Cornbread & Buttermilk, a Southern Puppy story.
“Just Two Crazy Kids in Love”.
The Cornbread & Buttermilk: Southern Dogs Manifesto
“Food, Family & the Faithful Dog”
“Here in the South, the kitchen may be the heart of the home,
but the dog lies faithfully beside the hearth.
We believe:
- A Southern dog is more than a pet—they’re kin.
- Dogs are woven into our stories, fields, porches, and family traditions.
- Training a puppy is a sacred rite of patience and love.
- A dog is a bridge between generations—Granddaddy’s bird dog, Mama’s porch guardian, our children’s playmate.
- The South teaches us to live slow, savor moments, return to the land—and a dog teaches us the same.
- Kitchens, gardens, and hunting fields share one truth: life tastes sweeter when shared with a good dog.
- We honor the dogs who came before, celebrate the pups just starting out, and cherish the lessons they teach us.
We will laugh, learn, and love alongside this new life in our household.
Here, we lift up:
- Stories of the dogs who shaped our memories.
- Practical wisdom for raising and training pups with gentleness and respect.
- Tales from our region—coon dogs in the hollers, bird dogs in pine country, yard hounds by the clothesline.
- The way dogs bring families together and root us deeper to a place.
Our pledge:
To tell stories that smell of wood smoke, wet leaves, biscuits on Sunday morning—and a puppy asleep under the table.
To teach with humility.
To speak with gratitude.
To welcome every listener to the porch, where puppies tumble in the grass and memories live on.
This new chapter is for our puppy—Truffles, and for all Southern family dogs, past and future.”
Send Cornbread a voice mail at his Speakpipe link https://www.speakpipe.com/Cornbread
Cornbread & Buttermilk, a Southern Puppy story.
The Mystery of The Hare in The Holler, and The Easter Blessings
They say just ’fore sunrise on Easter Sunday, when the dew clings like lace to the dogwood blossoms, and the whip-poor-wills hush their call, a long-eared shadow slips through Bean Creek Holler. No sound but the soft thump of paws on pine straw, no witness but the mockingbirds and the moon.
Out behind Auntie Lou’s house—past the henhouse, past the clothesline that always smells of lye soap and lavender—you’ll find a basket sittin’ like it sprouted from the earth itself. Woven of cane and honeysuckle vine, it’s filled with eggs—painted in swirls of butternut, pokeberry, and mustard seed yellow.
Folks whisper it’s the Holler Hare, a creature older than Easter sermons, born of spring magic and long-ago moonlight. Auntie Lou just chuckles when the children ask. She tells ‘em, “Baby, that bunny don’t need no chimney. He slips in through cracks of kindness and leaves behind a little joy where sorrow once sat.”
Mr. Rhymes says he seen it once—just a flicker behind the sassafras tree—and wrote this:
“In the dark of the night ‘fore the rooster can crow,
A rabbit runs quiet where the wildflowers grow.
He don’t speak a word and he won’t leave a track,
But he’ll drop you a blessing in a little brown sack.”
So today on Cornbread & Buttermilk, we’re settin’ the table with sweet Easter stories, old-time traditions, and maybe even a spring recipe or two. Pull up a chair, pour yourself a glass of mint tea, and let’s follow them rabbit tracks wherever they lead.
Truffles coming home song
Truffles hunting by my side, and Grandaddy’s shotgun hangs over the door.
Cletus Carver and the Talking Rock Boys
Twangy
Disclaimer:
Cornbread & Buttermilk is all about sharing stories, traditions, and the wisdom of the Southern kitchen and raising a puppy, but we are not medical professionals. The information shared in this episode is for educational and entertainment purposes only. Always consult with your physician, a qualified healthcare provider, or a Veterinarian before adding new foods, supplements, or home remedies to your routine—especially if you or your pet have underlying health conditions or are taking medications. Listen to your body, trust your doctor, and Veterinarian enjoy the journey with good food, a healthy dog, and well-being!
Thank you for listening; please share our Podcast with friends and family members who would find our stories interesting. It would certainly help us, it would be a blessing, it certainly would.
© [2025] Cornbread & Buttermilk Podcast. The original music of Velma Sugarcane Jones and Obe Monroe is the exclusive property of Cornbread & Buttermilk Podcast. All rights reserved.
Let us know if you enjoyed the program. What’s on your mind? We would love to hear from you. Contact us at: southerncornbread101@gmail.com