Taste Test – Boiled Peanuts

Boiled peanuts are popular in some places where peanuts are common. Fully mature peanuts do not make good quality boiled peanuts; rather raw, or green ones are used.  After boiling in salt water they take on a strong salty taste, becoming softer with prolonged cooking, and somewhat resembling a pea or bean, to which they are related because they are legumes and not an actual nut. I lived in Florida while going to graduate school and saw these around but had never tried them. We purchased a can from Amazon to give them a go. Alex and I both agreed that they are an acquired taste. We found the texture off putting being mealy and slimy in nature. We also found the flavor somewhat insipid.

Whether directly out of the can or heated up Alex’s reaction is representative of us both

Cowpens National Battlefield – Gaffney, South Carolina

The Cowpens National Battlefield in Gaffney, South Carolina preserve the site of the the Battle of Cowpens during the Revolutionary War. Brigadier General Daniel Morgan won the Battle of Cowpens, a decisive Revolutionary War victory over British Lieutenant Colonel Banastre Tarleton on January 17, 1781. It is considered one of the most memorable victories of Morgan and one of the most memorable defeats of Tarleton. Tarleton was known as “Bloody Tarleton” and was a despised figure to the rebel colonialists.

New photo by Wanderlust Family Adventure / Google Photos
New photo by Wanderlust Family Adventure / Google Photos
New photo by Wanderlust Family Adventure / Google Photos
New photo by Wanderlust Family Adventure / Google Photos
New photo by Wanderlust Family Adventure / Google Photos
New photo by Wanderlust Family Adventure / Google Photos
New photo by Wanderlust Family Adventure / Google Photos
New photo by Wanderlust Family Adventure / Google Photos
New photo by Wanderlust Family Adventure / Google Photos

Ninety Six National Historic Site – Ninety Six, South Carolina

The Ninety Six National Historic Site preserves the original site of Ninety Six, South Carolina, a small town established in the early 18th century. It encompasses 1,022 acres of property. The origin of the name Ninety Six is not certain. Some say it is the distance to a Cherokee town but the milage does not equate, the other explanation is that it derives from two nearby streams one with nine tributaries and one with six. There was a star fort here at the time of the Revolutionary War it was the site of South Carolina’s first land battle of the war. The area was a loyalist stronghold during the war and there were several battles and skirmishes. A trail from the visitor center takes you to the remains of the fort and there are several other trails throughout the property.

New photo by Wanderlust Family Adventure / Google Photos
New photo by Wanderlust Family Adventure / Google Photos
New photo by Wanderlust Family Adventure / Google Photos
New photo by Wanderlust Family Adventure / Google Photos
New photo by Wanderlust Family Adventure / Google Photos

Fort Moultrie – Fort Sumter and Fort Moultrie National Historical Park (Charlestown, South Carolina)

The first fort on Sullivan’s Island, constructed of palmetto logs and sand, was still incomplete when Commodore Sir Peter Parker of the Royal Navy and nine British men-of-war attacked it on June 28, 1776. After a nine-hour battle, the ships were forced to retire. Charlestown was saved from British occupation, and the fort was named in honor of its commander, Colonel William Moultrie. In May 1780 the British finally captured Charlestown, including Fort Moultrie, finally evacuating the city in December 1782 as the Revolution entered its final year. Several enhancements to the fort were undertaken so that by 1860 the fort was a major part of the defense of Charlestown harbor. Federal troops stationed at the fort withdrew to the more defendable Fort Sumpter out in the harbor when South Carolina seceded from the union. This was the site of the first action of the Civil War. When the Confederate army evacuated the city in February 1865, Fort Sumter was little more than a pile of rubble and Fort Moultrie lay hidden under the band of sand that protected its walls from Federal shells. The new rifled cannon used during the Civil War had demolished the brick-walled fortifications. The fort was again modernized after the war and became a part of America’s coastal defense network.

New photo by Wanderlust Family Adventure / Google Photos
New photo by Wanderlust Family Adventure / Google Photos
New photo by Wanderlust Family Adventure / Google Photos
New photo by Wanderlust Family Adventure / Google Photos
New photo by Wanderlust Family Adventure / Google Photos
New photo by Wanderlust Family Adventure / Google Photos

Osceola (1804 – January 30, 1838), named Billy Powell at birth in Alabama, became an influential leader of the Seminole people in Florida. His mother was Creek, and his great-grandfather Scotsman, James McQueen. He was reared by his mother in the Creek tradition. When he was a child, they migrated to Florida with other Red Stick refugees. After their group’s defeat in 1814 in the Creek Wars they became part of what was known as the Seminole people. In 1836, Osceola led a small group of warriors in the Seminole resistance during the Second Seminole War, when the United States tried to remove the tribe from their lands in Florida to Indian Territory west of the Mississippi River. Osceola and his warriors were captured and he was held here at Fort Moultrie. He died three months after his capture and he was buried with military honors at the fort.

New photo by Wanderlust Family Adventure / Google Photos