Tag: milk

  • Gravy

    Gravy

    My mom made gravy.  Gravy with fried chicken especially. 

    Biscuits and Gravy

    Once the chicken was done, mom would add 1/4 cup flour to the oil in the frying pan.  Stir the flour in the grease until it is brown.  It will brown nicely, stir constantly so it will not burn.  Once the flour has browned to the color you like, add 1 cup water all at once and stir constantly.  (If you add the water bit by bit, your gravy will get lumpy.)  As the gravy thickens, add 1 cup milk, stirring constantly.  Add salt and pepper to taste.  Ahhhh – this stuff is good.

    If you want to make sausage gravy, just start browning sausage and then make gravy from the drippings.  Serve with Baking Powder biscuits, fried potatoes and scrambled eggs for a hearty breakfast buffet. 

    Fried Potatoes, Biscuits and Sausage Gravy
  • Arroz con Leche – Rice Pudding

    Arroz con Leche – Rice Pudding

    Serve as dessert or for breakfast in the morning

    Abby would make this for the kids for breakfast and they would go crazy for it.  It is still a favorite.  I tried to make it on the stovetop like she did, but invariably I burn it. Nothing smells as bad a milk and rice.  Yuk.  I stick to the oven method. The classic recipe is with raisins, but they make it too sweet for me, so I omit them.

    4 to 6 servings

    • Milk — 4 cups
    • Short-grain rice –1/2 cup
    • Cinnamon stick — 2 broken into pieces
    • Salt — pinch
    • Raisins — 1/4 cup (Optional, I like mine without raisins)
    • Sugar — 1/2 cup
    • Butter — 2 tablespoons
    • Vanilla — 1 teaspoon
    • Zest of one orange
    • freshly ground nutmeg (garnish)

    Method

    1. Place the milk, rice, cinnamon stick, orange zest, salt and sugar  in a medium oven proof bowl and set into oven at 300 degrees for 2 hours.  Stir every 20 minutes. 
    2. Add the raisins if you are using them, vanilla and nutmeg and bake for another 20 minutes. Stir often to keep from sticking to the bottom of the pot.  Adjust sugar to taste and serve hot or cold, with some ground cinnamon or nutmeg and orange zest to top as garnish.

    Variations

    • Arroz con Dulce (Puerto Rico), or Arroz-Doce (Brazil): use coconut milk in place of regular milk.
    • Short-grain rice, like arborio or Valencia rice, is best for rice pudding as it gives the dessert a creamier texture, but regular long-grain rice can be used to good result too. A little more rice can be added if you want a firmer pudding. If the pudding gets too thick, just add a little more milk.
    • Sometimes water, cream, sweetened and condensed milk or evaporated milk is substituted for part of the regular milk. Just make sure the total amount of liquid adds up to 4 cups. And adjust the amount of sugar as needed.
    • Add 1 or 2 tablespoons of brandy or rum when you stir in the butter and vanilla if you like.
    • Some recipes call for stirring in 2 beaten egg yolks at the end before adding the butter and vanilla. The heat of the pudding will cook the yolks, make it creamier and give it a pale golden color. (I like mine eggless.)