Photo: Steve Snoodgrass, Flickr
Two things define the food of Maryland's Chesapeake Bay metropolis: spices and seafood. And the former owes its prominence to the latter -- plentiful crabs that once bred like hard-shelled rabbits in the bay's warm waters. "When they were prevalent, bars here would have steamed crabs as giveaways," explains local food writer Dara Bunjon. "So that people would drink more, they made them that much more spicy." In other words, it seems that the city's core condiment, known as Old Bay Spice, was cooked up as a ruse to raise profits at drinking dens.
Food guru Marguerite Thomas theorizes that the city's history as a port combines with its Southern-tinged psyche to make spice such a staple. "You can go to a crab house and order cracked crabs without Old Bay, but people look at you funny," she chuckles. "Baltimoreans take great pride in it." The difference between restaurants' recipes for crab cakes is usually centered on the seasoning. She also loves the crab cake-esque coddie: "I grew up eating them. I'd go to the fountain and for 11 cents, I got a coddie and a Coke as my after-school snack." Thomas says that coddies were traditionally a Jewish treat, a kosher riff on the crab cake made from cod and potato and served on a saltine with a dab of mustard.
Read our "only in Baltimore" list after the jump...
Her pick of the local recipes is in the gritty Lexington Market at Faidleys. "It's been going for maybe a 100 years and they have a secret spice. People have speculated, and I know that mustard is involved, but it's subtle." Thomas's experience at Faidley's sums up how seriously Baltimoreans take their crab cakes: Standing in line, she struck up conversation with a staffer. "I said to him, 'Tell me what that special spice is -- I can't identify it,' and he replied, 'I've been sleeping with the woman for 40 years and she won't even tell me.'"
McCormick Spices
There isn't a spice rack in America that doesn't feature a few McCormick goodies. The firm was started by 25-year old Willoughby McCormick in 1889, focusing at first on door-to-door tincture and syrup sales before taking over an existing spice importer and morphing into the monolithic operation it is today.
Old Bay Seasoning
Now owned by McCormick, Baltimore's signature spice rub in a yellow can was begun by German immigrant Gustav Brunn in the 1940s and named after a passenger ship line that once sailed Chesapeake Bay.
Vanns Spices
Founded by the late Ann Wilder, a local icon who stood in markets offering samples of the exotic spices she'd personally sourced, Vanns is an upscale alternative to McCormick.
Tulkoff Horseradish
Another spicy Baltimore staple invented in the 1930s by the namesake family of onetime grocers that is crucial for seafood-dunking cocktail sauce and pit beef both.
Pit Beef
Baltimore's answer to BBQ, it's usually top round rather than brisket, shaved paper-thin on a meat slicer. "It's grilled not smoked, so the flavor is more beefy than smokey," Thomas notes. Gorge on it with raw onions, a dollop of horseradish (preferably Tulkoff) and a hunk of bread.
Bergers Cookies
Dreamed up by German immigrant brothers in the early 19th century, the Bay's favorite chocolate cookies are light vanilla wafers smothered in rich, thick chocolate fudge.
Smith Island Cake
Named Maryland's official dessert, this indulgent layer cake -- whose origins are foggy -- has eight or more thin yellow cake layers welded together with slathers of chocolate ganache, usually with extra crunch thanks to frozen, crumbled candy bars in the frosting. The namesake island has a population of 300 or so, and "people say if it weren't for the cakes, the post office there would have closed down long ago -- mail orders are so popular," Thomas chuckles. Google a home baker on the island proper, or try the NPR's recipe.
Rheb's & Goetze's Candy
Twin titans of sweet-toothed Baltimoreans, Rhebs -- which will soon celebrate its centenary -- is a staple of the holidays, while Goetze's caramel creams (caramel wrapped around fondant) come in both original and extra-long "Cow Tale" versions.

Rodents Run Amok at Upstate New York Walmart
What Happened When Alex Kenjeev Paid His Student Loan in Cash
America's 10 Highest-Paid CEOs of 2011 (and How They Earned It)
What's a Realistic Retirement Age?
Carrie Underwood's Grunge Rock Past: 'I Was All About Pearl Jam'
I'm A Successful Entrepreneur But Might Get Deported
Farmers Hit the Jackpot in Kansas Oil Boom
Mary J. Blige, Charity Lawsuit: Singer's Foundation Sued for Failing to Repay $250K Loan
Beyonce 60-Pound Weight Loss: Queen B Flaunts New Figure During Comeback Concert Series
Editorial: Despite shaky 48 fps Hobbit preview, high frame rates will take off




2-23-2010 @1:08PM brent said... Try it on your corn on the cob this year. You will love it!!
Reply
2-23-2010 @1:26PM Dolly Too said... I moved from MD to the south after I retired about 13 yrs ago. Can not eat the seafood here. It taste awful..... Really love MD crab cakes and now have to have them shipped to be by family still in MD or ordered by me from QVC. Even have had steamed hard crabs brought down here to me from MD. So gooooooooooooooood.
Reply
2-23-2010 @1:30PM Laughing Lady said... I can't stand spicy food. Restaurants went overboard assuming Americans prefer everything HOT. If they tossed that Old Bay in the bay, it wouldn't happen soon enough for me. I don't know about other patrons, but hot food makes me crave water, not beer.
Reply
2-23-2010 @8:17PM Melissa said... Old bay is spicy??? I have used Old Bay in the past and I don't recall it being spicy.
2-23-2010 @2:20PM Pat De Range said... I bought some frozen fish, cheese sticks and chicken winglets last week..and boy was I EVER sorry. I HATE it when I'm eating something and all of a suden my teeth, gums and toung start burning. I can't stand that spicy s...t, I do not find pleasure in suffering when I'm trying to eat. Eating should be enjoyable not painful. All that stuff ended up in the garbage..good hard earned money wasted. My husband eats almost every thing (even mexican food) so I thought he'd eat it, NO, he didn't like it, said he didn't like the burning mouth feeling either.
Reply
2-23-2010 @1:52PM Jim said... Your article shows a can of the general purpose Old Bay Seasoning, but fails to mention the Old Bay product, which is specifically for making crab cakes... Old Bay Crab Cake Classic. It comes in an envelope and with a pound of lump or jumbo lump blue crab, a half cup of mayo and whatever else you want to add, you'll think you died and went to heaven. Do your homework Mark Ellwood. Callinectes sapidus forever!
Reply
2-23-2010 @1:53PM chipman said... If you like OLD BAY try some Herr's brand OLD BAY CHIPS http://www.herrs.com/Products/Chips/Old-Bay.html They"re the bomb.
Reply
2-23-2010 @2:04PM Megan said... Nooo no nooo sweetheart. Try UTZs old bay chips. They are absolutely DELISH
2-23-2010 @2:04PM Mike said... I live in Florida now but Philly has a bar (Chickie & Petes) that serve Crab Fries. French fries loaded with Old Bay. Absolutely the best, try them
Reply
2-23-2010 @2:25PM Bernard Ellenson said... Wife and I born and bred in Baltimore and have lived in NYC for over 35 years. Your article simply confirms that we are not crazy and that our devotion to all those foods mentioned is not a sign of a deranged person. Have taught my kids about crabs and up until last few years we as a family returned to Baltimore to get our "fix" of crabs,etc. Any trip South without bringing back Berger cookies is not acceptable. Once did a business deal by bribing an ex-Baltimoran with a box of Berger cookies. You even remembered "Choen"s Cotties" too-had one everyday after school with a made from scratch Coke for about 11 cents too. All these years living with these culinary snobs in NYC and they only have to party with us and they fall out of the seats over the foods you mentioned.
Reply
2-23-2010 @6:23PM Andrea Moss said... Agreed, Bernard!! I, too, grew up in Baltimore (now living in Atlantic City area and NYC). My fondest memories are of the Colts, cotties, crabs and cookies (Bergers, as well as the sinful chocolate top cookies .......once made by Silbers (and rainbow cake?).........and now by Gourmet Bakery. I would kill for that recipe! Isn't it amazing that these simple recipes cannot be duplicated anywhere else? When I see Maryland Crabcake on a menu outside of Baltimore and dumb enough to order it, I am always disappointed (too much filler, not the right seasoning and usually no jumbo lump)., I tell them to take the word Maryland off the menu and I 'd rather just hold onto my memories.........They taste better!!!!!