Several years ago, Bruce Kraig of Culinary Historians helped develop for the Smithsonian a traveling exhibit called '
Key Ingredients: America by Food,' which often included a locally developed food history component. Bruce did a number of oral histories where he learned about the Illinois River people and their tradition of eating turtle, which was derived from deep poverty. These oral histories became the basis of a paper presented at the Oxford Symposium as well as a talk he gave to Chicago Foodways Roundtable:
Riverworld: The Vanished World of Illinois Riverfolk
Marking the boundaries and draining its central prairies, rivers flow around and through the state of Illinois. In the century before World War II the largest and slowest flowing gave home to groups of people who lived on the rivers, along their banks, and who made their meager livings by harvesting the waters. In those days, the rural societies that bordered the river formed themselves into social hierarchies: farm owners and town folk; tenant, farmers; share croppers; and at the bottom people described in Southern Illinois communities along the Ohio River as “them river rats.” The same opinion held for the clam diggers of the Illinois River in the center of the state. Although mostly of the same American stock as their neighbors, mostly of Appalachian origin, these river people were recognized as distinct not only by their occupations and relative lack of cash, but their diets. Surprisingly, as much as they were able, it was deficient in fish. World War II ended these generations-long traditions, but they are remembered by some as authentic folkways that are now lost.
Bruce Kraig With a Ph.D. in History and Archeology, Dr. Bruce Kraig is Professor Emeritus in History and Humanities at Roosevelt University in Chicago.
Dr. Kraig’s Riverworld presentation was from the recent Oxford Symposium on Food & Cookery 2005.
When Bruce talked me into doing a talk for the Chillicothe Historical Society, he threw out the bone there was an opportunity to eat fried turtle. While people knew of fried turtle, nobody knew where to get it. The very first time I was at
Willie's Mississippi Tamales and BBQ, I inquired if he knew where to obtain fried turtle. While he knew of it, he didn't know but asked that I clue him in on a source whenever it was located. I inquired with people from Peoria to Havanna, IL coming up dry every time. My luck changed this summer, when making small talk with a friend from mushroom club who happened to mention he grew up in Peoria. He promised to ask his brother who still lived in the area. A few days later, I received five sources for fried turtle. I later learned the Peoria Journal Star's Jeff Lampe had published an article on August 15, 2008 on
Turtle devotees come out of their shells, which was likely the source of my friend's brother's information.
When I read through the list of restaurants and bars serving turtle, I realized I had come very close much earlier, but missed the bell. I had certainly been across the street from Lanuti's when I was in Ladd for fried chicken dinner at Kipp's. Dear sweet Willie never knew how close we both were to fried turtle, because Club La-Con is due east of Willie's location by a few miles. In fact, I had been inside Club La-Con to pick up a menu for future reference. Clearly I didn't read it with enough detail, otherwise my three-four year search would have been mere months. Fortunately ReneG, Pigmon and Trixie-Pea were fortunate to have tried fried turtle at Lanuti's in Ladd last spring.
Accord to ReneG the best of the three turtle preparations sampled was at Old Town Bar and Grill in Delavan, IL. Their method of braising the turtle, then breading and frying was less gamey tasting than our first try at Riverview Inn in Liverpool, IL. According to the owner of the Old Town Bar and Grill, the breaded, fried followed by braising is the classic Illinois River people preparation and what she grew up eating. When she first began offering the classic preparation, her customer's rejected it. When she reversed the method by beginning with the braise, then it was much better received. This is a non-menu item offered only on the last Friday and Saturday of the month at the Old Town Bar and Grill. However since the article in the Peoria Journal Star, there has been a surge of interest in this regional speciality.
From our experience as well as from what I have read, turtle meat varies in taste from cut to cut. It certainly was not eating chicken experience. While ReneG was not very enthusiatic about turtle from those sampled at Lanutti's. He was even less enthusiastic after the breaded-fried-and-braised prep at Riverview Inn. If we had not been commited to try Old Town Bar and Grill due to their monthly special, I might have been satisfied with having tried turtle though not very enthusiastic about the experience. However Old Town's Bar and Grill method took some of the unctuousness greasiness that mitigated the gamey taste. It was great to try authentic, though this revised method gave me encouragement to try more Illinos Riverfolk fried turtle someday.
Marseilles, IL: (seems to be dinner only):
viewtopic.php?p=211219#p211219Johnny's Corner Tap, 701 E. Bluff Street, Marseilles, IL. 61341
815-795-5577 - 4:30 PM
Ladd, IL: Lanuti's sells more turtle than anybody else in the area. Snapper and softshell. $14 for six pieces of turtle with potato and salad. Wednesday through Sunday - Sunday hours are 2 PM to 9 PM. 815/894-2124
302 N Main Av
Ladd IL
815-894-2124
Lacon, IL: Club La-con. Turtle on Mondays and Fridays. 309-246-5705 4:30 PM
1241 Lacon Rd
Lacon, IL 61540
Delavan, IL: Old Town Bar and Grill. Last Friday and Saturday or each month. 309/244-9488. – from 5 PM
410 Locust St
Delavan, IL
Liverpool, IL: Riverview Inn. Turtle served 11 AM to 9 PM every day. 309/668-3166.
245 E Main
Liverpool, IL 61543
(309) 668-3166