Vidalia Onion Cast-Iron Cornbread

A few years ago,  I traveled to Wooster, Ohio, for a Barbecue Summit at the headquarters of Certified Angus Beef.  My fellow barbecue pitmasters and I visited a black angus ranch, discussed barbecue, cut a side of beef together—or rather watched as the meat doctor, Phil Bass cut and explained. 

I was introduced to several new cuts including beef belly, a.k.a., beef bacon which I cannot wait to try and make myself. But, the stand-out of the trip was a Vidalia Onion Cast-Iron Cornbread made by the in-house chef Ashley Breneman.  Ashley is a hometown girl and after a stint in Los Angeles, she returned to Wooster to work in the kitchens of the not-for-profit Certified Angus Beef (CAB for short).  

The day that I was there, the CAB team of chefs lead by Ashley prepared a feast featuring a tableful of smoked beef including the beef belly, and the cornbread. 

The cornbread sparkled with a pave of caramelized Vidalia onion rings that were set in the bottom of the cornbread and made a beautiful pattern.  When Ashley served the cornbread, she inverted the cornbread in the cast-iron pan so you could see the concentric circles of onion baked into the bottom.  That caught my eye right away and I took a piece.  Even before we took a bite, the group marveled at the presentation and wondered why more people don’t embellish cornbread.  That is a good question and one we need to rectify beginning with Ashley’s Vidalia Onion Cast-Iron Cornbread.

The cornbread itself is light and cakey with a little tang and a little sweetness but the salty savory almost-fried onions take it over the top.  Ashley naturally sautéed the onions in beef bacon since she had it in her pantry.   When I made the recipe, I adapted it using pork bacon but you could use butter or any kind of bacon that you can get your hands on.


Ashley’s Vidalia Onion Cast-Iron Cornbread 

1 ½ cup all-purpose flour 

2/3 cup granulated white sugar 

½ cup yellow corn meal 

1 tablespoon baking powder 

½ teaspoon kosher salt 

½ cup heavy cream 

½ cup buttermilk 

3 whole eggs, beaten 

1/3 cup vegetable oil 

3 tablespoons melted butter 

1 large Vidalia onion, sliced thin and kept together as one piece in rounds 

4 slices bacon, diced

Equipment: 9 or 10-inch cast-iron skillet

Preheat oven to 375 F

Prepare the cast iron pan – sauté bacon over low heat in skillet until crisp.  Meanwhile slice thin rounds of onions, making sure you keep them intact and in one piece. 

Remove bacon from pan but leave the bacon grease for the onions to cook in. Carefully place the onion rounds in bottom of the pan to cover the surface. Let onions cook until the edges begin to brown. Be careful to keep onions in place—the bottom of the skillet will have a “polka-dot” pattern.  Season onions with a dusting of freshly cracked black pepper. Turn off the heat and set aside until ready to bake the cornbread.  If the pan cools down, warm the pan on low heat before pouring the cornbread batter in pan.

In a large bowl, whisk together flour, sugar, corn meal, baking powder and salt.   Set aside. 

In a separate bowl mix together the cream, buttermilk, oil, eggs and melted butter until combined—the mixture will emulsify.  Set aside.

Add wet to dry ingredients and mix until combined. Don’t over mix. Batter should look slightly lumpy. 

Just before baking, add the cooked bacon back to the pan and place in the areas around the onions, not on top of the onions or it will mess up the onion pattern.  Pour cornbread batter directly into hot pan. Place in the center rack of the oven and bake for 30 minutes or until a toothpick inserted in the middle comes out clean.

Cool in the pan for 20 minutes, run a blunt knife around the edges of the cast-iron skillet to make sure that it isn’t sticking on the sides.  Carefully turn the skillet upside down and flip cornbread out of pan to expose onion rounds—you can invert the cornbread and place it upside down back into the skillet for serving.

Serve at room temperature or warm. 

SidesElizabeth Karmel