For Those Not Blessed to Have Been Born South of the Mason-Dixon Line

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rabbithutch

Master of the Pit
Original poster
OTBS Member
What Are Grits?
Some folks believe grits are grown on bushes and are harvested by midgets by shaking the bushes after spreading sheets around them. Many people think grits are made from ground up bits of white corn. These are lies spread by Communists and terrorists. Nothing as good as a Grits can be made from corn. Research suggests that the mysterious Manna that God rained down upon the Israelites during their time in the Sinai Desert was most likely Grits. Critics disagree, stating that there is no record of biscuits, butter, salt, and red eye gravy raining down from the sky, and that God would not punish his people by forcing them to eat Grits without these key ingredients.

How Grits are Formed:
Grits are formed deep underground under intense heat and pressure. It takes over 1000 years to form a single Grit. Most of the world's grit mines are in Georgia , and are guarded day and night by armed guards and attack dogs. Harvesting the Grit is a dangerous occupation, and many Grit miners lose their lives each year so that Grits can continue to be served morning after morning for breakfast--not that having Grits for lunch and dinner is out of the question.

Yankees have attempted to create a synthetic Grits. They call them Cream of Wheat. As far as we can tell, the key ingredients of Cream of Wheat are Elmer's Glue and shredded Styrofoam. (Ever used wheat paste?) These synthetic grits have also been shown to cause nausea, and can leave you unable to have children.

Historical Grits:
As mentioned earlier, the first known mention of the Grits was by the Ancient Israelites in the Sinai Desert. After that, Grits were not heard from for another 1000 years. Grits were used during this time only during secret religious ceremonies, and were kept from the public. The next mention of Grits was found amidst the ruins of the ancient city of Pompeii in a woman's personal diary discovered in the seat of an old sedan. The woman's name was Herculania Jemimana, who was known as Aunt Jemima to her friends.

The Ten Commandments of Grits:

I. Thou shalt not put syrup on thy Grits
II.Thou shalt not eat thy Grits with a spoon or knife
III.Thou shalt not eat Cream of Wheat and call it Grits, for this is blasphemy
IV. Thou shalt not covet thy neighbor's Grits
V.Thou shalt use only Salt, Butter, and red eye gravy as toppings for thy Grits
VI. Thou shalt not eat Instant Grits
VII. Thou shalt not put ketchup on thy Grits
VIII. Thou shalt not put margarine on thy Grits.
IX. Thou shalt not eat toast with thy Grits, only biscuits made from scratch .
X. Thou shalt eat grits on the Sabbath for this is manna from heaven.


How to Cook Grits:
For one serving of Grits: Boil 1.5 cups of water with salt and a little butter. Add 5 Tbsp of Grits. Reduce to a simmer and allow the Grits to
soak up all the water. When a pencil stuck into the grits stands alone, they are done. That's all there is to cooking grits.
How to make red eye gravy: Fry salt cured country ham in cast-iron pan. Remove the ham when done and add coffee to the gravy and simmer for several minutes. Great on grits and biscuits.

How to Eat Grits:
Immediately after removing your grits from the stove top, add a generous portion of butter or red eye gravy. Do NOT use low-fat butter.
The butter should cause the Grits to turn a wondrous shade of yellow. Hold a banana or a yellow rain slicker next to your Grits; if the colors match, you have the correct amount of butter. In lieu of butter, pour a generous helping of red eye gravy on your
grits. Be sure to pour enough to have some left for sopping up with your biscuits. Use biscuits made from scratch. Never, ever substitute canned or store-bought biscuits for the real thing because they can cause cancer, tooth decay and impotence. Next, add salt. The correct ratio of Grit to Salt is 10:1 Therefore for every 10 grits, you should have 1 grain of salt. Now begin eating your grits. Always use a fork, never a spoon, to eat Grits. Your grits should be thick enough so they do not run through the tines of the fork. The correct beverage to serve with Grits is black coffee. DO NOT use cream or, heaven forbid, Skim Milk. Your grits should rarely be eaten in a bowl because Yankees will think it's Cream of Wheat.

Ways to Eat Leftover Grits:
Leftover grits are extremely rare and may only be a rumor. Spread them in the bottom of a casserole dish, Cover and place them in the refrigerator overnight. The Grits will congeal into a gelatinous mass. Next morning, slice the Grits into squares and fry them in 1/2' of cooking oil and butter until they turn a golden brown. Many people are tempted to pour syrup onto Grits served this way. This is, of course, unacceptable but delicious.


BLESSING BEFORE EATING GRITS

May the Lord bless these grits,
May Yankees never get the recipe,
May I eat grits each day while living,
And may I die while eating grits.

AMEN


Now that's True Grits
 
Thanks for sharing Hutch.

I'm a Utahn born and bred, but the family bloodline runs deep in Alabama, the Carolina's and Georgia but I have always loved Grits. Now that I'vd laid the background, let me proceed to a true story.  In June of 1975 I was shipped off to Army Basic Training at Fort Jackson, S.C. and after a week at the Reception Station getting fitted for uniforms, getting shots and taking care of admin paperwork ! was taken along with 349 other new recruits to our basic training site (C-5-1). The first morning there moving through the chow line I was handed a bowl of Grits and told to move on down the line-when the Mess Sgt. noticed that I was looking for something he asked "What are you looking for son? Your Momma?" I replied that I was looking for some red eye gravy for the Grits. The Sgt. was surprised that a boy from Utah knew what Grits were and also knew the proper way to eat them.  Although we didn't get Grits every morning, on those mornings that we did the Mess Sgt always made sure that I had red eye gravy to go with them.
 
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We were just in Atlanta and Savannah and picked up some stone ground grits to bring back with us - love me some good grits 
 
Thanks for sharing Hutch.

I'm a Utahn born and bred, but the family bloodline runs deep in Alabama, the Carolina's and Georgia but I have always loved Grits. Now that I'vd laid the background, let me proceed to a true story.  In June of 1975 I was shipped off to Army Basic Training at Fort Jackson, S.C. and after a week at the Reception Station getting fitted for uniforms, getting shots and taking care of admin paperwork ! was taken along with 349 other new recruits to our basic training site (C-5-1). The first morning there moving through the chow line I was handed a bowl of Grits and told to move on down the line-when the Mess Sgt. noticed that I was looking for something he asked "What are you looking for son? Your Momma?" I replied that I was looking for some red eye gravy for the Grits. The Sgt. was surprised that a boy from Utah knew what Grits were and also knew the proper way to eat them.  Although we didn't get Grits every morning, on those mornings that we did the Mess Sgt always made sure that I had red eye gravy to go with them.

Great story, Dutch!

My family has deep roots in NC and VA - going back to the 1630s and maybe earlier. I spent the first half century of my life in Raleigh and still have 5 living brothers and sisters in NC. Some of my ancestors followed the frontier West to TN and AL and TX (but I only got here 20 years ago).

Sounds like your family stayed true to its roots . . . AND its grits!

Regards,

rh
 
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