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Southern Cornbread

This is a recipe I devised through trial and error, not to mention the help of my daughter’s taste buds.  I’ll warn you, she’s a sweet one.  Sweet on the outside, sweet on the inside, plain everything in her world is sweet—including her preference in food.  Which leads me to a disclaimer:  this is NOT my mother’s recipe.  (We don’t want to tarnish her reputation in any way, particularly “guilt by association.”)

To be completely forthright, we took her basic recipe and modified from there.  Frankly, I prefer her recipe, only not oven-baked like she always did but pan-fried, with lots of yummy butter to make it a beautiful golden brown.  My apologies to my healthy friends—this recipe is anything but.

But it’s oh-so-delicious.  And simple–the best part of all!

fried cornbread recipe

Southern Cornbread

2 cups yellow cornmeal

2 cups buttermilk

3 TBSP melted bacon drippings, extra to grease pan

1 egg

1 tsp baking soda

1/2 tsp salt

1/4 cup vanilla pudding mix (optional – to add moisture)

2 TBSP sugar (optional – for the sweet tooth!)

Preheat oven to 400°F.  Grease bottom & sides of 10” cast iron skillet with bacon fat. For crisper crust, pre-heat skillet before adding batter. Mix all ingredients together and pour into greased pan.  Bake for 30 minutes.

Serve warm.  8 servings.

Mind you there are tons of variations for this recipe, like adding bacon bits into the batter, fresh corn kernels, jalapeno peppers – but whatever you do, don’t tell my mother I added sugar and pudding mix – she’ll have my hide!

However, there’s one modification she will approve and that’s Grandma Lulu’s way…  Combine the buttermilk, cornmeal (self-rising), salt and pepper and whisk until smooth.  Heat a small cast iron skillet to medium on stove top.  Melt a slice of butter in pan, then pour a 1/4 cup of batter into the pan, spreading it out pancake style.

pour cornmeal mix like a pancake

Cook several minutes or until bottom is golden brown, then flip (I add another swatch of butter before the corn cake hits the pan for the second time!).  Cook until underside is golden brown (won’t take long), then remove from pan and eat immediately!

pan-frying cornbread

All I can say is yum.  Made cornbread this way the other night and the family said it tasted like pancakes.  “Pass the syrup!”

Crazy as a dizzy goat, I tell you.  My corn cakes tasted nothing like breakfast pancakes.  In fact, Grandma Lulu’s method is my favorite way to make cornbread. 🙂  You decide.

So there you have it.  Two methods, two schools of thought.  But to me, cornbread any way you cook it is a compliment to a traditional southern meal, or simply divine served on its own.

Save Print
Southern Cornbread
Author: Dianne Venetta
Recipe type: Bread
Cuisine: American
Prep time:  10 mins
Cook time:  30 mins
Total time:  40 mins
Serves: 8 servings
 
This recipe is a Southern classic and the perfect complement to any meal.
Ingredients
  • 2 cups yellow cornmeal
  • 2 cups buttermilk
  • 3 TBSP melted bacon drippings, extra to grease pan
  • 1 egg
  • 1 tsp baking soda
  • ½ tsp salt
  • ¼ cup vanilla pudding mix (optional - to add moisture)
  • 2 TBSP sugar (optional - for the sweet tooth!)
Instructions
  1. Preheat oven to 400°F.
  2. Grease bottom & sides of 10” cast iron skillet with bacon fat. For crisper crust, pre-heat skillet before adding batter.
  3. Mix all ingredients together and pour into greased pan. Bake for 30 minutes.
  4. Serve warm.
3.5.3228

 

Comments

  1. Richard Helms says

    08/05/2014 at 12:59 PM

    I thought I had stumbled on my grandmother’s white flour cornbread recipe when I saw the images of the skillet bread. Hers was the texture of cornmeal and grits, if that’s likely. I have been trying to replicate it for years, with no success. If you have an idea of this, PLEASE SHARE! The cakes were about 6″ to 9″ in diameter, and lightly scorched on each side. She would bring them to table still hot – but somewhat doughey in the center. I remember cutting them across, to make a pocket – and sliding in a slab of butter YUM!

    Reply

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Hello there!

I'm Dianne, a Central Florida gardener who has learned that gardening doesn't have to be difficult or time-consuming, but instead--fun! With a husband, two kids and a Yellow Lab, I don't have time for difficult. My hands are full. But now, after a few years of trials and tribulations, so is my harvest basket! Let me share with you how I do it. Read More…

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