Irish_Man said:
He's from the Waco area
So like the alanis morissette song, more of a coincidence then?
Irish_Man said:
He's from the Waco area
Thanks for posting. I haven't thought of Gennie's in 20 years.OldArmyAggie94 said:
My go to..
https://www.google.com/amp/s/cookymunchkin.wordpress.com/2010/11/18/chicken-fried-steak-gennies-bishop-grill-style/amp/
Green Chile Willies, south of Amarillo, has a green chile gravy option for CFS. Pretty good.agfan2013 said:
Sodalacks and the Longhorn in B/CS area have good CFS. Longhorn even has a "spicy CFS" which is cheese melted with tobasco sauce instead of regular gravy.
CanyonAg77 said:Green Chile Willies, south of Amarillo, has a green chile gravy option for CFS. Pretty good.agfan2013 said:
Sodalacks and the Longhorn in B/CS area have good CFS. Longhorn even has a "spicy CFS" which is cheese melted with tobasco sauce instead of regular gravy.
BQ04 said:
Gristmill in Gruene
trouble said:
I always forget about them. Haven't had anything but breakfast but their biscuits are freaking legit.
trouble said:
I always forget about them. Haven't had anything but breakfast but their biscuits are freaking legit.
RPM said:
At BRC and Liberty Kitchen in Houston you can get CFS breaded in jalapeo potato chips. Awesome.
Only a select few know where D'Hanis is!Build It said:
Bill and Rosa's in D'Hanis worth the trek.
This is basically the way we do it, also! Top shelf!Mark Fairchild said:
You double dip the cutlets. First dip cutlet in batter- egg/buttermilk mix (1 large egg and 2 cups buttermilk), then roll cutlet in mixture of 2 1/2 cups flour/2 cups corn flakes(slightly crushed)/salt & pepper, then repeat. Fry cutlets slowly and turn only once. Fry each side to a medium brown. By cooking slowly and turning only once, the batter stays on the cutlet. I prefer plenty of grease.
Cream gravy: in pan grease drippings and fried batter mixture from finished cutlets, flour to thicken(about 2/3 cup) brown to light brown color, add about a third of gal of milk. Cook at about 375 to thicken. Continue to stir, don't leave it or it can scorch. Salt and pepper to desired flavor. I prefer mashed potatoes or homemade biscuits with the gravy, but to each his own. No better dish in the South. Enjoy!
I'll check this one out later this week.Mule_lx said:
In Round Rock, Krack of Dawn Donuts off University. Place is so legit for fish and grits and chicken fried steak. Sounds odd but go.
https://www.koddonuts.com/
That's what I do.maverick12 said:
Dip the tenderized cube steak, or venison in milk and egg and then seasoned flour. Keep it simple.
In the mid-80's for a college student budget, the Cow Hop CFS sandwich and gravy on the fries was hard to beat. Have a pig-out after and you'd be sure to take a good nap in class.Aggieangler93 said:
In the mid-nineties, my goto for CFS in B/CS was Tom's BBQ. It was a massive plate coverer, with good gravy. I miss Tom's!
Yeah, for us really old farts, Youngbloods Aggie Special was the plate-covering CFS. It was a real dive of a place, in the rock building that is now Carney'sOch26-58-87 said:In the mid-80's for a college student budget, the Cow Hop CFS sandwich and gravy on the fries was hard to beat. Have a pig-out after and you'd be sure to take a good nap in class.Aggieangler93 said:
In the mid-nineties, my goto for CFS in B/CS was Tom's BBQ. It was a massive plate coverer, with good gravy. I miss Tom's!
P.s. It's unbelievable that Tom's is no longer.
I'd like to hear more about that!SteveBott said:
I thought someone posted there was a spin off of Toms. A former manager started a place.