Simply Recipes / Shilpa Iyer
- Just three ingredients come together in ten minutes for this cool, creamy retro-inspired fruit salad.
- Tangy sour cream gives the salad a rich, velvety coating and brown sugar creates a light caramel flavor.
- Its fun Minnesota backstory brings regional tradition and conversation to your table.
They say time heals all wounds, but as a young, naïve, born-and-bred Minnesotan trying to find her footing as a food writer back in 2014, there’s one wallop I will always remember: the infamous representation of Minnesota in the New York Times’ United States of Thanksgiving.
In putting their interactive holiday recipe collection together, NYT editors claimed to have “scoured the nation for recipes that evoke each of the 50 states.” As I began scrolling through, skimming other states’ picks like Georgia’s pecan pie and Indiana’s persimmon pudding, my mind raced through what could possibly make the cut for Minnesota: probably wild rice, maybe Spam, perhaps even Jell-O.
Then I saw the recipe: Grape Salad. As I read the accompanying text, I was floored. Was there something about my heritage, my state, that I hadn’t been exposed to? Did grapes even grow well here? Who broils fruit salad? A Minnesota-born heiress? I needed answers.
I confronted everyone I knew, including my great-grandma, to write one of my very first food blog posts. I checked every church cookbook I could get my hands on as a source: no one had heard of grape salad. Of course, I wasn’t the only one confused, offended, and ready to write about it. Tons of articles quickly surfaced, and #grapegate swept through Twitter with gems like, “My favorite part of the holiday is pruning my family grape tree for our traditional grape hot dish.” and “‘I can’t wait to have Grandma’s Grape Salad at Thanksgiving!!’—said no one from Minnesota. Ever.”
As it turns out, this recipe did have a Minnesota connection. The Twin Cities Pioneer Press reported that a dish called Grapes Devonshire—though served as a dessert, not a salad—has been on the menu at the Lowell Inn in Stillwater, Minnesota since 1960. Does this alone make it a good representative of a Minnesota Thanksgiving? No. But I suppose it gives a sliver of credence to the choice.
Simply Recipes / Shilpa Iyer
Reclaiming the Recipe
It’s been over ten years since the grape salad debacle, and while it’s a significant example of the way Midwestern cuisine is often misunderstood by cultural gatekeepers, I think most of us Minnesotans look back on it now and laugh.
For me, it’s definitely still a core memory from the early years of my career. Aggrieved though I was, I can see that this incident only further cemented my interest in pursuing food writing. So I think it’s about time for me to reclaim this retro recipe, not only because it tastes good and is incredibly easy to make, but because creamy, cool, perhaps even Miracle Whip-spiked fruit salads are truly a part of Minnesota’s culinary heritage.
And who knows, maybe a comeback will turn this once-scorned grape salad into an actual Thanksgiving tradition. This time, though, it’ll be from a real Minnesotan, one who knows better than to put fruit salad anywhere near the broiler.
Simply Recipes / Shilpa Iyer
More (Actual) Midwest Classics
3-Ingredient “Minnesota” Grape Salad
The recipe is based on Grapes Devonshire from the Lowell Inn in Stillwater, Minnesota, as told to the Pioneer Press by Barb Cook. You can easily scale this recipe up or down, just stick to a ratio of about 2 tablespoons of sour cream and 1 tablespoon brown sugar for every cup (about 8 ounces) of seedless table grapes.
Ingredients
Method
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Make the salad:
Destem the grapes and them to a large bowl; if your grapes are especially large, feel free to slice them in half. Mix with the sour cream until every grape is more or less evenly coated.
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Top and serve:
Transfer the grape mixture to a serving bowl. Sprinkle the brown sugar and chopped nuts, if using, over the top of the grapes. Serve immediately.
To make ahead, mix the grapes and sour cream, cover, and chill in the fridge for up to 3 hours or until ready to top and serve.
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Simply Recipes / Shilpa Iyer
| Nutrition Facts (per serving) | |
|---|---|
| 128 | Calories |
| 3g | Fat |
| 27g | Carbs |
| 1g | Protein |
| Nutrition Facts | |
|---|---|
| Servings: 6 to 8 | |
| Amount per serving | |
| Calories | 128 |
| % Daily Value* | |
| Total Fat 3g | 4% |
| Saturated Fat 2g | 8% |
| Cholesterol 8mg | 3% |
| Sodium 8mg | 0% |
| Total Carbohydrate 27g | 10% |
| Dietary Fiber 1g | 4% |
| Total Sugars 24g | |
| Protein 1g | |
| Vitamin C 4mg | 19% |
| Calcium 31mg | 2% |
| Iron 0mg | 3% |
| Potassium 242mg | 5% |
| *The % Daily Value (DV) tells you how much a nutrient in a food serving contributes to a daily diet. 2,000 calories a day is used for general nutrition advice. | |