If you are in the kitchen while a skilled
chef is at work, be sure and take good notes.
My mom made the best cornbread sauce ever.
I was patting a pan of her wet and delicious clothes against the clothes made
by the country's best chefs, and I know without a doubt that Mama's recipe will
come out the winner. Mama carefully planned the culinary holiday a military
exercise; She made a detailed list of dishes to prepare, bought her groceries
weeks in advance, calculated how long it would take for the turkey to thaw, and
put the frozen bird in the fridge not a day early or too late. Most importantly,
she cooked the cornbread for seasoning a day or two in advance, so she will
have time to dry, which is an important ingredient in making high-quality
cornbread sauce.
The one thing Mama didn't do? She did not
write her recipe. Like many talented home chefs, my mom cooked from memory,
smell, taste, and touch, and even though I spent many vacations by her side in
the kitchen, talking through the recipe while preparing it, I never wrote it. I
recently ran through Southern Living's recipe for South Cornbread Dressing and
I think it's as close to Mama as anything I've been able to bake.
Food memories can take you back to another
place and time. A few weeks ago, I smelled baked cornbread in Southern Living
Test kitchens and was immediately taken to Mama's kitchen. This version uses
the same ingredients as Mama used - eggs, onions, celery, herbs, and even
breadcrumbs (she usually uses leftover biscuits or two). The method and
ingredients for this recipe are just like Mama's, so the texture and taste are
the same ... well, approx.
This recipe is similar to Mama not only in
terms of flavor and texture but in terms of quantity - it makes a lot. We have
a large family that has grown bigger over the years with the addition of
in-laws, grandchildren and great-grandchildren. Mama finally turns to baking a
double recipe of cornbread sauce on a large blue-splashed toasting tray. You
don't have to use a toasting pan for this recipe, but you will need a 13 '' by
9 '' baking dish and an 8 '' square baking plate. Bake both if you have a
holiday crowd, otherwise bake one and freeze one for another meal.
Everyone has the memory of a favorite dish
that reminds them of home. If you're in the kitchen this season while making
this recipe, take a pen and paper and jot down the recipe.
* Ingredients :
° 2 cups onions ( chop )
° 2 cups celery, (chop)
° 1/2 c butter ...
° 4 cups finely crumbled toast (I do not
use biscuits, too gum, knit 10)
° 4 cups cornbread finely crumbled
° 1 tablespoon salt
° 2 teaspoons freshly ground black pepper
° 1 tablespoon dried sage
° 2 teaspoons of poultry seasoning
° Turkey broth
° 4 large eggs, beaten
* How to make it :
Melt the butter in a frying pan. Add onion
and celery and saute until soft.
Mic toast & cornbread in a bowl and
blend .
Adding onion also celery, in to cooking
liquid, salt, pepper, sage also poultry seasoning, and blend well.
employ an onion broom, add enough turkey
gizzard broth to make a very moist mix, then stirring eggs and scrape sauce to
a greased skillet .
Baking in a 400 ° F oven To sauce is well
cooked, about 31-41 min
Enjoy !