Dad's Chicken Fried Steak & Cream Gravy
Submitted by shez
Dad’s chicken fried steak with cream gravy: pounded round steak triple-dredged in flour and evaporated milk, fried golden in oil, and smothered in pan-drippings white gravy. Pure Southern comfort.
YIELD
12 servingsPREP
15 minCOOK
15 minREADY
30 minChicken fried steak is the Southern truck-stop classic that takes a tough cut and turns it into something tender, crunchy, and gravy-smothered. Dad’s version sticks to the no-shortcut tradition: pounded round steak, a triple-dredge for serious crust, hot oil for the fry, and a pan-drippings cream gravy poured over the top.
The triple-dredge (flour, milk, seasoned flour) is what creates the signature craggy crust. The first flour layer dries the meat. The milk-and-hot-sauce dip moistens it so the second flour layer sticks. That double-flour finish picks up oil and crisps into a thick, shaggy coating that’s the whole reason for ordering chicken fried steak in the first place.
Evaporated milk is the unsung hero. It’s thicker and richer than regular milk, with a slight caramelized note from the canning process, and it makes the egg wash sticky enough to anchor the second flour coat properly.
The cream gravy isn’t an afterthought. After frying the steaks, you save six tablespoons of the fat, whisk in flour to form a roux, and gradually stir in milk to make a peppery white gravy. Using that same pan with the browned bits stuck to the bottom is the entire secret to a real Southern-style cream gravy.
Pro Tips
- Pound the round steak to even half-inch thickness. Uneven steaks fry unevenly and you’ll get thin pieces overcooked while thick ones stay raw.
- The oil should be hot enough that a pinch of flour sizzles immediately. Cold oil makes greasy steaks.
- Don’t crowd the pan. Cook in batches if needed. Crowded steaks lose their crust to steam.
- Make the gravy thicker than you think you need. It thins as it sits on the hot meat.
Variations
- Swap round steak for cube steak for an easier, even more tender version.
- Add cayenne or chipotle powder to the seasoned flour for a spicier crust.
- Top with a poached egg for chicken fried steak Benedict at brunch.
Ingredients
Directions
Trim steak and pound, if needed, to ½ inch thick; cut into 6 to 8 pieces.
Combine milk, Tabasco sauce and salt in a bowl.
Measure 1 cup of flour into a bowl.
Combine remaining flour, paprika, garlic powder, salt and pepper in another bowl.
Dip steak into flour, into milk mixture, and then into seasoned flour.
Set aside until all meat is coated. Heat 1 or 2 inches of oil in fry pan.
Fry meat until both sides are golden brown, about 2 minutes per side.
Drain on paper towels. Serve with cream gravy, mashed potatoes and gravy.
CREAM SAUCE:
Pour off all but 6 tablespoon of fat from fry pan; add 6 tablespoons flour into pan (use any leftover seasoned flour) and blend well.
Gradually stir in 2½ cups milk. Cook and stir over medium heat until thickened.
Season with salt and pepper. Cover steaks with gravy when served.
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