Going to ask this in both places
#11
Boone & Crockett
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: River Ridge, LA (Suburb of New Orleans)
Posts: 10,917

Calf liver smothered in onions, over grits.
Grits topped with butter and crumbled bacon, with calf liver seared in bacon grease on the side.
Shrimp and grits.
It's all good.
Grits topped with butter and crumbled bacon, with calf liver seared in bacon grease on the side.
Shrimp and grits.
It's all good.

#12

Have to disagree on that sh54. I might be Yankee born and bred but I love grits! My Mom lived in North Carolina for about 10 years when she was a young woman. Fortunately for me, she had a love for Southern cooking and brought it home with her. I eat grits, collards, blackeye peas, pinto beans and hocks and cornbread is always best when baked in a cast iron skillet that's got a little melted bacon grease in it before you pour in the mix!!
BPS
BPS



#14

I know where you're coming from sh54... my Pap wouldn't eat meat unless it was extra well done. He liked his pork chops fried until the fat was black and crisp!! Never could get him to try a steak cooked medium... let alone med-rare!
I can make a meal out of biscuits and gravy! Mom used to make "poor man's gravy" with some flour, a little water and a dash of pepper scorched in a little bacon grease... Damn that was good on biscuits!
BPS
I can make a meal out of biscuits and gravy! Mom used to make "poor man's gravy" with some flour, a little water and a dash of pepper scorched in a little bacon grease... Damn that was good on biscuits!
BPS
Last edited by Blackpowdersmoke; 02-24-2017 at 09:02 PM.
#15

My mom and dad both were big fans of "Red Eye Gravy" (very runny gravy made with coffee and ham drippings from country style ham). I really don't like coffee..If I do drink it, I have a little coffee with my cream and sugar
Yeah Yeah I know, A Marine that doesn't like coffee all that much...Go figure huh! My favorite gravy in the whole world was my Grammies gravy she made from her fried chicken grease!!! Her sausage gravy came in a VERY close second! I can duplicate her sausage gravy but I have absolutely NO clue what she did to her fried chicken to make it so dang good so my gravy from it is lacking as well.

#16

OK OK all you old goats...y'all got to talkin about grits and gravy and other kinds of grub that y'all probably forgot what the original thread was about.
And ya got me hungry to boot!! I guess I'm gonna have to go mix me up a batch of red beans with sausage and pile it on some rice.
And ya got me hungry to boot!! I guess I'm gonna have to go mix me up a batch of red beans with sausage and pile it on some rice.
#17
Boone & Crockett
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: River Ridge, LA (Suburb of New Orleans)
Posts: 10,917

You hungry Bronko? Come on over. I've got some pork butt, smoked sausage and shrimp in the fridge that will be turned into Jambalaya in about an hour.
And what do you mean that we forgot what the original thread was about. I believe it was you who asked "what kind of filler does one use?". We're just trying to provide you with some filling options.
And what do you mean that we forgot what the original thread was about. I believe it was you who asked "what kind of filler does one use?". We're just trying to provide you with some filling options.
#18

well guys I guess I was on the right track and it was cream of wheat and not oatmeal. Anyways I got me a Pedersoli 1874 Sharps in 45-70 which is why I was asking. Thanks. I'll be continuing this thread on the reloading forum.
#19
Nontypical Buck
Join Date: Sep 2010
Posts: 1,834

Ya'll done got me packed on 5lbs just reading about those recipes!!! And bringing back memories of growing up in the same kind of household cooking ways. Nothin beats cast iron for making anything, even flapjacks on cast iron with bacon grease from the small crock on the back of the stove. My daddy was a meat cutter for 51yrs cept when he was in 'Nam. He ate more raw hamburger and headcheese than most people ate cooked!!!! And I have used grits and cream of wheat as filler for reduced loads in my 220 Swift and 22-250 for more urban work back in the day with a Hornet bullet. I thought it produced more consistent groups and was easier to load than cotton or pillow ticking.