Cast Away Meat Eaters Dip

This is another of my old Fish Camp/Deer Camp recipes and I made it yesterday for the Georgia game at Cast Away Cove. Lisa and I were working on the house while watching the game and we both found ourselves going back to the crockpot again and again for more of this delicious dip. It’s pretty meaty, cheesy and addicting, especially watching football on a fall day. Btw, you can replace the ground beef with sausage, venison, chicken or even turn it into a seafood dip with shrimp or Langostino lobster. Here’s my best stab at the amounts as I have never really officially measured anything and I always suggest making changes to the way you like it.

Preheat your oven to 375 degrees

Ingredients:

  • 1/2-1 pound of cooked ground beef/venison, cooked sausage or cooked chicken
  • 2- 8 ounce packages of cream cheese (softened)
  • 1 cup of shredded cheddar cheese
  • 1/2 cup of shredded parmesan cheese
  • 1/2 cup sour cream
  • 1 can of Ro*Tel Dice tomatoes with lime juice and cilantro
  • 1/2 cup chopped onion
  • 1 cup of chopped andouille sausage (optional)
  • I like to throw in a little Old Bay for that southern flair
  • salt and pepper to taste

I just mix all of the ingredients listed above in a big mixing bowl and then put it all in my big blue baking dish. I cover and bake the dip for about 25 minutes covered and another 15 minutes uncovered. After I remove it from the oven I transfer it to the crockpot to keep it warm and ready to serve with my favorite, Tostito’s scoops. Enjoy!!

Shake and Bake in the Chop

This week I started my mornings offshore in search of a few things that needed to come together to make the topwater bite work for me. I would leave the creek about 8am and look for the areas of choppy water out on the vast main lake. Luckily, I was blessed with the ability to see well at a distance in my later years so I’ve been able to find the choppy areas for a great distance on the waters surface. It seemed like every morning there were these random areas of choppy water where there were areas of breezes across the lake. When these random breezes and patches of choppy water would collide with offshore humps or points with brush, that’s the areas I was targeting. If it was a hump or point and it had chop on it I would fish it because the chop seemed to distort the fishes view of the bait and they were more apt to commit to the bait rather than just swipe at it or ignore it. These patches of chop or random breezes would just drift around the lake in different areas in the mornings so I would just jump from one spot to the next following the breeze. The only 2 baits I threw this week was a custom painted pearl white Sebile and the Azuma Z Dog walking bait made by Profound Outdoors. It’s really all I needed to catch some nice beefy fish. I didn’t score big numbers but I did score some big fish. Here’s a picture of the 2 baits I used this week.

Once I found the areas I wanted to fish I generally approached the area from up wind and made my casts down wind while letting the boat drift as much as I could without using the trolling motor and without the noise of waves slapping the side of the boat. The trick to making the Z Dog work was to make a long cast down wind and immediately skip it across the water erratically for 5-10 feet and then a normal walk for a few feet and then skip and walk it erratically again and slow it back down. The splashing from working the bait erratically would get the fishes attention and they would react to it. If I just made a cast and walked the dog normally I would get far less bites. It seemed like the fish would react to the bait a lot better if I shook the bait and made it splash periodically. I named it my “Shake and Bake” pattern with the little Z Dog and I generally brought the bait back up wind kinda “against the grain” of the chop so to speak.

Another thing that was happening in these areas if I stayed around long enough was periodic schooling. That was a bonus and if I was in the right place at the right time I could score a nice fish with the right cast. If I saw fish schooling in the area I was fishing I would immediately jump on the trolling motor and get within casting distance as quick as possible. If I could get there within 5-10 seconds I could usually get the fish to come back up after the Z Dog if they had quit schooling. If I could get my bait into the area while they were actively schooling they would generally smash the Z Dog within seconds. I would say about 60-70% of my fish this week were from actively schooling fish and the other 30-40% was from calling the fish up over or around brush. The key was just about always the chop and the erratic behavior of the walking bait.

A lot of times the chop would kind of fizzle out while I was there and most of the time that’s when I would head out looking for other patches of chop. I would also take into account what bass boats were where and I didn’t really fish areas where boats had been recently. The whole thing was like an orchestrated dance that moved with the chop out on the main lake in the morning before I would head back to the creek to finish off my day fishing the Z dog over brush in the creek. I will say this, I caught some nice fish in the afternoons in the creek this week but I caught and lost some monsters offshore on the main lake.

The other bait I used this week was the pearl white Sebile. I sanded down a couple of 125 slow sinking Sebile’s I had lying around and repainted them my pearl white color pattern. This is a pattern I’ve used in the fall for a few years now and it has been money for me on overcast days and low light. This week I used it early in the morning out on the offshore stuff while the fish were actively schooling and I could make a cast to them. My Sebile was just about as deadly as the Z Dog with the fish chasing bluebacks on the surface. Here’s a picture and a video from Tuesday with a nice offshore bass on the custom painted Sebile. We had some good cloud cover Tuesday morning and it was a perfect time to use the custom Sebile. The bass in the first picture below spit up the blueback in the second picture and a video of catching the fish below.

It was pretty simple this week, find the chop on top of the brush on points and humps in the creek and offshore and use the shake and bake method over and around the brush for a few nice fish. When they were actively schooling on schools of bluebacks they were so lit up they would have probably hit a cat turd if you painted it white but out of convenience I used the Z Dog or white pearl Sebile this week. That’s all I’ve got from this week. Good luck!

The lake level is a foot above full pool and as I predicted the corps is moving a lot more water right now so the lake level is very slowly dropping. Surface temps are in the upper 70’s as I type this but that shouldn’t last much longer. Here’s a few pictures of some of my memorable fish this week.

Who Moved My Cheese?

“Who moved my cheese”. It was a pretty popular short book back about 20 years ago. It’s been described as a motivational business fable involving two mice and two little people and their ways of dealing with the change of periodically moving a pile of cheese in a maze. Just like in the book, this week I felt like my cheese had been moved but I kept going back to the old cheese location instead of looking for a new cheese pile. Highly recommended reading.

Transition is a hard time for me and it usually happens around the turnover. There comes a time when the cheese pile gets moved and I have to accept the fact that the cheese is gone and I need to move on. My topwater bite left town yesterday afternoon when that big striper tore off with my last Z Dog walking bait in the YouTube video below so late this week I needed to find a new confidence bait or confidence pattern. The popper isn’t the best choice for me right now and about all I can get with the popper is a couple swirls and a blowup or two. Just a week ago I was slaying the bass with the popper and I’m sure that bite will return as it always does in October but it’s about time for me to move on…..

When it comes to the turnover period on Lanier, remember two things to make it simple; 1st, turnover does not happen all at once on the lake, the back half of the creeks could be in turnover, but the main lake hasn’t got to that change yet. Secondly, when the water turns over so do the fish. By this I mean that the fishes primary focus is no longer what’s above them for their food supply and they start looking below them as well. That’s why beating the bank with things like a crankbait, jig or shaky head become very popular after the turnover in late fall/early winter. Just keep that in mind and make the transition from one pattern to another early instead of late. Go find the fish or the new cheese pile and don’t be like me and return to the old area of cheese hoping more cheese will show up. Another thing to keep in mind this time of year is lake level. We just had a significant rise in the water level and if there is one thing I know about Lanier and these spotted bass, they move with water level changes. When the water rises some fish come to the shoreline in search of new foraging grounds that may be rich in crawfish and baitfish feeding in the shallows, so anytime the lake rises it’s a good time to check the shoreline and rocky areas for foraging bass or “Meat Eaters” as I like to call them. I copied an excerpt from the fable below and if you replace the word “cheese” with “pattern” it’s pretty sound advice when it comes to transitioning bass.

Change Happens: They Keep Moving The Cheese

Anticipate Change: Get Ready For The Cheese To Move

Monitor Change: Test The Cheese Often So You Know When It Is Getting Old

Adapt To Change Quickly: The Quicker You Let Go Of Old Cheese, The Sooner You Can Enjoy New Cheese Change

Move With The Cheese: Enjoy Change! Savor The Adventure And Enjoy The Taste Of New Cheese!

Not to change the subject but I certainly wish I had the ability to take more photos back when I was running the marshes in Louisiana, but 30 years ago taking a picture was a little different than today. A selfie would take a week and $20 to develop the film only to find out it was out of focus and not centered. I guess my point is that if I were able to take pictures back then there would have been hundreds of pictures of me catching speckled trout by the dozens right now in the marsh. This is the time of early fall when the trout migrate into the marshes and I loved to catch trout in October in the marsh. The possession limit was 25 and speckled trout are delicious as table fare. Here’s one picture from an October marsh trip with my friend Eric some 25 years ago.

Every time I went out on the lake this week my mind kept going back to the Louisiana marshes and catching trout with a sparkle beetle under a popping cork. If you have never experienced speckled trout fishing in the fall in Louisiana I highly recommend making a trip and loading a cooler with trout and redfish in late October.

The lake level is about 1.5 feet above full pool, water temps in the mid to upper 70’s and the corps is pulling water a few hours a day. I figure they may start a more frequent generation soon to draw the lake down. Hopefully my topwater bite will return soon but I may be looking for a new cheese pile next week.

Here’s a little video from the last few hours of my last Z Dog. Z Dog….you served me well my friend.

The Hawk and the Crows

I wrote this a while back and decided to put it on my blog. Try to be the hawk in life”.

The Hawk and the Crows…..I spend a lot of days on the lake now and as I’m going about my day I can’t help but see the occasional hawk flying around the lakeshore and nesting in nearby trees. We have a very large population of red tailed hawks around the lake and a lot of times the hawks will use the lake as their hunting grounds. I love to watch the hawks swoop down for a floating fish from time to time and often times I can see them in the trees working together to hunt squirrels and small ground type rodents. They have a shrill scream and can be heard from a long way away when they are hunting or communicating and it’s easy for me to get distracted from fishing to watch the hawks. Numerous times I’ve seen the big hawks flying over the lake and sometimes hoovering around the big hawks are one or two black crows. The black crows seem to harass the hawk at every turn and they are relentless almost crashing into the hawk as they dive and swoop over the hawk during flight. The crow does not hunt and is not a predator and certainly no match for the hawk in battle. A couple of my observations during these hawk vs crow encounters are number one, if you watch closely you’ll see that the crows never attack the hawk from the front, it’s always from the rear and it’s always followed by a quick get away. Another observation is that the hawk pays little to no attention to the crows. The hawk goes on about his business and very rarely acknowledges the harassing crows existence. Keep in mind that the hawk is a master hunter and can kill it’s prey in flight with a quick swoop of it’s talons but it chooses to ignore the smaller weaker crows with focus and an even temper. My guess is that the hawk doesn’t like the taste of crow or there would be a lot less crows and a lot of fat hawks around there but they pay the crows no mind while in flight. After a few minutes of relentless attack, the crow gets no reaction and usually looses interest, moving on with no blood loss or feathers shed. If there is a moral to my observation, it would be to try and be like the hawk as you go through your life. There will always be a crow or two nipping at your heals, trying to throw you off course but pay them no mind and keep going with the focus and even temper of the hawk. Be the hawk in life, not the crow.-Jim Farmer

Welcome to October!

Finally! It’s the month I’ve been waiting for all year. It’s by far my favorite month of the year and for good reason; baseball is winding down and it’s time for the play-offs, college and NFL football gets going, my annual fantasy team starts tanking and topwater on Lake Lanier is in full swing.

Right now I’m in a place where fishing has become hyper focused for me so there’s not much of a report this week. I have a tournament tomorrow and I know exactly what I have to do to catch a fish but as it turns out, it’s totally up to the fish as to whether it’s going to be a magnum or it’s goin g to be a 14 inch fish. They are all mixed together in the brush and trying to increase the odds of a good fish verses a dink is where the proper bait comes in. –

In the past I have related my experiences from fishing to my experiences while hunting. When site fishing you need to lead your target much like shooting a bird in flight but before this occurs you must be able to lure your target to within range. Duck hunters know what I’m talking about when I say that one of the most satisfying feelings in duck hunting is the moment the ducks fold their wings to drop down on your decoy spread because that’s the moment you realized they bought your call, hook, line and sinker. It’s the same with fishing over brush; the idea is to lure the fish out of the brush and to your bait so the better call you have, the more success you’re going to have. It’s like creating and ringing a dinner bell for the fish and they start moving around looking for dinner. Really, it’s not completely necessary to just target the brush as the fish may already be in a feeding mode and moving around nearby brush on a point or a hump. This time of year they tend to cruise around looking for bluebacks on or near the surface and the brush is where they make their home. It’s that simple…..

Bottom line is that these fish are looking for a meal on or near the surface and the better you can call these fish up, the more success you’re going to have with topwater. Whether it’s the Emerald Popper, a whopper plopper, a walking bait, a gunfish or a big OG, for the next few weeks it’s all topwater for me so there isn’t a whole bunch to report and the videos I made this week are all location sensitive so they won’t be published. Water temps are in the upper 70’s and the lake is around full pool. Corps is still moving water in the afternoons during high power usage. Here’s a few memorable pics from the week.

Can You Walk the Dog?

If there is one tactic that I can teach someone to master in a day of fishing, it would have to be walking the dog. The fact is, I’ve done it with several of my guests over the years and it has generally worked to perfection. It generally works to perfection this time of year when the fish are focusing on the surface and looking for bluebacks so learning this tactic can be very rewarding and now is the time to learn it.

I guess I’ve been using these walking baits for years when I think back to how many years a Zara Spook has been in my tacklebox. Before it was bass, it was stripers and before it was stripers, it was bass for me so I think topwater walking baits have been a favorite of mine for a while. The technique itself is kinda like learning to dance, you need to be able to find a rhythm and use both hands for different tasks at the same time. I know that may sound hard but once you get the hang of it, you’ve unlocked a door to a whole new fun world of topwater.

On Lake Lanier we have a very healthy population of Blueback Herring that have mixed rather well with the threadfin shad population so there is an abundance of food for the bass and striper population. The bluebacks in particular tend to stay closer to the surface during certain times of the year and the fall is one of those times that our blueback population gravitates towards the fleeting surface warmth from the fall sunlight. During the fall it’s like the last hoorah before the bait starts moving deeper into the ditches where they make their winter home until the following spring and the bait spawn.

During the fall the bluebacks may be in smaller groups or larger schools and they move around both shallow and deep. It’s the shallow bluebacks that become the most visible target, both visible to us the fisherman and visible to the bass because of the backdrop of the surface. One of the most important aspects of being successful with topwater is watching the surface and listening for surface activity around you. I can’t count how many times I’ve heard a fish surface behind my back while fishing and turned around, made a cast and caught the fish. I also like to constantly scan the surface around me for surfacing fish and if I see fish surfacing in the distance I make a mental note of it and visit that area a little later. Often times the surfacing fish will still be active in the area for a while so to me it’s worth a check even 30 minutes after I saw the fish surface.

One of the main benefits of walking the dog is the excitement of topwater blowups and the subsequent hookups that often come with it. The other day I was chatting with a friend and I explained that I compared walking the dog to having an endless amount of tries for a prize at a carnival game of chance. Each cast is another opportunity to win the prize and there are endless opportunities out on the lake in the fall when walking the dog.

I’m partial to spinning gear here on Lake Lanier and about 75% of the fish I catch are 2-4lb bass and the rest are stripers in the 5-10lb range. Since Lanier is a clear reservoir I strictly use fluorocarbon by itself or flourocarbon with braid. When I’m walking the dog I like to use about 30 feet of 8lb Tatsu leader with a 12lb braid main line. The rod I’m using is a 7′ 3″-7′ 6″ MH fast action or fast tip and the reel is either a Penn Fierce or a Shimano Ci4. I want to make a long cast and the braid gives me the strength and sensitivity I need if I hook up with a fish with a lot of line out. I like to use my walking bait against the grain of the surface chop of waves. Let’s face it, the fish are looking up and the surface disruption made by the walking bait going against the wind and chop is much more visible to the fish than if the bait was moving with the chop. That’s been my experience with surface baits therefor I’m using my “Spot Lock” function on my Minn Kota a lot during the fall when we have wind. The biggest trick to walking the dog is being able to crank with one hand at the same time you are moving the bait with the other hand. You’ve got to be able to do both at once to keep the bait moving fluently and looking somewhat realistic to the fish. I like to use my index finger as the control point for my rod hand. Every twitch of my wrist goes through my index finger and down the rod. At the same time my other hand is doing the cranking in rhythm. It takes some practice but once you master the rhythm then you can work on the speed and believe me, the speed is very important as sometimes the fish will react to a faster speed but just the opposite to a slower bait so play with your speed till you find a trend. Another factor to consider is sound. Sometimes a walking bait with a “one knocker” sound or one larger ball bearing is preferred by the fish and sometimes the rattle of smaller bearings causes the react. Sometime a silent walking bait is the best approach but the point is to play with walking baits with different sounds this time of year. Size is another factor and a good sized walking bait for starting out is the 4-5 inch variety. Once you kinda get the hang of walking the dog then try some larger stuff. I can promise you that these big spotted bass won’t turn down a large 6-8 inch walking bait out on a main lake hump on a windy day.

Right now is the right time to work on walking the dog on Lake Lanier, whether you are fishing from a boat or walking the shoreline of one of the many parks here, it’s a tried and true method for both bass and stripers over the next few months. Here’s a video I made about 5 years ago in late September using the walking bait for some morning bait. It should give you and idea of how to use the technique.

The Shadows of September

It happens ever year about this time and it’s been a constant reminder that fall is on the way. At my old shop where I used to build tackle, the windows of the shop faced the south and every year the noonday summer sun would light up the back windows of the shop but as the days started growing shorter in late summer the angle of the sun would start to droop to the south. Since the angle of the sun would slowly get lower in the south in late summer, instead of direct sunlight in the windows the trees to the south would cause the sun to cast shadows through the windows and the area would be shaded all day until the following June.

Since this is our 3rd fall here at the new house on the lake I’ve noticed that the same shadows are cast every year in our little cove. Soon the leaves will start to turn and those humid days will be replaced by passing cool fronts and much dryer conditions. There is usually a time in mid to late September when the water starts to make that shift and starts getting cooler and I noticed yesterday that the water temps were barely holding at 80 degrees. First time we’ve seen 80 for a few months.

My week started with a run out to the main lake on Monday morning and found very little wind to work with but there were pockets of chop on the lake that I could work with. I started with the emerald popper and threw it around points and humps where I could find a little surface disruption but to be honest, my morning topwater bite has been really lacking. I can get a few to come up but these bass know that the surface activity is driven by bluebacks and bluebacks don’t like to come to the surface until the sun gets high in the sky, like around noon. I moved from location to location on the main lake but around lunchtime the wind picked up a little and I found a large blow-through that was just loaded with bait and fish. The schools of bait were being blown over an old road bed of sorts and the stripers and bass were ambushing the bait on the leeward side of the roadbed. I broke out the big black pearl OG and started bombing it into the wind and bringing it back down wind where the fish were set up. First I was able to catch a nice spot but after that it was all big stripers and they were aggressive. I started catching one on every cast using the black pearl OG till finally one of the big stripers broke me off. It was a humbling lesson in checking my line after every catch. It was a clean break and it was more than likely from a nick in the line. I waited in the area for another 30 minutes hoping the fish would shake it out but it was to no avail as the black pearl was gone….

I was heartbroken because I was just getting into a grove with the bait and it was gone. I went back home after catching a few other fish here and there on smaller baits but my day was ruined. There was a bright spot as I had ordered 2 more OG’s and they were coming in the mail Monday evening so I had something to look forward to.

Tuesday I got out with my buddy Mike and our plan was to throw big baits for big fish but the weather had other plans for us and it was a day of hit and miss fishing with very little wind to work with so we had to got to the smaller subsurface baits to get good bites. Shortly after lunch the topwater bite turned on but with very little wind to work with, it wasn’t like it was on fire. We popped a few good ones on the surface stuff and called it a day in the late afternoon. Here’s a couple nice fish and probably our biggest 2 of the day.

Wednesday was a wash this week and the weather was pretty nasty so I stayed in and worked in the shop. Most of ya’ll already know but LJ and Cory over at Lanier baits are selling the Emerald Popper now and I think they should be stocking most of the stores around here with the popper. Hopefully very soon they’ll all be all stocked up on poppers before the fall popper bite really gets going. Lisa and I discovered the Emerald Popper in Sept. of 2014 and this month makes it’s 7th anniversary of fun with our little popper. We’ll have more on the popper later including a little video on how and where to use the Emerald Popper. Stay tuned.

So Thursday rolls around and the weather is still kinda nasty but it was the kind of day I like for fishing. These fish are banking on us fisherman staying home on the rainy days so they take a few more chances during bad weather. On Thursday I had my new OG’s ready and really wanted to give them a workout in the big chop out on the main lake and as luck would have it my crank battery died leaving me stranded out on the main lake in the wind, whitecaps and rain. I made a quick battery swap with one of my trolling motor batteries so I could get back to the house but before the battery issue I managed to give the OG’s a work out. It was mainly stripers but I did find a few nice bass on the new OG’s and I really had a good time out in the nasty conditions before the battery trouble started. When I got back to the creek I stopped and drift fished a few points since my trolling motor was basically dead. I found out late in the afternoon that the fish were really responding to the Z-dog walking bait I’ve been using from time to time so I just started rolling the the Z-dog and ended my day with it. Here’s a couple pics from my day and a video of the Bone OG 40 gm in action.

On Friday I made a little run out in the creek after charging the batteries and putting the old crank battery in the mix with the other 2 batteries for the trolling motor. It got me back on the water for a couple hours before the bad battery killed the trolling motor. I mainly just stayed close to home and used the little Z-dog on points and humps with brush. Here’s a few more pics of some late week Z-dog damage and I included a YouTube video “On the Cast Away Deck” from the week. Lake levels are up around full pool and the corps is still moving water during the afternoons and evenings.

Cast Away Chicken Croissants

This is a recipe I picked up years ago and I still make it once every few weeks. I’m pretty sure this dish isn’t very health but it’s very delicious and somewhat easy to make. I like to serve it with quartered potatoes and a green vegetable. Here’s the ingredients.

Ingredients:

  • 1 pound of chicken tenders boiled
  • 1 can of cream of chicken soup with herbs
  • 8 ounces of Velveeta cheese cubed
  • 1 can of original crescents
  • 1 full soup can of milk
  • salt and pepper to taste

I like to boil my potatoes and chicken in the same pot to save time.

Once the chicken is done I set it aside to cool and finish boiling the potatoes. When the chicken has cooled I break it into pieces and start my cheese sauce on very low heat so the sauce doesn’t burn when it thickens. Preheat your over to 375 degrees at this point.

Add a good pinch of chicken to each of the unrolled crescents and continue to stir the cheese sauce. You may need to adjust the added milk to get the perfect thickness for the cheese sauce. Place your chicken crescent rolls in the oven for 10 minutes or until golden brown.

I guess you can get the picture from here. Enjoy!!

Can You Feel It?

This is that week in September when we start to see the first signs of Autumn with the entrance of a mild but dryer cool front. When I woke up this morning the temperature was down in the upper 50’s and I actually thought about something a little warmer to wear this morning when I hit the lake shortly after dawn. This week we had some warmer more humid days early in the week but by weeks end we are experiencing a touch of early Autumn with lows in the 50’s and highs in the low 80’s. Don’t get me wrong, I know we are in store for more hot days over the next few weeks but the last 2 days are just a reminder that fall is on the way.

A few weeks ago I ordered a few new baits from Cast Company called the “OG”. It’s been all the rage here lately on the lake and I’ve been seeing some very nice fish being caught on it. The problem is that a few weeks ago I cleaned the man cave and I misplaced my OG until this past weekend when I found it and decided to give it a whirl this week. It’s a bigger bait and I was throwing it on my baitcaster mounted on a 7 foot rod with some heavier flouro. One of the best parts about throwing a big bait like the OG is that I can cast it a mile and the bottom line is that the more time your bait is in the water, the better chance you have of catching a fish.

Tuesday morning I worked in the shop but in the afternoon I lit out for the main lake with the OG. No kidding, on my first stop with the bait, I was slinging it out in the wind off a reef marker and after a few casts, BAAAMMM!! one of my biggest fish of the year smoked the OG on the surface and it looked like an absolute “TRAIN WRECK” when she hit it. I knew it was a big fish right away and I enjoyed every moment of bringing the fish to the boat. Here’s a pic of my first fish on the Cast Co. 40gm OG“.

That was all the convincing I needed and from that point on this week it’s been on the deck and if I can find some wind I’ve been throwing the OG. This week the only two rods I’ve had on the deck is the OG and the popper. It’s all been topwater this week and I’m having fun learning about my new bait. I’ll give an expanded report on the OG next week when I get a full week with it and I also get to try the other two colors that are coming in the mail on Monday. Stay tuned for more on the OG. The water temps are cooling and as I write this the temps were around 83-84 degrees. The lake level is a little less than a foot above full pool and the corps is moving water in the afternoon. Below is a little bit of video I made this week catching a couple of nice stripers on the OG and some memorable fish from the week.

Cast Away Sunday Morning Biscuits and Gravy

My first memory of gravy was when I was very small and my grandmother would make fried rabbit gravy that she made in an electric skillet. I used to watch her mix the flour with the used grease drippings and then add the milk. She would quarter potatoes and the gravy would be served on top of the potatoes to go with the rabbit. She also made the gravy in that electric skillet for biscuits and gravy in the morning. You may want to play with the ingredients just a bit but here is my best guess at the amount of everything. I just wing it and I don’t measure anything, I just know how much to use.

Ingredients

  • 1/2 (6 ounces) package maple flavored sausage (or any flavor sausage you prefer). Note: Use bulk sausage instead of sausage links.
  • 1/2 stick of butter
  • 1/4 cup all-purpose flour
  • 3 cups whole milk
  • 1/4 cup of finely chopped onion (optional) (Lisa doesn’t like the onion) (Not Southern!)
  • 1 tsp Worcestershire sauce
  • salt and pepper to taste

Brown the Maple sausage in a non-stick skillet

Add the butter and onion once the sausage is broken down and browned

Add flour and Worcestershire sauce and stir thoroughly

Add milk slowly and continue to stir.

Once it begins to simmer it will thicken. Continue to simmer until desired thickness. If it gets to think I just add a little more milk.

Once desired thickness has been reached, remove heat and pour into a serving dish and pour over your biscuits.

Enjoy!!!