A Traditional Appalachian Breakfast and How to Make Sausage Milk Gravy & Fried Apples

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  • čas pƙidĂĄn 4. 12. 2021
  • Come cook breakfast with me! We're having biscuits, fried apples, sausage, sausage gravy, eggs, honey, and homemade grape jelly.
    You can find the apple peeler here: amzn.to/40HHJKP (Affiliate link, no extra charge to you, but supports the channel if you decide to purchase 😀)
    Check out some of my other favorite kitchen items here: www.amazon.com/shop/celebrati...
    (Affiliate link, no extra charge to you, but supports the channel if you decide to purchase 😀)
    Here's the video I referenced about biscuits and chocolate gravy: ‱ Chocolate Gravy and Bi...
    Please subscribe to this channel and help me Celebrate Appalachia!
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    tipperpressley@gmail.com
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    Brasstown, NC 28902
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    #Appalachia #AppalachianFoodways #Gravy

Komentáƙe • 4K

  • @lochamb1234
    @lochamb1234 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +38

    I'm from the UK, I live in Northern Ireland and I am fascinated by the food you eat. Much of what you eat, we would never eat or you make combinations we would never dream of putting together. Absolutely fascinating. Watching channels like yours, have given me much inspiration on how to change up what we eat..and I've developed a love for pinto beans đŸ€Ł

    • @birddog7492
      @birddog7492 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +5

      Pinto beans are great with corn bread and butter. I live in WV and the foods you see here is authentic to our area. However, I use buttermilk to make biscuits. and just a little cooking oil in my mix. you want your doe a little dry and be careful not to over work the doe. preheat your oven to 350 degree F And cook until the tops are golden brown. Best of wishes I hope you give this a try.

    • @redfaux74
      @redfaux74 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +3

      Loch - When you have gravy and biscuits like this.... you'll NEVER be the same.
      It turns breakfast into something heavenly. It's love in a spoon. You'll tell everyone you know about it. Looks disgusting. Smells incredible. My mother's side cooked like this every morning and the smell will drag you out of bed and put you in a mood you'll have memories with.

    • @redfaux74
      @redfaux74 Pƙed 7 měsĂ­ci

      @@birddog7492 - I would like to ask you if your male or female before I get carried away with my next question. It matters. đŸ€ŁđŸ€ŁđŸ€Ł And how old of course. 😕 I just can't see marrying a 12 year old female at my age.
      Buttermilk in biscuits?!? Do you know anyone who broke this Law? 😟

    • @barbarasue7191
      @barbarasue7191 Pƙed 3 měsĂ­ci +1

      So what is different that Irish eat? The only place I've ever wanted to travel is Ireland. Can't afford though. I'm interested.

  • @princessoffire1107
    @princessoffire1107 Pƙed rokem +53

    I almost cried watching this. This is how I was raised to cook and always did until I became disabled and can't any longer. But, I made sure my son knows how ! Thank you for showing the world how and what you do. Unfortunately it's becoming a lost art, but people like you are keeping it alive.

  • @DavidShockley
    @DavidShockley Pƙed rokem +24

    This took me back to my Granny cooking breakfast every single morning that we stayed with her as children in West Virginia! To this day, I can't seem to replicate her mastery in the kitchen! She also made the best dinner rolls that I've ever had, and I've never been able to clone them. Unfortunately, the recipe was lost with her, and I can't for the life of me figure it out. As an adult, I've owned my own bakery, filmed with Food Network stars, and had our wedding cakes appear on magazine covers like PEOPLE magazine, and yet - NOTHING that I've accomplished comes close to my Grannies cooking! :)

    • @canddysaunders7178
      @canddysaunders7178 Pƙed 7 měsĂ­ci +1

      But your kids or grandkids will say the same about you if you not try to pretend or impress, just pure love and time to share with them.
      I wish you the best in your culinary business and when doubt, think what Granny will do.

    • @mslaurelms1
      @mslaurelms1 Pƙed 2 měsĂ­ci +1

      It might be Angel Biscuits that you're thinking about.

    • @DavidShockley
      @DavidShockley Pƙed 2 měsĂ­ci

      @@mslaurelms1 Angel Biscuits? Now I have to look those up! Thank you! :)

  • @oldschooljack3479
    @oldschooljack3479 Pƙed rokem +2

    Bittersweet memories. Fried apples were a staple of my grandma's Sunday dinner. Sometimes we had ham, sometimes chicken, sometimes roast beef... But fried apples were regular fare. And when it wasn't fried apples it was her sweet potatoes.
    My grandma will be gone 11 years this May. And I miss getting together for Sunday dinner with her and Grandpa. You'll never know how golden a simple Sunday meal with loved ones is until they're gone.

  • @cindypressley4285
    @cindypressley4285 Pƙed 2 lety +296

    Tipper, that is a fine breakfast, a traditional country breakfast. In years gone by the apples would have come from their own trees, the eggs came from their own chickens, the sausage would have come from slaughtering their own pigs, the honey from their own bees and the jelly homemade from their own grapes. We were a self-sufficient people. This is the way my grandmother did things. It was not an easy life, they worked very hard.

    • @oldschool3372
      @oldschool3372 Pƙed rokem +22

      Not every one has given up the old ways ,instead of honey we make sorghum molasses, even the milk and cream comes from our milk cow

    • @rosespurlock4788
      @rosespurlock4788 Pƙed rokem +27

      I had someone who was talking about living off grid, raising all food, etc, say he couldn't wait to buy his land so he could make s'mores over a wood fire everyday and not ever have to work again. I was raised in Tennessee in a two room shotgun house along with my 9 brothers and parents. I was thinking to myself, Lordy this man is in for a shock! I had bigger shoulders and muscles than most male school mates from packing water up hill every day, clearing land, howing weeds, packing wood and coal, etc. Even kids work every day. It's a must. Honestly it was all we knew so we never gave it a second thought. But yes, it is a lot of work!

    • @Thehubb1
      @Thehubb1 Pƙed rokem +3

      What century are you in

    • @kofola9145
      @kofola9145 Pƙed rokem +11

      @@Thehubb1 The past one and maybe the future one as well.

    • @Littlepaw7
      @Littlepaw7 Pƙed rokem +18

      And if you didn’t have something your neighbors did💞they bartered a lot when I was a kid. My dad would leave fruit with our neighbors and they would put up several jars of whatever jams or jellies they were putting up for us.đŸŒ»đŸ«¶đŸŒđŸ’žcommunity supporting small businesses and one another.

  • @jawheeler9719
    @jawheeler9719 Pƙed 2 lety +642

    Tipper! I just want to let you know that I’m a young lady (of 30)who lives in southeast Ohio and I’ve been watching your channel (and your daughters channel too) since this summer and boy has it been an eye opener! I’ve always grown up doing “old timey” things. My summers were filled gardening and staying suffering hot days with a grandma who refused to have anything but antenna TV or air conditioning. I’ve spent many hours at antique power shows and square dances
 I never thought it unusual until adulthood. It was then I realized few children were raised in the manner I was. Your channel has explained SO much to me the “why” behind the food, traditions and language of my family. I never thought I had a culture until you! So, a big hearty thank you for explaining , MY Heritage!

    • @larahanson7196
      @larahanson7196 Pƙed 2 lety +15

      Hello I am in southest ohio too

    • @CelebratingAppalachia
      @CelebratingAppalachia  Pƙed 2 lety +36

      We appreciate your support! So glad you're enjoying our videos 😀

    • @countycalling
      @countycalling Pƙed 2 lety +10

      I just moved to Central OH from southern Ohio.

    • @usauditresponse
      @usauditresponse Pƙed 2 lety +19

      Southern Ohio 54 year old man here. It took sometime to realize that this was my culture.
      Copied from a post Iafe earlier
      Grandma made the best breakfast. Biscuit and gravy, eggs, salt pork, fried apples

    • @strawberrychampagnechica1193
      @strawberrychampagnechica1193 Pƙed 2 lety +19

      I live watching her channel too! I grew up in Nebraska but my dads family lives in SE Ohio. I spent two weeks every summer with grandparents helping with huge gardens and eating food from cast iron skillets. Fried green tomatoes, homemade noodles, meatloaf, biscuits & Tracey, sausage, stewed tomatoes, cucumbers, eggs fried in bacon freeze, pinto beans & fried potatoes

  • @marthamorgan2815
    @marthamorgan2815 Pƙed rokem +32

    I used your recipe for sausage gravy and biscuits tonight for supper. I crumbled the sausage up in the gravy instead of doing the patties. ANDD let me tell you! The absolute best I've ever had. My husband made several compliments about it. My mama passed away a couple of years ago and there are so many recipes and things I wanted to learn to cook from her... biscuits and gravy were at the top of the list. This was a bigger deal for me. Thank you so much sweet lady! Much love from South Georgia!

    • @CelebratingAppalachia
      @CelebratingAppalachia  Pƙed rokem +6

      Wonderful!! So glad you enjoyed it. I'm so sorry you lost your sweet mama!!

  • @VTHokies1987
    @VTHokies1987 Pƙed 10 měsĂ­ci +9

    Biscuits and gravy is at the top of the list of my favorites for breakfast. My mouth got to watering just watching this and hearing the sizzle of the sausage was almost too much!

    • @redfaux74
      @redfaux74 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +2

      Same here. Floods me with memories of a lot of grandma's and aunts passed and gone.

  • @beckyoneal738
    @beckyoneal738 Pƙed 2 lety +29

    I started making breakfast gravy, biscuits, sausage and eggs when I was five years old. I will be 70 tomorrow. I love buttermilk biscuits, but I also liked the idea of her “two ingredient” biscuits, so I will try these! This young lady really knows her way around an Appalachian kitchen and cast iron skillet!!!

  • @pamelanapierrice1394
    @pamelanapierrice1394 Pƙed 2 lety +128

    Made biscuits and gravy, scrambled eggs, bacon ,and fried apples this morning for my family for breakfast in my part of Appalachia- Southern Ohio.

    • @CelebratingAppalachia
      @CelebratingAppalachia  Pƙed 2 lety +4

      That's great!

    • @horticultureandhomes
      @horticultureandhomes Pƙed 2 lety +6

      An awful lot of Appalachians wound up in OH, MI, and IN working in the auto industry back in the 50's.

    • @pamelanapierrice1394
      @pamelanapierrice1394 Pƙed 2 lety +4

      @@horticultureandhomes yes, I had family that did that. I actually live across the Ohio River from Huntington Wv and Ashland Ky. My family is from Virginia/ W. Virginia and didn't go far from there.

    • @0Hillbilly
      @0Hillbilly Pƙed 2 lety +5

      I grew up in Lavalette, now im in Wisconsin. It's German sausages here so I order mine online. I miss the hills. God Bless.

    • @pamelanapierrice1394
      @pamelanapierrice1394 Pƙed 2 lety +4

      @@0Hillbilly I understand missing the hills. I think it's in us hill folks dna. đŸ€”

  • @88bigsam
    @88bigsam Pƙed rokem +9

    I'm from south-central Kentucky and all of my family going back a ways are from the mountains. I make gravy the same way as you and learned how from my Mother was taught by her Mother. I always crumble up a sausage patty into mine. Definitely not an everyday meal. More likely dinner here and there. Love your page and all the wonderful comments its received. Nice to see our culture appreciated instead of the usual mocking and belittling that is so common place. Keep up the good work!

  • @gracelandone
    @gracelandone Pƙed rokem +36

    I’m sitting here remembering what the intermingled smells of country sausage and frying apples are like and I have to say it’s enough to make me cry. Thank you for bringing this back to me. Sometimes it’s the simplest things.

    • @tashabr801
      @tashabr801 Pƙed rokem +1

      I can smell the sausage. Yummy

    • @donia1
      @donia1 Pƙed rokem +1

      Same, it makes me miss my Gran so much

  • @attilynn3924
    @attilynn3924 Pƙed 2 lety +289

    I don’t think you get enough credit for your video-making skills. Honestly, putting together a video is really an art-from the viewing angle to the lighting and sound (whether ambient or added), to the editing and production-you’ve really got a talent for this and it is part of what has made your channel so successful. Anyone could video themselves cooking, I guess, but not just anyone could make it look so professionally done. đŸ˜ŠđŸ‘đŸ»

    • @nealgrey6485
      @nealgrey6485 Pƙed 2 lety +7

      Putting together a meal like that is a real art! What a cook!

    • @attilynn3924
      @attilynn3924 Pƙed 2 lety +11

      @@nealgrey6485 Oh, I agree! I’m just pointing out that most comments are about that fact and not about her production skills. Both are outstanding!

    • @CelebratingAppalachia
      @CelebratingAppalachia  Pƙed 2 lety +34

      I so appreciate your kind words!! Gives me real encouragement 😀

    • @Luvknots78
      @Luvknots78 Pƙed 2 lety +12

      I agree! And videos make me feel so at home. Precious memories of my childhood. I still live in the hills but, sadly so many of these traditions are being lost.

    • @constancemiller3753
      @constancemiller3753 Pƙed 2 lety +7

      I like how you talk about things that are related to the meal. If I was in the kitchen with my Aunt this is the way she would talk through her kitchen tasks.

  • @marktaylor8659
    @marktaylor8659 Pƙed 2 lety +243

    Such a wonderful breakfast. When I was growing up, my mother was a stay-at-home mom and cooked breakfast for all of us (5 kids) every morning during the week before we went to school. Usually fried eggs, bacon, and biscuits, but sometimes pancakes, french toast or maybe just oatmeal. But it was always ready when I came into the kitchen. I took it for granted that every home was the same. I was so blessed. Thank you for sharing your family tradition.

    • @CelebratingAppalachia
      @CelebratingAppalachia  Pƙed 2 lety +14

      Your mother sounds wonderful 😀

    • @DeeDee-dl7sl
      @DeeDee-dl7sl Pƙed 2 lety +5

      Mine too 😊

    • @marktaylor8659
      @marktaylor8659 Pƙed 2 lety +18

      @@CelebratingAppalachia Yes she was. She's been gone over 20 years but I can still hear and see her in my mind in the kitchen in our old house.

    • @CelebratingAppalachia
      @CelebratingAppalachia  Pƙed 2 lety +23

      @@marktaylor8659 I was just thinking of Pap this morning. It's funny how they can all the sudden pop into your mind like they're still here 😀

    • @Randoplants
      @Randoplants Pƙed 2 lety +8

      It is amazing how some folks can manage all that!

  • @heysally13
    @heysally13 Pƙed rokem +10

    I didn't realize how much I missed watching my grandmother make breakfast. She's been gone almost 30 years now. She grew up in Hendersonville and cooked just like you. Thank you for your videos.

  • @charliethompson6601
    @charliethompson6601 Pƙed rokem +4

    I'm in the foothills of Kentucky. I've been making gravy since a child. I think you were spot on. People ask for the recipe but all I can tell is the ingredients, the rest is process. Couple things to know.
    #1 Never stop stirring if the pan is hot
    #2Never add flour after milk to thicken it. That's how lumpy gravy is made. If too thin, boil it down. See #1
    #3 brown/milk gravy is made by cooking the grease/flour hot. For whiter gravy add your milk as soon as the flour melts.
    #4 you can make gravy from countless types of meat. My favorite is bacon gravy with crushed up bits. My kids love hamburger gravy. My wife perfers Chipbeef white gravy on toast or SOS for you military guys.
    #5 it's great on thick cut tomatoes if you don't make biscuits. That's for you city folks.

  • @christophermaggard9917
    @christophermaggard9917 Pƙed 2 lety +39

    My Appalachian Pippa, always gauged his breakfast by fried apples, if he had them he had a good breakfast!đŸ¶đŸ±đŸˆ

  • @edclay28551
    @edclay28551 Pƙed 2 lety +109

    Mother used to fix my breakfast just like that with the addition of fried potatoes. She has been gone now for 27 years but when I go into her kitchen, I can still smell her wonderful cooking. Oh man! I miss my little mountain mother.

    • @fightsportnews4329
      @fightsportnews4329 Pƙed 2 lety

      czcams.com/video/jfwvKv1jWII/video.html

    • @BXtremP
      @BXtremP Pƙed 2 lety +1

      May she rests in peace. Looks like you had a wonderful mother.

    • @duranniemanny5181
      @duranniemanny5181 Pƙed 2 lety +4

      Ed

country girl here. This was very similar to a Tennessee breakfast like my mother cooked but my sweet mama too made the best little fried potatoes. She diced them really small and added some onions and fried them in some bacon grease. Oh my I haven’t had food that good since I left home. My parents have both passed now but sometimes I can still smell the kitchen smells from my old homeplace. What sweet memories.

    • @fyisense9312
      @fyisense9312 Pƙed 2 lety +2

      @@duranniemanny5181 I was thinking potatoes instead of apples but apples are good. I grew up eating this but mostly with potatoes. Physical labor food. I still eat this occasionally but just for a treat as I live alone but do enjoy cooking/eating. I especially like to pound chicken filets and fry them like chicken fried steak then I freeze them and reheat in the oven and serve with biscuits and gravy and sometimes with sourdough pancakes. I probably eat that as often as sourdough pizza. I make my own bread. I just love this channel. Many of my extended family/relatives were coal miners in West Virginia.

  • @mgb5170
    @mgb5170 Pƙed rokem +26

    I love how your husband shows everyone how to plate the way he likes it!

  • @GodISSovereign17
    @GodISSovereign17 Pƙed rokem +10

    I’ll never forget the first time I tried to make gravy with pan drippings! I was newly married, and my Mamie(grandmother) had shown me how to make it when I was a teenager, so I thought it would be simple enough! I added WAY too much flour, but he said it was good even though I’m sure we could have used it for cement!! Thanks for the food memories, blessings!

  • @mrdfoutz
    @mrdfoutz Pƙed 2 lety +11

    I should never watch your cookin episodes when I'm hungry!
    Back before I lost little brother, and then Mom, I'd make a Christmas morning feast. Everyone would sleep here the night before. I'd get up early and start the coffee, cooked bacon, then sausage in the bacon grease. Then, I'd make my gravy using condensed milk initially and thin with sweet milk, adding most of the sausage halfway through, whisking non-stop except towards the end when I'd throw the frozen biscuits in the oven (usually let Mom do that though cause she didn't want me to do it all!) and fry or scramble the eggs. Some freshly-made apple butter for a bonus (we had lots of biscuits!). That was a lot of work but everyone really enjoyed it, so it was worth the labor. Others would offer to clean afterwards, so I could sit and rest, being plumb foundered! 😊 Oh to have those times again. đŸ˜„

    • @GenX...MCMLXV
      @GenX...MCMLXV Pƙed 2 lety

      frozen biscuits? don't be cursin on this page

  • @lorchid23
    @lorchid23 Pƙed 2 lety +271

    Breakfast like this is the reason that breakfast has always been and remains my favorite meal. I even like breakfast for supper.
    Tipper, you’re one heck of a cook! 💯đŸ‡șđŸ‡žâŁïž

    • @CelebratingAppalachia
      @CelebratingAppalachia  Pƙed 2 lety +10

      😀 You're so kind thank you!

    • @MysticHeather
      @MysticHeather Pƙed 2 lety +4

      Same here!! Breakfast is the best! Biscuits n sausage or chocolate gravy 😋

    • @lorchid23
      @lorchid23 Pƙed 2 lety +9

      @@gailcurl8663 - I bet you were a real riot at that one party you got invited to all those years ago. đŸ€Ł

    • @kajem575
      @kajem575 Pƙed 2 lety +2

      @@gailcurl8663 When was your last history lesson?
      đŸ™‚âœŒâ€
      🙈🙉🙊

    • @kajem575
      @kajem575 Pƙed 2 lety +1

      @@lorchid23 👍😆
      đŸ™‚âœŒâ€
      🙈🙉🙊

  • @nicotinedietcoke
    @nicotinedietcoke Pƙed rokem +2

    Your videos are so comforting to me, they always calm my stress and help me unwind. I watch when I can’t sleep. Thank you for sharing â™„ïžđŸ«¶đŸ»

  • @michellemiles9966
    @michellemiles9966 Pƙed rokem +12

    I grew up in the Ozarks and we ate very similarly. Granny always had her folgers can of bacon grease on the stove that she'd season with. Now there's so much fuss about hydrogenated oil but, bless her, Granny lived to 96. We would have fried apples on occasion but usually it was fried potatoes. And yes, mostly on the weekends. I'm in NC now and have great appreciation for the Appalachian people and their heritage. This is my first time on your channel but I enjoyed it. I will be back.

  • @okiejammer2736
    @okiejammer2736 Pƙed 2 lety +159

    Tipper, you are such a CLASS ACT! 😁 Dealing with those who are critical (the nerve!) about how you're making YOUR family biscuits, you have dignity and respect and perhaps just a wee smile too. Oh, MY. My utmost respect for you, girl. Well done. AND A GLORIOUS BREAKFAST!

  • @emeraldcollier178
    @emeraldcollier178 Pƙed 2 lety +51

    When you added that flour to the grease from the sausage I got misty eyed as it reminded me of my grandmother.. God rest her soul.. she made the BEST gravy and I remember so many days growing up and watching her cook.. it was like magic. Thank you for sharing this.

    • @maryfrancesmoore9514
      @maryfrancesmoore9514 Pƙed rokem

      I'm from Michigan and we called that kind of gravy "Grandma Gravy" and it was WONDERFUL, and I sure can't make it the way she did! Gosh, I miss her.

  • @tylerash98
    @tylerash98 Pƙed rokem +11

    This is like something my mom's family in West Virginia would make. Looks delicious

    • @juliebrooks2948
      @juliebrooks2948 Pƙed rokem +1

      Yea, you know what's good!

    • @TheLyzaj
      @TheLyzaj Pƙed rokem +1

      This totally gets the Eastern Kentucky stamp of approval as well!

  • @seshenofthenile2363
    @seshenofthenile2363 Pƙed rokem +2

    I feel that if everybody in the world could experience biscuits and gravy, we would have a much better, peaceful world.

  • @johnaeryns5364
    @johnaeryns5364 Pƙed 2 lety +181

    This is my first time seeing this channel and I absolutely love her. There is not a drop of arrogance or contempt. Just a sweet hearted good woman cooking for her family. And I will always be happy to see her in my feed.

    • @CelebratingAppalachia
      @CelebratingAppalachia  Pƙed 2 lety +17

      I appreciate the kind words thank you for watching!

    • @isaacdelfinosilva866
      @isaacdelfinosilva866 Pƙed 2 lety +4

      @@CelebratingAppalachia
      My Congratulations for You 💐
      A Special Lady 💐💐💐💐💐💐💐💐💐💐💐The Talent Great Of Your Work 💐💐💐
      The Simpátic Great 💐💐💐💐💐💐💐💐
      Y am Your Fan ,💐💐💐💐💐💐💐💐💐💐
      A Special Tank for You 💐 And
      God Bless ALL 💐 And You 💐 And Your FamĂ­ly ❀ And Yours Friends 💐

    • @Farron1960
      @Farron1960 Pƙed 2 lety +6

      She's very attractive as well

    • @HughWoo
      @HughWoo Pƙed 2 lety +7

      @@Farron1960 I’m sure her husband thinks the same


    • @lisakrieg3076
      @lisakrieg3076 Pƙed 2 lety +9

      @@CelebratingAppalachia I just found this channel as well!! WONDERFUL!!!!!

  • @usauditresponse
    @usauditresponse Pƙed 2 lety +17

    Yes please! Grandma made the best breakfast. Biscuit and gravy, eggs, salt pork, fried apples, bacon, sausage.
    I make my grandma's breakfast every Sunday, take a while but it's worth it. She made it every day, rising about 4:30 in the morning to get it started. Coupled with a cup of hot coffee I'm in heaven. My best memories of childhood is grandma up making biscuits and gravy.

  • @forgoodnesssake9161
    @forgoodnesssake9161 Pƙed rokem +97

    As an Australian I’ve always wondered what biscuits and gravy is, as they are something really different here. I hope to one day try a traditional breakfast like that.

    • @shadowtheimpure
      @shadowtheimpure Pƙed rokem +13

      Come on over to America sometime, there's a million places throughout the south that would be happy to show you a good time.

    • @RobertWilke
      @RobertWilke Pƙed rokem +8

      Yeah biscuits area whole other thing than what we have here. The closest to what we have here would be a type of scone. Even that isn’t exactly what it is.

    • @Dr.Gonzz0
      @Dr.Gonzz0 Pƙed rokem +1

      its a dish you ether love or hate

    • @glendawoodward8750
      @glendawoodward8750 Pƙed rokem +11

      My mom was from Kentucky my dad was from Australia. He had his home favorite but he loved my mom's cooking. I learned how to cook from both. They both grew up on farms. Marmite on toast and mixed up in gravy.😄

    • @samuraidoggy
      @samuraidoggy Pƙed rokem

      @@Dr.Gonzz0 Yeah, looks absolutely disgusting to me.

  • @oilofjoywithcoachtina9555
    @oilofjoywithcoachtina9555 Pƙed rokem +8

    Oh my breakfast looks sooooo good! Biscuits and gravy are a very rare treat for us. My favorite breakfast is what my family called migas. It’s fried ripped up corn tortillas with eggs scrambled into them. I eat it over refried beans and topped with salsa. So delicious and simple.

  • @GeorgeCMcRae
    @GeorgeCMcRae Pƙed 2 lety +33

    What we share as a people in this country. A big breakfast in all it variety. Why can't we get along? We share so much. Boy, that looked so good!!!!!

  • @robertbraden3889
    @robertbraden3889 Pƙed 2 lety +148

    My Mom cooked just like this, she is 90 now and still has the cast iron pans she used all her life. We were very poor when I was a kid but she could make something good out of the simplest things. Thanks for the video it took me to a good place : )

    • @bigbub5219
      @bigbub5219 Pƙed 2 lety +6

      Rite old timers could make a meal out of nothing.

    • @teresahiggs4896
      @teresahiggs4896 Pƙed 2 lety +9

      Hang on to those skillets. They are family heirlooms and valuable. If the power goes out you can cook with cast iron on a fire, , in a fireplace or on a a grill.
      And the way things are going, we might have to go back to some of the old ways .

    • @littledetailsbydarby3240
      @littledetailsbydarby3240 Pƙed 2 lety +2

      đŸ˜łđŸ€ŻđŸ€©đŸ€©đŸ€©Keep those pans if possible!!!! But if you want to sell one, I’d pay top dollar if they’re in good condition and have been properly treated đŸ€©đŸ€©

    • @emmalewis1979
      @emmalewis1979 Pƙed rokem

      My mom too ,she was from Alabama

    • @jondickinson6830
      @jondickinson6830 Pƙed rokem

      @@bigbub5219 Easier when food and rent was affordable.

  • @kathleencapehart2254
    @kathleencapehart2254 Pƙed rokem +3

    Fried apples are SO much better than hash brown potatoes with breakfast. My sister and I were the first generation in my family to make biscuits! My dad preferred toast, so my mom never made biscuits, and my grandmother (born in 1898) said as a young housewife she tried and tried to make biscuits, but they were always awful. She found a recipe for Parker House rolls on a cake of Fleischman's Yeast, and made delicious rolls the first time! So her husband and kids always had hot rolls with breakfast. It seems strange to me to be able to make yeast bread but not biscuits!

  • @sunshinestatebushcrafter3049

    My Grammy was from Southeast Kentucky, and she made wonderful biscuits and gravy. She also made apples, but she would make them in a pot, and the consistency was more like apple sauce. Add some butter to them right before eating, and they were so good.

  • @MultiVictos
    @MultiVictos Pƙed 2 lety +31

    Takes me back to my youth. My great grandmother had 17 kids. When we all visited on holidays, she, my mom and my aunts would cook everyone a big country breakfast like that. Always sounded like an orchestra of pots and pans while they cooked and when us kids would tackle the dishes afterwards.

    • @1jackvalley580
      @1jackvalley580 Pƙed rokem +3

      17 kids?!?!?!Holy MolyđŸ™đŸ™đŸ™â€ïžâ€ïžâ€ïžđŸ™

  • @ls7196
    @ls7196 Pƙed 2 lety +7

    Afternoon/Evening Miss Tipper this could make me hungry.

    • @CelebratingAppalachia
      @CelebratingAppalachia  Pƙed 2 lety +1

      😀 It just might! Hope you've had a good day 😀

    • @kellypbr7742
      @kellypbr7742 Pƙed 2 lety

      Makes you hungry! I gain weight every time I watch her cook.😂

  • @elizabethmiller9979
    @elizabethmiller9979 Pƙed rokem +2

    This is exactly how our breakfasts were at Mamaw’s house growing up in WV. I can’t eat biscuits and gravy anymore because other people can’t make it right

  • @leewilliams7152
    @leewilliams7152 Pƙed rokem +1

    I enjoyed seeing your man load his plate up, I bet he enjoyed every mouthful of your beautifully cooked breakfast. Thank you very much for sharing and for your stories of when you were growing up. It feels like my Grandma or Aunty is right here in my own kitchen telling me stories of them growing up. 🙂

  • @foreverlv311
    @foreverlv311 Pƙed 2 lety +79

    Very interesting, I'm from UK and love to see other country's staples. Appalachian people fascinate me. Food looks good and hearty just the way it should be. You remind me of my mother, she cooked and dad worked. It's a shame women today don't get to stay home and cook like this anymore. đŸ‘â€

    • @teresahiggs4896
      @teresahiggs4896 Pƙed 2 lety +14

      I’m a stay at home mom, and I enjoyed being a housewife and a mom
. It’s worked well for my family. I have such womderful memories of my daughter when she was growing up
.
      If people would get off the consumerism, buying so much new stuff, going into debt for so much stuff, maybe more families could afford to,have the woman stay home. It just seems like it’s so hard on a woman to have a full time job , be a mom and have a marriage , and then take care of the house
. Where’s any time left for herself?
      I know a family wouid need to budget , and be careful about finances but it sees such a shame and so hands on women. Maybe that’s why woman aren’t having as many babies anymore 
You just can’t do and have it all .
      And then, it’s easier to survive in the country than the city
,in the country you can have in gardens, animals for food
.and even hunt for some of your food.

    • @Sewmena918
      @Sewmena918 Pƙed 2 lety +7

      My husband and I both work, but we love to cook. He cooks most of our meals. There is always a way to cook for anyone that wishes to do so.

    • @marvinabigby5509
      @marvinabigby5509 Pƙed 2 lety +1

      We got to work all day and come home an cook.Doing alot of prep and precooking hamburger and such to make supper faster during the week

    • @meatavoreNana
      @meatavoreNana Pƙed rokem +1

      Try biscuits and gravy... I thought it would be awful but it was sooo nice.Im a Kiwi and have good old English tastes. 😋😋😋🇳🇿🇳🇿🇳🇿Just try it Mate

    • @alliekingsley7919
      @alliekingsley7919 Pƙed rokem +3

      It's a shame when a woman doesn't get to choose if she wants to stay home and cook or not (or a man, for that matter, if his wife wants to be the wage earner)! It should always be up to the couple, what they want to do.

  • @BL-tr2ug
    @BL-tr2ug Pƙed 2 lety +58

    Man, I cod listen to you all day. When I was 20 I never thought I'd think watching a woman cooking breakfast was cool. Its Cool to see how people in other countries go about their day. Thanks for the culture lesson. Keep the videos coming.

  • @chevypreps6417
    @chevypreps6417 Pƙed rokem +1

    I can tell just by listening to you and watching you cook. This breakfast is going to taste as good as it looks.

  • @jodileben694
    @jodileben694 Pƙed rokem +4

    I don't know much about Appalachian breakfasts, but this looks just like the breakfasts my mom made. She was taught how to cook from my Texan great granny.

  • @bigbearcrouse2801
    @bigbearcrouse2801 Pƙed 2 lety +37

    Ma'am, my family is from the Appalachia mountains, just a touch further north. Every video you make reminds me of my great uncles and aunts, and my great Grannie. Thank you for keeping all this alive.

  • @Furrynavel
    @Furrynavel Pƙed 2 lety +36

    I could smell that breakfast through the screen. As someone from Appalachia, this really made me crave my grandmother's cooking :)

  • @JangoDripDrop
    @JangoDripDrop Pƙed rokem +1

    This the mama everyone needs and wants.

  • @nicholo1
    @nicholo1 Pƙed rokem +28

    I loved hearing your stories of the food and the history. Thank you for sharing your regional traditions with us. I would love to go down to Appalachia some day.

  • @norffc6557
    @norffc6557 Pƙed 2 lety +47

    Apples seem like much a mainstay in Appalachian cuisine; just the same as they are in traditional English cooking and this brings me alot of joy. The sheer amount of varieties, colours, flavours and textures of Apple cultivars is amazing - and their application in pork products is legendary.
    Truly, apples are an undersung hero of the kitchen; versatile as a vegetable, seasoning and sweet dessert base. Our lives would be infinitely poorer without them.

  • @virginiamccabe3073
    @virginiamccabe3073 Pƙed 2 lety +37

    I was raised in Oklshoms and we had Cocoa and Bisquits and sausagebacon fried apples or peaches and always biscuits just like you did. I still love all that stuff today and I am 75 years old. Thanks for the walk down memory lane.

    • @leighchambers5052
      @leighchambers5052 Pƙed rokem +1

      You had fried peaches?? I have never heard of that. Interesting!

  • @1rewd133
    @1rewd133 Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci +2

    My West Virginia grandfather ate the same thing for breakfast every day most his entire life of 96 years: bowl of oats, two pieces of sausage, two slices of toast, and a cup of coffee. I'm no stranger to yours and it looks delicious.

  • @donayers5925
    @donayers5925 Pƙed rokem +1

    I grew up eating biscuits and gravy for breakfast and it's still my favorite

  • @rhondag8128
    @rhondag8128 Pƙed 2 lety +19

    My grandson and I call it “Brenner” breakfast for dinner. I loved waking up to the scent of coffee and bacon, I just knew my Dad was in there cooking us up a feast, biscuits and gravy, eggs and always fried potatoes and sliced tomatoes along with it.

  • @joeseeking3572
    @joeseeking3572 Pƙed 2 lety +8

    I'd be happy to eat that breakfast :) We too had breakfast for dinner sometimes growing up (dinner = supper in our house), but that was usually a request made to Dad. Mom was much more rules oriented, and she didn't quite approve. Truth be told, Mom was a pretty bad cook - she could stretch a dollar but hated cooking, and it showed. Dad, on the other hand worked as a cook in a restaurant as a teenager, and although his taste has always stayed fairly plain (basic) he can handle things in the kitchen, doesn't hate doing it, and the results are usually quite good. What I like best about this channel is the authenticity; it shows.

  • @debbiewells2405
    @debbiewells2405 Pƙed rokem +6

    This reminds me of my grandma from Kentucky. She made either fried apples or fried sweet potatoes for breakfast most of the time. They were both slightly carmelized from the sugar. Mine do not compare. The other grandma from Alabama made chocolate gravy for me any time I wanted it. I make it for my grandson who loves it too. I enjoy your videos so much.

    • @jeanlawson9133
      @jeanlawson9133 Pƙed 10 měsĂ­ci

      Awesome 😎 I grew up in Mill Creek Holler in Virginia and My Mother is from Alabama.... I had the best of both worlds....

  • @DavidMajorz
    @DavidMajorz Pƙed rokem +1

    Born in Rome Georgia and my mom used to make these kinds of breakfasts every Sunday morning before church.

  • @thomasgordon8963
    @thomasgordon8963 Pƙed 2 lety +9

    "I reckon it'll do" dude is served a meal fit for a king đŸ€Ž uh yum big time love the biscuits and everything in between thanks for sharing with all of us

  • @marisachambers6192
    @marisachambers6192 Pƙed 2 lety +46

    My 80 year old mamaw, makes the absolute best homemade buttermilk biscuits and she doesn't even measure anything. I've tried may times to get mine like hers but never can. This breakfast reminds me of what my mom used to make before she passed. Love it. ❀

    • @buffalogal9139
      @buffalogal9139 Pƙed 2 lety +4

      Buttermilk and lard are the best for biscuits.

    • @corrinnacorrinna5572
      @corrinnacorrinna5572 Pƙed 2 lety +3

      I always use buttermilk & Hussons Cream self rising flour & that's it. I melt bacon grease in a hot iron skillet & bake them. 😋

    • @Riskmangler
      @Riskmangler Pƙed 2 lety +12

      I think there's an unwritten rule where all mamaws agree to never measure anything. It's a way to keep the next generation on their toes.

    • @marisachambers6192
      @marisachambers6192 Pƙed 2 lety +2

      @@Riskmangler I think you are right! Lol

    • @cynthiabeckham9049
      @cynthiabeckham9049 Pƙed 2 lety +1

      Just keep at it-
      All that practice is what makes mammow’s biscuits so good.
      You’ll get there!

  • @Rayvane55
    @Rayvane55 Pƙed 7 měsĂ­ci

    For nearly 40 years I cooked these kinds of meals. My family from Eastern ky all cooked like this. My mamaw cooked on a wood cook stove, she had a dough bowl that she used to make her biscuits. I watched her for years and today i have a dough bowl and i make my biscuits and choke them off to put in my skillet. My late husband was from the mountains of Virginia and his mother was a country cook as well. This is the real soul food.

  • @afghansoffthehook542
    @afghansoffthehook542 Pƙed rokem +1

    I grew up in Indiana and that's pretty much the big breakfast that I grew up with. Always for dinner though. Like me my mom was not a morning person. She always told me how hard getting gravy just right was. But I have never had a problem with it. To me the hardest part of gravy is trying to teach somebody else how to make it. So many people want an exact recipe; I don't have one. You just gotta eyeball it. We like crumpled sausage in our gravy too. And we used to scramble the eggs cuz they're good with gravy on it too.
    Well the sun was in the army station in Hawaii and he came home every year with list of what he wanted me to make for dinner while he was home. It was always my gumbo my biscuits and gravy and my chili. Everything else varied from time to time but it's always those three.

  • @jimdeane3667
    @jimdeane3667 Pƙed 2 lety +11

    My father used to make this on Sunday mornings except for the apples, when I was growing up. It is one of my fondest memories with my father.
    Breakfast for dinner was always pancakes.

  • @robinsonstegard538
    @robinsonstegard538 Pƙed 2 lety +7

    While in my early 20s in the 80s, I learned to make sausage gravy while working at a Bob Evans restaurant. I live in Lima, which is NW Ohio. As a young child we moved there from western Pennsylvania. Mom knew how to make a big traditional breakfast, but she worked and we ate cold cereal or instant oatmeal. I am so glad I learned about country cooking. From that time on, I've learned to cook and bake with cast iron. I just love it. Having a well seasoned skillet is a treasure!

  • @montemccarty6512
    @montemccarty6512 Pƙed rokem +8

    My grandmother's biscuits and gravy with eggs sausage and bacon gave my grandpa a heart attack...and he would probably say it was worth it. She made it every day. Ready at 6:30am....every day. Nobody has came close to matching her cooking.

    • @jrpetty3331
      @jrpetty3331 Pƙed rokem

      My great-grandmother did the same how I miss those days on the farm

  • @lonnier.6431
    @lonnier.6431 Pƙed 18 dny

    theres nothing better than a breakfast like this, my grandmother cooked this, even chocolate gravy, i wish i knew how she made it, this kind of breakfast food could bring peace to the middle east.

  • @cheryllamb8831
    @cheryllamb8831 Pƙed 2 lety +5

    My mom was a stay @ home worker. She made hot breakfast everyday for dad & all the children. She also packed a brown bag lunch for all of us & sometimes would make us a sub sandwich for lunch with our fruit & cookies. I feel very fortunate. Even though I worked, I made hot breakfast for my children until in high school they asked me to stop. I love your cooking Tipper. My mom was raised in Georgia so a lot of the same food. 🙂

  • @annalorree
    @annalorree Pƙed 2 lety +9

    The color of the egg yolks proves they’re home grown, and oh my goodness, this video has made me hungry! I’ve not had fried apples before, so I’ll have to make that one of these days.

  • @doublejfarmshomestead4501
    @doublejfarmshomestead4501 Pƙed rokem +10

    It’s so good to see folks cook like we do. Your channel is such a blessing!

  • @judymccord871
    @judymccord871 Pƙed rokem +4

    I so agree with having a big breakfast. We also love breakfast for supper! I was raised in Kentucky and are familiar with your delicious cooking! Thank you for sharing all your recipes!

  • @neomage2021
    @neomage2021 Pƙed 2 lety +6

    This is the kind of breakfast my grandmother would always cook when we were at the farm.

  • @kathycox7392
    @kathycox7392 Pƙed 2 lety +8

    When I was a young girl and we were all gather at my grandmothers house in middle Tennessee for the holidays my grandmother would spend at least an hour and a half or two hours fixing the most amazing breakfast fried squirrel, biscuits and gravy fried sweet potatoes fried apples jams and jellies of all kinds those breakfast were amazing. Oh how I miss those people and those places they are all gone, but I still have the most wonderful memories of my southern heritage. I wouldn’t trade it for anything in the world.

  • @TheWynch
    @TheWynch Pƙed rokem +1

    My granny got up at 4 o'clock every morning and made that breakfast, she usually had about 8 things on the table. We weren't rich, she just raised her own food and made enough food to last through lunch. She usually came in about 3 and fired up the wood stove and started on supper. And you are darn right, those were some hard working people and some tough women. I don't think we modern women could touch them.

  • @Thehubb1
    @Thehubb1 Pƙed rokem

    There’s something very soothing about the way she talks

  • @dianaobrien2589
    @dianaobrien2589 Pƙed 2 lety +36

    I'm Australian and I can see the breakfast similarities..the sausage the eggs the biscuits, we call them scones and the gravy..
    Looked delicious.
    The Apple with the pork sausage is a winner.

  • @PROUDCANADIANGIRL
    @PROUDCANADIANGIRL Pƙed 2 lety +52

    This was pure comfort. I’m
    Not from anywhere near Appalachia but my grandma and mom cooked like this every weekend here in Ontario 🇹🇩
 the only difference is they added maple syrup to everything ( ha so Canadian)
    LOVED THIS!!!!!! Thank you for a walk down memory lane

  • @timmaggard8862
    @timmaggard8862 Pƙed rokem +1

    I've cooked this hundreds of times for my family.. SOO good!! Thanks!

  • @billyjohnson4092
    @billyjohnson4092 Pƙed rokem

    Yep, that's it. This was breakfast every Sunday morning at my Grandparents house. I'm 62 years old now and miss those days in West Texas.

  • @knobbynah
    @knobbynah Pƙed 2 lety +11

    My grandmother was from western Kentucky and this video is EXACTLY like her Sunday breakfasts. I know how that room smells and I would give anything to have her food again.

    • @Krupertful
      @Krupertful Pƙed 2 lety +1

      Funny, I was thinking the same thing. Fulton county, KY and this reminds me way too much of growing up there.

  • @julieseifert7314
    @julieseifert7314 Pƙed 2 lety +18

    When I was growing up in Southern Ohio everyone made this. I absolutely love biscuits but prefer mine with jam. On a week day I like to eat soup for breakfast. It's weird I know but it's warm and a complete filling meal.

    • @williamcurry4868
      @williamcurry4868 Pƙed 2 lety +1

      Living down in the NC mountains, we’d make our biscuits in the morning and I would always eat them by sopping up butter with Karo syrup, though my sugar problem is meaning that I can’t really eat like that anymore. Darn it.

  • @JustAThought155
    @JustAThought155 Pƙed rokem +4

    Wow! That looks AMAZING!!! Biscuits and Gravy, eggs, and fried apples alone got me??? Yessss Lord! I’m coming over!!!❀

  • @kimcool6327
    @kimcool6327 Pƙed rokem +1

    Breakfasts for supper is this girl's favorite.

    • @BigDaddy-vr2ut
      @BigDaddy-vr2ut Pƙed rokem

      I had breakfast for dinner last night đŸ€€

  • @patsytunnell2165
    @patsytunnell2165 Pƙed 2 lety +86

    There's actually a formula for perfect gravy: For each cup of milk, use 1T flour for thin gravy, 2 T flour for medium gravy and 3 T flour for thick gravy; use same amount drippings ĂĄs flour. This will never fail. Keep in mind as you cook the flour in the grease, the darker it gets, the less it will thicken the gravy. Flour only needs to cook about two minutes to cook off the raw taste.

    • @hesabutton6899
      @hesabutton6899 Pƙed 2 lety +16

      Well, I'm sure that works, but Mammaw didn't measure, so I don't either 😉

    • @corrinnacorrinna5572
      @corrinnacorrinna5572 Pƙed 2 lety +4

      Good to know. Thanks 😊

    • @maryannspencer7623
      @maryannspencer7623 Pƙed 2 lety +4

      Gravy can be made just as easy using corn starch, then everyone can have it including those with gluten intolerance.

    • @RottenInDenmarkOrginal
      @RottenInDenmarkOrginal Pƙed 2 lety +9

      @@maryannspencer7623 Yes, but it doesn't taste the same though.

    • @joedoe842
      @joedoe842 Pƙed 2 lety +5

      One ton of flour is a lot for each cup of milk lol

  • @lindagross8112
    @lindagross8112 Pƙed 2 lety +20

    I learned to cook exactly like you do. My mother's grandfather was from Kentucky via N.C. and so many ways were passed down to my mother from her mother and daddy. I had to laugh when you were making gravy, mine looks exactly like yours. It is just one of those things you grow up making and don't realize other people don't. I really enjoy your videos, keep them coming. Thanks.

  • @flexmasterson4297
    @flexmasterson4297 Pƙed rokem +3

    Granny was not a baker, except for baking lots of country hams. But she made the best milk gravy that we would pour over white bread that we tore up and piled high on the plate. One my absolute favorites, like last meal favorites. Thanks for ringing back those good memories cooking for us.

  • @Catloudan
    @Catloudan Pƙed rokem +1

    That looks delicious! My doctor 100% wouldn’t want me eating it except for the eggs, lol. But definitely a wonderful, tasty once in a while meal!

  • @joaniereed8272
    @joaniereed8272 Pƙed 2 lety +8

    Reminds me of my own grandma who passed lots of years ago. Put me on a step-stool to watch as a very small child. She eyeballed all her Biscuit ingredients w the palm of her hand. 💗

  • @snidelywhiplash6391
    @snidelywhiplash6391 Pƙed 2 lety +19

    I remember eating breakfast at my grandparents in southeastern Kentucky. They would remove the cooked sausage that was preserved in a canned glass jar in grease and heat it up. I've never eaten anything else like it.

    • @osmadchlo
      @osmadchlo Pƙed 2 lety +3

      That makes the best sawmill gravy!

    • @CelebratingAppalachia
      @CelebratingAppalachia  Pƙed 2 lety +6

      We made our own sausage one time and canned it like that. You are so right-it was the best 😀

    • @JC-xh9mp
      @JC-xh9mp Pƙed 2 lety +2

      My family still cans sausage in jars. It’s delicious.

  • @scottperine8027
    @scottperine8027 Pƙed rokem +6

    This takes me back to my early days when I was in Knoxville and I was introduced to cat head biscuits along with the most sublime sausage gravy that became my right of passage into the glorious gift of southern cooking,you would make Edna Lewis very proud.

  • @williamlackey123
    @williamlackey123 Pƙed rokem +9

    This breakfast reminds me of my grandmothers breakfast in West Virginia. She taught Homeeconomics and she knew how to do EVERYTHING. Everything she cooked was just delicious!

    • @suzybailey-koubti8342
      @suzybailey-koubti8342 Pƙed rokem

      Where did you grow up âŹ†ïž n WV, William? I grew up in Logan County, WV. ❀

    • @williamlackey123
      @williamlackey123 Pƙed rokem

      @@suzybailey-koubti8342 My dad and his parents were from McDowell County and later moved to Mercer county. Not far from you!!!

  • @ChrsGuit
    @ChrsGuit Pƙed 2 lety +7

    My grandmother made Chocolate gravy when we were kids... I haven't heard someone mention it in a LONG LONG TIME.
    My grandpa is still alive at 81, and still fixes breakfast every year on Christmas day.
    Bacon, Country Ham, Sausage, gravy, eggs, biscuits...
    Before my grandma passed, I'd always try to bring her some things I'd cooked, since she no longer could, and she got a big kick out of it... I'm the only grandkid out of 10 who can actually cook a meal, and thankfully our newborn son will be able to learn and pass down the things I learned from my grandparents

  • @orlandovelezgarcia
    @orlandovelezgarcia Pƙed 2 lety +5

    I really like the way you cook. Your kitchen is warm and inviting. It just feels familiar. It’s one of those kitchens that always smells delicious, even when there’s nothing in the oven.

  • @kevinlamartina8208
    @kevinlamartina8208 Pƙed 10 měsĂ­ci +1

    Your children will have suck wonderful memories of the meals and family time you had together. What a Blessing! 👍🙏😊😘

  • @teresafincher3413
    @teresafincher3413 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci

    I was taught to roll my biscuits by hand. I've tried rolling them out on the counter and cut them, lordy they was some hard biscuits.
    I am a southern born and bred woman who is thankful for her heritage.

  • @chucksix6231
    @chucksix6231 Pƙed 2 lety +15

    Wow❗Takes me back in time 60 years. The only other thing I would add would be fried potatoes , and a pinch of cinnamon to the fried apples. My mom was the best cook in whole world, and second best ain't bad at all. Sure made me hungry. đŸ€ŁđŸ‘ PS. Can't remember how she made her chocolate gravy, but it sure was good. We were from southeastern part of Kentucky .

  • @missmollyc
    @missmollyc Pƙed 2 lety +19

    Fried apples were always my favorite snack after getting home from school. This brought back a lot of nostalgia. ❀

  • @christinaday813
    @christinaday813 Pƙed rokem +1

    I'm from northern Indiana, and the first time I heard of fried apples was from my late husband. He grew up in Knoxville and Union County Tennessee. He described how they looked and tasted, and some of how they where made. So I made them, he thought they tasted great. Now everytime I watch your videos, it takes me back to our visits to his childhood home.

  • @suzybailey-koubti8342
    @suzybailey-koubti8342 Pƙed rokem

    Watching this again, Tipper, and I cried. I miss my mommy’s breakfasts that were just like yours, except daddy liked fried apples for supper. Mommy went to heaven in 2019 at 88 after suffering from Alzheimer’s for 3 years. Precious memories! ❀

  • @jerryrolen9639
    @jerryrolen9639 Pƙed 2 lety +12

    Also, my family raised hogs and we made our own sausage. Washtubs full. I remember it was a bit hot for me but liked it. Grandpa and grandma raised red peppers and sage,they dried it and ground it and that went into the sausage mix. Fried it and canned it. Delish!

  • @bethroberts674
    @bethroberts674 Pƙed 2 lety +4

    You are so blessed to live this life and to have your wonderful memories from your childhood. You brought me to tears with saying you eat an apple a day. My beloved father did too, he lived to be 86, my mother 89. My daddy loved his apples. 🍎 Thank you so much for sharing part of your life with us.

  • @J_LOVES_ME
    @J_LOVES_ME Pƙed rokem

    When I was a kid, once a month we used to drive 4 hours to visit my grandparents for the weekend. And my grandma used to make these big breakfasts with sausage, bacon, fried eggs and biscuits & gravy (with bacon grease). We only got that at her house, and to this day we still refer to it as a "grandma breakfast." 💝

  • @patmelton43
    @patmelton43 Pƙed 2 lety +24

    This is what my mom fixed nearly every day. She also made what I call tomato gravy. Open a can of stewed tomatoes and thicken with bacon grease and cornstarch. Delicious. Also, I love fried apples and biscuits. Takes me back.

    • @randymiller3949
      @randymiller3949 Pƙed 2 lety +1

      Ms.Pat I live in Satsuma Alabama...about 20 miles north of Mobile Alabama...my WONDERFUL MOM just brought me a pan of thick tomato gravy with chunks of tomatoes & 4 big cat head biscuits last week...MY MOM IS 75 YRS OLD, STILL LOVES TO BAKE ANY DESSERT, STILL LOVES TO COOK A COUNTRY DINNER, STILL KEEPS THE ROADS HOT WITH 4 OF HER CLOSE FRIENDS & IS STILL ABSOLUTELY AMAZING & AWESOME!!!

    • @patmelton43
      @patmelton43 Pƙed 2 lety +2

      @@randymiller3949 OH, wow! I'm older than your mom. I'm 78, but I still love down-home cooking.

    • @YT-BenG
      @YT-BenG Pƙed 2 lety +2

      Tomato gravy pulled apart bread fried taters an liver wurst was a regular meal for us .my mouth waters at the thought