownies are super-rich due to the cream cheese, and as good as they are warm, they are divine cold, so place them the bottom of the cooler, and finish off the picnic on a high note.

2 sticks unsalted butter, melted

2 cups granulated sugar

4 ounces cream cheese, softened

4 large eggs

1 teaspoon vanilla

3/4 cup natural cocoa powder (I use Hershey's)

2/3 cup unbleached all-purpose flour

1/2 tsp. baking powder

1/2 teaspoon salt

1. Preheat the oven to 350°F. Butter a 9-inch-square metal baking pan.

2. Melt the butter in a saucepan. Off the heat, stir in sugar, then the cream cheese, followed by the eggs and vanilla. Slowly stir in the flour, cocoa, baking powder, and salt, until the batter is smooth and free of lumps.

3. Spread the batter into the prepared pan. Bake until a toothpick or a skewer inserted 3/4 inch into the center of the brownies comes out with just a few moist clumps clinging to it, about 40 minutes. Let the brownies cool completely in the pan on a rack.

4. Cut into squares. Store the brownies in the refrigerator in a covered container.

 watermelon

 Watermelon. What can I say? It's Georgia in June and the watermelons are sweet and available at every fruit and vegetable stand by the side of the road. Chill the melon in the fridge, then carve into chunks and what my family calls "pie slices"- with a handy rind handle for kids to hold.

Text & images  © 2010, Lucy Mercer. 

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Comments

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Since you are from Atlanta you can publish pimiento cheese recipes, it's okay!
I have my own little mental movie going now following through on the picnickers story board.
Lovely story!
What a fabulous series of photos! She is a delightful-looking girl. I want to know her story too. And of course you know I love homemade pimento cheese! The brownies sound good too -- sometimes mistakes wind up being fortunate.
Beautiful pictures, and a lovely story. I hear a picnic by a brook calling my name...
These pictures are beautifully evocative. And your recipes make me ACHE for the South.
It's so rare to see lively action shots from that era! Thanks for posting.
Fred: I'm glad to have minner cheese cred. Thanks for reading!

Bell: I intended to make your minner cheese, but used the last of the cream cheese in the super-fudgy brownies. Will stock up and try again!

Katrocada: I want to be on this picnic, too!

la: oh, honey, you don't have to ache for the South. Visit anytime. Or have a tall glass of sweet iced tea and read To Kill a Mockingbird, that'll do in a pinch.

Felisa: The action is what attracted me to these pictures - you so rarely see candid pictures from this time. I have my share of serious German ancestor pictures. It's nice to see my Grandpa and his friends having fun.
That's yummy, Lucy. What's a picnic without watermelon - and brownies? ~R
That mysterious girl looks like she'd be fun to know--and something about those photos looks really fresh and modern, despite their age. I think she'd like your menu!
Lucy, those pictures are gems... Felisa is right, action shots from that time period are rare. As for the food, I think cheese of some sort - the more spreadable the better - should be on every picnic. Great recipes.
Lucy, what amazing photos (and clothes)! Maybe you should try picnicking in an outfit like that, just once, and see if people will carry you around. I like how you rescued your brownies and reinvented them. Lovely sounding picnic.
LOVE the photos, Lucy! And your picnic sounds delicious...you can't go wrong with cheese, crackers, watermelon, and brownies. Yum!
Lucy, those pictures are fantastic! But just think, one day our grandchildren will be sitting around in those one piece, skintight bodysuits (per all sci fi movies) swooning over "romantic" t-shirts and jeans. :-)
Your old photos are fantastic! Those brownies look so tempting I may have to make them this morning.
Enchanting photos and a yummy looking brownie recipe! Are you sure you are not related somehow to the pretty woman in the pictures? I see a distinct resemblance.
Nice post.

4 eggs in the brownies? Do they turn out fudgy or cake-like? (maybe 3)


{[R]}
Yum. And what wonderful, evocative photos.
Such captivating photos -- and you have inherited her smile as well as the recipies! Lucky for you!!! Did you get the hat? For years I had several of my grandmother's old hats and their original boxes from J. L. Hudsons but they dissappeared in a move. I just love those old hats!!! Bravo on a lovely post!
thanks for sharing! so wonderful!
Oooo I love the pictures, you're right she has such a great face. And I'm making those brownies for sure
A great post, and I am most curious about the laughing lady. I think this would make a great painting. John Singer Sargent could have done her justice. Maybe you could make up a story about her and give us something to think about this laughing, happy woman. Unusual poses for photography of that time, whoever took the pictures was probably an artist.....you see my mind wanders.....R
Now this is a picnic. One day this Yankee will try something with pimentos in it..._r
Thanks, friends for reading!

Fusun: the brownies are super-rich, the watermelon makes you feel virtuous.

Felicia: My family thinks I’m a little weird for loving these pictures (among other things), so it’s comforting to know there are others as taken by the laughing girl. And I can’t imagine she’d turn down the brownies.

Cyndi: Thanks for loving the pictures and being a member of the spreadable cheese club. It’s more than squeezy cheese - that can be our motto.

Linda: I’d love to have a dress like this & the paid help to launder and press it. (I lived in linen in the 80s and will never go back.) I’d love to be on this picnic! I’ll post more antique pictures soon!

Lisa: We’re lucky we live in the watermelon capital of the Southeast. The watermelon is fabulous this year!

Mamie: I love your vision of the future! I’ll definitely be old school in my t-shirt and cargo shorts.

Jenna: Let me know how the brownies turn out. I can send a link to the original sans cream cheese.

Ablonde: Thank you, but I’m pretty sure the laughing girl is not a blood relative. I wish I had that smile!

Larry: Four eggs, believe it. Very fudgy. Three would make a decent brownie, I’d think. Let me know if you try.

Lulu & Phoebe: I make those brownies all the time, but got caught up in my variation and trying to write the story for SKC. A happy accident!

Lea: Thanks for stopping by and for the comment!

PattyJane: My favorite sunhat is about this big, but it flops down on to my face, so it’s not nearly as flattering. I know what you mean about hatboxes, they’re treasures, too. Thanks for reading!

Love Heals Everything: Thanks for commenting!

Caroline Marie: Thanks for loving the laughing girl!

Sheila: Oh, Mr. Sargent is fine and would do well by her, and I think Cassatt would capture the motion and flush of excitement. I thought about going the fiction route, but that is absolutely not my strength. I’d love to know what other creative minds come up with. Maybe an open call?

Joan: I hated pimento cheese until I married a man from Macon, Georgia. It is Macon manna and absolutely delish. Use roasted red peppers instead of pimentos. Spread on whole wheat bread and run under the broiler. Divine.
Oh, Lucy, I fell in love with the girl in Colorado, I am linking this to an Open call I made recently called "What Do You See?" I like these photos very much.

And then I saw the photos and recipes for your picnic, and my stomach GROWLED! I guess I'd better make some lunch after I fix that link.