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Anyone Here Make Good Hush Puppies?

 
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Lou Decruss



Joined: 27 Sep 2007
Posts: 219

PostPosted: Wed Feb 27, 2008 4:30 pm    Post subject: Anyone Here Make Good Hush Puppies? Reply with quote

I've got orange roughy thawing for dinner and I think I'd like to deep
fry them and make hush puppies. Not sure about the other sides yet.
I've made hush puppies before and they weren't all that great. I
found the following recipe and would like to know if it's any good?
Or if someone has a better one I'd appreciate it very much.

Thanks,

Lou


From here:
http://chitterlings.com/hush-puppies.html

We ate a lot of cornmeal based foods when I was
growing up because corn meal was cheap. In fact,
we could even take grain to the local mill and
have it ground into flour, meal, livestock feed,
etc. Cornbread or biscuits were almost always
served at any meal I attended at many houses in
the neighborhood. They were usually pretty good
too, although I preferred the lighter tasting
hush puppies. Eaten fresh out of the fryer, they
practically melted in your mouth. Here is my
recipe:

Ingredients:
2 cups yellow corn meal
1 cup plain flour (flour is what gave it the
lighter taste and you can experiment with the
amount you use if you want)
2 eggs
1 cup buttermilk (you can also use plain milk in
a pinch, but nothing compares to buttermilk)
3/4 teaspoon seasoned salt. I use Lowreys but just
about any brand will work as you are just looking
for something to spice things up a little
1/2 teaspoon ground pepper blend (again, the idea
is to spice things up a little).
1 teaspoon baking powder
2/3 teaspoon baking soda
1/8 cup bacon grease. This is another big key to
the flavor. In a pinch you can use other types
of cooking oil, but bacon is my favorite.

You also need some type of cooking oil to deep fry
these in. I usually use Crisco oil although peanut oil
and some of the lower fat oils work well too.

Mix all of the dry ingredients in a bowl. Add your
eggs, oil, and buttermilk. Stir it all up until
the flavors are thoroughly blended.

Turn your cooker on medium-high heat. When it's
hot you can drop your hush puppies in using a
table spoon. Allow them to brown on all sides.
They should begin floating when done, but if they
don't, don't overcook them.

Serve as a side dish with just about any meal. I
loved eating them with fried catfish or fresh
chopped or pulled pork barbecue. Most of the local
resturants added them as a standard feature when you
bought plate meals.

After getting to Alaska, I visited a restaurant that
also added yellow corn to their hush puppies and a
touch of sugar. If you want to give this a try,
precook the corn, but don't overcook it. Use 3/4 cups
in the recipe above. On top of that add 2 table spoons
of white sugar. The recipe at the restaurant in
Alaska was so popular that customers often ordered
side orders to take home. I always though that it
tasted pretty good.

You can also store this mixture in the refrigerator
for a day or so if you are only cooking for a smaller
group. Before cooking let it reach near room
temperature.

Archived from group: rec>food>cooking
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Sqwertz



Joined: 19 Nov 2007
Posts: 92

PostPosted: Thu Feb 28, 2008 12:09 am    Post subject: Re: Anyone Here Make Good Hush Puppies? Reply with quote

On Wed, 27 Feb 2008 11:30:41 -0600, Lou Decruss wrote:

> I've got orange roughy thawing for dinner and I think I'd like to deep
> fry them and make hush puppies. Not sure about the other sides yet.
> I've made hush puppies before and they weren't all that great. I
> found the following recipe and would like to know if it's any good?
> Or if someone has a better one I'd appreciate it very much.

I follow a basic hushpuppy recipe, then I add lots of onion,
bacon bits and cheese. Short of that or a great dipping sauce of
some sort, there's really no way to make "good" hush puppies.

Chicken fat is much better than bacon fat for that recipe. Fry
in peanut oil if possible. Since they don't fry long, it should
really matter much.

-sw
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Dave Bugg



Joined: 26 Jul 2007
Posts: 185

PostPosted: Thu Feb 28, 2008 1:26 am    Post subject: Re: Anyone Here Make Good Hush Puppies? Reply with quote

Lou Decruss wrote:
> I've got orange roughy thawing for dinner and I think I'd like to deep
> fry them and make hush puppies. Not sure about the other sides yet.
> I've made hush puppies before and they weren't all that great. I
> found the following recipe and would like to know if it's any good?
> Or if someone has a better one I'd appreciate it very much.

Folks love my hushpuppies. Your recipe should work. Instead of buttermilk, I
like to use whole milk and add a couple of teaspoons of apple cider vinegar
to the milk. Another thing I find is that to make sure you have more soured
milk on hand than the recipe calls for, 'cause for whatever reason, the
batter might turn out too thick and need to be thinned out a bit.
--
Dave
www.davebbq.com
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milo henderson



Joined: 27 Feb 2008
Posts: 1

PostPosted: Wed Feb 27, 2008 9:11 pm    Post subject: Re: Anyone Here Make Good Hush Puppies? Reply with quote

Lou Decruss wrote:
> I've got orange roughy thawing for dinner and I think I'd like to deep
> fry them and make hush puppies. Not sure about the other sides yet.
> I've made hush puppies before and they weren't all that great. I
> found the following recipe and would like to know if it's any good?
> Or if someone has a better one I'd appreciate it very much.
>
> Thanks,
>
> Lou
(cut)
Hush puppies are good and they do need onions in them. I think green
garden onions are best. I do not like the hush puppies with sugar in
them. No bacon bits or cheese thank you.

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