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Corn pone (sometimes referred to as "Indian pone") is a type of cornbread made from a thick, malleable cornmeal dough and baked in a specific type of iron pan over an open fire (such as a frontiersman would use), using butter, margarine, 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.

Etymology

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The term "pone", meaning "Indian corn bread" was first introduced in English about 1634. The word "pone" was a replacement for the earlier terms "appone" and "ponap" (1612), These words derive from the Powhatan (Algonquian) word apan meaning "something baked," taken from word apen meaning "she bakes."

Other usage

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The term "corn pone" is sometimes used 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). The term is sometimes intended as a pejorative, often directed at persons from rural areas of the southern and midwestern U.S.

For example, the Li'l Abner comic strip featured references to a fictional Confederate general named Jubilation T. Cornpone. President Lyndon Johnson was branded "Uncle Cornpone" by his White House aides.

References

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