!!FIRST TIME!! Two Swedes cook and try biscuit and gravy

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  • čas přidán 7. 09. 2024
  • We did this our way, call it a Swedish version of the American biscuit and gravy.
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Komentáře • 891

  • @reckyNcarol
    @reckyNcarol Před rokem +362

    A lot of comments on what we did wrong here, we did our best with what we had and what we could! We had fun, its not perfect but it was tasty and maybe some day me and Recky can go to America and taste the real thing 🤗🩷

    • @black4211
      @black4211 Před rokem +15

      Yes you guys should!

    • @janiewindle946
      @janiewindle946 Před rokem +29

      You did great!

    • @plasticbutcher
      @plasticbutcher Před rokem +19

      I think you did fantastic, love your videos
      Take care and stay safe
      Rick B

    • @breadmakerbreadmaker5283
      @breadmakerbreadmaker5283 Před rokem +23

      I was impressed with what you made. Please don't be so hard on yourselves. I thought you did great! I love it when you two cook together. It is pure fun!

    • @Magpiebard
      @Magpiebard Před rokem +27

      Don't fuss yourself. A real honest go and maybe not perfect, but considering how it is pretty far from what you normally have? You did great. Maybe not perfect, but I'm gonna be honest with you - ANYONE who isn't southern and takes a swing at it is gonna be told it isn't quite right. But trying and it tasting good? That's a solid win. And yeah, you two get here, here's the plan. Go to somewhere like Georgia and find a tiny hole in the wall cafe, NOT a chain. Sit down, and if they ask if you want sweet tea, say yes (be prepared for syrup in a cup though. Maybe also ask for a water to cut the sugar shock) and ask for the biscuits in gravy. Once they hear your accent, tell them you have never had it and be ready for a southern food invasion. Something about an accent and a polite simple request is gonna get you stared at a bit as they hold their breath and watch you eat, they are gonna need to feed you "right". Just, um. Don't eat before hand. Possibly for a day, Because you are gonna need a nap when you are done!

  • @kinjiru731
    @kinjiru731 Před rokem +105

    I think you did a really good job, actually. This is one of those recipes people tend to adjust to their own tastes and make their own way. As a southerner in America who has eaten this all my life, I think you should be proud of your work.

  • @vincentdarrah
    @vincentdarrah Před rokem +141

    Your mastery of the english language is impeccable. you even swear properly

    • @Reckyj
      @Reckyj  Před rokem +11

      Thank you. =)

    • @joeyindahl2593
      @joeyindahl2593 Před rokem +15

      I find most Scandinavian people I met speek better English than many native speakers.

    • @vincentdarrah
      @vincentdarrah Před rokem +4

      @@joeyindahl2593 Most young people today aren't able to understand anyway

    • @kathyschwarz459
      @kathyschwarz459 Před rokem +2

      Lol

    • @andrewking4350
      @andrewking4350 Před rokem +3

      @@Reckyj you over worked the dough that’s why it was flat

  • @tamienglish6828
    @tamienglish6828 Před rokem +29

    Recky and Carol. .you did great! Don't listen to critics! You just cooked something that is a southern breakfast staple...and it's not something you are familiar with. I'm proud of you for cooking it from scratch and giving us your unbiased opinion! You guys rock and I'm so grateful to be one of your followers!

    • @Marcel_Audubon
      @Marcel_Audubon Před 5 měsíci +1

      @tamienglish2868 handing out participation trophies, hun?

  • @grifftech
    @grifftech Před rokem +63

    Growing up on Biscuits and Gravy for 50 years it made me smile seeing you guys enjoy it!!!! You guys did a GREAT JOB!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @karimonster
    @karimonster Před rokem +108

    I love that you guys tried this and it looks really, really good! :) The 3 big tricks to biscuits and gravy is: 1) You can make the gravy with ANY animal fat. Bacon grease, sausage grease, even left over ham steak grease. 2) Biscuits come together quick and with very little measuring required. You don't have to roll them out and you don't even have to cut them pretty. This is a poor, blue-collar quickbread and you just throw stuff in until it barely comes together, then kick it in the oven. You've got ranchers coming in from the fields after morning chores and you got to get a big, hearty breakfast on quick, so you just throw it together. 3) Every Southern woman has her own recipe for both biscuits and gravy passed down from her granny, so no two households eat the same biscuits and gravy!
    I look forward to y'all's attempt at the next evolution of biscuits and gravy- shit on a shingle! 😁

    • @msdarby515
      @msdarby515 Před rokem +8

      I just asked SOMEONE about an hour ago if they ever had SOS! 😂 Now for supper I'm making chicken SOS. 😁

    • @dylnfstr
      @dylnfstr Před rokem +1

      Shit on a shingle is far more simple and some prefer it. Though I’ve never had it with chipped beef. Just sausage. Had a guy in the booth next to us at a diner order toast and gravy with a side of toast 😂 I’ll never forget that.

    • @msdarby515
      @msdarby515 Před rokem +2

      @@dylnfstr 😂
      I make my gravy the same it's just not always the same protein. Try with chicken, man, it's delicious. There won't be much grease when you cook the chicken so use a stick of butter and brown your roux, then use 1/2 chicken broth( a good one, not just those salt cubes) and 1/2 cream in the gravy. Delicious!

    • @dylnfstr
      @dylnfstr Před rokem +2

      @@msdarby515 I’ve never done half cream half chicken broth. Usually just one or the other. I’ll have to try that! Over a piece of fried chicken on top a biscuit 🤤

    • @msdarby515
      @msdarby515 Před rokem +2

      @@dylnfstr I also add poultry seasoning to my chicken gravy. Really adds flavor!
      I also use chicken thigh meat and cut it into bite-size pieces, Brown it, then make the gravy. But if you fry chicken and then use that grease to make your gravy, excellent!

  • @Grey-Honey-Badger
    @Grey-Honey-Badger Před rokem +5

    People, remember: This was and still is poor people food. It was often made with whatever you had on hand. My family often just used torn up bread and called it bread and gravy. There is no wrong way to make this dish.

  • @azrielsilverkirk9034
    @azrielsilverkirk9034 Před rokem +79

    Not bad for you first Time Recky! I hope you enjoyed it. :) myself and my wife wish lots of love and health to you and Carol!

    • @Reckyj
      @Reckyj  Před rokem +5

      Hi buddy! Likewise to you and your own! :)

  • @sallyintucson
    @sallyintucson Před rokem +124

    You can always use a drinking glass to cut round Biscuits.

    • @fumesniff
      @fumesniff Před rokem +11

      i've used a glass to make biscuits for 30 years, just like my grandma. my nephew gave me a razor sharp biscuit cutter, and my biscuits rise twice as high- the glass edge squishes the sides together and restricts rising. also a few grates of nutmeg takes sausage gravy over the top.

    • @TheOriginalLexa
      @TheOriginalLexa Před rokem +2

      @@fumesniff exactly my thoughts! I thought the nutmeg was my own trick, lol!

    • @fumesniff
      @fumesniff Před rokem +3

      @@TheOriginalLexa nutmeg makes anything dark dark green or creamy white taste better- savory or sweet :D

  • @katrinaprescott5911
    @katrinaprescott5911 Před rokem +21

    My grandma, who passed away just last January at age 100, taught me to make biscuits from scratch - no measuring 😄. We never had sausage IN the gravy. This is how Appalachian people make a big breakfast.
    We make the biscuits and put them in the oven to bake. Fry sausage in one skillet and bacon in another. Take out the bacon and sausage and put them on serving plates. Use the bacon grease to fry eggs and potatoes. Use the sausage grease to make gravy. Breakfast is bacon, sausage, eggs, fried potatoes, biscuits with gravy and biscuits with butter and jam. Also fried apples.
    Biscuits: put a lump of shortening in the pan and put it in the oven while the oven preheats. Put buttermilk in the bowl. Add baking powder and a little baking soda (because of the acid in the buttermilk). Add flour until it's a soft dough. Take the pan out of the oven, swirl the melted shortening around it to grease it and pour the rest into the biscuit dough. Mix it in really quick. Turn the dough out onto a floured board and gently knead it just until it is not too sticky. Cut out the biscuits and put them in the pan and bake at 350 degrees Fahrenheit until they are brown on top.
    Don't knead the dough so vigorously. They will be tough. Gently lift the side of the dough and fold it over, turn, and do it again several more times. It will be a little sticky in the middle when you cut them but that's how you get nice, light biscuits. Dip the cutter in flour between cutting out each biscuit.

    • @richardcandelaria8043
      @richardcandelaria8043 Před rokem +1

      Yes, the less kneading the the softer the biscuit the better! That’s why the fork is used primarily preferably to minimize hand kneading. Also, heat from your hands also toughens dough. That’s said for your first time you did well!

    • @aaronburdon221
      @aaronburdon221 Před rokem +2

      Ah yes, the heart attack on a plate. lol

    • @katw3070
      @katw3070 Před rokem +1

      Great description! That’s just the way we always had breakfast, including the fried apples! From Virginia here.

    • @katrinaprescott5911
      @katrinaprescott5911 Před rokem +1

      @@aaronburdon221 did you miss the part that the grandma who taught me how to cook just passed away at age 100? She had bacon, eggs and fried apples for breakfast the day she passed.

    • @katrinaprescott5911
      @katrinaprescott5911 Před rokem +1

      @@katw3070 did you ever have sorghum on your biscuits or is that a Kentucky thing? We always called sorghum syrup "molasses" so I was really surprised and disappointed when I bought actual molasses at the store. Sorghum is less bitter and more flavorful. Dad said everybody he knew growing up had a sorghum canebrake on their farm and the sorghum-maker would go from farm to farm to boil it down.

  • @AuntDi
    @AuntDi Před rokem +6

    Never knead the dough. (You knead bread and pasta, but never biscuits) It will let them rise better. You want to fold it a few times on your floured surface and gently roll it out about 1/2 inch.
    I have an old tuna can my Mom cut out both sides of from 30 years ago that I cut my biscuits with. Lol
    Press straight down and don’t twist the dough.
    Looked really good! Nice job.

    • @katw3070
      @katw3070 Před rokem +1

      I use a juice glass to cut my biscuits. You’re exactly right…press straight down & don’t twist the cutter.

  • @Stepperg1
    @Stepperg1 Před rokem +9

    You did great! All you need is country fried steak to go with those excellent biscuts, then pour the gravy over everything! You'll be saying y'all before you know it! Yay!

    • @Reckyj
      @Reckyj  Před rokem +2

      yummy!! So much to try! More to come.

  • @poohbearsmom2964
    @poohbearsmom2964 Před rokem +27

    Dang!! I’m sorry to hear y’all have gotten so much criticism.
    Both biscuits and sausage gravy are only perfected by trial and error.
    Your first attempt was really good.
    I’m a southern girl. I buy my biscuits from a local bakery. And I have a cheat recipe for my gravy since I can’t eat pork.

    • @joanreynolds955
      @joanreynolds955 Před rokem +5

      Biscuits sound simple, but they’re really not.

    • @sharcrum
      @sharcrum Před rokem +3

      I don't think anyone was criticizing! Just helping through our experience and what we are seeing that will make his next try a little better!!!

  • @thseed7
    @thseed7 Před rokem +24

    Love that you tried this. Highly recommend mixing all the dry ingredients before adding the butter for even distribution of the baking powder. Keep the butter very cold (freeze for 10-15 minutes before cutting it into the flour.) It makes sure the butter doesn't melt as you work it in. This makes the biscuits lighter as the pockets of butter melt and release steam. Should be about the size of a pea, no need to be exact. Make your own butter milk by adding the juice of a lemon to the regular milk you used in this recipe. The acidity brightens them up. Add the butter milk slowly until you have a dough that is barely coming together. It should be just wet enough to clump together and hold shape, a farely low moisture dough. You barely mix the dough, so it doesn't build gluten and get tough. It doesn't really matter if there's a little flour that's not completely wet. Biscuits are supposed to be light and fluffy. A simple, rich, no fuss bread. American breakfast sausage has dried sage, a little dried thyme and oregano, garlic powder, coriander, salt and crushed red pepper. Really love this video and hope you keep trying to make recipes from the States or around the world because this was fun. ✌️♥️

    • @katw3070
      @katw3070 Před rokem +2

      Yes to everything you said!

    • @Budini67
      @Budini67 Před rokem +2

      @Eric Davis **stands up and applauds** Eric I am a southern grandmother who learned how to make biscuits from her grandmother when I was a little girl and your biscuit-making knowledge and technique are outstanding! Major props!

    • @catherinelw9365
      @catherinelw9365 Před rokem

      Well said, except adding lemon juice to milk is not buttermilk. It's sour milk, but the acidity is still there and helps. Buttermilk has different bacteria than sour milk.

  • @juliemckew1728
    @juliemckew1728 Před rokem +2

    I'll say one thing now was 2centimeters thick not wide. The Hillbilly Kitchen shows very easy ways to make biscuits. You never want to need the dough. Thanks for trying and glad you enjoyed it.

  • @robertrodgers1423
    @robertrodgers1423 Před rokem +12

    Great effort on the biscuits. The concept of a buttermilk biscuit is to have lots of flaky layers. Layers are created when the butter melts away so you want to use cold butter and don't smash it in with a rolling pen. The dough will seem really dry because the butter is firm. Many people will put the butter in the freezer for a bit before mixing because the heat from your hands will melt it. Keep the milk and butter cold as possible before mixing.Thanks for sharing.

    • @SilvaDreams
      @SilvaDreams Před rokem

      We'd always freeze the butter than use a cheese grater to break it up so it is mixed more easily without potentially making it melt

    • @wordforger
      @wordforger Před rokem

      ​@SilvaDreams I use a pastry cutter. does the job and no heat from your hands to mess it up.

  • @lisacook9482
    @lisacook9482 Před rokem +6

    You do not put sugar in biscuits also you can use a glass to cut the biscuits. Just dip it in flour.

    • @reneerollins4433
      @reneerollins4433 Před rokem +3

      You are so right about that. Just like no sugar in cornbread either!

  • @henryfreimuth9359
    @henryfreimuth9359 Před rokem +2

    Don’t worry about people saying you are doing it wrong. Looked fine to me! And biscuits and gravy is very delicious but quite filling!

  • @lilliemcneil5447
    @lilliemcneil5447 Před rokem +13

    I've had biscuits and gravy for breakfast,lunch,and dinner. Freaking fantastic at anytime of day.

    • @RedRoseSeptember22
      @RedRoseSeptember22 Před rokem +3

      Agreed! Same with pancakes!

    • @rg20322
      @rg20322 Před rokem +2

      Absolutely a great and amazing hangover cure as well!

  • @tammywelch7539
    @tammywelch7539 Před rokem +13

    you did everything right including not adding sugar, true biscuits and gravy to me never has sugar. grew up eating biscuits and sausage gravy. was a staple in my household and is my go to meal for supper. am so glad you enjoyed it.

    • @nathanwahl9224
      @nathanwahl9224 Před rokem

      Yep. They said sugar, and I'm like NOPE!

    • @Real_LiamOBryan
      @Real_LiamOBryan Před rokem

      Same! Sugar in the biscuits is only for when you are making desert biscuits. Some restaurants, however, tend to put sugar in their biscuits and cornbread. Drives me crazy; although, sometimes I enjoy it, but not with biscuits and gravy!

  • @aaronburdon221
    @aaronburdon221 Před rokem +7

    Well there are several ways to make biscuits. My personal favorite are called drop biscuits. You take a spoon full of the dough and just drop it on the baking sheet. They're not really for pouring the gravy over. Drop biscuits are best when you crumble them up into the gravy and use a fork to scoop it up.

    • @nathanwahl9224
      @nathanwahl9224 Před rokem

      I end up doing that no matter what way the biscuits are made. Mix it all up, an egg fried over easy on top and . . . . . 😁

  • @SpitfiretheCat16
    @SpitfiretheCat16 Před rokem +2

    Per your requested tips...
    >You can make your own breakfast sausage at home from ground pork, seasoning with sage, fennel, and thyme alongside your standard GSP. Usually served in little patties, or broken up into gravy like this.
    >The gravy is a sausage bechamel. Use the drippings from the sausage to make a bechamel and season liberally with salt and especially pepper before you combine the gravy and sausage.
    >The magic biscuit ratio is 3-2-1; 3 parts flour, 2 parts liquid, 1 part fat, by weight. "Traditionally" you'd make them round, but the people who care about that are people you don't want to associate with.

  • @HappyValleyDreamin
    @HappyValleyDreamin Před rokem +4

    The first time I made biscuits and gravy, I over worked the dough and they were so heavy, you could break a window with one, if you threw it! Now, I pat it out and fold the dough over a couple of times for flakey layers. You will get better and better.💗💗💗

  • @NaveeCheefe
    @NaveeCheefe Před rokem +3

    Interesting. I've never added salt to my gravy when making this dish because I always figure there's enough salt in the sausage. The pepper is what brings in the flavor. Also, I always make some scrambled eggs to go with it.

  • @dianaspy6733
    @dianaspy6733 Před rokem +5

    I found it awesome that you had no sugar in your house! The trick to biscuit making is not to stir very much. It makes for fluffy and light biscuits!

    • @Reckyj
      @Reckyj  Před rokem +1

      Sugar is a weekend thing. Not a weekday.

    • @williamnicholson8133
      @williamnicholson8133 Před 8 měsíci

      Pastry blenders. Or 2 forks is a better way to incorporate the butter into the dry ingredients . Minimal stirring makes for flakier biscuits.

  • @JulesfromHouston
    @JulesfromHouston Před rokem +21

    I don't know who told you the biscuits should be sqare. I just cut mine out with a water glass, so they are round. Just as delicious.

    • @joanreynolds955
      @joanreynolds955 Před rokem +4

      I have sometimes cut biscuits square. It cuts down on wasted dough,

    • @deplorablenation111
      @deplorablenation111 Před rokem

      I use a cutter or glass, it's supposed to be circular.

    • @jndaley
      @jndaley Před rokem +4

      @@deplorablenation111 Who says they have to be circular? I say normalize square biscuits. Lol.

    • @msdarby515
      @msdarby515 Před rokem +2

      Square is so much easier. No rerolling any dough! 😊👍

    • @MGmirkin
      @MGmirkin Před rokem +1

      It can go either way. Some do it round some do it square. A lot prefer round, but square is fine. In the end, it's all just bread. ;)

  • @mrhalfstep
    @mrhalfstep Před rokem +2

    In the US, our breakfast sausage is made using pork (the sissy, health nuts have forced the producers to also include chicken and turkey versions, but we hate them, right?), salt, black pepper, ground sage (very important for breakfast sausage) and red pepper flakes. It's sometimes formed into links about the size of your little finger in a casing, but the more popular way is to pack it into about a 60 mm-ish plastic tube and, when ready to fry, cut it into patties that are about 10 mm thick. We would use the grease from frying those patties to make the gravy and then dice up some of the patties and add them to the gravy, after the fact. That would be "sausage gravy", but many of us prefer plain "milk" gravy, which uses butter as the fat and just lots of salt and pepper with no meat added to the gravy at all. Do you guys season your pork breakfast sausage like we do? We make sausages for grilling for dinner from beef and pork with totally different spice profiles, but for breakfast it's salt, pepper, SAGE, and red pepper flakes that are critical. We, here in the Southern USA, at least ( who knows what a Yankee is willing to eat?) would have removed the meat from the fat, estimated how much fat, by volume, that we were dealing with, and then added and cooked an equal volume of flour to form a roux. Then the milk would be added and stirred until the gravy was just right, and at that point the meat would be added back in. With the meat and grease all combined in the skillet it's hard to know when you have the right ratio of flour to fat and when that flour has been cooked enough. Uncooked flour in a sauce or gravy tastes like the underside of a farm animal's tail region.
    As for the biscuits,....we'll have to address that another day. Those weren't anything that would be recognized as a biscuit where I live. My scones would probably be worse, so no shame in that!
    One last comment. We would usually tear the biscuits into 20 mm square pieces and then pour the gravy over the top of it. Does that sound kinda anal? Yep, but that's just how we are about biscuits and gravy down here in God's country. Do you guys have a regional food that that you insist must be cooked or eaten in a certain way? You must have. People are people all over the world. loved this ...ehh... experiment. LOL

  • @mimiv3088
    @mimiv3088 Před rokem +23

    Great job for first try with minimum ingredients. Looked REALLY good. Especially the gravy. Very proud of you both. 😊

  • @Chamomileable
    @Chamomileable Před rokem +3

    Both gravy AND biscuits are something that every southerner has their own take on. I encourage you guys to develop your own Swedish-style recipe to make it unique! As for the biscuits, you can get perfect biscuits every time by cutting them out with a drinking glass or a mug. And the gravy just needs flour, a fat, and milk. If you want a suggestion, gravy goes fantastic on fried chicken as well as being half the ingredients for what we call "chicken-fried steak", basically a pounded flat cube steak breaded in flour and pan-fried, topped with a helping of sausage gravy.
    Awesome job, for real. I'm glad you two enjoyed it.

  • @heatherhuard
    @heatherhuard Před rokem +5

    Well done! I know a lot of people that their first biscuits are not edible!

    • @katw3070
      @katw3070 Před rokem +1

      I was determined to make good biscuits, so tried 4 or 5 different recipes until I found the one which was best. Those first few were not impressive.

  • @mrjaspersrevenge
    @mrjaspersrevenge Před rokem +12

    With biscuits and gravy, welcome to hillbilly heaven

  • @dobermanownerforlife3902

    The art of cooking is variety. This is why some recipies will say a pinch of a seasoning. This creates a margin of error(difference) that can change the taste with the same ingredients. Each time a different seasoning will be more pronounced than the last

    • @Reckyj
      @Reckyj  Před rokem +2

      Thats perfect, and "To you liking" is one of the things that says "taste it damn it"

  • @TNBuckeye1617
    @TNBuckeye1617 Před rokem +1

    I love that so many people are trying American biscuits and gravy on CZcams. Probably the hardest thing would be to find an American breakfast sausage equivalent in other countries, but I think it’s almost a truer experience if you find a ground sausage from you’re own country (like you did) since we have so many different brands and flavors in the US. A way to alter your recipe would be to make drop biscuits where you just take a large spoon to scoop out the dough and drop it in several portions onto the baking sheet. Drop biscuits are more forgiving of adding a little too much milk and they keep more air in the biscuits because you handle the dough less. Then just crumble the biscuit and add the gravy on top.

  • @manjisaipoe517
    @manjisaipoe517 Před rokem +25

    That looked fun, and you did better than I did the first time. My gravy turned into a loaf because way to much flour!🤣

    • @Reckyj
      @Reckyj  Před rokem +3

      Love to hear it! =) haha

  • @ronrowley9367
    @ronrowley9367 Před rokem +3

    don't worry about constructive comments guys, you will not be able to visit the American Midwest and find two families that make the gravy the same way, when i was 14 yrs. old my lovely mamaw, at Christmas breakfast proudly announced that she finally had her gravy perfected, i asked her when she started working on it, she said since she was about 12 years old, she was 77 at the time, the more you make it, the better it gets, and the best part is you get to eat the test tries.

  • @mokumboi19
    @mokumboi19 Před rokem +6

    You did a really good job, especially for never having tried the dish. Pro tip for next time: add some dried sage into your gravy. That's what takes it to the next level.

  • @bracejuice7955
    @bracejuice7955 Před rokem +7

    Good first attempt! I’d recommend adding a nice amount of dried sage to the sausage while its cooking, as most US breakfast sausages are pork with sage

    • @wordforger
      @wordforger Před rokem

      Sage, some red pepper flakes, salt and pepper. Those seem to be most standard.

  • @Texbec
    @Texbec Před rokem +1

    As a born an raised southerner you did just fine. The good thing about gravy is its adjustable. You did good working with what you have.

  • @iwouldratherbewithmydog
    @iwouldratherbewithmydog Před rokem +1

    The fact that you managed to do such a good job without ever experiencing biscuits or sausage gravy in person before is super impressive!
    The biscuits can be difficult to get the hang of, but you did a really good job. Especially considering the ingredient differences between the countries.
    I tend to do my biscuits thicker so I can cut them open and pour the gravy over the fluffy insides.. highly recommend
    Everyone has their own way of doing biscuits and gravy, so you just have to keep perfecting your own recipe now.
    I hope you liked it enough to share it with family and friends! This is one of those dishes that sounds crazy to people who have never tried it, but if they give it a chance they get it

  • @mellmell77
    @mellmell77 Před rokem +4

    I think you did a fantastic job with what you had available. I'm glad you enjoyed your end product. The white gravy or milk gravy can be served over a simple piece of toasted bread and it makes a hearty meal. This is a great alternative to making biscuits. You can also use seasoned ground beef instead of sausage.

  • @chris...9497
    @chris...9497 Před rokem +3

    Good try and enough to begin to get what biscuits and gravy are like. YEAH!
    I apologize ahead of time for the length of this comment.
    I just wanted to offer some cooking tips. It's not a recipe, just technique and its purpose.
    Quick suggestion on sausage:
    Sausage in our country comes in links and in patties. Sometimes links are sold in the casings, sometimes they're molded into links without casings.
    Sausage gravy is made with crumbled noncasing sausage. If you can't get pattie-formed or unformed sausage, you can mash up sausage not in casings OR you can slit the casing end to end and dump the sausage mixture out. Break it up with your fingers and further break it up into small crumbles as you cook it. You don't want big lumps of sausage in your gravy.
    Also, sausage doesn't have to be pork; it can be beef-based, venison-based, even poultry-based (turkey, chicken), or a mixture of meats.
    By the way: GREAT JOB WITH THE GRAVY!!!
    What you're REALLY missing is the fluffiness of America biscuits. I could see your biscuits didn't rise, so there was very little fluffiness inside. A biscuit with a proper rise will go from a half-inch in its raw state to 1-1/2 to 2 inches or more after baking. The top will be golden and the sides white (brown means it's overcooked).
    You need a tall cooked biscuit because you're supposed to split the biscuit (like a scone) to open up the fluffiness to the gravy. You split it, lay the halves on the plate interior side up, and spoon the gravy over it. The fluffiness absorbs the gravy in a wonderful way. You never want to pour your gravy over the top of an unhalved biscuit; the crust does not absorb the gravy well enough to provide maximum flavor and texture.
    You have all the correct ingredients for biscuits, but there's a question about one of the ingredients and also you need a little coaching about technique.
    So the baking powder:
    First, it IS baking POWDER, not baking SODA, correct? A lot of people new to cooking confuse them.
    Second, how old is your baking powder? It breaks down over time and no long will allow your baked goods to rise. You can test it. To find out, drop a teaspoon of the baking powder into a cup of hot water. If it bubbles heavily, the baking powder is still good. Always good to test before using.
    The technique:
    Let me first drop this bit of info about biscuits in America. Yes, you can buy premade frozen biscuit dough in America; just pop them out of the cardboard tube, separate them , lay them on a sheet, and bake them. But in the South, where biscuits and gravy is a common meal or side dish, no self-respecting southerner would eat anything but from-scratch made biscuits. It's so easy and quick to make, and the flavor is superior to commercially-made biscuits.
    And I've never used sugar in regular biscuits before. Maybe it's a regional variation.
    Now, the key to fluffy/flaky biscuits is how you 'cut in' the butter.
    'Cutting in' is a real cooking term, and there's a tool called a 'pastry cutter' used to cut solid fats into pastries. By solid, I mean solid at room temperature, like butter or shortening. And you CAN use shortening instead of butter for biscuits, but butter makes for better flavor and a fluffier texture. But most southern households don't waste money on a pastry cutter; they just use a table fork; the tines work very well.
    So, freeze the butter. Once frozen solid, dice it small, 1/4 inch pieces are best. Some people grate the butter on a large-hole grater, like you do carrots. But once they're cut up, put them back in the freezer. You need the butter to remain hard and cold. If it warms up, it melts into the flour and it won't rise properly and the texture will suffer.
    Once all the dry ingredients are well mixed, dump in the butter. Don't use your hands! Your hands will soften/melt the butter. Use the tines of the fork to mash the butter and smash it into the flour mixture. You keep it up until it looks like coarse meal. And don't be afraid to put the bowl of butter and flour mix in the freezer if the butter looks like it's getting soft.
    'Cutting in' is a technique of breaking solid butter into bits that will separate layers of flour during baking; you are literally CUTTING the butter up to incorporate into the flour mixture. You can't achieve that by mashing it with a warm hand. If you try again using this technique, you'll see a real difference between a dry coarse crumbly flour mix and a slightly moist pliable pie dough.
    Oh, another technique tip:
    Just do a steady pour of (preferably cold) milk. You want to work the dough as little as possible, or the baking powder finishes reacting before you even roll it out, much less bake it. If it's overworked, it won't rise properly, and maybe won't rise at all. Then you actually DO have a scone instead of a biscuit. (The difference between a scone and a biscuit is the same as the difference between a cracker and bread; that difference is fluffiness.)
    Just mix in the milk, enough to moisten the mixture. If it has some small lumps, that's okay; it will sort itself out while baking (it steams internally).
    And while you do roll out the dough on a floured surface, you DON"T knead the dough. That's unnecessary and further overworks the dough, ensuring it will not rise or attain that internal fluffiness.
    I think you had too much milk; 2 cups flour takes 1 cup milk; that looked like a 2-cup measuring cup.
    Just remember, take your time cutting in the butter and keeping it cold, but be quick about mixing in the milk. You can do this.
    Time:
    230C/450F for 12 to 15 minutes.
    Found this online:
    Why do my scones never rise?
    First, make sure you're using fresh baking powder, one that has been opened less than 6 months ago. Also, if you knead the dough too much, the scones won't rise as tall. Knead gently, and just enough to bring the dough together.
    Scones you knead, but only a little. American biscuits you don't knead at all. Kneaded pastries (especially bread) require kneading to develop gluten; biscuits are not encouraged to develop gluten.

    • @katw3070
      @katw3070 Před rokem +2

      Great advice!

    • @Reckyj
      @Reckyj  Před rokem +2

      Amazing! Thank you!!

    • @twanajoyhildebrecht9718
      @twanajoyhildebrecht9718 Před rokem

      Now I feel like a lazy-butt slacker 'cause I Just use 2 cups of the Kroger all-purpose flour Biscuit Mix & 1 cup of Milk before Mixing Quick With a Fork, Scooping & GIooping With a TableSpoon, Baking & Calling it done 🤷🏻‍♀️😅

  • @patriciakeith6755
    @patriciakeith6755 Před rokem +1

    hi friends. I'm Southern to the core. A farm girl in my youth and I never learned to make biscuits. On one hand, you could use them for hockey pucks. On the other hand, they would crumble 'all to pieces'. But, my mother could make them that would melt in your mouth.

  • @odemusvonkilhausen
    @odemusvonkilhausen Před rokem +13

    Someone needs to mix everything Recky says with footage of the Swedish Chef.

  • @patriciahughes5592
    @patriciahughes5592 Před rokem +6

    You did fine, my friends! Southern folks are particular about this. As long as YOU like it.❤️

  • @redstateforever
    @redstateforever Před rokem +1

    Now you need to try chocolate gravy! It’s unique to certain parts of the south, from Appalachia, thru Tennessee, into Arkansas and parts of Oklahoma and Texas. It’s like a thin chocolate pudding, made with flour, cocoa, sugar, eggs, milk and vanilla. It’s a favorite of kids, but grownups too, a sweet, hearty breakfast, poured over the same kind of biscuits we use for sausage gravy. Love it!

  • @Kerrawin69
    @Kerrawin69 Před rokem +1

    I love to cook. I was making biscuits and gravy with my grandma when I was 6-7 years old. She pushed a chair up to the stove so I could see what she was doing. I am so glad y'all had fun with it. You should always have fun in the kitchen. It brings people together.

  • @andyirwin9191
    @andyirwin9191 Před rokem +1

    I come running when the wife makes biscuits and gravy! It's a staple and one of my favs. And everyone struggles the first few times. Jimmy Dean sausage and pillsbury biscuits wow

  • @ppiechnik
    @ppiechnik Před rokem +2

    I made biscuits in a skillet on top of the stove this morning. 3 ingredients!
    ..

  • @LauraSnuggleBear
    @LauraSnuggleBear Před rokem +3

    That looked amazing for a first try :D I know my husband sometimes adds a sprinkle of paprika and/or chili powder to his gravy if he's feeling extra spicy ^_^

  • @BillSmith-ut5li
    @BillSmith-ut5li Před 11 měsíci +1

    The baking powder reacts with the acid in the milk. That's why it's preferable that you use buttermilk or a sour milk. Some recipes say add a teaspoon of vinegar to the milk to curb, so, but they acid And the alkaline react.

  • @paulfeist
    @paulfeist Před rokem +1

    A very good looking first try at Biscuits and Gravy! I understand not being intuitive with cup measurements or fractions...
    If you make this again, my only tip for the biscuits is, don't overwork the dough. Mix and knead it only JUST enough to get it fully mixed, roll it out, and cut or stamp into your desired shape (round, I think, is more traditional). If you overwork the dough, the biscuits become very tough.
    A larger pan, so you can thin down that amount of flour with the sausage, would be good... I know you didn't want it too thin, but, that was a LOT of flour. :-)
    Seasoning is always up to the individual, of course... I like quite a bit of black pepper, and a bit of ground sage.
    It makes me happy to see people trying an American dish that not everyone thinks about!

  • @davidnoel2977
    @davidnoel2977 Před rokem +55

    Biscuits and gravy is a staple down here in the south. I think you guys would love all of the Southern comfort foods that we are famous for. It is a long delicious list. As a second job at night I used to cook in many different types of restaurants so if you guys have any questions about what to cook next let me know and I will be glad to help. I know I'm a little biased but I believe that our food down here in the southeast is the best out there. And every Southern state has their own spin on each item in the list and we each all have a unique item just to that state so you will be having la long delicious journey if you go down that road of trying these great foods we are known for. Happy eating. Much respect from here in Mobile, Alabama.

    • @ritayprice3510
      @ritayprice3510 Před rokem +9

      This South Carolina woman agrees.

    • @robertgriffin178
      @robertgriffin178 Před rokem +7

      I have to agree also !! central Georgia here

    • @Reckyj
      @Reckyj  Před rokem +4

      Hi David! Im sure of that to! lol

    • @charlayned
      @charlayned Před rokem +7

      Texas here, agreed, Southern food is best (followed by the Southwest stuff, Tex-Mex). Biscuits and gravy is my husbands favorite breakfast. I had to teach him to do the gravy, that can be hard. I also can do it with chicken or pork bouillon when I don't have the meat. Melt the butter with the bullion, then add the flour, then the milk. Tasty without having to go to the meat part. Of course, I like the meat, but in a pinch. :) As for the black pepper, my husband loves it spicy, but we make it less for me. He can add pepper after it's made--on his. :) He also makes it just for him with hot sausage (spicy). Not me, I don't do that.

    • @davidnoel2977
      @davidnoel2977 Před rokem +6

      @@charlayned so true ma'am. Plus Texas has a special place in my heart since we rented out our house here when I was in the first grade and we lived in Pasadena outside of Houston. My folks used to go ride the electric bull at Mickey gilley's club back then. When they filmed Urban cowboy with John Travolta in it. I know it's just a movie but everytime I see it it reminds me of the great state of Texas and the love I have for it. My mother is originally from Tennessee and my grandfather lives in Slidell, Louisiana. But I love all things Southern. And I do love Tex-Mex. And even great Mexican food to be honest. Thank you for the comment backing me up. Much respect from here in Mobile, Alabama. 😁

  • @tracygann8914
    @tracygann8914 Před rokem +2

    YOU did a good job!

  • @Ira88881
    @Ira88881 Před rokem

    Carol rocks! I love how she had to correct and comfort him through all this!
    And I laughed my ass off when he cut the dough into four…5 seconds after she told him to cut it into 6!

    • @Reckyj
      @Reckyj  Před rokem

      More of that here. In case you missed it: www.youtube.com/@reckyNcarol

  • @Timotimo101
    @Timotimo101 Před rokem +4

    That was fun to watch. Wish I could share some of my homemade biscuits with you. An important tip in making biscuits is not to touch the dough too much. Over-handling or mixing can make the biscuits tough. Ideally they are soft and flaky. We sometimes eat them with ham inside, sausage inside, or jam, preserves, some cheese, or only a pat of butter. They need not have the gravy but, yes, it's tasty. Glad you all tried it! Cheers from USA!

    • @chrisb2535
      @chrisb2535 Před rokem +1

      This. Mix until it JUST comes together. If you overwork the dough, it will develop gluten, and the heat from your hands will melt the butter and they become dense.

  • @erikmcclintock2025
    @erikmcclintock2025 Před rokem +1

    The thing with biscuits is that you have to be gentle with them when you mix it. Butter, flour, am egg, and baking soda and be careful how you mix it. Then add chunks of butter into it

  • @nancyankrom3803
    @nancyankrom3803 Před rokem +5

    Excellent job on the biscuits and gravy. 👏

  • @DUEYZ4U
    @DUEYZ4U Před rokem +4

    What a fun video; I hope you guys liked the food.

  • @dochubbell
    @dochubbell Před rokem +6

    Recky, you and your wife make a great team. Glad you make biscuits and gravy from scratch. Like the others, I think you can use a jar or round cookie cutter to cut the biscuir dough next time. Using what you had was a fair try at this breakfast dish. Glad you liked it. The flavor of the dish will have a lot to do with the spices in your sausage and what you use also. Black pepper plays a big part in the flavor too. Good effort!

  • @phillipdavis5175
    @phillipdavis5175 Před rokem +2

    For your first time you did great. Well done

  • @williambrown2830
    @williambrown2830 Před 3 měsíci

    I just love how Europeans turn the fork upside-down to eat. I never knew about that til I started watching CZcamsrs from Europe. Good job on the biscuits!

  • @ElwoodEmmons
    @ElwoodEmmons Před rokem +2

    We call that a rolling pin and you guys did great no worries here in the states you can find as many ways to make biscuits as you can cars and everybody likes what they grew up on I like my gravy made with sausage as well but you guys did the most American thing you took a recipe and made it your own congratulations Love your videos thanks a lot

  • @jeffmorse645
    @jeffmorse645 Před rokem +1

    You can actually make gravy from any kind of breakfast meat. American style breakfast sausage is probably the most common, but my Mom (from Oklahoma) made it from the pan drippings of fried ham, bacon, pork chops - even fried bologna grease! So yeah, there's no set way to make it and you guys did fine! I think my favorite gravy for biscuits is made from bacon grease after the bacon is finished frying. Its so smooth and creamy! Also, you can put gravy on any sort of bread. If we had leftover gravy but no biscuits we'd pour it over toast! Its always good.

    • @marzsit9833
      @marzsit9833 Před rokem

      you can even make a very decent breakfast gravy using a can of diced spam, i do it a lot and most people don't know that it is actually spam, they think it's diced ham.

  • @coleensakamoto6844
    @coleensakamoto6844 Před rokem +1

    I had so much fun watching you tackle this very Southern dish. I laughed out loud so many times. I so admire you both. You did great!

  • @jacquelineraines2074
    @jacquelineraines2074 Před rokem +7

    I understand your challenge with the measuring differences. There is a Swedish cook who makes some amazing looking dishes but I could never figure out the metric system. I have always used Bisquick which is a cheaters' way of making biscuits with little work So watching you do it like my Grandma did was quite something. Hats off to you! Love you guys!

    • @Reckyj
      @Reckyj  Před rokem +1

      =)

    • @andrewking4350
      @andrewking4350 Před rokem

      @@Reckyj just a tip take the meat out before you add the flour and us a whisk

  • @kathleenchilcote9127
    @kathleenchilcote9127 Před rokem +4

    I'd like to see a traditional swedish dish!

  • @momD612
    @momD612 Před rokem +1

    Biscuits & gravy are a must comfort food. Y'all did great for what you have. Some good buscuits & gravy is the bestest American you can get! Even chipped beef gravy can be good, but that's a whole nother thing. Y'all did good, but come to America & get it soooooo good! 😂❤❤

  • @nekrull2610
    @nekrull2610 Před 7 měsíci

    Biscuits and gravy should feel like a hug from Grandma.

  • @JulesfromHouston
    @JulesfromHouston Před rokem +4

    I just don't think you can get American -style breakfast sausage in Europe. Ours is also pork, but spices will be different.

  • @denisehaukkala9742
    @denisehaukkala9742 Před rokem +1

    Biscuits and gravy is my favorite breakfast. Only for very special occasions. The gravy is fantastic on hashbrowns and eggs too.
    My daughter's favorite breakfast too.

  • @kimstevens7472
    @kimstevens7472 Před 10 měsíci

    To make the biscuits soft from the oven you must cover them immediately with a clean hand towel or pot to steam the tops, after you add butter to the tops of course. Makes all the difference. The whole biscuit gets perfectly soft and delicious.

  • @JulesfromHouston
    @JulesfromHouston Před rokem +5

    My favorite breakfast. Hope y'all had fun with it.🧑‍🍳😎🍛

  • @seandunne6714
    @seandunne6714 Před 4 měsíci

    Finally, someone with the brains to get a set of American measuring cups and spoons. Most just use an odd coffee cup and call it a cup no matter how much it holds, in baking exact measurements count.

  • @a00141799
    @a00141799 Před rokem +2

    Carol and Recky, you are the best. Love Sweden....♥

  • @Budini67
    @Budini67 Před rokem +1

    I think you guys did well! Another thing you might not know but, particularly in the southeastern U.S., there was a lot of poverty, and this was considered an inexpensive way to feed a family a hot meal. In that same area today this is still a popular breakfast.

  • @valoriemurray2688
    @valoriemurray2688 Před 6 měsíci

    It is so wonderful seeing people from all over the world trying our comfort foods we always knew biscuits and gravy have the power to unite the world 😊❤

  • @sandybritches
    @sandybritches Před rokem +2

    Y'all just have way too much fun together. My cheeks hurt from smiling while watching this video. 😊

    • @Reckyj
      @Reckyj  Před rokem +1

      Hahaha that’s nice to hear!

  • @pamforrester844
    @pamforrester844 Před rokem +8

    This was awesome! So glad they turned out good for you, can't wait for more cooking demonstration, you did good!

  • @briangoss8062
    @briangoss8062 Před rokem +1

    I love your enthusiasm and the way you two play off each other! Fun to watch and good job!!

  • @juliemckew1728
    @juliemckew1728 Před rokem +1

    I love the amount of sausage with the gravy, toss some dry sage in next time and it really adds flavor. Loved it

  • @Nimbus1701
    @Nimbus1701 Před rokem

    This was really good..... especially for a first attempt. The more you do it, the easier it gets. A very simple trick to get a little extra rise from the biscuits is to make sure the edges touch the edges of other biscuits when you arrange them on the baking pan, prior to putting them in the oven. I learned to cook quite a few things from my grandma, and some of her best and most simple advice to me was think of whatever you are cooking as an experiment you can eat. If you like something, just practice and refine it to make it better and easier, if you don't, then you learned you didn't enjoy it, and don't have to make it again, but it still gives you experience with your knife and cutting skills, and learning short cuts to make everything you cook in the future easier. Much love from Texas!

  • @stevechilders2624
    @stevechilders2624 Před rokem +4

    Good job, kids! Especially for a first time cook making a astrange dish

  • @jasongilbert6992
    @jasongilbert6992 Před rokem +4

    That gravy looked good 😋 the biscuits on the other hand was a good try

    • @Reckyj
      @Reckyj  Před rokem

      a bit "not fluffy" but i blame the flour!

    • @sparrowflying864
      @sparrowflying864 Před rokem

      @@Reckyj make sure you're using self rising flour. It takes the guess work out of it.

  • @kimstevens7472
    @kimstevens7472 Před 10 měsíci

    A southern US grandma knows how to make the biscuits, fry the bacon, stir the gravy, fry the potatoes, whisk the frying apples, turn the eggs over easy, all at the same time without burning one thing or breaking a sweat. It's like being an octopus. lol Takes years of experience and many large families. Great job on your first try though.

  • @pgg0508
    @pgg0508 Před rokem +1

    3/4 is three quarters or .75. For biscuits, you shouldn't kneed the dough too much...a mistake we often make. Also, use a coffee cup as a biscuit cutter.

  • @robertfrye5161
    @robertfrye5161 Před 7 měsíci

    what a lot of people don't understand that outside the US, grocery stores stock to the local market and some spices common here are unheard of there. Our sausage is different from theirs. I think you did a great job considering what you had to work with. I remember in Germany the place we were staying, 7 of us, decided to do a Thanksgiving dinner. We told the owner who was a chef that we would get the turkey and got one from the American base, a Butterball. We took it to him and his eyes popped out of his head, he had never seen a turkey that size. They joined us and I taught him a cranberry sauce recipe. The next night he had friends over to try the turkey and it was entirely different. I ended up getting a few turkeys for my own use that mysteriously got stolen from his freezer. In a tiny village of 300 turkey was a big hit

  • @ittybitty304
    @ittybitty304 Před rokem +1

    You did an amazing job! Biscuits and gravy is a dish that most foreigners say sounds disgusting but one taste and they're hooked. When you come visit us in the states you will have to try the real deal....Loved this video, thanks for sharing with us!

  • @user-ge8bc6yi9p
    @user-ge8bc6yi9p Před rokem

    I am Canadian and I make biscuits all the time. They are very popular in both the US and Canada. Here is a very simple way to make them.
    2 cups of all purpose flour or bread flour
    4 tsp baking powder
    1/2 tsp salt
    4 tbsp butter (very cold butter)
    2/3 cup milk
    Set oven to 425 degrees F or 218 degrees C
    mix flour baking powder and salt together
    then work the butter into the flour with your hands until small pea sized pieces a left
    then add the milk and mix but DO NOT OVER MIX the less you work the dough the better
    just combine the ingredients now put the dough out onto the counter (a trick I use is to wipe the counter with a damp rag and then put a piece of tinfoil down and it will stick to the counter) place a bit of flour on the counter or foil and form the dough into a rectangle and knead it a few times remember do not overwork the dough then cut into squares or use a cookie cutter to cut into rounds. If using a cookie cutter do not twist the cutter when cutting the biscuits just push down and pull up (if you twist then it seals the edges and they will not rise properly)

  • @pauln6917
    @pauln6917 Před rokem

    Oh the biscuits are made with soft winter red wheat flour, White Lily brand. General purpose flour makes a tougher denser biscuit. The White Lily brand is essentially pastry flour.

  • @RedDawnRocker
    @RedDawnRocker Před rokem

    Great job guys!
    While biscuits and gravy are a southern dish, in many parts of the U.S. the sausage gravy is used to make other dishes as well. Instead of the biscuits, the gravy can be served over mashed potatoes, baked potatoes, french fries, hash brown potatoes or even scrambled eggs. I've seen combo dishes serving it on top of scrambled eggs on top of waffles and even had breakfast pizza with that gravy. The breakfast pizza is very simple as well, a pizza crust, the sausage gravy as a base, topped with scrambled eggs and cheddar cheese. Without the sausage, it's called country gravy and can be gotten with country-fried steak/chicken-fried steak or fried chicken. It's definitely a versatile gravy useul in many dishes.
    Another dish up our way is New England Boiled Dinner. It's an American take on corned beef and cabbage. You boil whole peeled potatoes, whole peeled carrots, cabbage and Smoked Pork Shoulder Butt (it's called Daisy Roll here). It's a full meal with no effort and delicious as can be.

  • @apandamandaaa
    @apandamandaaa Před rokem +3

    Biscuits and gravy is my favorite breakfast food with fried eggs and bacon 🤤 maybe some hash browns

    • @Reckyj
      @Reckyj  Před rokem +1

      omg.. now i wanna do it again and add fried eggs and bacon!!!

    • @dobermanownerforlife3902
      @dobermanownerforlife3902 Před rokem

      ​@@Reckyj have you ever heard the phrase "$hit on a shingle"?
      It's a military phrase for chipped beef gravy on toast. It's the poor man biscuits and gravy.

    • @Reckyj
      @Reckyj  Před rokem

      @@dobermanownerforlife3902 yeah! lol

  • @amandabeachlife3838
    @amandabeachlife3838 Před rokem +1

    You two did great for your first time, and I'm impressed. My grandmother's way was what I call was drop biscuits. She used a cast iron frying pan for them. Her gravy was made from many types of meat that she cooked with. From cubed stake to actual stake. Whatever meat she had that morning. Bacon and cubed gravy was my favorite. Gravy was always the hardest to get right for me. I loved that you two tried. It takes many years to get biscuits and gravy right. My 86 year old grandmother says she is still perfecting her biscuits and gravy.

  • @joshuamcdowell1460
    @joshuamcdowell1460 Před rokem

    For future reference, you cut biscuits with a good round cup. Just cut out basically at random, then you ball the leftover dough back up, roll it back out, and cut more, repeat until out of dough. That's how I was taught.

  • @Uldihaa
    @Uldihaa Před rokem

    Honestly, as someone that grew up on these biscuits, the best thing you can do is keep that butter near-frozen and shred it with a grater. The butter can't be allowed to soften at all if possible. And while it sounds odd, you need both baking powder _and_ baking soda if you want to make true Buttermilk Biscuits. Also, buttermilk. Since buttermilk is ever so slightly acidic, the baking soda will be able to boost the leavening of the baking powder; yeah, it's a bit of a pain in the butt, honestly.
    But you did a great job for your first time!
    Also, I have those EXACT measuring spoon/cup set!

  • @veronica978
    @veronica978 Před 3 měsíci

    Biscuits are hard to make from scratch.. y’all did a great job. I’m from the southern states and i hate making biscuits from scratch. Just a tip.. if you make them again you want you butter extremely cold and you milk really cold as well. I would say look up different recipes and try different ones until you find one you like. No sugar in biscuits. You also need to be sure not to mix them too much as it will make them tougher. Proper southern biscuits are light and fluffy. But you did amazing for a first try without all the same ingredients that we use. You can also put a little butter on top of the biscuits when you take them out of the oven so they won’t be as dry looking.

  • @RubyGB
    @RubyGB Před rokem

    For Easter breakfast at church 2 wks ago when the men do the cooking, my husband made 2 gallons (7.57 liters) of sausage gravy and others provided the biscuits.

  • @rhondas9684
    @rhondas9684 Před rokem +2

    Oh my goodness…I love this! I live in the USA and I’ve been to Sweden several times. I have friends that live in Stockholm and it’s one of my most favorite places to visit. You have motivated me to try to make an authentic Swedish Princess Cake, it is absolutely one of my favorite have to have things when I visit Sweden. Nothing beats Fika with princess cake, coffee and friends! Keep up the good work and I appreciate all of your hard work. Tack!!!😊

    • @Reckyj
      @Reckyj  Před rokem +1

      ohh the Princess Cake! love it!!

  • @rebeccaknight-comer509

    I have to tell you something. My little brother's couldn't say my name as Becky. They called me Recky. And it's been something my family calls me for most my life.
    Especially when I get clumsy and hurt myself. 😂 so glad to see someone else that has this name. You both make me smile.

  • @denisehaukkala9742
    @denisehaukkala9742 Před rokem +1

    Some of the best USA origin food is cajun in Louisiana. You just substitute shrimp for crayfish in recipes like etoufee, Cajun boil, or gumbo. It tends to be spicy, but we love it like that here.

  • @kaylanichols7343
    @kaylanichols7343 Před rokem +2

    Not bad at all for your first time making biscuits and gravy from scratch. Here in the South we like layers and are biscuits so we have to fold the dough and then roll it out multiple times to get the layers. We do use ground sausage in my area, but you really can't go wrong with this dish because there are so many different ways to prepare it and it mostly just depends on where you're at where you grew up as to how you prepare it.