All of my friends like to write and eat. Well, some of them like to sing and eat and some of them like to talk and eat, but all of them like to eat. Lisa Knighton, whom I met at a retreat with Natalie Goldberg, is a fitness trainer who likes to eat healthy, fresh, local food, to bake cakes and to tell stories. Just see how many stories she starts to tell you in this post. Lisa hales from Athens, Georgia, and has come to “The Kale Chronicles” to teach you how use wild-caught shrimp and that Southern staple grits in the entree shrimp and grits. By the time you read this, you’ll be wanting to make them for supper (Let me just apologize in advance for the funky spacing in Lisa’s post — even re-typing it won’t fix it — I tried).
Who knows the first time I was fed grits. Probably would have to count all the times my mother ate corn grits when she was pregnant with me.
Daddy makes his grits with water, on the stove top in a small, metal pan. The corn grits bubble for 20 minutes, at least. He tells me: “Take a quarter cup of grits. Sometimes I measure the water and other times I don’t.”
Grits ain’t groceries.
Mama says that when she was a little girl her father was responsible for making her breakfast. “Each morning, before school,” she says, “My daddy would serve grits and sunny-side-up eggs. And as he put the grits on my plate, he said ‘Grits ain’t groceries.'”
Grits may not be groceries — meaning grits were staples — always in the southern house and made fresh at the nearest grist mill, often ground from the family’s very own corn. Grits are always eaten, at least in my family, with salt and black pepper and a spoonful of softened butter.
Another food I grew up eating was shrimp. Big Daddy, my daddy’s father, used to own an oyster bar, just off the main square in downtown Blakely, Georgia. At Christmas time, instead of turkey and such, Daddy, Uncle Charles, and boy cousins old enough to operate oyster knives shucked croaker sacks full of fresh oysters pulled from Apalachicola Bay on the Gulf of Mexico. Also, we ate tender Gulf shrimp, most often boiled and served hot with a small side bowl of cocktail sauce. I don’t ever remember sitting down for a Christmas meal: my cousins and I stood about eating the seafood as quick as it was prepared.
April begins shrimp season in Georgia. These days we bring shrimp home to Athens from the salty Atlantic waters near Darien, Georgia in McIntosh County. When we travel back from visiting this lowland county, situated along the Altamaha River, a place made infamous by Melissa Fay Greene’s 1991 work of nonfiction, Praying for Sheetrock, we always have the blue cooler iced down and full of these sweet, wild-caught Georgia shrimp.
When I set out to make grits, gourmet grits, I turn to Nathalie Dupree, author of cookbooks of the American South. When Natalie lived in Georgia I once had the good fortune to attend an afternoon party at her home in the pretty town of Social Circle. Her large dining room table was decorated with food she’d prepared, but all I remember was the big helping of warm cheese grits I ate, scooped from a large, hollowed-out round of Parmesan cheese. I’ve adapted the shrimp and grits recipe I offer from Nathalie Dupree’s Shrimp & Grits Cookbook. I’ve also provided links to two places located here in the South where you can order yellow grits, or white grits. I encourage you to select wild caught shrimp for this recipe.
Shrimp and Grits (serves four)
First, bring all of your ingredients to room temperature before cooking.
2 cups water
1 cup milk (1%, 2%, or whole — just know that the fattier the milk, the creamier the final taste)
1 cup half and half (have another 1/2 cup water or half and half on hand to use when the mixture begins to thicken).
2 cloves garlic, finely chopped
1 cup grits (white or yellow will do — just know that white grits are more refined and smooth, and yellow grits are rustic, coarser.)
1 pound of shrimp, peeled, heads removed.
1/4 to 1/2 stick unsalted butter
1/2 cup fresh shredded mild to medium cheddar cheese
1/2 to one cup fresh-grated Parmesan cheese
salt and fresh-ground black pepper
Get out your biggest, sturdiest cooking pot. I use a 4-quart with a heavy bottom. Once the grits begin to bubble, you are going to want to have plenty of room in the pot for the mixture to gurgle and bubble without it going over the sides. To the pot, add the water, milk and half and half, then bring all to a simmer over medium heat, stirring frequently. Add the grits and garlic, and stir well and often since you do not want this mix to clump or stick.
Bring the grits mixture to a slight boil, then reduce the heat. Add salt and pepper. Again, stir often, cooking about 15 minutes. Then add in extra water or half and half here (the mix should not be runny though) and the desired amount of butter and cheeses, letting this mixture cook for another 5 to 10 minutes: keep it creamy and loose and stir well so that the cheeses do not stick. Taste the grits then. You will want a soft texture, nothing gritty or hard.
When you have the grits like you want, add the shrimp and stir, coating the shrimp well. The hot grits and cheese will cook the shrimp and they’ll be ready in about two to three minutes, as soon as the shrimp turn a pretty pink.
Serve in large bowls alongside glasses of sweet tea.
This sounds delicious, Sharyn, and so very Southern. I have grits so rarely that it is a real treat to have a serving. This dish would be even more so. Thanks to you both for sharing.
Thanks, John. I like it when other people share their local and regional food. I even found grits at my local cheese store the other day in the bulk bins.
I really enjoyed this “guest post” Sharyn. I’m a little envious, too, of the Natalie Goldberg workshop 🙂 My family roots are southern yet I’m the only one who really likes grits! The last time I had shrimp and grits, though, was years ago in Charleston. I’d love to make this. Just reading this post and “hearing” her voice made me very nostalgic for my aunts and grandmother. I liked the sweet tea reference! Debra
Thanks, Debra. I never “got” plain grits when I lived in the South, but I always liked cheese grits and someday I’m going to make Lisa’s shrimp and grits — probably during swimming season when I can work off some of the calories.
This sounds like a great shrimp and grits recipe and I loved reading Lisa’s story. My very first post was about red grits and a mill in North GA that grinds them. I think grits are great plain and even better with cheese, then add shrimp, perfect! Now I’m going to have to go and buy some local shrimp soon.
I’m glad you enjoyed the post, Betsy. Let us know if you make this.
What a lovely guest post, sadly I am no grits fan, but then again, I may not have had good grits. The one and only time I had grits was in Atlanta in 1996; the people I was with lived there and took us to their local brunch place. They served grits. Sadly, I am not a fan.
Eva http://kitcheninspirations.wordpress.com
Grits are not my absolute favorite either, Eva, but I know I would like Lisa’s shrimp and grits with all of that yummy cheese, butter and shrimp. I plan to make it during swimming season.
What a great guest post – I have never heard of this recipe before but it sounds intriguing and delish 😀
Cheers
Choc Chip Uru
Thank you, CCU (or would you rather be called “Urvashi?”)
CCU or Choc Chip Uru is good 😉 – keeps relating me to chocolate chips 😀
Cheers
Choc Chip Uru
I love grits! One of the things that I really enjoy in my new place is that I can buy real southern grits at the local Fresh Market. And I like shrimp. Last night I had grilled shrimp and mushroom rissotto. This recipe seems like a perfect dinnner for us.
Oh good! Let us know if you try it, Maura.
Sharyn,
Thank you most kindly for allowing me to write for you. And I’m glad to hear there are some folks who are eager to try the recipe. I’d love to hear any comments from those of you who cook-up this dish. Remember, the secret to real good grits is letting them cook for at least 20 minutes, and much stirring. Lisa
I know that these grits are good — I’m married to the chef!
Testify, Brother!
You are welcome, Lisa. It’s good to have variety and hear from other parts of the country – I’m pretty much a California cook.
Mmm yum! I’ve never heard of grits before but the sound wonderful! I quite like the sound of this cooking style. I shall have to find me some grits in England! Is it corn flour?
Once you get the grits, which I highly recommend you order from one of the two links in the post (both mills are located in the American South), you are going to love the sound of them bubbling away in a pot. Please do write to let us know how you like them.
Grits are corn, yes, but not finely ground (not cornmeal). Avoid anything labeled “quick grits.”
Grits are ground parched corn — also known in the States as hominy grits. They are different from corn flour and from corn meal (more coarsely ground) The difference is sort of like the difference between steel-cut or Irish oats and porridge oats: you cannot use other corn products in place of grits.
Thanks for sharing! I love shrimp and grits (I did grow up in Alabama) 🙂
Glad you enjoyed it. We are finding that the very mention of grits produces strong opinions.
Great guest post. Fit for a novel; the type that would make the Oprah list of most recommended reads. Not only did I want shrimp and grits (I love, love, love shrimp), but it is as though she makes you feel the atmosphere of her home town and table. Very enjoyable. Thanks.
Granny, thank you darling, for your kind and most lovely words. I’ll get to work on that story, and you’ll be the first to know of its quickening. Cook up some shrimp and grits and let me know how you like them.
You are welcome and thank you.
I’ve never tried grits, and I can’t really get my head around the idea of them! I can’t work out what they taste like. But I do love shrimp 🙂
I understand, thoroughly. Grits, I think it is in the very name, the word grits, like something caught between your bra-strap (forgive me if you are not of the feminine persuasion) and your bare back, maybe? But if you are so inclined to give them a try, come on and order up a bag from one of the links posted. For a beginner, I can attest to the Charleston white grits as they are finely ground and sweet. Just use lots of liquid when cooking and stir often and well. Let me hear what you think about them, please.
I’ll admit the name is a bit off putting but what I still can’t work out is what do they taste of?
They taste of corn, quite simply. Just corn. Unless you put on lots of butter and cheese and then they taste of corn with butter and cheese. Truly. Now, the texture of grits could be described as thick and chewy, like a good bowl of oats (steel cut maybe).
Grits taste like ground corn, something like polenta, but the texture is different. I think they are a food you have to try to know what you think and, as Lisa says, don’t try instant or quick-cooking grits. When I lived in North Carolina the Kroger grocery store had half an aisle of grits (I had never seen such a thing before).
Thank you, I have an idea now in my head!! Maybe one day I’ll get to try them and who knows, maybe even like them 🙂
I’ve never had grits, not entirely sure what they are! Would be interested to try this though.
Grits, also called hominy grits, are a coarse form of dried corn that has been ground. They are a quintessential food of the American South, eaten as a side dish, a breakfast item, or in a main dish, as with Lisa’s recipe for shrimp and grits.
I’ve never tried grits Sharyn – I’m really curious as to what they might taste like. I hear a lot about them on different blogs… I wonder if I can find them anywhere here… they’re really not popular here I don’t think.
Charles, I think your best bet for obtaining grits would be to order them through Lisa’s links, although the shipping might be prohibitive. I’m not sure that hominy is grown in Europe — I’d have to do some research on that. But there is no substitute for grits in a grits recipe: grits are grits even if “grits ain’t groceries.”
I just returned home from Anna Marie island and had shrimp and grits two nights while there. I looooove shrimp and grits and planning to make this Saturday. Perfect timing. When my daughter lived in Charleston we have shrimp and cheese grits for breakfast.
Yay! A shrimp and grits fan. Enjoy it, Jane.
She really is quite the storyteller, Sharyn (like you!).. I could just picture that metal pot on the stove with grits bubbling.. And I’d love a hot scoop out of the parmesan wheel thank you and please may I?!
That she is, Smidge. I liked the sound of that wheel of cheese, too.
These sound delicious.
Thank you. I’ve wanted to taste them ever since Lisa first mentioned them to me.
Lisa,
Your recipe makes my mouth water. I’ve never made my own Shrimp ‘n Grits but ate it plenty of times. Now, I think I’ll make my own. Those sweet Georgia shrimp are sososo very tasty, too.