Garden & Gun

SWEET HEAT

“HERE YOU GO,” LORI BEAN’S FATHER SAID TO HER ABOUT A decade ago. “Have at it.” He had handed his daughter her great-grandmother’s canning. The items had been languishing for years. “The art of preserving hadn’t carried on past my great-grandma,” Bean says, “and it wasn’t going to carry on unless I picked it up, and that bothered me.” Bean went to culinary school in Florida but focused on pastry. “When I was a kid, I was always in the kitchen with my grandma or great-grandma, watching their cooking techniques,” she says. “Baking taught me that there was always a method.”

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Garden & Gun

Garden & Gun3 min read
Thirty Years Past Midnight
In the late eighties, a Savannahian pulled the visiting journalist John Berendt aside. “As far as Savannah is concerned,” she told him, “being a writer and being from New York is a deadly combination.” “I understand,” he replied. “But I have no inten
Garden & Gun4 min read
Andrew Lathar Haplins
LOCATIONSavannah, GA MEDIUMPainting HOMETOWNMobile, AL I have known Andrew LaMar Hopkins since he was seventeen, and watched as he’s become the internationally known artist and force of nature that others meet today. Originally from Mobile, and a lon
Garden & Gun4 min read
Choo Choo Charmer
Chloe Wright and Ryan Smith’s first project, the Rosecomb, opened in the North Shore neighborhood of Chattanooga in the summer of 2021 as the oakleaf hydrangeas in the front yard bloomed. The pair, who have since married, decorated the garden house b

Related