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The Bs and Gs (Plus Help Nashville!)

As most of you probably know, Betsy is from Nashville and while her family is doing okay from the flood, it’s been kind of devastating to look at the pictures and videos of the flood. I mean, we were just there like three weeks ago getting married and now all the places we went to are underwater or recovering.

Bets asked me to make one of her favorite Southern brunch dishes that she always used to eat in Nashville: Biscuits and Gravy. I was of course happy to oblige!

biscuits and gravy

I surrender to your deliciousness.

This also happened to be one of my favorite brunch/late night dishes in high school as well. We had this awesome diner in town that was open 24 hours a day and we’d go there for a late night snack. Biscuits and gravy was one of my favorite things to get. Or as we used to call them in high school: The Bs and Gs.

In my opinion, nothing makes this dish better than homemade buttermilk biscuits. They aren’t that hard and they take this dish to another level of deliciousness.

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Biscuits and Gravy

Yield: Serves 6.

Prep Time: 45 minutes

Total Time: 1 hour

Ingredients:

Buttermilk Biscuits (From a Tyler Florence Recipe)
4 Cups all-purpose flour
1 1/2 Teaspoons salt
1 Tablespoon baking powder
2 Teaspoons baking soda
1 Cup vegetable shortening or 1 Cup plus 2 Tablespoons of unsalted butter, cold
1 1/2 to 2 Cups buttermilk

Sausage Gravy:
1 pound hot Italian sausage
1/4 all-purpose flour
4 Cups whole milk, warm
Salt and pepper to taste

Helpful Equipment:
Cast Iron Skillet

Directions:

1) Start biscuits by mixing flour with salt and baking soda and baking powder in a large bowl.

2) Cut in cold butter or shortening using your fingers until it resembles small pea-sized pieces in the flour.

3) Add buttermilk and mix until the mixture forms a loose dough. Don't over-mix the dough.

4) Scoop the dough out onto a floured surface and roll it out in a rectangle shape. Fold it into thirds over itself. Then roll it out gently and do it again. Finally roll it out until it's about 1 inch thick.

5) Cut the biscuits out of the dough. You can either cut out circles or just slice the dough into rectangles.

6) Add biscuits to an ungreased baking sheet and brush them with some extra buttermilk. Then bake them at 375 degrees for 25-30 minutes until they are golden brown.

7) For gravy, cook sausage in a cast iron pan until it well-browned and cooked through. Remove it from the pan and leave as much of the grease as you can.

8) Add flour to pan and whisk to form a roux. Cook for 3-4 minutes over medium heat until it turns a light tan color.

9) Slowly whisk milk into roux. Work slowly so lumps don't form. Once the milk is incorporated, continue to cook until it's nice and thick.

10) Stir sausage back into gravy and season with salt and pepper.

11) Serve biscuits with the gravy!


Making the Biscuits

These are really good biscuits. I used butter but the original recipe from Tyler used shortening so I guess use whichever one you want.

biscuits ingredients

Butter not pictured.

Start the biscuits by mixing the flour, salt, baking powder, and baking soda in a big bowl and then cut in your shortening or butter. You can either use one of those shortening cutter devices or also you can just use your fingers to mix in the butter. You want pea-sized balls of butter. Lumps are good here people.

butter added

You could do shortening also.

Next, add about 1 1/2 Cups of buttermilk and mix it up. If it still looks dry, add a bit more. It should stick together but not be gooey at all. The key thing about biscuit dough is not to overwork it. Once all the dough comes together, pour it out onto a well-floured surface and roll it into a large rectangle about 1/2 inch thick.

Then fold it into thirds by folding the left half over and then folding the right half over the left half. This will create layers in the biscuits and make them really flaky.

dough folded

Be gentle people.

Gently roll out the rectangle again, this time until the dough is about 1 inch thick. At this point, you could cut them into circles if you wanted, but I like squares actually because it doesn’t waste any dough and is a lot easier.

Whatever shape you decide on, then just set the biscuits on an ungreased baking sheet and brush them all with buttermilk.

biscuits ready

Squares cause I'm lazy.

Baking the biscuits

Bake these guys at 375 for about 25-30 minutes until they are golden brown on top. These are about perfect.

biscuits cooked

Flaky and delicious.

The Gravy

This is a really basic sausage gravy, but I don’t think it’s the kind of thing that needs to be too complicated. Start with your favorite hot pork sausage and remove it from the casing. In my humble opinion, a cast iron skillet is really your best bet for making this gravy.

Add your sausage to the pan and cook it down over medium heat until it’s nice and brown.

sausage cooking

Very important.

Remove your sausage from the pan but leave as much grease from the sausage as you can. It’s okay if some sausage hangs around for the party also. Then add your flour to the grease and stir it to make a roux. Keep it over medium heat and cook it until the flour taste is out and it turns a light tan color. This will take about 3-4 minutes.

roux

Makin' gravy.

The trick to lump-free gravy

There’s really only two things to remember to keep your gravy lump free. First, make sure you warm up your milk before you add it to the roux. I just nuked mine in the microwave for a few minutes until it was just warm to the touch.

The second trick is just to whisk like crazy as you pour the milk into the roux. Don’t pour all the milk at once either. Pour it slowly and keep whisking. At first it might look like lumps are forming, but just keep pouring and whisking and it’ll smooth out. Once you get all your milk incorporated (you might not need all 4 Cups), then you can whisk your sausage back into the mix.

gravy

Smooth and sausagey

Be sure to give this mixture a good pinch of salt and lots of fresh ground pepper.

You know the rest of the story. Open up a few biscuits and ladle on as much gravy as you want. Sooo good.

up close biscuits

I mean come on...

HELPING OUT NASHVILLE

Besides making a good Southern meal, Betsy and I wanted to help out by making a donation to the Mid-South Red Cross who are helping on the ground with the clean-up and recovery in Nashville.

Photo by raygun.

So here’s the deal. For each comment this post gets, Betsy and I will be donating $1 to the relief work. We’ll go up to $200, so leave a comment and help out!

Please share this post on Twitter or your social networking site of choice so we can get 200 comments!

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167 Responses to “The Bs and Gs (Plus Help Nashville!)”

Comment Pages 1 2 3 4
  1. 151
    Basic Living — May 14, 2010 @ 10:24 am

    Square biscuits – that is truly brilliant! I love biscuits and gravy – and from now on I’m making square biscuits! Wonderful of you and Betsy to donate and help Nashville.

    [Reply]

  2. 152
    Mags & Marquis — May 14, 2010 @ 10:56 am

    SAVE NASHVILLE. Great idea guys. The city has been good to us – now let’s be good to the city!

    [Reply]

  3. 153
    sara — May 14, 2010 @ 12:20 pm

    love a good biscuit. and love that you're helping nashville.

    [Reply]

  4. 154
    Lindsey — May 15, 2010 @ 11:09 am

    Making these this weekend…so good!

    [Reply]

  5. 155
    Patricia Jernigan — May 16, 2010 @ 6:41 am

    Thanks for the donation. what is better than B and G? We are also missing our "Biscuit Lady" from the Loveless Cafe.

    [Reply]

  6. 156
    Angela@spinachtiger — May 19, 2010 @ 4:14 am

    I live here so I'll be glad to help out.

    [Reply]

  7. 157
    Joe — June 16, 2010 @ 2:59 pm

    SOOOO GOOD! :D

    Loving every bit of them, eventually got round to making them and they were, and I quote, “om nom nom.. dee-lish!”

    Thanks for the recipe!

    [Reply]

  8. 158
    Eric — June 23, 2010 @ 2:20 pm

    I have a lot of german chicken sausages… Any changes you would make to the recipe in order to utilize this flavor?

    [Reply]

    • Nick replied: — June 24th, 2010 @ 4:09 am

      The only thing might be that chicken sausage tends to not be as fatty as pork, so you might have to add some extra butter before you start making your gravy. If your pan is dry, just toss in a few Tablespoons and you should be all set ;)

      [Reply]

  9. 159
    Mark — December 25, 2010 @ 6:11 am

    Big fail on this recipe; very disappointed. The sausages did not render the required fat I needed to make the roux; So in a panic, I added some water …. sauce never thinking — had to dump it out =[

    [Reply]

    • Nick replied: — December 27th, 2010 @ 5:38 pm

      Sorry for the fail man. For future reference, I'm not sure what kind of sausage you used but sausages have hugely different fat content depending on brand, type, etc. So if the sausage you used was lean or pre-cooked then it probably wouldn't make enough fat to make the roux.

      If you try it again, or any roux recipe really, just remember that most roux mixes are usually 1 part fat to 1 part flour. So if I have 1/4 Cup of flour, I need 1/4 Cup of fat as well (you can eyeball this. It doesn't have to be perfect.) So water will actually do the opposite of what you want. If you don't have enough oil from the sausage you can add in butter or any kind of oil (veggie/lard/olive/etc) and it should get you there.

      Sorry it didn't work out man. Let me know if you try it again with better results.

      [Reply]

  10. 160
    M& T -chillicothe,IL — January 1, 2011 @ 7:15 am

    we are utilizing your recipe to make gravy for 100! wish us luck! (unfortunately, we aren't providing the "b"s but yours sound delicious and we can't wait to try them at home later.)

    [Reply]

  11. 161
    peddler — February 11, 2011 @ 7:25 pm

    I am going to make this! Never made biscuits before or gravy, but its my boyfriends favorite!

    [Reply]

  12. Pingback: Gluten-free Biscuits and Gravy recipe | Making A Home And Family

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