Vegetarian
Sautéed Green Beans with Onions & Mushrooms
This is how my mother cooks green beans. Theyâre so good and so simple that right from the start we made them our Tuesday vegetable of the day at the restaurant.
Garlic & Cheddar Grits
Most Yankees have a preconceived notion that they donât like grits. When we put them on the menu, lots of folks are resistant. Itâs a tough sell for the waitresses, but once they get customers to try them, theyâre hooked. Our flavor-boosted grits are rich and powerfully earthy. Serve them instead of mashed potatoes.
Mean Money Greens Revisited
Mean Money Greens are one of our special daily sides. We make âem in the good old Southern mannerâboiled with salt pork for hours til they melt in your mouth. Realizinâ that this technique might not fit the time constraints of the modern cook, weâve revisited this dish and can now give you an updated, healthier version that preserves most of the B vitamins found in collards and brings out their natural peppery flavor.
Garlic & Ginger Green Beans
This recipe from our Rochester restaurant brings together the lively flavors of fresh garlic and ginger. It makes for a refreshinâ salad that goes with all sorts of grilled and roasted meats and poultry.
Fresh-Cut Fries
This recipe is so simple itâs downright hard. Weâre talking about only three ingredients hereâpotatoes, oil, and salt. But youâve got to pay close attention to those ingredients and their handling to come out with crispy, erect french fries. Make sure you read Fry Obsession (see below) before you start.
Cajun Corn
This is our most popular âvegetable of the day.â It shows up on the menu every Monday. Itâs damn simple and packed with flavor. When you can make it with fresh corn in season, itâs even better.
Honey Hush Corn Bread
Any Southern cookinâ conjures up corn bread. Ours is sweet and mellow and goes great with the tanginess of our bar-b-que.
Black Beans & Rice
Serve up these deeply flavored Cuban-style beans with a pile of perfectly cooked white rice. Add a salad or some veggies and youâve got the Dinosaur vegetarian platter.
Perfect Rice
Rice acts as a base for many a saucy dish, so you should never take it for granted. Itâs gotta be every bit as good as the food you serve it with. Rinsing the rice before cooking gets rid of the floury starch that clings to the grains and makes cooked rice sticky and lumpy, and adding some garlic boosts the flavor.
Macaroni Salad
Hereâs a classic side dish if there ever was one. Thereâs a thousand ways to make it, and I think youâll find ours to be a keeperâCreole mustard, fresh diced tomato, and a touch of green pepper all tossed with freshly cooked pasta shells. We like the way shells hold the dressing better than elbows. Itâs still Macaroni Salad to us.
Tomato-Cucumber Salad
This recipe was inspired by an Italian recipe handed down by my partner Mikeâs grandmother. Like all good Italian cooks, she insisted that the raw ingredients in any dish be ripe and flavorful. She never cheaped out and neither do we. When we started the Dinosaur Bar-B-Que, it was one of our original sides, and it has stayed on our menu ever since. Itâs best made in the morning, or at least several hours before serving.
Coleslaw
Coleslaw is an absolute essential in a barbecue joint. We make ours fresh twice a day so the crispness and integrity of the cabbage always contrasts with the tangy, creamy dressing. What Iâm saying is, it donât get better with age.
Asparagus, Red Pepper, & Potato Salad
When spring hits and the asparagus comes into season, I canât wait to eat this simple potato salad. Because itâs made without mayonnaise, it can be held at room temperature where the flavors can really develop. Itâs perfect picnic food. Once the asparagus goes out of season, try making it with a pound of green beans instead.
Guacamole with Fried Tostones
When we make guacamole, we make it to order. Itâs one of those dishes that doesnât improve with age. The avocados have to be perfectly ripe, giving gently when pressed, and then mixed with just the right balance of other ingredients. We serve our guacamole with warm, crisp tostones, a Cuban specialty made from fried plantains. You can make the tostones ahead of time and then refry them right before serving.
Arepas
I first came across these tasty Colombian fried corn cakes stuffed with oozinâ, stringy cheese at a Miami street festival. Back home, I messed around with the recipe and added whole corn kernels to the dough to make âem more interesting. In the restaurant we serve arepas with a pile of pulled pork in the center for a real Memphis-meets-Miami dish. But if you donât have the pork on hand, theyâre just as good served with some Fire-Roasted Garlic Salsa.
Buttermilk Cornbread
This is great bread for any meal, but one of my favorite ways to eat it is crumbled up in a big bowl with really cold milk. Mmmm! Beth likes it cold with buttermilk. Now thatâs just wrong!
Jackâs Yeast Bread
This was Daddyâs âI quit smokingâ bread. When I was in high school, he stopped smoking for good. Being a man who was never still, he started looking for ways to occupy his hands other than smoking. He bought some of the first bread flour ever to hit the shelves in Monticello, Georgia, and started experimenting. He became known around town for his homemade bread, and often made loaves for bake sales and church suppers.
Daddyâs Biscuits
Biscuits are synonymous with southern cooking. If I had the time, I would have homemade biscuits at every single meal. They should be required in every household! When my niece Ashley was small, one of the things she liked best about going to Granddaddy and Grammyâs house was breakfast. There was usually a conversation the night before about all the awesome things on the menuâbacon, grits, sausage, and, of course, homemade biscuits. Ashley would be up early to help make the biscuits, standing on a chair beside Granddaddy, wearing a big apron and covered with flour.
Sweet Potato Soufflé
This is a nice variation on regular sweet potatoes for a Thanksgiving side dish. Itâs almost a dessert, itâs so sweet!
Bethâs Hash-Brown Potato Casserole
There are as many versions of this casserole as there are southern cooks and church cookbooks. Bethâs is a compilation of several. I like the potatoes shredded instead of cubed and not as much butter as some recipes have (donât worry, thereâs still plenty!).