The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn vocabulary

179 vocabulary words, including people, places, music, artists, etc.

over 179 words
help & settings
[x]
help with word

corn pone

help with synonyms synonyms: indian pone ???
help with tags tags: [food]

help with definition
► definition
Definition:
is a type of cornbread made from a thick, malleable cornmeal dough (which is usually egg-less and milk-less) and cooked in a specific type of iron pan over an open fire (such as a frontiersman would use), using butter, margarine, shortening, or cooking oil. Corn pones have been a staple of Southern U.S. cuisine, and have been discussed by many American writers, including Mark Twain.

In the Appalachian Mountains, cornbread baked in a round iron skillet, or in a cake pan of any shape, is still referred to as a "pone" of cornbread (as opposed to "hoe cakes," the term for cornbread fried in pancake style); and when biscuit dough (i.e., "biscuits" in the American sense of the word) is occasionally baked in one large cake rather than as separate biscuits, this is called a "biscuit pone."

The term "corn pone" is sometimes used derogatorily to refer to one who possesses certain rural, unsophisticated peculiarities ("he's a corn pone"), or as an adjective to describe particular rural, folksy or "hick" characteristics (e.g., "corn pone" humor). This pejorative term often is directed at persons from rural areas of the southern and midwestern US. A character in the Lil' Abner comic strip, General Jubilation T Cornpone, was a mythical Civil War general from Dogpatch known for his retreats and imputed cowardice. President John F. Kennedy's staffers, who were mostly Northeastern Ivy League elites, openly mocked Texan Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson's rural speech patterns, referring to Johnson behind his back as 'Uncle Cornpone' or 'Rufus Cornpone'.

text from Wikipedia, licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike

help with use text
► uses
Uses:
"Must be something you know. What your mama teach you growing up?"
She looks down at the webby feet of her panty hose, says, "I can cook corn pone."

Kathryn Stockett. The Help, p.26 (2009)
---
BERZELIUS WINDRIP, of whom in late summer and early autumn of 1936 there were so many published photographs— showing him popping into cars and out of aëroplanes, dedicating bridges, eating corn pone and side-meat with Southerners and clam chowder and bran with Northerners,

Sinclair Lewis. It Can't Happen Here
help with search help with search