Monday morning road trippin’ for holiday provisions

Ahead of the holiday rush, two friends took a short road trip to collect a country ham and a dose of nostalgia.

Early this week, I coaxed my friend Margaret Prim to take a short road trip with me in hopes of sparking some holiday spirit.

Our destination was Newsom’s Old Mill Store — a time capsule to a simpler, salt-cured era in downtown Princeton — where I could check off two boxes. First, I wanted a quality country ham. Second, I needed a whiff of nostalgia. 

Margaret was up for both. And as soon as she heard that I was half-way through two surgeries to take care of cataracts in my eyes, she also volunteered to drive. 

Cured country hams hanging at Newsom’s Old Mill Store in downtown Princeton. (Hoptown Chronicle photos by Jennifer P. Brown)

Newsom’s never disappoints. It is home to what I consider the Cadillac of country hams, and I found a 15-pounder that I’m saving for Christmas. My family will enjoy an economy country ham from a local grocery store for Thanksgiving. 

Margaret and I loaded up with several other treasures — jellies, sorghum, prosciutto, creamed pull candy — and even a few packs of candy cigarettes. Speaking of a whiff of the past. Remember those from the 1970s? 

The hams are always the star attraction at Newsom’s. But I also appreciated listening to an employee on the phone trying to verify orders with customers too distant to drop by and collect their ham in person like I did. Soon, hams bound for many addresses around the United States will fill UPS trucks idling in front of the store. 

Several dozen varieties of jellies, butters and preserves line shelves at Newsom’s. 

Before Margaret and I headed out the door to search for our lunch, I heard the Newsom’s employee on the phone with another long-distance request. 

“OK, sweetheart. We’ve got you down. We’ll take care of you … I know it needs to be there by Thanksgiving. Yes ma’am.”

If you’ve never cooked a country ham, here’s a story we ran a couple of years ago that explains the process. Let me know if you are a country ham newbie and decide to give it try. 

Jennifer P. Brown is co-founder, publisher and editor of Hoptown Chronicle. You can reach her at editor@hoptownchronicle.org. Brown was a reporter and editor at the Kentucky New Era, where she worked for 30 years. She is a co-chair of the national advisory board to the Institute for Rural Journalism and Community Issues, governing board past president for the Kentucky Historical Society, and co-founder of the Kentucky Open Government Coalition. She serves on the Hopkinsville History Foundation's board.