Situation in US South grows more dire after days of ice, frigid temperatures and widespread outages

posted in: All news | 0

By SOPHIE BATES, JEFF MARTIN and RUSS BYNUM, Associated Press

JACKSON, Miss. (AP) — Mississippi dispatchers are fielding desperate calls for medication or oxygen from people stuck in their homes. Troopers in Tennessee are fanning out for welfare checks on those who haven’t been heard from in days. And in at least one rural area, officials have resorted to using trucks typically used for battling wildfires to transport patients to hospitals.

It could be days before power is restored across the South, where more subfreezing temperatures are expected by Friday in areas unaccustomed to and ill-equipped for such cold. The situation is reaching a breaking point for the elderly and those with medical conditions who lack electricity, some of whom are trapped by roads made impassable by ice and fallen trees.

The situation in northern Mississippi was “life-or-death,” said Jamie Parttridge, a longtime resident of Batesville, along icy Interstate 55 in the hard-hit northern part of the state.

Nancy Dillon, 87, spent three days without power on her family farm in the rural outskirts of Nashville, relying on her fireplace for warmth. When her phone battery started dying and her backup battery pack stopped working, she said she became “alarmed.”

“If I were to fall, if I were to need somebody, there would be no way to get help,” she said, adding that electricity was restored on Tuesday night.

This image taken from a video released by the city of Oxford, Miss., shows crews working on power lines Tuesday, Jan. 27, 2026. (City of Oxford Mississippi via AP)

Warming centers are open across Mississippi

The growing misery and anxiety comes amid what Mississippi officials say is the state’s worst winter storm in more than 30 years. About 60 warming centers were opened across a state known as one of the nation’s poorest. But for some communities, they are not enough.

Hal Ferrell, mayor of Batesville, said Wednesday that no one in the city has power and, with roads still slippery with ice, it’s too soon to begin recovery efforts.

“We’re at a real mess and warming centers just don’t exist for 7,500 people,” Ferrell said.

About 100,000 homes and businesses remained without power in Mississippi early Thursday, and another 100,000 customers are without power in Tennessee, according to PowerOutage.us. More than half of the residents in 13 Mississippi counties had no power. Many of them of were in the northern part of the state but several were also in the Mississippi Delta region on the state’s west side.

At least 70 people have died across the U.S. in states afflicted by the dangerous cold.

Utility trucks are seen through ice covered trees Wednesday, Jan. 28, 2026, in Nashville, Tenn. after a winter storm passed through area over the weekend. (AP Photo/George Walker IV)

Tennessee residents still without power need help, official says

In Hardin County, Tennessee, at the Mississippi state line, LaRae Sliger, the county’s emergency management director, said while people were prepared to manage a couple of days without power, they can’t go much longer without help.

“They’re cold, they don’t have power, they don’t have heat, they’re out of propane, they’re out of wood, they’re out of kerosene for their kerosene heaters,” she said.

Around 90,000 outages remained in Nashville, Tennessee, where downed trees and snapped power lines blocked access to some areas. Utility workers will need at least the weekend, if not longer, to finish restoring power, said Brent Baker, a Nashville Electric Service vice president.

Forecasters say the subfreezing weather will persist in the eastern U.S. into February, with a new influx of arctic air arriving this weekend. There’s a growing chance for heavy snow in the Carolinas and Virginia.

The National Weather Service said chances of additional, significant snowfall are low in places like Nashville, but weekend temperatures will reach dangerously low single digits with wind chills below zero.

Mississippi dispatched 135 snowplows and National Guard troops equipped with wreckers to sections of Interstates 55 and 22 gridlocked by vehicles abandoned in the state’s ice-stricken northern region.

Cars and semitrucks trying to navigate the frozen highways single-file began getting stuck Tuesday. No injuries were reported, the Mississippi Department of Public Safety said.

A tree blocks the road days after an ice storm in Nashville, Tenn., on Tuesday, Jan. 27, 2026. (AP Photo/Travis Loller)

Road crews work to fully reopen interstates for travel

On Thursday, road crews “will continue to focus on opening all lanes of I-55 and I-22,” Mississippi Gov. Tate Reeves said. “Drivers are encouraged to remain off any open interstate in northern Mississippi unless it is an emergency.”

“Once you get the goods on the interstate, you can’t branch out and get it anywhere else where it needs to be,” said Parttridge, who described I-55 as “our lifeline.”

Related Articles


US stocks drift as gold’s price keeps ripping higher


US applications for jobless benefits, a proxy for layoffs, tick down to 209,000 last week


Sen. Susan Collins announces end to ICE large-scale operations in Maine after talks with Noem


Dow to cut about 4,500 jobs as emphasis shifts to AI and automation


US appeals court says Noem’s decision to end protections for Venezuelans in US was illegal

Parttridge spent 36 agonizing hours not knowing how his parents, in their 70s, were after they lost heat, lights and cellphone service at their home about 25 miles away. Bates said he felt helpless not being able to reach them.

“Imagine the roadways blocked,” he said. “You can’t get to your family members, and then you can’t reach them to make sure if they’re OK. … I can’t imagine someone with an infant in this.”

Meanwhile, the University of Mississippi is extending the time it will be closed for all classes and activities and now does not plan to reopen until Feb 9.

Crews at the main campus in Oxford have begun removing “dangerous hanging limbs” from the campus, with initial work focusing on central campus and residence hall areas. Power has been restored to all of the campus, the university said in an update to students and employees Wednesday night.

Erik Lipsett in Benton County, Mississippi, spent the last several days scooping ice from the front yard so he can melt it to flush down his toilets. The area has been without water and power since the weekend.

On Wednesday morning, he lined up at a nearby gas station to shower and said that propane bottles, canisters and hookups for heaters are hard to come by.

Bynum reported from Savannah, Georgia. Martin reported from Atlanta. Associated Press writers Adrian Sainz in Memphis, Tennessee; Jeff Amy and Charlotte Kramon in Atlanta; Jonathan Mattise and Travis Loller in Nashville, Tennessee; Hallie Golden in Seattle; and Sarah Brumfield in Washington contributed to this report.

See costumes from the Oscar-nominated wardrobe of ‘Sinners’ at the African American Museum in Philadelphia

posted in: All news | 0

By Elizabeth Wellington, The Philadelphia Inquirer

PHILADELPHIA — “Sinners,” Ryan Coogler’s vampiric period film starring Michael B. Jordan made Academy Award history last week when it was nominated for 16 Oscars, more than any other film in the history of the award ceremony’s 98-year run.

Related Articles


These are the greatest Westerns of all time, according to the experts


‘Sinners’ makes history, setting Oscars nomination record


Watch St. Paul native Tommy Brennan’s take on ICE in ‘SNL’ bit that didn’t make the show


Hours after ABC News ran a story about Mischief Toy Store, ICE agents arrived at their door


On ‘SNL,’ Finn Wolfhard pays tribute to the Replacements 40 years after they were banned from the show

It toppled the 14 nominations previously received by “All About Eve” (1950), “Titanic” (1997) and “La La Land” (2016). In addition to Michael B. Jordan’s best actor nomination and Coogler’s best director nod, “Sinners” Oscar-winning costume designer, Ruth E. Carter, received her fifth nomination for work on the film.

And six of those costumes are on display at the African American Museum through September in the traveling “Ruth E. Carter: Afrofuturism and Costume Design Exhibit.”

That includes Smoke and Stack’s (twins played by Jordan) memorable 1930s-era three-piece suits, with complementary fedora and newsboy cap, time pieces, and tiepins.

When working on the costumes, Coogler’s only direction to Carter was to dress Smoke in blue and Stack in red, she told The Inquirer in November.

Carter, not one to fret long, dove into her arsenal of research. By the time she began the fittings, she’d amassed an array of blue and red looks befitting of the 1930s sharecroppers-turned-bootleggers and juke joint owners.

“[And] when I put that red fedora on him, Ryan flipped out and said, ‘That’s it!’,” Carter said. “We wanted people to resonate with their clothing and it did.”

Ruth E. Carter during the“ Ruth E. Carter: Afrofuturism in Costume Design” opening gala at the African American Museum in Philadelphia on Nov. 1, 2025. (Elizabeth Robertson/The Philadelphia Inquirer/TNS)

The Smoke and Stack effect went beyond “Sinners.” This Halloween there were tons of social media posts of revelers dressed as the mysterious twins.

Also a part of AAMP’s “Sinners” display is the earthy flowing dress best supporting actress nominee Wunmi Mosaku wore in her role as Annie. Annie is Smoke’s lover and a root woman who discovers the vampires in their Clarksdale, Mississippi, town.

Cornbread’s (Oscar Miller) tattered sharecropper outfit is on the dais along with Mary’s (Hailee Steinfeld) cream knit dress with its short sleeved bodice and pussy bow accent. Her matching knit beret and pearls are also on display. In the film, Mary is Stack’s childhood friend, turned girlfriend, turned vampire.

Lace gloves and knit dress detail of Mary’s costume from “Sinners.” (Elizabeth Robertson/The Philadelphia Inquirer/TNS)

“I immerse myself in the mind, body, and soul of my characters,” said Carter. “Then I see them in my mind, how they move and with research I come up with a look that I feel is unique to them.”

The “Sinners” pieces are among the more than 80 looks featured in “Afrofuturism,” joining outfits from “Malcolm X,” Lee Daniels’ “The Butler,” “Coming 2 America,” “Black Panther” and its sequel, “Black Panther: Wakanda Forever.”

The show, headlining the African American Museum’s Semiquincentennial celebration, will be on display through September.

During her five decades in the movie business, Carter’s more than 60 films are big screen documentations of where Black Americans have been, who they are at the given moment, and who they dream of becoming.

Her work has shaped how the world sees African Americans around the world.

The“ Ruth E. Carter: Afrofuturism in Costume Design” exhibit at the African American Museum in Philadelphia on Nov. 1, 2025. (Elizabeth Robertson/The Philadelphia Inquirer/TNS)

In the 2010s, a friend of hers suggested she plan a museum exhibit around her costumes. After “Black Panther,” she partnered with Marvel and in 2019, “Afrofuturism in Costume Design” debuted at the Savannah College of Art and Design’s Atlanta Campus.

Philadelphia is the exhibit’s ninth — and longest — stop. It’s also the first stop for the “Sinners” costumes.

“I am a griot,” Carter said. “[Throughout my career,] I’ve developed a knowledge base that embraces our culture and speaks to all of us in a positive way.”

Ruth E. Carter: Afrofuturism in Costume Design” will be on view through Sept. 6, 2026. African American Museum in Philadelphia, 701 Arch St., Thursday through Sunday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tickets are $20 for adults, $10 for children.

©2026 The Philadelphia Inquirer. Visit inquirer.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

50 years later: 11 classic albums that hit No. 1 on the charts in 1976

posted in: All news | 0

In 1976, record shoppers knew what they liked – the Eagles and Rolling Stones, Stevie Wonder and Bob Dylan – and they bought it in droves.

Only 11 different albums reached No. 1 on the Billboard 200 album chart that year, with Peter Frampton and George Benson sneaking to the top between the better-known likes of Wings, Led Zeppelin, Earth, Wind & Fire, and a few other familiar acts.

The singles chart, meanwhile, was all over the place, with radio stations in transition and not sure where to land. Wings’ “Silly Love Songs” was the overall top single of ’76, but Rod Stewart’s “Tonight’s the Night (Gonna Be Alright)” wasn’t far behind.

Disco was starting to make inroads on the airwaves with No. 1 hits such as Johnny Taylor’s “Disco Lady” and “Walter Murphy’s “A Fifth of Beethoven.” Soul and funk showed up strongly with Ohio Players’ “Love Rollercoaster” and Wild Cherry’s “Play That Funky Music.”

And ’70s soft rock was hanging around too, with Barry Manilow‘s “I Write the Songs,” Chicago‘s “If You Leave Me Now,” and, um, the Starland Vocal Band’s “Afternoon Delight,” which for some reason I can still sing from memory, also all reaching No. 1.

But we’re here for the albums, and now let’s get to ’em!

“Chicago IX: Chicago’s Greatest Hits” spent two weeks at No. 1 on the album charts to start 1976 after finishing 1975 with three weeks at the top spot on the Billboard 200 album chart. (Album jacket courtesy of the record label)

“Chicago IX: Chicago’s Greatest Hits,” Chicago / Weeks at No. 1: 2

Chicago, which finished 1975 with three weeks at 1, held onto the top spot for two more weeks to open 1976 on the Billboard 200 album chart. This album is so stacked with hits that you can drop the needle anywhere and land on a huge hit song, from “Saturday In the Park” and “Feelin’ Stronger Every Day” to “Make Me Smile” and “Wishing You Were Here.” Yet somehow it didn’t chart in the United Kingdom.

New and noteworthy: You know what was No. 1 on the UK album charts at the start of 1976? Perry Como’s “40 Greatest Hits,” proof that the Sex Pistols couldn’t show up soon enough. Some little-known guy named Peter Frampton released an album titled “Frampton Comes Alive!” in the United States on Jan. 15. I wonder what happened with that?

Earth, Wind & Fire’s “Gratitude” spent three weeks at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 album chart in 1976. (Album jacket courtesy of the record label)

“Gratitude,” Earth, Wind & Fire / Weeks at No. 1: 3

Eight months after Earth, Wind & Fire scored its first No.1 album in May 1975 with “That’s the Way of the World,” the soul-funk-pop band was back there with “Gratitude,” a mostly live double album. There’s stuff on here that’s less-than-essential, but you’ll feel good even listening to that. It also contained a handful of newly recorded songs, including “Sing a Song” and “Can’t Hide Love.”

New and noteworthy: The Thin White Duke reached record stores when David Bowie released “Station to Station” in February, an album that spun off the singles “Golden Years” and “TVC15.” Diana Ross’s self-titled album included the disco classic “Love Hangover,” and Lynyrd Skynyrd requested that you “Gimme Back My Bullets.”

Bob Dylan’s “Desire” spent five weeks at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 album chart in 1976. (Album jacket courtesy of the record label)

“Desire,” Bob Dylan / Weeks at No. 1: 5

Dylan released his follow-up to “Blood on the Tracks” between legs of his 1975-76 Rolling Thunder Tour, recording it before heading out in ’75 with many of the same musicians who’d join him on the road. The familiarity of bard and band shines through here with classic songs, such as “Hurricane,” “Isis,” “Mozambique,” and “One More Cup of Coffee.” It wraps up with “Sara,” a heartfelt, unusually personal song for his soon-to-be ex-wife, Sara Dylan.

New and noteworthy: What were the Brits digging as “Desire” topped our charts? Oh dear. They’d just put “The Very Best of Slim Whitman” at No. 1 for six weeks. Phil Collins replaced Peter Gabriel as vocalist for Genesis’s “A Trick of the Tail.” Captain and Tennille released “Song of Joy,” and finally muskrats had something to dance to at the prom. Be-Bop Deluxe released “Sunburst Finish,” which you should go listen to now.

The Eagles’ ‘Greatest Hits’ spent five weeks at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 album chart in 1976. (Album jacket courtesy of the record label)

“Their Greatest Hits (1971–1975),” the Eagles / Weeks at No. 1: 5

For decades, this was the one Eagles album that almost everyone you knew had on vinyl or CD. For good reason, too, because like the Chicago compilation that opened ’76 at No. 1, this Eagles‘ collection had nothing but massive hits: “Take It Easy,” “Desperado,” “Tequila Sunrise,” “Lyin’ Eyes” and more. This baby is certified to have sold more than 38 million copies in the U.S. alone, making it the No. 1 selling album of the 20th century.

New and noteworthy: Kiss released “Destroyer” with singles such as “Shout It Out Loud” and “Detroit Rock City.” Kiss drummer Peter Criss also let his lady know that he and the boys just couldn’t find the sound, which was a lie because “Beth” became Kiss’s biggest single ever. Marvin Gaye sang “I Want You,” one of his sexiest songs ever, and the Doobie Brothers were “Takin’ It to the Streets,” with Michael McDonald on vocals for the first time. And more! Thin Lizzy dropped “Jailbreak,” Rush delivered “2112,” and Boz Scaggs had “Silk Degrees.”

Peter Frampton’s “Frampton Comes Alive!” spent 10 weeks at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 album chart in 1976. (Album jacket courtesy of the record label)

“Frampton Comes Alive!” Peter Frampton / Weeks at No. 1: 10

Here’s that guy with all those lovely curls! Peter Frampton‘s double live album debuted at No. 1 for a single week in April at first, but came back for another week in July, three more in August and five in September and October. Ten weeks, the top album of the whole year, powered by the singles “Show Me the Way,” “Baby, I Love Your Way,” and “Do You Feel Like We Do” – and that rad talk-box that had many teenage boys trying to imitate it as they drove aimlessly around their small towns looking to meet girls.

New and noteworthy: It’s a little tricky because of the gaps between “Comes Alive!” at No. 1, but in its three weeks in August alone, Boston released its self-titled debut as did that city’s Modern Lovers; Hall & Oates delivered “Bigger Than Both of Us,” which spun off the single “Rich Girl”; and Lee “Scratch” Perry and the Upsetters’ released the dub classic “Super Ape.” New Zealand’s Split Enz put out “Second Thoughts,” produced by Phil Manzanera of Roxy Music, whose live album “Viva!” also landed.

Wings’ album “Wings at the Speed of Sound” spent seven weeks at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 album chart in 1976. (Album jacket courtesy of the record label)

“Wings at the Speed of Sound,” Wings / Weeks at No. 1: 7

Like Frampton, Paul McCartney‘s band bounced up and down to No. 1 a few times – a week in April, another in May, and five in June and July. This was a softer Wings sound than earlier albums such as “Band on the Run.” The hits included “Let ‘Em In,” which taught us all what to do when someone’s knockin’ at the door, and “Silly Love Songs,” which was exactly what it said on the tin. But the record was huge, and the subsequent tour, Wings Over the World, saw McCartney play live in the U.S. for the first time in a decade since the Beatles’ last shows here.

New and noteworthy: Rod Stewart’s “A Night on the Town” included “Tonight’s the Night (Gonna Be Alright),” which got banned by the BBC for being too s-e-x-y, and his classic Cat Stevens cover, “The First Cut Is the Deepest.” The title track of Maxine Nightingale’s “Right Back Where We Started From” was a delightful pop hit. The Beach Boys‘ “15 Big Ones” is a good latter-day album. Reggae singer Peter Tosh made his debut with “Legalize It,” and Graham Parker and the Rumour’s “Howlin’ Wind” signaled the shift of British pub rock toward new wave.

Led Zeppelin’s “Presence” spent two weeks at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 album chart in 1976. (Album jacket courtesy of the record label)

“Presence,” Led Zeppelin / Weeks at No. 1: 2

Some acts are big enough that they’re always going to grab the top spot on the charts based on reputation alone. “Presence” is probably the least-known of Zeppelin’s studio albums, with only “Achilles’ Last Stand” and “Nobody’s Fault But Mine” ever being played in live shows before the band split. Today it’s seen as a return to the hard rock of Led Zeppelin’s earlier days, but in 1976 it quickly sold the usual millions of copies before being overshadowed by “The Song Remains the Same” when the concert film and soundtrack arrived that fall.

New and noteworthy: Speaking of hard rock, Aerosmith released “Rocks” during “Presence’s two weeks at No. 1. Soul-jazzer Roy Ayers put out “Everybody Loves the Sunshine,” the title track of which would make a few hundred hip-hop samplers happy in future decades. And the Southern California all-female rock band the Runaways released their self-titled debut, giving the world its first glimpse of future solo star Joan Jett.

The Rolling Stones’ “Black and Blue” spent four weeks at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 album chart in 1976. (Album jacket courtesy of the record label)

“Black and Blue,” the Rolling Stones / Weeks at No. 1: 4

As with Led Zeppelin and “Presence,” the Stones‘ album this year sold a ton, wasn’t praised as much at the time, but then saw its reputation grow as the years passed. The band didn’t technically have a lead guitarist when they recorded it – Mick Taylor quit the band two years earlier, and though Ronnie Wood plays on some of the tracks, he wasn’t officially invited to join until it was time to tour. “Fool to Cry” and “Memory Motel” are the songs you remember most.

New and notable: Warren Zevon’s self-titled major-label debut didn’t sell a lot, but he still made bank thanks to Linda Ronstadt’s covers of “Carmelita,” “Poor Poor Pitiful Me,” and “Hasten Down the Wind.” Billy Joel’s “Turnstiles” produced a pair of his standards, “Say Goodbye to Hollywood” and “New York State of Mind.” David Bowie added another terrific compilation to the year with “Changesonebowie,” and the Steve Miller Band did the same in all but name with “Fly Like an Eagle,” packed with great songs.

George Benson’s “Breezin’” spent two weeks at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 album chart in 1976. (Album jacket courtesy of the record label)

“Breezin’,” George Benson / Weeks at No. 1: 2

Jazz-soul guitarist George Benson broke out of the jazz genre to score a hat trick of No. 1s on the pop, R&B and jazz charts. It’s a smooth record with a pair of acclaimed and enduring hits. The single “This Masquerade,” a cover of Leon Russell’s song, went on to win the Grammy for record of the year in 1977, while the title track earned the Grammy for best pop instrumental performance.

New and noteworthy: New releases were a bit thin during Benson’s two weeks at the top, but we did get Merle Haggard‘s “My Love Affair With Trains,” for which Hag’s only original was “No More Trains to Ride.” It also included a pair of hobo songs, “The Hobo” and “Where Have All the Hoboes Gone.” Remarkably, this was Merle’s second train-based album, after the Jimmy Rodgers tribute “Same Train, A Different Time,” which itself included a pair of hobo songs, “Hobo Meditation” and “Hobo Bill’s Last Ride.”

Fleetwood Mac’s self-titled album spent one week at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 album chart in 1976. (Album jacket courtesy of the record label)

“Fleetwood Mac,” Fleetwood Mac / Weeks at No. 1: 1 

Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham joined Christine McVie, John McVie and Mick Fleetwood for this album, and suddenly Fleetwood Mac rocketed toward the stardom it would carry into commercial and critical acclaim in the decades that followed. But it took time! The album was released in July 1975, and it wasn’t until the singles “Over My Head, “Rhiannon,” and “Say You Love Me” had been all over the radio that the album hit No. 1 for a week in September 1976.

New and noteworthy: Bob Dylan, Lynyrd Skynyrd and Rush all released live albums, “Hard Rain,” “One More From the Road,” and “All the World’s a Stage,” respectively. Funkadelic released “Tales of Kidd Funkenstein,” which opened with a track titled “Butt-to-Butresuscitation” and closed out side 1 with “Take Your Dead Ass Home!” Joan Armatrading and Tom Waits released two different takes on singer-songwriter albums, with hers self-titled and his titled “Small Change.”

Stevie Wonder’s “Songs in the Key of Life” spent 11 weeks at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 album chart in 1976. (Album jacket courtesy of the record label)

“Songs in the Key of Life,” Stevie Wonder / Weeks at No. 1 / 11

Stevie’s masterpiece of masterpieces closed out 1976 with 11 consecutive weeks at No. 1. A double album with a bonus 4-track EP, “Songs” is stuffed with fantastic tunes from “Sir Duke,” “I Wish” and “Pastime Paradise” to “As,” “Another Star” and “Isn’t She Lovely?” Seeing him perform it in full at the Forum in 2014 was a bucket list moment. That it arrived in 1976 after a run of albums that began in 1972 with “Music of My Mind,” “Talking Book,” “Innervisions,” and “Fulfillingness’ First Finale” says everything you need to know about the genius of Stevie Wonder in his prime.

New and noteworthy: ABBA’s “Arrival” landed with hits including “Dancing Queen,” “Money, Money, Money,” and “Knowing Me, Knowing You.” Elton John and Bob Seger released “Blue Moves” and “Night Moves” on the same day in October, yet somehow we didn’t get the Blue Night Moves tour from the two of them. The Patti Smith Group released “Radio Ethiopia,” Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers dropped their self-titled debut, the Eagles checked us all into the “Hotel California,” Queen took us to “A Day at the Races,” and just before the end of the year, Blondie made its self-titled debut, too.

Related Articles


Mystic Lake Amphitheater adds three new shows, including Dave Matthews Band


Bruce Springsteen sings out against Trump in ‘Streets of Minneapolis’


Four big questions ahead of the 2026 Grammy Awards show


Lionel Richie and Earth, Wind and Fire will return to St. Paul in June


Sly Dunbar, legendary reggae drummer who anchored tracks from Bob Marley to Bob Dylan, dies as 73

Recipe: This Super Bowl snack is scrumptious and easy to prepare

posted in: All news | 0

With Super Bowl Sunday approaching, I’m on the lookout for a nosh that is scrumptious and easy to prepare. White cheddar cheese topped with wine-soaked cherries andherbs is the perfect answer.

The dried cherries need to soak in a mixture of wine, balsamic vinegar, olive oil, herbs de Provence and salt for 2 to 7 days in the fridge, so allow time for this little do-aheadchore.

White Cheddar with Wine-Soaked Dried Cherries and Herbs

Yield: Serves 4

INGREDIENTS

1/3 cup Merlot, or other dry red wine

2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil

1 tablespoon balsamic vinegar

1 teaspoon herbes de Provence

1/4 teaspoon kosher salt

2/3 cup dried cherries, half of amount coarsely chopped

8 ounces medium-sharp white cheddar cheese

For serving: sturdy crackers

DIRECTIONS

1. In medium glass or stain-resistant plastic container, combine the wine, oil, vinegar, herbes de Provence, and salt, whisking to dissolve salt. Add the cherries, cover and refrigerate for at least 2 days or up to 7 days, stirring occasionally. Bring the mixture to room temperature before serving.

2. Place cheese on a plate or small platter. Stir room temperature cherry mixture and spoon over and around the cheese. Serve with crackers on the side. Provide a knife.

Source: Adapted from “100 Perfect Pairings” by Jill Silverman Hough

Award-winning food writer Cathy Thomas has written three cookbooks, including “50 Best Plants on the Planet.” Follow her at CathyThomasCooks.com.

Related Articles


These ugly (but super tasty) chocolate chip cookies are the comfort food we all need right now


The secret to perfect tortiglioni with peppers and eggplant from a 1929 Italian cookbook


Gretchen’s table: Warm winter’s chill with a hot bowl of this tangy and traditional Mexican stew


Quick Fix: Beef Tenderloin with Cranberry Mustard Sauce and Green Beans with Rice


Fish cakes and Birmingham greens were a hit at the Harlem EatUp! festival