8/31/21

Homemade Chicken & Dumplings (Drop or Rolled)

An old-fashioned recipe for tender stewed chicken in a rich stock with soft dropped dumplings or use the same recipe for rolled and cut dumplings – whichever you prefer! 

JUMP TO RECIPE

I don’t lose many fights in the kitchen. It’s my domain. I rule there. I am the queen.

And I kinda rule like Cersei. We do it my way or I’ll burn everything to the ground. 

But I lost a recent battle. The Battle of the Dumplings. There was a mutiny. Or a boycott, depending on how you look at it.

My whole family. Every last stinking one of them prefers doughy drop dumplings over the rolled noodle-style dumplings I grew up eating and love most. I make them both ways because I know what they like but, ummm… I’M the one doing the cooking soooo… I make them the way I like too.

Homemade Chicken & Dumplings (Drop or Rolled) - An old-fashioned recipe for tender stewed chicken in a rich stock with soft dropped dumplings or use the same recipe for rolled and cut dumplings – whichever you prefer!

The last time I made Chicken & Dumplings I told them I was making them my way. Evidently they rallied their bannermen and united their kingdoms because I was officially informed (by the one who drew the short straw while the others hid in the living room) that they weren’t eating supper if I didn’t make drop dumplings. 

Dang it. I might be a powerful force of a woman - especially in my kitchen - but more than anything, I love to feed people. And I especially love to feed my family. And they know it too. The slick devils.

Well, I like drop dumplings too so FINE. 

Homemade Chicken & Dumplings (Drop or Rolled) - An old-fashioned recipe for tender stewed chicken in a rich stock with soft dropped dumplings or use the same recipe for rolled and cut dumplings – whichever you prefer!

I think we all like what we grew up with best. I literally didn’t know there was any other sort of dumplings than the kind Nanny made until I was grown and saw them in a magazine and was like: {snort} That ain’t chicken and dumplins!

I make both types of dumplings using the same recipe but Nanny actually made her rolled dumplings using flour and eggs. I’ve tried and tried to make them that way and the texture is never right so I either use this recipe or I use the stash of leftover biscuit trimmings I keep in the freezer.

You can use this very same recipe to make whichever type of dumplings you like best:

  • Drop Dumplings: scoop portions of dough with two teaspoons or use a cookie scoop (I used a 1” cookie scoop in the ones pictured here) then drop into gently boiling broth.
  • Rolled Dumplings: Turn dough out onto lightly floured surface then sprinkle with more flour. Roll into desired thickness (anticipate they will at least double in thickness when cooked). Cut into squares or rectangles (however your granny did it) then drop into gently boiling broth.
Homemade Chicken & Dumplings (Drop or Rolled) - An old-fashioned recipe for tender stewed chicken in a rich stock with soft dropped dumplings or use the same recipe for rolled and cut dumplings – whichever you prefer!

HOW TO MAKE THE BEST CHICKEN & DUMPLINGS

1 - The secret to tender, flavorful chicken and delicious stock is to slowly bring everything to temperature and to never allow it to reach a full, rolling boil. You want it to cook low and slow the entire time. If time allows, the chicken and stock will be EVEN BETTER if you can cook the chicken from start to finish over low heat then allow everything to cool to room temperature in the pot after it’s cooked. TIP: Cook the chicken in the crock pot during the day (low for 6-8 hours or high for 4-6) then finish everything on the stove for an easy weeknight meal. 

2 - Don't use boneless, skinless chicken breasts. Bone-in, skin-on chicken pieces can be substituted for the whole chicken in this recipe. If you simply must use boneless breasts anyway, omit the water and broth then use 8 cups chicken stock instead and add a stick of butter. Or consider adding 6 chicken legs or wings to flavor the stock.

Homemade Chicken & Dumplings (Drop or Rolled) - An old-fashioned recipe for tender stewed chicken in a rich stock with soft dropped dumplings or use the same recipe for rolled and cut dumplings – whichever you prefer!

3 - For thinner, more noodle-like dumplings (some folks call them “slicks”), make the dumplings before you start the rest of the recipe then let them dry out for several hours (all day is fine) and roll them very thin (obviously). It may take a little longer to cook them when the time comes and you’ll likely need to gently stir them a bit to keep them from sticking to each other.

4 - If you don’t love the idea of the finely chopped vegetables (or know your grandmama didn’t make it that way and want to keep it simple), feel free to just rough-chop a few carrots, stalks of celery, several cloves of garlic and an onion then throw them in the pot when the chicken cooks. That way your stock will still get all the flavor. If you decide to do it this way, still melt the butter then cook the flour for 5 minutes over medium heat. This just makes a little roux to thicken the stock a bit.  You’ll see a lot of recipes that call for a can of Cream of Something soup – this is the homemade equivalent to that.

5 - For an especially Southern spin on Chicken & Dumplings, add several sliced boiled eggs after adding the dumplings. My grandparent’s generation added boiled eggs to all sorts of dishes and I always loved it! I imagine it was a way to add protein to meals during lean times. 

Recipe for Homemade Chicken and Dumplings (Drop or Rolled)

Homemade Chicken & Dumplings (Drop or Rolled) - An old-fashioned recipe for tender stewed chicken in a rich stock with soft dropped dumplings or use the same recipe for rolled and cut dumplings – whichever you prefer!

Homemade Chicken & Dumplings (Drop or Rolled)

Homemade Chicken & Dumplings (Drop or Rolled)
Yield: 8 Servings
Author: Mandy Rivers | South Your Mouth
Prep time: 15 MinCook time: 2 H & 30 MTotal time: 2 H & 45 M
An old-fashioned recipe for tender stewed chicken in a rich stock with soft dropped dumplings or use the same recipe for rolled and cut dumplings – whichever you prefer!

Ingredients

Chicken & Stock:
  • 1 whole chicken
  • 4 cups chicken broth
  • 4 cups water
  • 2 teaspoons salt
  • 1 teaspoon pepper
  • 1 teaspoon garlic powder
  • 1 bay leaf (optional)
  • 1/2 cup butter
  • 1 cup finely diced celery
  • 1 cup finely diced carrots
  • 1 medium onion, diced
  • 1/2 cup flour
Dumplings:
  • 1 1/8 cups milk*
  • 6 tablespoons butter, melted
  • 3 cups all-purpose flour
  • 2 tablespoons baking powder
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 1/4 teaspoon pepper
  • 1/4 teaspoon dried thyme

Instructions

Cook Chicken & Prepare Stock:
  1. Add chicken, broth, water, salt, pepper, garlic powder and bay leaf to a wide stock pot or dutch oven. Cover then bring to a slow simmer over medium heat. Once broth is bubbling, reduce heat to low then cook, covered, for 2-3 hours, or until legs and thighs are pulling apart from the body and the chicken is very tender. See notes.
  2. Remove chicken from broth; set aside. Strain broth into a large bowl or pitcher, discarding bay leaf and loose bones or skin; set broth aside.
  3. Melt butter in the (now empty) pot then cook celery, carrots and onion over medium heat for 10 minutes. Add flour, stir well, then continue cooking for 5 minutes.
  4. Slowly stir reserved broth in with vegetables. Continue stirring until completely smooth. Reduce heat to low and cover.
  5. Remove skin and bones from chicken then shred or cut chicken into bite-sized pieces.
  6. Prepare dumplings.
  7. Heat pot with broth over medium-high heat until it starts to boil. Add chicken. Gently drop dumplings, one at a time, into gently boiling broth. Take care to drop dumplings away from other freshly dropped dumplings as they will stick to each other before they have a chance to cook.
  8. Once all of the dumplings are in the pot, sprinkle with additional pepper then cover pot. Reduce heat to low then allow to cook for 10 minutes or until dumplings are cooked through.
  9. Serve immediately.
Prepare the Dumplings:
  1. Place milk in a wide, shallow bowl in the freezer for about 10 minutes to chill. This will help to separate the melted butter when we pour it in so that our dumplings are very much like actual biscuits without the fuss of actually making biscuits.
  2. Melt the butter then set aside.
  3. Combine flour, baking powder, salt, pepper and thyme in a mixing bowl then whisk to combine; set aside.
  4. Slowly drizzle melted butter into chilled milk, stirring with a fork until combined. The mixture should look like curdled milk or cottage cheese.
  5. Add milk mixture to flour mixture then stir with a spoon or rubber spatula until just combined.
  6. If making Drop Dumplings: scoop portions of dough with two teaspoons or use a cookie scoop (I use a 1” cookie scoop) then drop into gently boiling broth.
  7. If making Rolled Dumplings: turn dough out onto lightly floured surface then sprinkle with more flour. Roll into desired thickness (anticipate they will double in thickness when cooked). Cut into squares or rectangles (however your granny did it) then drop into gently boiling broth.

Notes

  • 1/8 cup of milk is 2 tablespoons.
  • You can absolutely cook the chicken faster than the directions but the secret to tender, flavorful chicken and delicious stock is to slowly bring everything to temperature and to never allow it to reach a full, rolling boil. If you have the time, the BEST way is to cook the chicken the entire time over low heat.
  • Bone-in, skin-on chicken breasts or thighs can be substituted but I don’t recommend boneless, skinless chicken. If you simply must use them anyway, omit the water and broth then use 8 cups chicken stock instead and add a stick of butter.
  • If you don’t love the idea of the finely chopped vegetables, feel free to just rough-chop a few carrots, stalks of celery and an onion then throw them in the pot when the chicken cooks. If you decide to do it this way, still cook the butter and flour for 5 minutes over medium heat. This just makes a little roux to thicken the stock a bit. You’ll see a lot of recipes that call for a can of Cream of Something soup – this is the homemade equivalent to that.
  • For an especially Southern spin on Chicken & Dumplings, add several sliced boiled eggs after adding the dumplings. 
  • Recipe updated from 2 to 4 cups water 8/13/22. The dumplings soak up so much of the liquid as they set, it's best to make sure you have enough.
chicken &, chicken and, dumplings, dumplins, drop, dropped, doughy, rolled, cut, noodle, slick, slicks, pastry, old fashioned, homemade, from scratch, easy, simple, best, how to, southern, boiled eggs
main dishes, dinner, potluck
southern, american
Keep up with my latest shenanigans by following South Your Mouth!


8/27/21

Pineapple Upside Down Bundt Cake - Weekend Potluck 494

A virtual recipe swap with dozens of new recipes from some of the TOP recipe creators online and on Pinterest!

Take a look at these amazing recipes featured from last week's Weekend Potluck (recipe links listed with full photos just below), then scroll down to see all the NEW recipes this week!

Here are our featured recipes from last week:

  • Crock Pot Mississippi Whole Roasted Chicken
  • Crab Rangoon Dip
  • Pineapple Upside Down Bundt Cake
  • Caramel Apple Funnel Cakes
A virtual recipe swap with Crock Pot Mississippi Whole Roasted Chicken, Crab Rangoon Dip, Pineapple Upside Down Bundt Cake, Caramel Apple Funnel Cakes and dozens more!

The recipe with the most clicks was...

Pineapple Upside Down Bundt Cake
Pineapple Upside Down Bundt Cake by Mommy’s Kitchen

Recipes that caught our attention...

Crab Rangoon Dip
Crab Rangoon Dip by Wanderlust and Wellness

Caramel Apple Funnel Cakes
Caramel Apple Funnel Cakes by This Silly Girl’s Kitchen

Featured Hostess Recipe...

Your Hostesses...

The Country Cook ~ Brandie
South Your Mouth ~ Mandy
Served Up With Love ~ Melissa

You are invited to the Inlinkz link party!

Click here to enter


8/24/21

Butterscotch Crunch Cookies

An old-fashioned cookie recipe with brown sugar and toffee bits for double the butterscotch flavor plus toasted pecans for added crunch. Freeze and cut for picture-perfect cookies any time you have a craving! 

JUMP TO RECIPE

The first thing I should tell you about this recipe is that there is no actual butterscotch in it. Ha! It’s a very old recipe (you know it's old when the recipe card uses the term “oleo”) so I can’t tell you much about the origin of it either. 

What I can tell you is that they are addicting! And they are my go-to cookie when I want to have something without chocolate. Like when I’m making lots of different types of cookies at Christmas or I’m craving something a little different.

I’m sure “butterscotch” comes from the use of all brown sugar (and no white sugar) because that’s what butterscotch is made of (whereas caramel is made from white sugar). And toffee or brickle is also made with brown sugar so there may be some correlation there.

Butterscotch Crunch Cookies! An old-fashioned cookie recipe with brown sugar and toffee bits for double the butterscotch flavor and toasted pecans for crunch. Freeze and cut for picture-perfect cookies any time you have a craving!

There are so many things I love about these cookies like…

They are frozen and cut – I keep them in the freezer so when I get a hankering for something sweet, I just slice and bake and within minutes the house smells like heaven!

They’re chewy on the inside but still have a crisp texture on the outside which makes for the perfect cookie in my opinion!

The dough is so so sooooo flavorful – many cookies depend on chips and chunks and nuts to bring the flavor but this dough is delicious all by itself!

Butterscotch Crunch Cookies! An old-fashioned cookie recipe with brown sugar and toffee bits for double the butterscotch flavor and toasted pecans for crunch. Freeze and cut for picture-perfect cookies any time you have a craving!

FAQ FOR BUTTERSCOTCH CRUNCH COOKIES

You may have some questions about the recipe. Some I can answer, some I can’t and some I’m just going to have to guess but here goes…

Do I have to use shortening and butter? Or can I just use butter? You technically can use all butter though I have never made them that way and don’t suggest it. Shortening is used because it has a higher melting point so it keeps the cookies from spreading too much. It also makes for a more tender dough. If you use all butter, the cookies will be flatter and not as soft.

Two tablespoons of vanilla?? Yep. The original recipe calls for 2 teaspoons (and no salt) and though I LOVED the texture of the cookies I always thought the flavor of the original recipe was a bit lacking so I tripled the vanilla and added a hefty amount of salt. I mentioned it in my recent Oatmeal Cookies recipe but I’ve started really beefing up the vanilla in cookie recipes and looooooove the results.

Butterscotch Crunch Cookies! An old-fashioned cookie recipe with brown sugar and toffee bits for double the butterscotch flavor and toasted pecans for crunch. Freeze and cut for picture-perfect cookies any time you have a craving!

Do I have to use Cream of Tartar? I dunno. I know it’s a leavening agent and Google tells me it can be substituted but I’ve never made these without the cream of tartar so I can’t tell you how they will turn out if you substitute it with something else.

Do you have to freeze the dough? No. And yes. You can make these as soon as the dough is ready but the cookies will be pillowy and uneven. They are delicious but if you’re looking for gorgeous, uniform cookies then roll, freeze and cut. 

Can you double the recipe? 100% yes! I almost always do so I can stock the freezer.

Butterscotch Crunch Cookies! An old-fashioned cookie recipe with brown sugar and toffee bits for double the butterscotch flavor and toasted pecans for crunch. Freeze and cut for picture-perfect cookies any time you have a craving!

Do I have to use a stand mixer for this recipe? I highly recommend it because the dough is very thick. A sturdy handheld mixer can get the job done too but I doubt the whisk-style attachments for the hand-held mixers will be able to mix the dough properly. Unless you have Popeye arms, I don’t think you’ll be able to mix these by hand.

Do I have to use pecans and/or toffee bits? Nope! You don’t have to add anything or you can add your own favorites (butterscotch chips are amazeballs) but the “crunch” comes from the toffee bits and the nuts so keep that in mind. 

Butterscotch Crunch Cookies! An old-fashioned cookie recipe with brown sugar and toffee bits for double the butterscotch flavor and toasted pecans for crunch. Freeze and cut for picture-perfect cookies any time you have a craving!

I mentioned that I like to make these at Christmas… here are my go-to recipes for holiday baking and Christmas cookie trays! 

  • JIM-JAMS - An old-fashioned heirloom cookie recipe for molasses cookie sandwiches filled with raspberry jam. 
  • COCONUT MACAROON KISSES - A tender and light, yet rich and dreamy recipe for chewy coconut cookies topped with Hershey’s Kiss chocolate drops.
  • MAN BARS - An easy and unique cookie bar recipe made with graham cracker crumbs, sweetened condensed milk and chocolate chips, cut and rolled in powdered sugar.
  • SNOWBALL COOKIES - A tender shortbread cookie recipe with pecans and powdered sugar (also called Mexican Wedding Cookies and Russian Tea Cakes) perfect for holiday baking!
  • TRIPLE CHOCOLATE NO-BAKE COOKIES - Classic no-bake peanut butter oatmeal cookies made with DOUBLE the cocoa and studded with chocolate chips for three times the chocolate goodness!
  • CHEWY SUGAR COOKIES - A fool-proof recipe for tender and chewy sugar cookies perfect for sprinkles! 
  • CHOCOLATE CHIP COOKIE BARS - All the goodness of chocolate chip cookies made easy in one big batch of bars. Top with seasonal M&M's for a special holiday cookie recipe.

Recipe for Butterscotch Crunch Cookies

Butterscotch Crunch Cookies! An old-fashioned cookie recipe with brown sugar and toffee bits for double the butterscotch flavor and toasted pecans for crunch. Freeze and cut for picture-perfect cookies any time you have a craving!

Butterscotch Crunch Cookies

Butterscotch Crunch Cookies
Yield: 38-40 cookies
Author: Mandy Rivers | South Your Mouth
Prep time: 10 MinCook time: 10 MinInactive time: 4 HourTotal time: 4 H & 20 M
An old-fashioned cookie recipe with brown sugar and toffee bits for double the butterscotch flavor and toasted pecans for crunch. Freeze and cut for picture-perfect cookies any time you have a craving!

Ingredients

  • 1/4 cup butter, softened
  • 1/4 cup shortening
  • 2 cups brown sugar, packed
  • 2 eggs
  • 2 tablespoons vanilla extract
  • 3 cups flour
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons baking soda
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons cream of tartar
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 1 10-oz bag English toffee bits
  • 1 cup finely chopped pecans*

Instructions

  1. Mix butter, shortening and brown sugar in a stand mixer using the paddle attachment until well combined and no lumps remain (mixture will resemble wet sand).
  2. Add eggs, one at a time, mixing well after each addition. Mix in vanilla.
  3. Combine flour, baking soda, cream of tartar and salt in a separate bowl. Gradually add to the brown sugar mixture and mix well.
  4. Mix in toffee bits and pecans.
  5. Shape into two 10-inch rolls then wrap each in plastic. Freeze for 4 hours or until firm.
  6. Preheat oven to 375 degrees.
  7. Unwrap dough then cut into 1/2-inch slices. Place frozen cookie dough portions 2 inches apart on greased baking sheets.
  8. Bake at 375 degrees 9-11 minutes or until lightly browned. Cool until set before moving from the pans.

Notes

  • I HIGHLY suggest toasting the pecans. I just toss mine in a skillet then heat over medium-high heat until fragrant. Let them cool before using. 
  • Yes, that's 2 TABLESPOONS of vanilla.
  • Double-wrap in plastic wrap to freeze if not baking the same day. Dough will keep for up to 3 months in the freezer.
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cookies, desserts
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8/20/21

Fresh Cherry Limeade - Weekend Potluck 493

A virtual recipe swap with dozens of new recipes from some of the TOP recipe creators online and on Pinterest!

Take a look at these amazing recipes featured from last week's Weekend Potluck (recipe links listed with full photos just below), then scroll down to see all the NEW recipes this week!

Here are our featured recipes from last week:

  • 4-Ingredient Peach Ice Cream
  • Chocolate Pudding Snack Cake
  • Fresh Cherry Limeade
  • Garden Fresh Dill Dip
A virtual recipe swap with 4-Ingredient Peach Ice Cream, Chocolate Pudding Snack Cake, Fresh Cherry Limeade, Garden Fresh Dill Dip and dozens more!

The recipe with the most clicks was...

Fresh Cherry Limeade
Fresh Cherry Limeade by A Red Spatula

Recipes that caught our attention...

4 Ingredient Peach Ice Cream
4 Ingredient Peach Ice Cream by Cooking With Carlee

Featured Hostess Recipe...

Garden Fresh Dill Dip
Garden Fresh Dill Dip by Served Up With Love

Your Hostesses...

Served Up With Love ~ Melissa
The Country Cook ~ Brandie
South Your Mouth ~ Mandy

You are invited to the Inlinkz link party!

Click here to enter


8/18/21

Mama’s Brown Rice (Not the Healthy Kind, the Beefy, Buttery Kind!)

Rice browned in butter then baked in beef consommé for an absolutely perfectly cooked recipe easy enough for weeknight meals and special enough for holiday dinners!

JUMP TO RECIPE

Here I sit, yet again, thinking my family’s way of cooking something was the way everybody cooked it. 

I’ve been running this blog, publishing recipes for over ten years, and could have shared this a thousand times by now but never did because it’s one of those recipes I just assumed everybody already had.

But nope. At least not from what I’m seeing online. I can’t find one single recipe exactly like this one. And I’ve spent all morning looking.

Mama’s Brown Rice (Not the Healthy Kind, the Beefy, Buttery Kind!) Rice browned in butter then baked in beef consommé for an absolutely perfectly cooked recipe easy enough for weeknight meals and special enough for holiday dinners!

What got me looking was I couldn’t figure out what to call this so I wanted to see what everybody else calls it. We just call it brown rice.

But it’s not actually brown rice. Brown rice is the less processed, somewhat healthier form of rice that still has the bran and germ (unlike traditional white rice which does not).

This recipe is actually browned rice – traditional white rice that’s been sautéed in butter until lightly browned and almost nutty in fragrance – that’s then made further brown by cooking in beef consommé.

I still don’t know what to call this but I’m hoping inspiration strikes before I get to the recipe.

Mama’s Brown Rice (Not the Healthy Kind, the Beefy, Buttery Kind!) Rice browned in butter then baked in beef consommé for an absolutely perfectly cooked recipe easy enough for weeknight meals and special enough for holiday dinners!

The main differences in our recipe and the ones I see online are:

Less butter – most recipes use twice the amount of butter as this one. Most use 1 stick of butter like this one does but this recipe makes twice the amount (this uses 2 cups of rice, most other recipes use 1 cup). As much as I love butter, I honestly think 1/2 cup of butter is way too much for a recipe with just 1 cup of rice.

Sautéing the rice – many of the recipes I see add cold butter to the dish before baking. Our recipe uses the butter to sauté the rice (to brown it) which adds so much flavor and texture. I mentioned it in my Mexican Restaurant-Style Rice recipe, but sautéing the rice does something to the texture that helps it hold up better – it makes it almost (but not quite) chewy (in a good way!).

Beef Consommé – our recipe uses all beef consommé. I do see recipes online that use it, though about half use French onion soup. I definitely prefer it with beef consommé but I’ve used French Onion and Beefy Mushroom soups (and combos of the three) and like those options too. 

Mama’s Brown Rice (Not the Healthy Kind, the Beefy, Buttery Kind!) Rice browned in butter then baked in beef consommé for an absolutely perfectly cooked recipe easy enough for weeknight meals and special enough for holiday dinners!

Beef consommé is a little different than other beef soups. It's a bone broth that's highly reduced then also clarified so the flavor is extra concentrated. Because it's a condensed bone broth, it's naturally thicker (slightly gelatinous) due to the collagen. I think that richness really comes through in this recipe. The consommé just seems to “stand up” in this where the others can seem a little watery and weak. 

Mama sautés a diced onion with her rice. Sometimes I do too but since I usually don’t, I didn’t add it to the recipe below. If you’d like to, simply finely dice a small onion then add it to the butter with the rice when following the recipe below.

This recipe is such a favorite in my family, it comes out at the BIG meals like Easter, Thanksgiving and Christmas dinners. It goes great with baked ham and I almost always serve the two together. 

You can reduce or increase the recipe very easily. The cooking times stay the same – just use a smaller or larger dish of course. Here are the ratios for the ingredients:

Welp, I didn’t come up with anything clever to call this so I’m just going to call it Mama’s Brown Rice and hope that the “Mama” part might tip somebody off that this isn’t the whole grain healthy stuff (that has the texture of what I imagine my ottoman poof is stuffed with).

I’m sure you have a version of this you enjoy but I sure hope you try this one too! We love it so much! Our college junior was on her way out the door, I told her I’d made this for y’all and there was a whole pan in the fridge and the next thing I heard was the microwave beeping. When something’s good enough to make a 20-yr old carb-counting coed circle back for leftovers, it’s good y’all. 

Mama’s Brown Rice (Not the Healthy Kind, the Beefy, Buttery Kind!) Rice browned in butter then baked in beef consommé for an absolutely perfectly cooked recipe easy enough for weeknight meals and special enough for holiday dinners!

NOTES ABOUT MAKING BEEFY BROWN RICE:

  • You can use French Onion or Beefy Mushroom soup as well or a combination of the three. I have and enjoy them but definitely like the more condensed beef flavor in the consommé best. 
  • Feel free to add finely diced onion when sautéing the rice – that’s how Mama usually makes it!
  • I have no clue how to make this with actual whole grain brown rice. I’m sure it can be done but I couldn’t tell you how long to cook it.
  • To reduce or increase the recipe, see the table above. Cooking time and temperature will stay the same.
  • Do not add salt to this recipe. This is a frog's hair from being too salty so if you're sensitive to salt, consider subbing 1 can of the beef consommé with reduced sodium beef broth and using unsalted butter. 
  • You must cover the dish tightly with foil and start with a hot oven for the rice to cook properly.
  • The dish won’t boil over so you can fill it pretty full (don’t go wild – no closer than half an inch from the top). If you bake it in something much wider than needed (making it very shallow) it will likely be done quicker than an hour so check it early.

Recipe for Beefy Brown Rice

brown, browned, rice, stick of butter, beef consomme, consome, consume, bullion, broth, french onion, beefy, mushroom, paula deen, fried, sauteed, onion, baked, casserole, bake, covered dish, side dish, potluck
covered dish, side dish, potluck
Yield: 8 Servings
Author: Mandy Rivers | South Your Mouth
Mama’s Brown Rice (Not the Healthy Kind, the Beefy, Buttery Kind!)

Mama’s Brown Rice (Not the Healthy Kind, the Beefy, Buttery Kind!)

Rice browned in butter then baked in beef consommé for an absolutely perfectly cooked recipe easy enough for weeknight meals and special enough for holiday dinners!
Prep time: 5 MinCook time: 1 HourTotal time: 1 H & 5 M

Ingredients

  • 1 stick (1/2 cup) butter
  • 2 cups uncooked long-grain white rice
  • 4 10.5-oz cans beef consommé

Instructions

  1. Preheat oven to 375 degrees.
  2. Melt butter in a large skillet over medium-high heat. Add rice then sauté for about 5 minutes or until rice is light brown. The butter will become foamy and lovely and the rice will start to smell somewhat nutty.
  3. Pour rice and butter into a 2-quart baking dish then add beef consommé. Cover tightly with two layers of aluminum foil then bake at 375 degrees for 1 hour.
  4. Remove from oven, fluff rice with a fork, then serve.

Notes

  • You can use French Onion or Beefy Mushroom soup as well or a combination of the three. I have and enjoy them but definitely like the more condensed beef flavor in the consommé best. 
  • Feel free to add finely diced onion when sautéing the rice – that’s how Mama usually makes it!
  • I have no clue how to make this with actual whole grain brown rice. I’m sure it can be done but I couldn’t tell you how long to cook it.
  • To reduce or increase the recipe, see the table above.
  • Do not add salt to this recipe. This is a frog's hair from being too salty so if you're sensitive to salt, consider subbing 1 can of the beef consommé with reduced sodium beef broth and using unsalted butter. 
  • You must cover the dish tightly with foil and start with a hot oven for the rice to cook properly.
  • The dish won’t boil over so you can fill it pretty full (don’t go wild – no closer than half an inch from the top). If you bake it in something much wider than needed (making it very shallow) it will likely be done quicker than an hour so check it early.
Keep up with my latest shenanigans by following South Your Mouth!
Mama’s Brown Rice (Not the Healthy Kind, the Beefy, Buttery Kind!) Rice browned in butter then baked in beef consommé for an absolutely perfectly cooked recipe easy enough for weeknight meals and special enough for holiday dinners!


8/13/21

Mini Orange Bundt Cakes - Weekend Potluck 492

A virtual recipe swap with dozens of new recipes from some of the TOP recipe creators online and on Pinterest!

Take a look at these amazing recipes featured from last week's Weekend Potluck (recipe links listed with full photos just below), then scroll down to see all the NEW recipes this week!

Here are our featured recipes from last week:

  • Lemon Cornmeal Cake with Blueberries
  • Mini Orange Bundt Cakes
  • Anastasia’s S’mores Cookies
  • Brioche French Toast Casserole
A virtual recipe swap with Lemon Cornmeal Cake with Blueberries, Mini Orange Bundt Cakes, Anastasia’s S’mores Cookies, Brioche French Toast Casserole and dozens more!

The recipe with the most clicks was...

Mini Orange Bundt Cakes

Recipes that caught our attention...

Brioche French Toast Casserole
Brioche French Toast Casserole by The Happy Mustard Seed

Featured Hostess Recipe...

Anastasia’s S’mores Cookies
Anastasia’s S’mores Cookies by Sweet Little Bluebird

Your Hostesses...

Served Up With Love ~ Melissa
The Country Cook ~ Brandie
South Your Mouth ~ Mandy

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