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A Southern Tradition

Biscuits and gravy are indeed a southern tradition for sure.  I grew up on biscuits in gravy in the countryside of Arkansas and loved the smell of homemade biscuits cooking throughout my parent's home.  My mom makes some of the best biscuits you ever put butter on and she really knows how to bring people to the table with her gravy as well.  

Biscuits have gotten a bit more fluffy over the years that they have been baked.  The first biscuit was actually a flat bread that would be pout back in the oven hence the "bis" part of biscuits...."bis" meaning twice, as in twice cooked.  The flat bread was hard and was eaten by soldiers  to help keep them full while traveling to and from war zones. (Source)  With that said the flakier, fluffier biscuit came from the southern kitchens over time and were added to just about every meal that came out of the kitchen in the south.  I remember having a biscuit with breakfast at least and at almost every dinner.  

Gravy came along with the turn of the need for a fuller meal to keep farmers and military men full.  It was a cheap way of using all the parts of cooking meat.  The meat fats were either used on the biscuits straight or milk, flour and water were added to make the grease and fat go further for more mouths.  

Now days there are a bit more choices and the options for biscuits and gravy are thought to be a treat rather than a need for a hearty meal.  Here is my twist on a history making, southern tradition.

A few months before Valentine's Day last year my mom sent me a package of the Loveless Cafe biscuit mix.  If you want a great tasting buttermilk biscuit without the hassle of all the measuring and mixing, give this mix a try.  All you add is the buttermilk!

The Loveless Cafe is in Tennessee and you can snag your own biscuit mix and Loveless Cafe jam set  HERE for under $40.



I baked my biscuits in a cast iron skillet just like my mom used to do when I was a kid.  I love the skillet biscuits because the bake up all smashed together and just seem like real biscuits that way instead of on a cookie sheet.  

How tasty and yummy do those look?



Next came the gravy.  A simple gravy is made with a fat, flour, milk, and finally water.  That's just about it!

  Here's how it's done the southern way:

Start with a cup of bacon grease.  Heat the bacon grease over medium heat and add a cup of flour.  Turn the heat up to medium high and combine the bacon grease with the flour and begin to "burn" the flour.  Once the flour begins to burn or turn brown slightly, reduce the heat back down to medium and add 2 cups of milk.  Combine the milk with the burned flour and bacon grease mixture with a wire whisk until thick.  Add 3 cups of water and turn heat on high.  Whisk the gravy mixture until thick and reduce heat to low.  Serve over the top of prepared biscuits.  



Serve with a pad of butter and salt/pepper on top.  The BEST biscuits and gravy you ever tasted.  Such a southern tradition for breakfast on the weekends! 

Enjoy!


Eco-Tip:  Use bulk items when you can.  Buying items in bulk and storing in reusable food containers can help cut down on manufacturers package waste with each item you buy.  When you do go buy bulk items, be sure and take your own reusable bags to fill as well too.  For this and other tips on going green visit, The Earth and Me Go Green.

Skylar's Christmas Train

When I was posting all the posts about our Christmas and New Years, I neglected to touch on a cute little addition to our Christmas table this year; Skylar's Christmas tree with his train.  

This year we decided to add a small tree to the center of our Christmas table and Skylar had to notion to add his train to the underside of it.  I think it turned out lovely!



  








We had a lot of fun Christmas Day with the train and played around with different track setups to see which one we liked best.  I think we all agreed that the circle shape was the best one for around the bottom of the Christmas table tree.


Eco-Tip:  Simplify your life as much as you can.  Reduce the amount of stuff you have in your home, car, office, or even yard.  When you reduce your life down to the bare minimum, you use less and create less waste overall.  Try this approach, every day pick a room in your home and get rid of 5 things in that room each day.  By the end of the week you have reduced your impact of needing more throughout your entire home.  Try it every week and see how much stuff you can really get rid of.  For this and other tips on going green visit, The Earth and Me Go Green.

How we spent our New Year's

New Year's Eve we hung around our house a bit and drank champagne, sparkling grape juice, and spiked lemonade I made following a recipe I found on Pinterest.  We played games like UNO, CLUE, and even had a good game of Operation going till the batteries died from me hitting the sides too many times.  HA!



Sparkling Spiked Lemonade
 3 cups Lemonade
2 cups Club Soda
1 Tbsp lemon zest
1 cup rum or vodka
mint sprigs or lemon wedges to garnish
Mix Lemonade, Club Soda, zest and rum or vodka into a pitcher.
Serve in a Tom Collins glass over ice.
Garnish with mint or lemon wedges.
(for a kid-friendly version, omit the alcohol and add in ginger ale, or apple juice)
  
Skylar was happy because he was winning almost every game.  :-)
We counted down the hours, then the minutes, and then the seconds until 2013.  Watching Dick Clark's New Year's Rockin' Eve just isn't the same without Dick Clark though.

New Year's Day we sat and ate our black-eyed peas and I made a homemade cinnamon apple crisp.  We shared the crisp with the neighbor girl, Keya, when she came over to say Happy New Year to Skylar and us.  We spent the day taking down the Christmas decorations and lounged around watching the original Mary Poppins, ELF, and National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation, to top off the night.


Southern Black-Eyed Peas

  • 4 slices bacon (Cooked and cut into bits)
  • 1/2 spiral-cut, fully cooked ham
  • 1 white onion, chopped
  • 1 package dried black-eyed peas (16 ounces)
  • 1 tbs. lemon pepper seasoning
  • 1 tsp. black pepper
  • 1 tsp. sea salt
  • 1 tbs. hot sauce (for milder beans omit the hot sauce)
  • 1 tbs. chili seasoning
  • 1 tbs. season salt
Add everything to a stock pot, except the ham, cooked bacon, and the onion, with 2-3 cups of water and cook for 2 hours.  Top peas with water as the beans soak up the water over the cooking time.  For the last 30 minutes of cooking add the ham and the chopped onion and cook on low.  Serve topped with the cooked bacon bits.




Cinnamon Apple Crisp


  • 8-inch square glass baking dish
  • 1 cup brown sugar
  • 1 cup rolled oats
  • 1 cup all-purpose flour
  • 1/2 cup organic butter
  • 3 cups organic apples
  • 1/2 cup organic white sugar
  • 2 tsp. ground cinnamon

    Peel the skin from the apples and cut into bite-sized pieces and set aside in a bowl.  Coat an 8-inch glass, baking dish with a good layer of butter and preheat oven to 350 degrees.

    Mix the brown sugar with the oats, and flour in a bowl.  Cut in the butter until blended to make crumbs.  Sprinkle the bottom of the baking dish with half of the crumbs and sprinkle the top of the crumbs with the cinnamon.  Add the apples to the top of the crumbs and sprinkle again with cinnamon and the white sugar and top with the rest of the crumbs.

    Bake for 35 minutes until golden on top and the mixture is bubbling.  Cool a bit before serving and top with whipped cream sprinkled with cinnamon on top. 

    ENJOY! And I hope your New Year was just as great!


    Eco-Tip:  Purchase bleach-free, toilet paper that is made from the highest post-consumer waste content you can find (80% minimum).  For this and other tips on going green visit, The Earth and Me Go Green.
  • Running through the lights at the Snow Park (Ralston Park)

    Shortly after New Year's we decided to take a stroll from our house to the Snow Park.  It's actually called Ralston Park here in town, but I like to refer to it as the Snow Park because when it snows, this park the most beautiful sight I have seen covered in snow. It's their Holiday in the Parks festivities and this year the poor tree was missing a star due to some rot at the top.  According to other people the day the fire department went to put the star on top of the tree, they had to cut away a lot of the tree because of the wood being rotted out.  After placing the star on top it fell because there was more rot then expected, so the star was left off the top this year.  It still looked pretty even without the star though.   Unfortunately, this year, we didn't get much snow around the Valley floor, so the park was without snow when we took the walk down to it.  But the lights of the Snow Park are still very pretty!


    We invited Skylar's cousins Izzy and Abby, and even invited Grandma Cheryl (Jeff's mom) to come with us too!

    The holly tree in the park is always our annual picture-taking pose.  It helped me win a photo contest through the local Bi-Mart here in Lebanon one year too, when Skylar was 3.  

      
    The holly tree was in full bloom while we were there.  It was covered with berries!



    Isabelle and Abby sat down in the meditation pose (Dhyana) under the Christmas lights and Skylar joined them.  They said it just seemed like the right thing to do.  It was cute, and it cracked me up!  Ha!

      

    The Build Lebanon Trails light display.  We found several businesses, companies, groups, and people that backed up the lights in the park displays.  The Pioneer School PTA needs a light display next year for sure!


    It was pretty muddy by the swing and Skylar had to help Grandma Cheryl through the mud at one point so that she wouldn't slip and fall.  (And some say chivalry is gone)  :-)

    After awhile we decided to walk back.  We took Izzy and Abby back to their house and ended up staying for dinner and having the Northwest-Style of Dumplings with them.  


    It was a really fun night!