RECIPES: How pecans come to life beyond a dessert plate

Pecans are one of Georgia's favorite crops, but you can expand your recipe plans beyond pie. Ideas include (clockwise, from left) Black-Eyed Pea and Pecan Butter Hummus, Cheesy Breakfast Tacos with Salsa Macha, Pecan Pesto Grain Salad, and Grilled Pork Chops with Apple and Pecan Relish. (Styling by Taylor Mead / Chris Hunt for the AJC)

Credit: CHRIS HUNT

Credit: CHRIS HUNT

Pecans are one of Georgia's favorite crops, but you can expand your recipe plans beyond pie. Ideas include (clockwise, from left) Black-Eyed Pea and Pecan Butter Hummus, Cheesy Breakfast Tacos with Salsa Macha, Pecan Pesto Grain Salad, and Grilled Pork Chops with Apple and Pecan Relish. (Styling by Taylor Mead / Chris Hunt for the AJC)

The Georgia Pecan Commission estimates the state’s farmers produce 100 million pounds of pecans each year. In their efforts to encourage us to think “beyond the pie,” the commission partners with community organizations like the Ponce City Farmers Market to share pecans and recipe ideas.

In June, the Ponce market hosted “Pecan Day,” and market manager Taylor Mead offered tastes of dishes like squash casserole with a pecan-Parmesan topping while vendors like Sweet Lola sold focaccia with tomatoes and pecans. Those who arrived at the market early enough went home with sample bags of pecans.

It was such a success that the commission will be back at the start of this year’s pecan harvest, Sept. 28, with more bags of pecans and Mead will once again be offering samples of her pecan-filled recipes, including the black-eyed pea and pecan butter hummus she’s sharing the recipe for here.

Mead has been working with Community Farmers Markets for almost three years, starting at the Decatur market and now managing the Ponce market full time.

As a self-professed foodie, she decided not to get a meal plan while in college but to cook for herself. As she cooked from many different cuisines, she developed spice blends that made quick work of preparing healthy meals with a range of flavors.

When Mead was fresh out of college with a degree in English, her first job was running the farm-to-school lunch program at Grant Park Cooperative Preschool. “I wanted to be a garden teacher and I had always loved to cook. Now I was preparing meals for 75 kids a day using my spice mixes and for the parents who would come into the classrooms and eat lunch, too. They told me, ‘You’re really good at cooking. I’d buy your food.’”

After four years of cooking at the school, Mead began Better Off Fed in 2018. She describes it as a constantly evolving culinary project. It began as a meal prep company, and because she was relying so much on her spice mixes in her cooking, she began selling those, too.

The importance of pecans runs in Taylor Mead's family. Pecan trees grew on the last remaining piece of her grandmother’s original homestead in Lindsay, Okla., and Mead just planted a pecan tree at home in Atlanta’s Venetian Hills neighborhood. (Styling by Taylor Mead / Chris Hunt for the AJC)

Credit: CHRIS HUNT

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Credit: CHRIS HUNT

When the pandemic arrived, she stopped doing meal prep but kept and expanded the seasoning mixes. Ultimately, she ended up with eight blends: her “haus” blend, BBQ dry rub, Greek, chili, taco, Thai-inspired yellow curry and ranch seasonings and a mix she calls “spicy faerie” with garlic, parsley, edible flowers, crushed red pepper, pink salt and oregano.

Mead feels a special connection to pecans as she remembers the three pecan trees that grew on the last remaining piece of her grandmother’s original homestead in Lindsay, Oklahoma, and how her grandmother would shell those pecans and mail the shelled nuts to her family every year.

Taylor Mead, market manager at the Ponce City Farmers Market, holds her favorite egg-laying hen, Alice, who was named after Mead's grandmother. Taylor and her husband, who live in Atlanta, consider themselves "urban homesteaders." (Chris Hunt for the AJC)

Credit: CHRIS HUNT

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Credit: CHRIS HUNT

Mead just planted a pecan tree at home in Atlanta’s Venetian Hills neighborhood, where she has a vegetable garden, grows a variety of fruits and mushrooms, and keeps chickens. “Two generations ago, my family was homesteading, and my grandparents think it’s wildly hilarious that I am committed to what they consider a hard way of life. They think the best thing in the world is sliced bread.”

Creating pecan recipes to share with the Ponce City Farmers Market shoppers is a way she can honor that family heritage.

RECIPES

All too often, we relegate pecans to sweet dishes. Pecans add crunch and body to these savory recipes from Taylor Mead of Better Off Fed and the Ponce City Farmers Market. Mead calls for pink salt in all her recipes, an ingredient she prefers for the trace minerals it contains. It’s fine to substitute regular salt if you prefer.

Black-Eyed Pea and Pecan Butter Hummus goes great with crudite and crackers. (Styling by Taylor Mead / Chris Hunt for the AJC)

Credit: CHRIS HUNT

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Credit: CHRIS HUNT

Black-Eyed Pea and Pecan Butter Hummus

Hummus is infinitely adaptable. Add more lemon, more garlic or more salt to taste. Mead likes seasoning this with the smoky flavor of Beautiful Briny Sea’s Campfire Sea Salt, a mix of sea salt, sumac, ancho chile, cumin and smoked paprika. It’s available online or at the Chop Shop on Memorial Drive. And she uses Georgia Grinders pecan butter in this recipe, available at Whole Foods Market and local farmers markets.

— All recipes are adapted from ones by Taylor Mead of Better Off Fed.

Carrot tops are a key ingredient in the pesto for Pecan Pesto Grain Salad. (Styling by Taylor Mead / Chris Hunt for the AJC)

Credit: CHRIS HUNT

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Credit: CHRIS HUNT

Pecan Pesto Grain Salad

Mead likes to cook the barley for this hearty side dish in her Instant Pot. “I was horrible at cooking grains until I got my Instant Pot. It delivers flawlessly cooked grains every time.”

You’ll want a bunch of carrots with their tops, available at farmers markets and most grocery stores, for this recipe since you’ll need the tops for the pesto. And she prefers crumbling her own feta from a block stored in brine, rather than purchasing crumbled cheese.

Pecan Pesto

If you purchased carrots without tops, you can substitute flat-leaf parsley for the carrot tops in this recipe. If using carrot tops, discard the stems and use only the feathery fronds.

If you have leftover pesto, freeze it in an ice cube tray and use to season cooked pasta or roasted eggplant.

Grilled Pork Chops with Apple and Pecan Relish is a perfect dish for fall. Extra relish can be served with chicken or tempeh, or added to a grilled cheese sandwich. (Styling by Taylor Mead / Chris Hunt for the AJC)

Credit: CHRIS HUNT

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Credit: CHRIS HUNT

Grilled Pork Chops with Apple and Pecan Relish

Mead’s Haus seasoning is available at Better Off Fed and is made of equal parts pink salt, pepper, garlic, onion and paprika.

Apple and Pecan Relish

This relish is tart and nutty. For the most colorful presentation, keep the peel on the apples. Extra relish can be served with chicken or tempeh, or added to a grilled cheese sandwich. Mead’s Aunt Katy gave her the tip about letting the apples and shallots sit in an ice water bath as a way to keep the produce crisp when pickled.

Cheesy Breakfast Tacos with Salsa Macha. (Styling by Taylor Mead / Chris Hunt for the AJC)

Credit: CHRIS HUNT

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Credit: CHRIS HUNT

Cheesy Breakfast Tacos with Salsa Macha

Per taco, without Salsa Macha: 203 calories (percent of calories from fat, 52), 10 grams protein, 14 grams carbohydrates, 1 gram fiber, 12 grams total fat (5 grams saturated), 201 milligrams cholesterol, 232 milligrams sodium.

Pecan Salsa Macha

The inspiration for this dish came when Mead sampled the macha from Chico chef Maricela Vega. “It made me dream for days of crunchy pepitas and toasted sesame. I thought pecans would be a fun substitution to try.”

Mead likes a mix of half avocado and half grapeseed oil for this salsa.

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