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Cheesy Grits Breakfast Casserole
Posted on 12/20/20 at 1:21 pm
Posted on 12/20/20 at 1:21 pm
This recipe and photo came from Garden and Gun Magazine.
See it here
The dish looks holiday good to me, so I thought I'd share it. Everything here - comments, recipe, & photo are theirs.
Cheesy Grits Casserole
One day a year, enjoy the most decadent grits ever, courtesy of Charleston chef Kevin Johnson
By: CJ Lotz - December 6, 2019
“Once a year, mainly because that’s as often as you should probably eat it, my family has a grits casserole on Christmas morning,” says Kevin Johnson, chef of The Grocery in Charleston, South Carolina.
His mom received the recipe from a friend years ago, and now it’s a holiday staple for the family. The secret is to start the grits on the stovetop but to stop before they’re fully cooked so they can finish in the oven, where they’ll absorb all the savory, salty flavor from the pile of cheese you’re going to blend into them.
“This recipe goes against everything I’ve ever been taught about cooking grits,” Johnson says, “but in the end, the crispy potato gratin-like crust hides the creamiest, cheesiest grits you’ve ever had.”
Recipe:
Cheese Grits Casserole – From Garden and Gun Magazine
Ingredients:
4 cups milk
1 cup coarse, stone ground grits
Salt and pepper
10 oz. gruyere cheese, grated
4 oz. butter, cut into small pieces
3 oz. parmesan cheese, grated with a micro plane
Directions:
Preheat oven to 400°. In a large, heavy-bottomed pan, bring milk to a simmer.
Slowly whisk in grits and reduce heat to low. Cook grits, stirring often until milk is absorbed and grits are thick (20 to 30 minutes). Season grits to taste with salt and black pepper.
Add gruyere cheese and beat with a handheld mixer on high for about 5 minutes until very fluffy.
Turn grits into a greased 9 x 11-inch baking dish. Dot top of casserole with pats of butter and sprinkle with parmesan cheese.
Bake for about 30 minutes until bubbly and deep golden brown on top.
See it here
The dish looks holiday good to me, so I thought I'd share it. Everything here - comments, recipe, & photo are theirs.

Cheesy Grits Casserole
One day a year, enjoy the most decadent grits ever, courtesy of Charleston chef Kevin Johnson
By: CJ Lotz - December 6, 2019
“Once a year, mainly because that’s as often as you should probably eat it, my family has a grits casserole on Christmas morning,” says Kevin Johnson, chef of The Grocery in Charleston, South Carolina.
His mom received the recipe from a friend years ago, and now it’s a holiday staple for the family. The secret is to start the grits on the stovetop but to stop before they’re fully cooked so they can finish in the oven, where they’ll absorb all the savory, salty flavor from the pile of cheese you’re going to blend into them.
“This recipe goes against everything I’ve ever been taught about cooking grits,” Johnson says, “but in the end, the crispy potato gratin-like crust hides the creamiest, cheesiest grits you’ve ever had.”
Recipe:
Cheese Grits Casserole – From Garden and Gun Magazine
Ingredients:
4 cups milk
1 cup coarse, stone ground grits
Salt and pepper
10 oz. gruyere cheese, grated
4 oz. butter, cut into small pieces
3 oz. parmesan cheese, grated with a micro plane
Directions:
Preheat oven to 400°. In a large, heavy-bottomed pan, bring milk to a simmer.
Slowly whisk in grits and reduce heat to low. Cook grits, stirring often until milk is absorbed and grits are thick (20 to 30 minutes). Season grits to taste with salt and black pepper.
Add gruyere cheese and beat with a handheld mixer on high for about 5 minutes until very fluffy.
Turn grits into a greased 9 x 11-inch baking dish. Dot top of casserole with pats of butter and sprinkle with parmesan cheese.
Bake for about 30 minutes until bubbly and deep golden brown on top.
Posted on 12/20/20 at 4:58 pm to MeridianDog
quote:
bring milk to a simmer.
quote:
reduce heat to low
These are both very important when you make grits with milk.
Posted on 12/20/20 at 5:08 pm to MeridianDog
I do believe I will try this on Christmas morning. I’m a big grits fan and this looks delicious. Thanks for posting it. I will update board after I make it.
Posted on 12/20/20 at 5:24 pm to MeridianDog
Friend,
I may try these this year. I often make Santa Grits on Christmas morning, a fatty concoction that substitutes cauliflower for grits. But this year I am feeling like going back to the original. They look surprisingly like a recipe Mother shared with me. She got the recipe from a Methodist minister who works with the homeless in Baton Rouge, and they are, in my experience, the best grits I have ever had. Sometimes she adds bacon and jalapeno peppers to them for a nice surprise.
Yours,
TulaneLSU
I may try these this year. I often make Santa Grits on Christmas morning, a fatty concoction that substitutes cauliflower for grits. But this year I am feeling like going back to the original. They look surprisingly like a recipe Mother shared with me. She got the recipe from a Methodist minister who works with the homeless in Baton Rouge, and they are, in my experience, the best grits I have ever had. Sometimes she adds bacon and jalapeno peppers to them for a nice surprise.
Yours,
TulaneLSU
Posted on 12/20/20 at 5:58 pm to Btrtigerfan
quote:
These are both very important when you make grits with milk.
Both my grandmother and my wife’s grandmother cooked grits with milk so we do to and that’s a correct statement. I believe they have a richer flavor.
My wife makes this casserole with the addition of bacon and a lot of green onions. Not a Christmas thing just something when she has overnight guests.
MD as a Garden and Gun reader and I’d guess safe to assume a Southern Living reader I’m sure you read Rick Bragg. I love all of his audiobooks because he reads them and his The Best Cook In The World is a wonderful read but a better listen because he has that Alabama, lower Appalachian accent and Southern prose that is really nice to listen to. It’s a disappearing language.
And it’s the language we can’t let go.
Tulane- I’m guessing that Methodist Minister is Chris Andrews who was minister of First Methodist but left about 9 years ago. He was and still is very active with the homeless and while he is no longer my minister - which he was for years- I still support his Ministry. He’s a great guy and worthy of the support. I suggest send him a few bucks.
But truth be known Methodist ministry supports many causes regarding the homeless. Brady Whitton has proven to be a worthy replacement for Chris Andrews and supports many of the same ministry.
Baton Rouge is lucky to have both of these Ministers here.
Posted on 12/20/20 at 6:08 pm to Martini
Friend,
It could be. I just asked Mother and she suggested his name was Randall, but she was unsure. I did not have my first serving of grits until I was 18 and they were quite a revelation. It will forever be unknown why grits did not enter our house until that time. Although I assume New Orleans restaurants served grits a couple of decades ago, I do not ever recall seeing them on a menu.
Yours,
TulaneLSU
It could be. I just asked Mother and she suggested his name was Randall, but she was unsure. I did not have my first serving of grits until I was 18 and they were quite a revelation. It will forever be unknown why grits did not enter our house until that time. Although I assume New Orleans restaurants served grits a couple of decades ago, I do not ever recall seeing them on a menu.
Yours,
TulaneLSU
Posted on 12/20/20 at 6:25 pm to Martini
quote:
Rick Bragg.
The chocolate pies we had for Thanksgiving were straight out of that book. So much like the ones my Grandma would make.
Posted on 12/20/20 at 6:39 pm to Btrtigerfan
quote:
Rick Bragg.
The chocolate pies we had for Thanksgiving were straight out of that book. So much like the ones my Grandma would make.
It’s just Southern Appalachian Cooking. Which translates to just poor southern country cooking.
I have that old cooking from one side which is the same. The other side is from New York State so I have that too.
Listen to the audiobook.
Posted on 12/20/20 at 7:35 pm to MeridianDog
quote:
MeridianDog
Are you daydreaming about carbs again? I do that a lot since Ive been Keto.
Posted on 12/20/20 at 8:00 pm to Paul Allen
Sorry. Got sucked into a place I needed to avoid.
This post was edited on 12/21/20 at 8:43 am
Posted on 12/20/20 at 8:03 pm to MeridianDog

It’s all good.
I didn’t appreciate the way he was speaking to BRgetthenet.
This post was edited on 12/20/20 at 8:05 pm
Posted on 12/21/20 at 11:22 am to Martini
Reverend Andrews was a huge force in my life growing up at FUMC. Brady is very solid, but I haven't lived in BR in years. And yes, Grits Casserole is delicious.
Posted on 12/23/20 at 10:14 pm to LSUDav7
quote:
Reverend Andrews
Why did he leave FUMC? Was it in search of some higher power?
Posted on 12/23/20 at 11:44 pm to Martini
quote:
Chris Andrews
I missed your post before, but he baptized me many years ago. Many of my earliest memories are Sundays at First Methodist. ( Candlelight Christmas Eves were some of the best memories of my life ) Everyone was sad when he went to Slidell.
Posted on 12/25/20 at 7:39 am to MeridianDog
Thanks OP this shite is hittin. Added bacon to ours.


This post was edited on 12/25/20 at 8:02 am
Posted on 12/25/20 at 9:55 am to tilco
I was aiming to make it this morning as well. Until I drank a lil too much WP and Makers Cask last night. Merry Christmas to all of y’all. Will try to make it soon. Headed to duck blind in morning.
Posted on 1/19/21 at 4:50 pm to MeridianDog
Friends,
Can anyone give an update on how Meridian Dog is doing?
Yours,
TulaneLSU
Can anyone give an update on how Meridian Dog is doing?
Yours,
TulaneLSU
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