My first introduction to
Country Fried Steak, also called Chicken Fried Steak, was back in the 1980's. A new restaurant had opened up in Farmingdale,
New York which served "Southern" food; after all these years, I don't
remember the name of it. It was a thin
piece of steak which had been beaten into tenderized submission; deep fried
with bread coating, served with white gravy, mashed potatoes and corn. Personally, I thought the white gravy was
pretty bland, so when I started to experiment with making this dish on my own,
you know I was intent on jazzing it up.
Then there was another way I learned watching
one of Paula Deen's many shows on Food Network; prepare the meat the same way,
but finish cooking it off in rich, brown gravy packed with onions. I love variety in preparing food, so knowing
there were different types of Country Fried Steak was a boon for me. Oh, the term "Chicken Fried Steak"
just refers to the method of cooking the thin steak the same way you would a
chicken cutlet.
Lets talk gravy. Now while the typical gravy
you might see in restaurants or even make yourself is the white gravy, or the
pepper gravy; I jazz it up with some browned, ground sausage. A mildly seasoned, loose breakfast sausage
works great.
Black Pepper Sausage Gravy
Ingredients:
1/4 cup mildly seasoned ground sausage
1/2 cup flour
4 cups half n' half
2 Tbsp cracked black peppercorns
pinch of salt
Preparation:
In a large saucepan, brown the sausage making sure to break up the meat into tiny pieces. Stir in the flour thoroughly and cook until golden brown. Gradually stir in the half n' half, whisking constantly until thickened. Stir in cracked peppercorns and pinch of salt. Pour over steaks and serve.
This will make enough to cover six Country Fried Steaks, and with excess to spoon over mashed potatoes if desired.
Black Pepper Sausage Gravy
Ingredients:
1/4 cup mildly seasoned ground sausage
1/2 cup flour
4 cups half n' half
2 Tbsp cracked black peppercorns
pinch of salt
Preparation:
In a large saucepan, brown the sausage making sure to break up the meat into tiny pieces. Stir in the flour thoroughly and cook until golden brown. Gradually stir in the half n' half, whisking constantly until thickened. Stir in cracked peppercorns and pinch of salt. Pour over steaks and serve.
This will make enough to cover six Country Fried Steaks, and with excess to spoon over mashed potatoes if desired.
The next gravy is called "Onion Red Gravy"; I use regular white or yellow onions, but instead of a brown only gravy, I make it sing with a little tomato sauce.
Onion Red Gravy
Ingredients:
3 Tbsp oil (oil from the skillet the steaks were browned in)
1 large onion cut into 1/4 inch slivers
3 Tbsp flour
1 (8 oz) can tomato sauce
1 (14.5 oz) can beef broth
1 tsp ground black pepper
1 tsp minced garlic
Preparation:
This will be enough to simmer 6 Country Fried Steaks in.
Mary Cokenour