Fried Steak w/ Gravy | May 21, 2025
Annonce:

Featured in Hearty Main Courses.

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Coat steaks in flour, batter, then flour again. Fry them until golden, make gravy using milk, butter, flour, broth, then season and pour it all over.

A true taste of Southern comfort appears in every bite of crispy coated steak drowned in velvety homemade gravy. This method turns basic cube steak into something truly special through well-seasoned coating and proper frying. It’s the perfect treat-yourself dinner that makes everyone go quiet as they dig into each rich mouthful.

What Makes This So Good

. Gives you that amazing crispy outside with soft meat inside
. Shows you the real double-coating trick for extra crunch
. Helps you whip up authentic country gravy using basic ingredients
. Brings pure comfort food to your table in under 45 minutes

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The first time I cooked this for my husband who grew up up north, he took one taste and said it was “way better than any restaurant version.” These days it’s our go-to special breakfast when family stays over – nothing wows guests more than fresh-made chicken fried steak with sunny eggs and warm biscuits.

Essential Components

. Cube Steak: This pre-tenderized cut works perfectly—those tiny marks grab seasonings and help the breading stick properly
. Flavored Flour: The base of your coating’s taste—every spice works together beyond basic salt and pepper
. Cajun Blend: Adds fantastic flavor layers without heat—just a touch makes the whole breading better
. Whole Milk: Adds thickness to both coating and gravy—don’t try using skim or 2%
. Butter: Starts your gravy off right with amazing flavor—get unsalted so you can adjust seasoning yourself
I learned how crucial the flour-wet-flour dipping pattern is after watching coatings fall off many times. That extra step really is the difference between sad, naked meat and perfect results. Turns out grandma’s old-school methods weren’t just for show!

Detailed Cooking Method

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Getting Ready
Seasoning your steaks first builds taste from within. The mix of salt, garlic powder and pepper works into the meat itself before any coating happens. Let them sit for a few minutes so flavors can sink in slightly.

Setup Stations
Arranging your coating spots beforehand saves you from mixing stuff with messy fingers later. The first flour layer makes a dry base for the wet mix to stick to. Your batter should coat a spoon but still pour off easily—add more milk if needed to get it right.

Coating Done Right
For the best results, push the final flour firmly onto your batter-dipped meat. This creates those bumpy areas that turn super crispy when fried. Handle one piece at a time so your coating stays fresh while you work.

Smart Frying
Keeping oil at 350°F matters a lot—too hot and the outside burns while the inside stays raw; too cool and everything turns greasy. Cook just 1-2 pieces at once so the oil stays hot enough. That golden-brown color tells you when they’re done.

Staying Crispy
The rack-in-oven trick works wonders for keeping everything crunchy—air flowing all around stops moisture from making things soggy. A low temp keeps food warm without cooking it more, which would make the meat tough.

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Perfect Gravy
Your butter-flour mix needs full cooking time to lose that raw taste and get nutty flavor. Pour liquids in slowly while constantly stirring to avoid lumps. The thickening happens bit by bit—don’t rush and you’ll get perfect smoothness. Taste as you go for just the right amount of salt.

Important Tips

. Always tenderize your steak if it isn’t already pounded out
. Watch your oil temp closely—grab a thermometer if possible
. Give your gravy enough time to cook away the flour flavor

My first chicken fried steak was awful—I hurried through the gravy and ended up with clumpy, flour-tasting goop. Now I know you can’t skip constant stirring while adding liquid bit by bit. Sometimes the easiest steps need the most care to get right.

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What To Serve With It

This hearty main goes great with traditional Southern sides. Smooth mashed potatoes work as the ideal base to soak up extra gravy. Add simple green beans or collards for some color and balance against the richness. For morning meals, add runny-yolk eggs and fluffy buttermilk biscuits. Finish with hot coffee or sweet tea for the full Southern experience.

Different Ways To Make It

Switch up this standard recipe with easy changes for fresh flavors. Mix a spoonful of hot sauce into your batter for some heat. Swap some flour with crushed pork rinds for extra crunch and fewer carbs. Make fancier gravy by adding cooked mushrooms or crumbled sausage. Plant-based eaters can use the same method with big mushroom caps or thick cauliflower slices instead.

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Prep Ahead Options

While this dish tastes best fresh-fried, you can get things ready early for quicker cooking later. The flour mix keeps for several days in a sealed container. To prep steaks ahead, finish coating them, lay on parchment paper without touching, cover with plastic, and chill up to 8 hours before frying. You can make gravy beforehand and warm it up with a splash of milk to fix the texture.

Grandma’s Tricks

Heat Hint: Set steaks out for 15-20 minutes before cooking so they heat evenly
Crunch Trick: After coating, let steaks rest on a wire rack 5 minutes before frying
Gravy Fix: If you get lumps, use a stick blender or pour through a fine strainer

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I’ve tweaked this recipe for almost ten years, slowly improving the spice mix and cooking steps. What started as trying to copy my grandma’s Sunday favorite has turned into one of my trademark dishes that people ask for by name. There’s something really special about getting a classic comfort food just right—it links the past to today and makes new family stories around dinner.

Frequently Asked Questions

→ What is cube steak, and can it be swapped for something else?
Cube steak is a tenderized cut of round steak. If unavailable, take round steak and pound it thin until it’s about ¼-inch thick.
→ Why does the coating fall off as I fry?
Your oil’s heat might be too low. Keep it at 350°F. Let the coated steaks rest 10 minutes before frying so the coating sticks better.
→ How can I tell if my oil’s hot enough?
Aim for 350°F. No thermometer? Sprinkle a touch of flour into the oil. If it sizzles and bubbles right away, you’re good to go.
→ Why’s my gravy clumpy?
Add liquid slowly to the roux, whisking the whole time. Got lumps anyway? Use a sieve to strain it or blend quickly with a handheld blender.
→ Can I prepare this in advance?
Fried steak is best fresh, but the gravy can be made ahead. Reheat it and add a bit of milk to thin it out if needed.
→ What sides pair nicely with fried steak?
Mashed potatoes, green beans, biscuits, corn, collard greens, or Texas toast are great options. The gravy’s perfect for ladling over potatoes!

Ingredients
→ For the Steaks
Four tenderized cube steaks (about 1 pound in total)
1 teaspoon garlic powder
1 teaspoon salt
½ teaspoon ground black pepper, freshly cracked
→ For the Breading
1½ teaspoons of your preferred seasoned salt or sea salt
1 teaspoon garlic powder
A little less than a cup of whole milk (add buttermilk if you want)
¼ teaspoon each of celery salt, Cajun seasoning, and paprika
½ teaspoon of onion powder
1 large egg
1½ cups of regular flour
Just a tiny pinch of cayenne for some spice
½ teaspoon black pepper
Roughly 2 cups of canola oil for frying
→ For the Gravy
4 tablespoons butter, unsalted
Salt and pepper, add to taste
Just a pinch of dried thyme for flavor
¼ teaspoon each of garlic and onion powder
1½ cups room-temperature whole milk
1 cup warmed chicken stock
4 tablespoons all-purpose flour

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Instructions
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