Here’s a comprehensive, big recipe for Biscuits and Sausage Gravy — including everything you requested.
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Introduction
Biscuits and sausage gravy is a iconic Southern American breakfast dish, beloved for its creamy, peppery sausage gravy ladled over warm, flaky buttermilk biscuits. It’s comfort food at its finest: rich, hearty, and deeply satisfying. Perfect for lazy weekend mornings, holiday brunches, or anytime you need a soul-warming meal.
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Ingredients
For the Biscuits:
· 2 cups all-purpose flour
· 1 tablespoon baking powder
· 1 teaspoon salt
· ½ cup cold butter, cubed
· ¾ cup milk (whole or buttermilk preferred)
For the Sausage Gravy:
· 1 lb ground breakfast sausage (sage or mild)
· ¼ cup all-purpose flour
· 2 cups whole milk
· ½ teaspoon black pepper (plus more to taste)
· ¼ teaspoon salt (adjust to taste)
· Optional: pinch of cayenne or red pepper flakes
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Instructions
Make the Biscuits:
1. Preheat oven to 450°F (230°C).
2. In a large bowl, whisk flour, baking powder, and salt.
3. Cut in cold butter using a pastry blender or fingers until mixture looks like coarse crumbs.
4. Add milk, stir just until combined (don’t overmix).
5. Turn dough onto floured surface, gently knead 3-4 times. Pat into ½-inch thick rectangle.
6. Fold in thirds (like a letter), pat down again to ½ inch. Repeat once for layers.
7. Cut with biscuit cutter (or glass). Place on baking sheet, sides touching.
8. Bake 10-12 minutes until golden.
Make the Gravy:
1. In a skillet over medium heat, cook sausage until browned and crumbly (8-10 minutes).
2. Sprinkle flour over sausage, stir constantly for 2 minutes.
3. Slowly pour in milk, stirring continuously.
4. Add pepper and salt. Simmer until thickened (5-7 minutes).
5. Taste and adjust seasoning.
Assemble:
Split biscuits in half, place on plate, smother with gravy. Serve hot.
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Methods & Techniques
· Cold butter method ensures flaky biscuits – never use softened butter.
· Folding technique creates distinct layers without rolling.
· Gravy roux – cook flour in sausage fat before adding milk to avoid raw flour taste.
· Low and slow for gravy prevents scorching.
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History
Biscuits and gravy traces back to the late 1700s in the Southern United States. It became a staple among working-class families and loggers because it used cheap, available ingredients (flour, lard, milk, sausage trimmings). The dish grew in popularity during the Civil War and has remained a Southern breakfast icon.
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Benefits
· High energy – perfect for active mornings (carbs + protein + fat).
· Iron and B12 from sausage.
· Calcium from milk.
· Mood-boosting comfort food – reduces cortisol.
· Customizable – lower fat with turkey sausage and skim milk.
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Formation (Dish Structure)
The dish forms in two distinct parts:
1. Biscuit – flour, butter, milk → layered dough → golden crust with tender crumb.
2. Gravy – sausage fat + flour (roux) + milk → creamy, peppery sauce clinging to sausage crumbles.
Together, they form a base + topping structure where the biscuit absorbs but doesn’t become soggy.
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Nutrition (per serving, approx.)
Nutrient Amount
Calories 580-650
Protein 22g
Fat 36g
Carbs 42g
Fiber 1g
Sodium 1200mg
(Values vary based on sausage type and milk fat content.)
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Lovers
This dish is beloved by:
· Southerners – as cultural heritage food
· Brunch crowds – hearty and photogenic
· Campers & hunters – easy to make over a campfire
· Chefs who elevate it with gourmet sausages or herb biscuits
· Anyone seeking true comfort on a plate
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Conclusion
Biscuits and sausage gravy is more than breakfast – it’s a warm hug in a bowl. Whether you stick to tradition or add your own twist, this dish delivers flavor, history, and satisfaction. Make it once, and it’ll become a requested favorite.
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Enjoy your homemade Southern classic! 🧡